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Champagne's on us, says bank

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Published Date: 22 June 2009
BAILED-out bank the Royal Bank of Scotland is spending tens of thousands of pounds on corporate entertaining at Wimbledon, it has been revealed.
Customers will enjoy fine dining and champagne courtesy of the bank as they watch the tennis championships at the All England Club.

RBS is now more than 70 per cent owned by the taxpayer after being hammered by the financial crisis. It reported r
ecord UK losses in 2008 and tens of thousands of staff have lost their jobs.

It was reported that the RBS corporate hospitality package for SW19 is costing up to £300,000.

A leaked e-mail describes the bank's booking of an "entertainment suite" for more than 42 guests for each of the tournament's 13 days, at a cost of at least £19,500 a day. In addition, the bank will pay up to £100 for each Centre Court seat and £75 a head for lunch, according to the paper.

A spokeswoman for RBS was unable to confirm the costs but said the deal had been a long-standing agreement and pointed out that customers rather than staff would be attending.

She said: "We fully recognise that as we get our house in order we need to be seen to change the way we operate.

"We have cut our hospitality by 90 per cent this year to recognise the reality of our situation.

"The cost of the Wimbledon event is already sunk in and contracted. We are using it to support our charity partners and customer relationships which are vital to our success."

Earlier this week, former RBS boss Sir Fred Goodwin bowed to public pressure and offered to hand back more than £210,000 a year of his controversial pension payout.

The former chief executive who led the bank to the brink of disaster "volunteered" to reduce his pension payout from £555,000 to £342,500 a year. Sir Fred's pension deal – a £703,000-a-year package including a £2.7 million lump sum – caused outrage.





The full article contains 340 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 22 June 2009 12:53 AM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Royal Bank of Scotland
 
1

Brianwci,

22/06/2009 02:02:29
I guess you have to 'put out' in order to 'rake in'.

The bank's continued high viz sponsorship of prestige events like Wimbledon and the Grand Prix are important signs of 'business as usual'.

Something I would have thought which is vital for the bank's recovery, a recovery which is vital to us as we as taxpayers currently own most of it.

RBS is still a great Scottish Bank.
2

SteveSC,

West Lothian 22/06/2009 08:01:57
It is time someone called a spade a spade. Corporate entertainment is corruption.

If businesses awarded contracts on quality and price, rather than the lavishness of executive entertainment, the things we buy would be cheaper and work better.
3

Irked,

Edinburgh 22/06/2009 08:42:48
Corporate hospitality is a necessary part of business (although maybe not quite on this scale!).

However why are journalists not interested in RBS's plan to transfer UK IT jobs to India? Why is a state-owned bank sending jobs overseas?

4

Tartan Viking,

22/06/2009 12:30:11
£300,000 is small beer when compared to the £800 million of tax-payers' money that was diverted into the RBS pension fund to keep these greedy champagne-slurping rich bankers in the custome to which they have become acquired.

 

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