UK banks face competition probe

UK banks face competition probe

Britain's competition watchdog is preparing an in-depth investigation into the retail banking sector in a move which could eventually see the country's high street giants broken up.

The Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) has made a provisional decision to go ahead with a full-scale, 18-month long inquiry into the industry, although it will first carry out a consultation before making a final call in the autumn.

The move comes after two CMA studies which found that the £8 billion personal current account market and the £2 billion SME banking market suffer from a lack of competition.

Despite the arrival of new players such as Tesco Bank, Virgin, Metro Bank and TSB, the four big boys - Barclays, HSBC, Lloyds and RBS - still control 77% of the personal current account market and 85% of the business current accounts.

The arrival last year of a current account switching service has failed to make a significant change to the number of people moving providers, says the CMA. With many customers seeing little difference between the services on offer, just three per cent switch each year despite satisfaction levels with the big four floundering below 60%.

The watchdog has also flagged a lack of transparency, making it difficult for customers to compare providers. The government is currently working with banks to address this by letting Brits download all of their current account data and feed it into online tools that help them pick the best banking provider.

But despite the industry initiatives to make account switching easier and boost transparency, the CMA is eager to push ahead with a full investigation which could see it recommend that the high street giants divest parts of their businesses.

Alex Chisholm, chief executive, CMA, says: "Competitive personal and SME banking markets are essential to households and businesses throughout the country, and to the success of the UK economy.

"However, our studies have found that despite some positive developments, significant competition concerns remain which mean that customers may not be getting consistently good service and value from their banks."

British Banking Authority chief Anthony Browne insists that "substantial changes" are already underway to boost competition but that banks would cooperate fully with any investigation.

Comments: (3)

A Finextra member
A Finextra member 22 July, 2014, 09:40Be the first to give this comment the thumbs up 0 likes

Oh dear....seems to miss the main point.  So-called "Free" banking is a crucial area of review where the cross subsidising of such free accounts is likely to be seen as being anti-competitive.  Look out for a flurry of announcements from the banks to withdraw such products.

Ketharaman Swaminathan
Ketharaman Swaminathan - GTM360 Marketing Solutions - Pune 22 July, 2014, 10:39Be the first to give this comment the thumbs up 0 likes

Do we need government intervention to break up banks when the likes of Apple, Facebook, Google, Prosper and other neobanks are supposedly going to decimate them shortly and turn them into dinosaurs before you could say B-A-N-K?

Vinod Sekharankutty
Vinod Sekharankutty - Genpact - London 22 July, 2014, 11:18Be the first to give this comment the thumbs up 0 likes

Crux of the issues as the article states in between is lack of differentiation as switiching is made easier. So it is incumbent on some of the new entrants to woo customers rathern than blaming the big 5. One avenue to make a difference would undoubtedly be service excellence but then we have seen that this starts to deteiorate once you become a big operation..

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