Jupiter Merlin Weekly: NatWest/Farage -- investment risk, moral hazard
The Jupiter Merlin team analyses the compatibility of capitalism and corporate “socialism.”
If Coutts Bank thought it risked reputational damage by retaining Farage as a customer, it never in its worst nightmares calculated the reputational risk and consequences of getting rid of him and making an enemy of him. If it did, it would not now be in the position in which it finds itself.
“A relationship bank for a digital world,” according to the front cover of parent bank NatWest’s 2022 Annual Report. As for the bank’s former head, Dame Alison Rose, in her CEO report in the same document, she said, “We champion the potential of the people, families and businesses we serve – when things are going well, and when things are tough. By standing strong and standing together, we can provide the support and security our customers, colleagues, economy and society need.” Warm, inclusive and fluffy sentiments indeed. But if in the opinion of the bank’s moral arbiters you as a customer failed to align with the bank’s own ‘values’, NatWest’s corporate culture of promoting inclusivity, ‘standing together’, meant precisely the opposite, particularly at Coutts: you risked being persona non grata, not just unwelcome but out. Farage was accorded neither support nor security. As for “A relationship bank”? Publicly humiliating your customers is hardly a winning business formula.
Leaving aside the initial cause, that it was left to the Prime Minister and the Chancellor late at night to insist that Rose be fired demonstrated a lead-footed board compounded its offences by not taking control of the situation and acting decisively. It failed quickly and unequivocally to establish the simple, binary answer of whether Rose was the source of the BBC’s report that Farage was cancelled for commercial and not political reasons, and then to take robust remedial action when it was clear she had not only breached client confidentiality but also had not been truthful. In an unfolding story which may not yet have reached its conclusion, the managing director of Coutts has also departed. On every level of policy and governance, NatWest’s is an entirely self-inflicted reputational hit. But there could now be a significant direct financial penalty too: under the General Data Protection Regulation regime, the Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO) is formally involved and has already offered the opinion that “Mr Farage’s trust was betrayed” by NatWest. Should the ICO find NatWest in breach of the data protection principles, the financial sanction is severe: it could be fined up to 4% of its annual global turnover (in 2022, NatWest’s group income was £13.2bn, of which 4% would represent £520 million).
Capitalism and corporate ‘socialism’: uneasy bedfellows
It is a moot point and a philosophical argument. There are no right or wrong answers here; it is an immensely complex subject in which the pendulum of opinion swings to-and-fro. Inevitably, in today’s climate much is political in nature which in turn tends to polarise opinions: Brexit in the UK; gender politics; social inclusion; geopolitics; biodiversity and the environment; climate change itself; all are now important preoccupations in any corporate board room. Many are also the preoccupation of legislators, regulators and central banks.
Perhaps the insidious and pernicious term ‘stakeholder’ itself is part of the problem: are those groups referred to above all genuine ‘stakeholders’? Shareholders are, certainly: they really do own a stake in the company. But arguably the rest (even employees unless they too are equity holders) are more accurately interested or contracted parties. Looked at that way, it offers a different slant.
Last year another corporate giant, Unilever, was in the press for all the wrong reasons: virtue-signalling social change by ensuring that every product in its extensive stable of food products and everyday household staple goods must justify its existence through its social purpose; presumably when buying a jar of Marmite and spreading it on their crumpets of an evening in front of the fire, or more mundanely swishing the loo with Domestos it was supposed to make the consumer bask in the company’s reflected glory that they had just made the world a better place thanks to the altruism and high moral standing of Unilever (with the subtext that the consumer would remain attracted to the premium-priced brand and keep buying it). Smart brand management? Cynical? Misguided? Inspirational? Or, as one high-profile shareholder put it, “lost the plot”? Creating its own moral muddle, while its ice cream subsidiary Ben & Jerry’s has very publicly embroiled itself in the morass of Palestinian-Israeli politics, Unilever is estimated still to be selling more than £0.5bn worth of goods a year in Russia since Putin invaded Ukraine, leaving the company open to the charge of hypocrisy about social purpose. These are high profile but far from isolated examples.
Does providing capital still equate to traditional capitalism?
That share capital, supported by the reserves which accrue from retained profits, is the company’s only permanent capital, provided by equity investors. It is the financial basis of what banks and other lenders are prepared to lend against with a reasonable prospect of seeing their money again should the company become insolvent. Without equity share capital, there is no business (each of those other ‘stakeholders’ is important to the company’s future, but they have no stake at all if there is no business in which to have an interest the first place). Equity investors commit capital because they think the company has good prospects and they believe on the basis of their analysis of its management, products, competitive positioning, investment in new areas, financial prospects etc that over time they will see the value of their investment grow and that there is a reasonable likelihood of receiving cash dividends (a discretionary distribution of a proportion of the after-tax profits) on the journey. They know too that they may be called upon at any time to subscribe additional capital. Also that in the event the company fails, they are at the bottom of the heap after its creditors have been settled and may never recover any of their investment.
Investors’ perceptions are changing
When the ESG pendulum swings too far
NatWest provides a timely reminder that even in the new values-driven ‘stakeholder’ environment, treat any one of them with contempt (in this case a section of the customer base), and punishment and reputational damage are swift, including potentially undermining investors’ wealth.
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