>> ASIAONE / BUSINESS / NEWS / STORY
Ex-RBS chief will return some of his pension
Thu, Jun 18, 2009
AFP

LONDON - The disgraced former boss of troubled British lender Royal Bank of Scotland, Fred Goodwin, has agreed to take a "substantial" cut in his pension, the bank said Thursday, after widespread pressure to do so.

Goodwin, who came to symbolise the greed of bankers blamed for the worst financial crisis in decades, will see his annual pension reduced to 342,500 pounds (S$816,794), RBS said in a statement.

The pension was originally worth nearly 700,000 pounds.

Goodwin, whose home in Edinburgh was attacked by vandals earlier this year after he was forced to exit RBS, had previously rejected government requests to give up part of his pension despite criticism from Prime Minister Gordon Brown.

Royal Bank of Scotland is now 70 percent owned by the British government after being ravaged by the credit crunch and its 2007 takeover of Dutch group ABN Amro at the top of the market.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 
STORY INDEX
 
  Ex-RBS chief will return some of his pension
   
 
  British deficit balloons to record high in May
   
 
  AXA urges reform of insurer accounting rules
   
 
  World Bank raises China 2009 growth forecast
   
 
  Trade deals starts 'new era' in Japan-Philippine ties
   
 
  Oil prices above US$71 dollars in Asian trade
   
 
  Geithner backs up sweeping US finance overhaul
   
 
  Big Swiss banks still overexposed to risk
   
 
  India enters deflation as economy slows
   
 
  Tokyo shares fall 1.39 percent at closing
   
>> RELATED STORY
Ex-RBS chief will return some of his pension
Banks tweaking pay to rein in pushy sales staff
'Green shoots' spur rise in bank lending
US bailout panel more bank stress tests needed
Banks' exclusion clause is unfair to customers

Elsewhere in AsiaOne...

News: IT grads with business bent wanted by banks

 

We welcome contributions, comments and tips.
a1admin@sph.com.sg