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Why Hester has gone | Why Hester has gone |
(35 minutes later) | |
There have been fears in the Treasury for some months that Stephen Hester would quit as chief executive of Royal Bank of Scotland. | There have been fears in the Treasury for some months that Stephen Hester would quit as chief executive of Royal Bank of Scotland. |
In the event, he is leaving by what is described by a Treasury official as "mutual agreement" - because the chancellor and the chairman of RBS, Sir Philip Hampton, both felt this huge semi-nationalised bank is entering a new phase. | In the event, he is leaving by what is described by a Treasury official as "mutual agreement" - because the chancellor and the chairman of RBS, Sir Philip Hampton, both felt this huge semi-nationalised bank is entering a new phase. |
They believe the chief executive at this juncture needs to be someone who can stay in the job for a good five years. Mr Hester is apparently not prepared to commit to stay that long. | They believe the chief executive at this juncture needs to be someone who can stay in the job for a good five years. Mr Hester is apparently not prepared to commit to stay that long. |
This new phase for RBS involves privatisation - which in itself is a process which is likely to take years, given the sheer size of the stake owned by taxpayers. | This new phase for RBS involves privatisation - which in itself is a process which is likely to take years, given the sheer size of the stake owned by taxpayers. |
And, of course, RBS has to become a more normal bank, in the sense of providing the credit needed by the economy and earning big profits on its capital. | And, of course, RBS has to become a more normal bank, in the sense of providing the credit needed by the economy and earning big profits on its capital. |
Mr Hester is seen as a chief executive who stopped RBS going bust. Now it needs a boss who will grow the bank again. | Mr Hester is seen as a chief executive who stopped RBS going bust. Now it needs a boss who will grow the bank again. |
He will stay until a new boss arrives, and will leave with what most would see as a fairly substantial bag of money. | He will stay until a new boss arrives, and will leave with what most would see as a fairly substantial bag of money. |
Mr Hester will receive £1.6m in cash, or a year's salary, and he will keep his long-term investment plan, currently worth £3m. The Treasury has capped his maximum entitlement from this plan at £4.2m. | Mr Hester will receive £1.6m in cash, or a year's salary, and he will keep his long-term investment plan, currently worth £3m. The Treasury has capped his maximum entitlement from this plan at £4.2m. |
Which may be seen by some as an example that bankers never lose - except that his leaving package is worth around a third of what he might have earned, had he stayed. | Which may be seen by some as an example that bankers never lose - except that his leaving package is worth around a third of what he might have earned, had he stayed. |
I asked the Treasury if Stephen Hester had been sacked. An official said no. | I asked the Treasury if Stephen Hester had been sacked. An official said no. |
That said, friends of Hester told me a few days ago he had decided in his own mind that he wanted to stay at the bank through privatisation - and it was therefore his bad luck that the board of RBS and the chancellor had other ideas. | That said, friends of Hester told me a few days ago he had decided in his own mind that he wanted to stay at the bank through privatisation - and it was therefore his bad luck that the board of RBS and the chancellor had other ideas. |
To be clear, it is not that they don't rate him. | To be clear, it is not that they don't rate him. |
As the chairman Philip Hampton has said on numerous occasions, and again today, Hester has made RBS a much more solid bank, by shrinking it, getting rid of marginal and toxic assets, and increasing its capital resources to absorb potential future losses. | As the chairman Philip Hampton has said on numerous occasions, and again today, Hester has made RBS a much more solid bank, by shrinking it, getting rid of marginal and toxic assets, and increasing its capital resources to absorb potential future losses. |
But Hester was not desperate to stay much longer than was necessary to get at least some of the 81% of the bank owned by taxpayers back on the stock market - whereas Hampton and Osborne want the boss to be there for the privatisation and some years beyond. | But Hester was not desperate to stay much longer than was necessary to get at least some of the 81% of the bank owned by taxpayers back on the stock market - whereas Hampton and Osborne want the boss to be there for the privatisation and some years beyond. |
And there is a logic to their position. | And there is a logic to their position. |
It will be much easier to flog RBS to investors if the person at the helm (I almost said "man" at the helm - can't think why) is the person who not only sets RBS's future course but also steers it on that course. | It will be much easier to flog RBS to investors if the person at the helm (I almost said "man" at the helm - can't think why) is the person who not only sets RBS's future course but also steers it on that course. |
The Treasury won't be amused RBS's Sir Philip Hampton said in today's conference call that the chancellor is determined the bank is in a state to be privatised at the end of 2014. | |
Earlier today a Treasury official was urging me not to draw any conclusion on the privatisation timetable from Hester's departure. |