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Saturday, 5th December 2009 Change Date

RBS takes 'major step' with Sir Sandy

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Published Date: 22 May 2009
ROYAL Bank of Scotland today confirmed that Standard Life boss Sir Sandy Crombie will join its board, in a move that it said was a "major step" in its restructuring.
Sir Sandy, who is set to retire from the Edinburgh-based insurer at some point this year, has been appointed as senior independent director of the part-nationalised RBS.

The post, which he will take up in June, will allow him to be an independent
voice for investors on the restructured RBS board.

Sir Philip Hampton, recently-appointed chairman of RBS, said: "Sandy has a deep understanding of insurance and financial services, having held a number of senior executive positions during his career at Standard Life.

"We are also fortunate that he will bring to the role his extensive experience of, and engagement with, institutional shareholders, government and regulators.

"Sandy Crombie's appointment is a further major step in the restructuring of our board as we implement our strategic plan to return to standalone financial strength."

Sir Sandy started out as a trainee actuary at Standard Life in 1966, and held a number of posts throughout the next three decades until his appointment as chief executive of Standard Life Investments in 1998.

In 2002, he became deputy group chief executive and was appointed group chief executive in 2004.

He also sits on the Chancellor's insurance industry working group. He received a knighthood for services to the insurance industry in Scotland this year.





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  • Last Updated: 22 May 2009 10:05 AM
  • Source: Edinburgh Evening News
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Royal Bank of Scotland
 
1

Mallory,

Edinburgh 22/05/2009 12:17:13
Was this the same man who eventually had to bow to FSA pressures and increase reserves in SL before it de-mutualised some years back? Surely there was talk at the time about the dangers of a bonus driven culture chasing the quantity of business rather than profitability. Should fit in well at RBS given their entry into sub-prime in the US

In her new book, Fool’s Gold, Gillian Tett, the heroine who covered capital markets for the Financial Times and who predicted the crisis, has RBS ‘aggressively’ growing its exposure to Collateralised Debt Obligations during this period.[4] In 2007, its American subsidiary Greenwich Capital bought a chunk of sub-prime mortgages from New Century Financial, one of the biggest players in the market, which was, not coincidentally, facing bankruptcy; RBS lent another sub-prime player, Fremont General, $1 billion; yet another American subsidiary of RBS, the aforementioned Citizens Bank, was buying up US sub-prime risk, ‘allegedly without seeking approval from the RBS board’. The Telegraph goes on to say: ‘It is claimed that it was not until the summer of 2007, as Northern Rock was facing meltdown, that Sir Fred told the board that RBS had, in fact, built up a substantial sub-prime exposure.’

 

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