This article is from the source 'bbc' and was first published or seen on . It will not be checked again for changes.
You can find the current article at its original source at http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/-/1/hi/business/7250023.stm
The article has changed 31 times. There is an RSS feed of changes available.
Previous version
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
Next version
Version 8 | Version 9 |
---|---|
Rock nationalisation 'right move' | Rock nationalisation 'right move' |
(20 minutes later) | |
The Prime Minister Gordon Brown has been defending the government's decision to nationalise Northern Rock. | The Prime Minister Gordon Brown has been defending the government's decision to nationalise Northern Rock. |
At a Downing Street briefing he called it "the right move at the right time for the right reasons". | At a Downing Street briefing he called it "the right move at the right time for the right reasons". |
The government's move has been fiercely criticised by shareholders who face losing almost all of their investment. | |
Shadow chancellor George Osborne said the nationalisation plans were "catastrophic," and that they would be opposed by the Conservatives. | Shadow chancellor George Osborne said the nationalisation plans were "catastrophic," and that they would be opposed by the Conservatives. |
Trading in Northern Rock shares has been suspended. | |
It is the biggest decision made yet by this Prime Minister Robert Peston, BBC Business Editor Read Robert's blog | |
The prime minister said that the government had considered two offers from private sector buyers for Northern Rock, but decided not to accept them. | The prime minister said that the government had considered two offers from private sector buyers for Northern Rock, but decided not to accept them. |
"We will have and always will put the interests of taxpayers first," he said. | "We will have and always will put the interests of taxpayers first," he said. |
Turned down | |
Chancellor Alistair Darling said two private takeover offers did not offer the taxpayer "sufficient value for money". | Chancellor Alistair Darling said two private takeover offers did not offer the taxpayer "sufficient value for money". |
"We had independent advisers look at this, and they all pointed in one direction: the best thing to do was to take the bank into a period of temporary public ownership before ultimately trying to return it to the private sector," he told the BBC. | "We had independent advisers look at this, and they all pointed in one direction: the best thing to do was to take the bank into a period of temporary public ownership before ultimately trying to return it to the private sector," he told the BBC. |
Nationalisation is not the right answer and a commercial solution would have been the best way forward Richard Branson,Virgin Group | |
UK taxpayers are now subsidising the bank in loans and guarantees to other lenders to the tune of about £55bn. Under the new strategy this will jump to £110bn, a cost of £3,500 per taxpayer. | |
Explaining the government's decision, Mr Darling said it was better for the government to hold onto Northern Rock until market conditions improve and its value increases. | |
He emphasised that "the long-term ownership of this bank must lie in the private sector". | |
A consortium led by Richard Branson's Virgin Group had put forward a rescue proposal for the beleaguered bank, and a plan from management had also been considered. | |
"We believe nationalisation is not the right answer and that a commercial solution would have been the best way forward," Mr Branson said in a statement. | |
The board of Northern Rock, which had also put together a rescue package for the bank, said that it was "very disappointed" with the government's decision. | |
Shareholders worried | |
The government said that it will introduce emergency legislation to temporarily nationalise the stricken Northern Rock bank. | |
I'm absolutely devastated...this was a vibrant successful ethical bank...I was proud to work there. Mark, Newcastle Is Darling still in control?In quotes: Reaction to move | |
Under nationalisation rules, Northern Rock's shareholders will be offered compensation for their holding at a level set by a government-appointed panel. | Under nationalisation rules, Northern Rock's shareholders will be offered compensation for their holding at a level set by a government-appointed panel. |
The calculation will be based on the bank's value without government guarantees. | The calculation will be based on the bank's value without government guarantees. |
However, analysts say under those conditions shareholders will receive very little. | However, analysts say under those conditions shareholders will receive very little. |
It seems likely that shareholder groups will take legal action over the government's move. | It seems likely that shareholder groups will take legal action over the government's move. |
Roger Lawson, chairman of the Northern Rock Shareholders' Action Group said he thought there were "good grounds" for legal action. | Roger Lawson, chairman of the Northern Rock Shareholders' Action Group said he thought there were "good grounds" for legal action. |
"We've already considered it and obviously SRM - who are one of the major institutional shareholders - have effectively promised legal action already if nationalisation went ahead," Mr Lawson said. | "We've already considered it and obviously SRM - who are one of the major institutional shareholders - have effectively promised legal action already if nationalisation went ahead," Mr Lawson said. |
Job cuts? | |
Ron Sandler, the former boss of the Lloyd's of London insurance market, will lead Northern Rock. | |
Mr Sandler is widely respected for restoring confidence in Lloyd's after its years in financial disarray. | |
He is due to give a news briefing at 1300 GMT from Northern Rock's headquarters in Newscastle. | |
Mr Sandler has said Northern Rock must be reduced to a sustainable size, and it is thought there will be thousands of job cuts under his stewardship. | |
Mr Sandler said the changes would have no impact on the guarantees made to lenders, or the government-backed support for savers' deposits. | |
"It is business as usual," he said. |