HBOS Group Reorganisation Act 2006

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The HBOS Group Reorganisation Act 2006 is a private Act of Parliament, passed by the British Parliament in June 2006. The aim of the act was to provide HBOS, a banking and insurance group in the UK, the legal authority to reorganise its subsidiaries into a more simplified structure.

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[edit] Background

HBOS plc is a banking and insurance holding company and was created on September 10, 2001 from the merger of the Governor and Company of the Bank of Scotland and Halifax plc. These two banks are the main UK subsidiaries of HBOS, although they themselves operate various other subsidiary companies. The Bank of Scotland was incorporated by an Act of the Parliament of Scotland in 1695, and operates under the authority of this Act and subsequent other Acts passed in 1873, 1920, 1954 and 1970. Halifax is a public limited company and was created in 1997 from the demutualisation of the Halifax Buidling Society to plc status.

[edit] Aims of the Act

The main aim of the Act is to simplify HBOS’s operating structure, namely:

  • changing the legal status of the Governor and Company of the Bank of Scotland to a public limited company (Bank of Scotland plc);
  • transferring the assets and liabilities of HBOS's UK banking subsidiaries (Halifax plc, Capital Bank plc, and HBOS Treasury Services plc) to the new company ;
  • transferring the remaining assets of the Clerical, Medical and General Life Assurance Society to HBOS's subsidiairy, Clerical Medical Investment Group Limited and disolve the Society. The bulk of the Society's assets were acquired by Halifax plc in 1997, although some residual assets were not transferred at that time.

[edit] Bank of Scotland plc

The Governor and Company of the Bank of Scotland is unique in its legal structure, as it is a company formed under statute, the 1695 Act, and is governed under the provisions of this Act and successive Acts of Parliament relating to the Bank. The most important is the Bank of Scotland Act 1920, which sets out the bank's business objectives and its regulations. HBOS group wished to restructure the Bank into a plc governed under the Companies Act 1985, and transfer the assets and liabilities of its other UK subsidiaries with a banking licence (Capital Bank, Halifax plc and HBOS Treasury Service plc) to the new Bank of Scotland plc. Doing so would save the costs of maintaining 4 banking licences, and the need for 4 separate companies, each with their own board of directors.

The transfer of assets and liabilities from one bank to another also requires the consent of the account holders. For institutions such as the Halifax, this would involve seeking the consent millions of people, and would be unpractical. Thus an Act of Parliament gives HBOS the statutory authority to transfer accounts without seeking individual account holder approval.

The Act secures the right of the Bank of Scotland to continue to print banknotes.

[edit] External links