Tesco and Virgin lead a raft of new banks

By Simon Wilson Jan 29, 2010

Simon Wilson

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Tesco and Virgin are heading a queue of hopefuls wanting to start up new banks in Britain. Should the Big Four be worried? Simon Wilson reports.

What's going on?

Everyone seems to want a piece of a sector characterised by regulatory and consumer uncertainty, declining profits and hyper-consolidation: British banking. Applications for banking licences are piling up at the Financial Services Authority (FSA). Meanwhile, Tesco Bank already has a licence and Virgin Money will have one shortly. The backers of these new banks see an opportunity to grab disgruntled customers from the big four players (who have 75% of the market) and a chance to grow by picking up assets cheaply. Well-capitalised new banks will also be able to profit from lending rates that are now at a record premium to the Bank of England's base rate.

Is setting up a bank easy?

No. To acquire a deposit-taking (banking) licence, applicants need to prove to the FSA that they can meet onerous capital and liquidity requirements. A bulky set of forms and enquiries must be completed and the regulator provided with documents ranging from business plans through risk-management policy statements and compliance manuals to personal and business information. The FSA then typically takes six to 12 months to reach a decision. If you are very rich, there is the faster route taken by Virgin. Earlier this month it bought Church House Trust, a small private bank based in Somerset. This fast-track approach means Virgin Money should be free to start trading as a full-service bank in about two months' time.

Who else wants to start up?

Licence applications are confidential, and the FSA doesn't reveal how many it gets. Some reports suggest that as many as 30 applications are under consideration. However, not all are likely to be credible. One that is credible is Metro Bank, responsible for the swathe of 'love your bank' advertising posters in central London. Metro is backed by Vernon Hill, the US entrepreneur behind Commerce Bancorp, and a British marketing specialist, Anthony Thomson. Metro will offer family-friendly, convenience-focused branches that are open late seven days a week. It hopes to open 12 branches in the first two years, focused on London.

The other venture widely tipped to be granted a licence in the coming months is a new bank targeting affluent individuals and small businesses, led by Sandy Chen, a banking analyst at broker Panmure Gordon. According to recent press reports, Chen has already secured £100m in funding from Invesco Perpetual and M&G, and hopes to raise £200m by floating on Aim next month. The bank had been trailed under the name Albion Bank, but is now thought likely to be named Walton & Co. after its chairman, veteran banker Paul Walton.

Separately, the US private-equity group Blackstone is conducting due diligence on an investment in The Home and Savings Bank, which ex-Abbey boss Peter Birch hopes to launch later this year. But compared with all these upstarts, Tesco and Virgin are both already a long way down the track.

How big is Tesco Bank?

Tiny. It has assets of just £6bn, compared to (say) £1,700 billion for RBS. But its potential is huge. Already it has more than six million financial services customers, has rapidly won an 8% slice of the credit-card market, and is the UK's sixth-biggest motor insurer. This year it launches mortgages and next year will launch a current account, with future plans said to include a move into mutual funds. Its core challenge is to convert more of its 15 million Clubcard customers into financial services customers; currently the rate is 18%. Overall, Tesco's strategy looks to be steady growth via in-store branches. By contrast, Virgin Money is interested in rapid growth by acquisition and is widely touted as a potential buyer of Northern Rock, as well as assets being sold off by government-backed banks.

Should the big banks be worried?

Any new competition is a worry. Given their brand recognition and customer base, there's little doubt highly-successful, customer-focused businesses and/or trusted brands, such as Tesco and Virgin, potentially present a big challenge to the banking establishment. Banking analysts also say that brand new banks, such as Tesco and Metro, will benefit from modern, flexible core IT systems that will be superior and cheaper to run.

So it's an open field for the newcomers?

Far from it. To succeed in retail banking you need to be big. That's why so few new entrants emerge. Sceptics argue that even with brand-new technology, new banks will find themselves more expensive on a per-unit basis. Next, there is the question of trust (see below). Finally, some banks are fighting back by reinvesting in branches. They've twigged that pushing customers away to the internet makes them more profitable, but also less loyal.

Would you trust Tesco with your money?

A recent survey conducted for Moneysupermarket.com made cautionary reading for the likes of Tesco and other retail brands looking to move into the banking sector. Only 4% said they would trust a supermarket more than a bank to look after their finances. Supermarkets are already too big, said 41%, and should stick to what they do. Only one in ten thought supermarkets would offer a better service than a bank on financial products – hardly a ringing endorsement. And while 24% were happy to take out a credit card with a supermarket, only 5% would take out a mortgage.

Comments (4)

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  • 1. Ben Kayuma

    (29 January 2010, 01:15PM)  Complain about this comment

    I think it is a very good idea to have new entrants into the retail banking sector. Not only will it add to the competitiveness of the sector, but also new ways of doing banking might emerge.
    With the likes of Tesco and Virgin, two of a number the U.K's highly innovative businesses, the news of their intentions should be received with great anticipation.

    Go Tesco, Go Virgin !

  • 2. Ben Jardine

    (29 January 2010, 09:54PM)  Complain about this comment

    Of course it is a great idea to create more banks: it will generate more jobs for bankers and lead to increased salaries due to enhanced competition. Well done Gordo!

  • 3. Andy Brown, ACI Worldwide

    (03 February 2010, 12:39PM)  Complain about this comment

    It’s true that “brand new banks, such as Tesco and Metro, will benefit from modern, flexible core IT systems that will be superior and cheaper to run” but that isn’t their only opportunity to leapfrog the competition. Through using agile technology systems to understand their customers, new banks will also be better placed to track customer activity, prevent fraudulent transactions and encourage increased customer use of bank products. New entrants from the retail space, such as Tesco, will have a highly developed understanding of these techniques and the banking industry will be watching with interest to see how they apply their existing customer knowledge to their retail banking offering.

  • 4. Andy

    (07 February 2010, 11:11AM)  Complain about this comment

    "It will generate more jobs for bankers and lead to increased salaries due to enhanced competition."

    Sorry Ben, I disagree, only if the market is expanding will salaries increase, if it is static or falling salaries will decrease with more competition.
    I think large chunks of the state owned Banking sector, ie Northern Rock, RBS, etc should be carved off and sold to the new entrants to get some cash back for the taxpayer. I can't think of anyone better than Virgin and Tesco and even Sainsbury to do that.

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