Coutts

For other uses, see Coutts (disambiguation).
Coutts & Co.
Subsidiary; Private unlimited company
Industry Private banking and wealth management
Founded 1692
Headquarters London, England
Key people
Lord Waldegrave, Chairman
Rory Tapner, Chief Executive
Products Wealth management  accounts, investments, lending, deposits
Parent The Royal Bank of Scotland Group
Website www.coutts.com

Coutts & Co. is a private bank and wealth manager. Founded in 1692, it is one of the world’s oldest banks, and is wholly owned by The Royal Bank of Scotland Group (itself 84% owned by UK Financial Investments, an investment arm of the British government). RBS acquired Coutts when it bought NatWest in 2000. Coutts then acquired Zürich-based Bank von Ernst & Cie in 2003 and in 2008, Coutts Bank von Ernst and other Coutts International subsidiaries became RBS Coutts Bank. These traded as RBS Coutts International to align them with the parent RBS Group until 2011, when RBS Coutts was renamed Coutts & Co. Limited.

Headquartered in London, Coutts is a wholly owned subsidiary of National Westminster Bank and part of the commercial and private banking division of The Royal Bank of Scotland Group, with clients from over 40 offices in financial centres in the United Kingdom, Switzerland, the Middle East and Asia.

In March 2015, RBS sold Coutts International to Union Bancaire Privée, as part of a plan to focus the group on fewer countries.[1]

History

A Coutts office as it appeared in the 18th century. This mock-up is part of the archives of Coutts at their head office at 440 Strand
Mary Peagram, the granddaughter of John Campbell, who married James Coutts in 1755
The "Three Graces", the daughters of Thomas Coutts

The bank which was to become Coutts & Co, was originally a goldsmith-banker's shop. It was formed in 1692 by a young Scots goldsmith-banker, John Campbell of Lundie, Scotland. He set up business in Strand, London, under a sign of the Three Crowns, as was customary in the days before street numbers.[2] Today, the Coutts logo still has the three crowns, and its headquarters is still on the Strand.

Campbell died in 1712, leaving the business to members of his family. The dominant force was Campbell's son in law, George Middleton, who had become Campbell's partner in 1708. During Middleton's stewardship, the bank was buffeted by one crisis after another. The Jacobite revolution of 1715 threatened the stability of the banking system, John Law, the Comptroller of France's finances, owed a great deal of money to the bank when the Mississippi Company bubble burst in 1720 and the English stock market collapsed in the same year. Stability for the bank did not return until 1735. John's son, George Campbell was also a partner, and ultimately became the sole partner after the death of Middleton in 1747, after which the bank was renamed the "Bankers of 59 Strand".

In 1755, John Campbell's granddaughter, Mary (known as "Polly"), married a merchant and banker, James Coutts. Polly was George Campbell's niece and George immediately made James a partner. The bank became known as Campbell & Coutts, with James running the business and becoming sole partner following Polly's and George's deaths in 1760. George bequeathed most of his fortune, and the bank, to James.

Thomas Coutts

In 1761 James took his brother Thomas Coutts into the business, which was now named James and Thomas Coutts.

James and Thomas did not always get on and eventually James drifted into politics, leaving the running of the bank to Thomas. James retired from the bank in 1775 due to ill health. The bank in the Strand became known as Thomas Coutts & Co.

Thomas Coutts married twice. His first wife, a servant named Susannah Starkie. She gave him three beautiful daughters nicknamed "The Three Graces" who eventually married leading figures in British society: the Earl of Guilford, the Marquess of Bute and Sir Francis Burdett. Thomas also had four sons who died in infancy. When Susannah died, he remarried just four days after the funeral. Thomas Coutts was 80 years old, and his new wife, Harriot Mellon, was 40 years younger and an actress, which stirred considerable comment. On Thomas' death in 1822 the bank was renamed "Coutts & Co."

Thomas' widow, Harriot, inherited £900,000 from Thomas along with a 50% share in the bank. Although she did not get on with her stepdaughters, she wanted to keep the bank in the Coutts family. Harriot died in 1837. In her will, the Coutts fortune was passed on to Thomas's granddaughter, Angela Burdett, the daughter of Sophia Coutts and Sir Francis Burdett. The will contained three conditions: firstly, Angela's 50% share in the bank was to be held in Trust; secondly that the heir should take the name of Coutts; and thirdly that the heir may never marry a foreigner.

Angela Burdett-Coutts

Upon receipt of her inheritance, Angela Burdett-Coutts became the wealthiest woman in Britain. She devoted her life to philanthropy, giving away an estimated amount of between £3 million and £4 million. Her charity ranged widely: she supported the Church of England and its Anglican offshoots overseas, as well as the arts, but the main thrust of her charity was directed toward improving the lives of the poor. A sewing school in Spitalfields, cotton gins in what is now Nigeria, boats and nets for the Irish fishing industry, and ragged schools in the poorest sections of cities were but a few of her projects. Gladstone, the Prime Minister, and Queen Victoria resolved to acknowledge her philanthropic spirit formally.

In 1871, she was granted a peerage in her own right as Baroness Burdett-Coutts of Highgate and Brookfield in the County of Middlesex. In 1880, it became known that the baroness wished to marry her young American secretary William Ashmead-Bartlett, who was her junior by forty years. The partners of the bank were aghast at the prospect of such a marriage, as were many dignitaries; they saw Bartlett as an adventurer, only interested in her money. Archibald Tait, the Archbishop of Canterbury, attempted to forestall such a marriage from occurring, while Queen Victoria herself, with whom the Baroness had often dined, herself tried to prevent what she called the "mad marriage". In a letter, the Queen wrote to Lord Harrowby stating that it would grieve her much "if Lady Burdett-Coutts were to sacrifice her high reputation and her happiness by such an unsuitable marriage". This letter was passed on to Lady Burdett-Coutts who asked Lord Harrowby to reply that he had no knowledge of the subject alluded to—quite a snub to the Queen. One potential stumbling block to the marriage was her step-grandmother's (Harriot's) will which forbade marriage to an alien. As Bartlett was an American, the marriage would cause her to be disinherited. If this eventuality occurred, her younger sister, Clara, as next in line, was set to inherit. Angela Burdett-Coutts managed to get Clara to waive her rights. Clara's son Francis (known as Frank) was not, however, so easily dissuaded, and consulted his lawyers thinking to forestall the marriage by standing on their rights. Finally Bartlett himself, in the face of immense pressure from society, offered to release the Baroness from his offer of marriage. She, however, remained determined, refusing to release Bartlett from his promise, in spite of various scandalous accusations being made against him involving another woman, and even his fathering of an illegitimate child.

In February 1881, at the age of 67, Angela Burdett-Coutts broke the terms of the will by marrying Bartlett in Christ Church, Down Street, Piccadilly. The partners of the bank rushed to reassure the press that the heiress was neither a partner in the bank, nor could she touch the capital. An argument sprang up over the inheritance and, in particular, over whether Her Ladyship should give up the bank to her sister Clara. The newlywed fought back claiming that Bartlett was only half American and therefore not technically an "alien". Her sister, Clara, then claimed the fortune, and the bitter dispute continued. In anticipation of victory, Clara and her son Frank took the name "Coutts"  as required by the will. Finally, a compromise was struck, with the majority of the Coutts fortune set to pass to Clara and her heirs. Angela Burdett-Coutts, however, kept two fifths of the income until her death in 1906.

On changing her name, Clara Burdett, who had married James Money in 1850, became Clara Burdett Money-Coutts. Her son Francis' full name became Francis Burdett Thomas Nevill Money-Coutts. He was better known as Francis (or Frank) Coutts, a writer and poet. He became 5th Baron Latymer in 1913 and died in 1923.

The following appeared in Punch at the time:-

Money takes the name of Coutts,
Superfluous and funny
For everyone considers Coutts,
Synonymous with Money.

[Vere Carpenter]

The Panic of 1890 forced the bank to change from a Partnership to a Unlimited liability company in 1892. At that time, limited liability was seen as risky by depositors. As a partnership, the Coutts family would have been personally liable to any depositor for his bank deposit in a crisis. Fortunately, there was no crisis. Despite this, there was little change in the organisation - the working partners were divided between managing and junior managing partners.[3]

Further expansion

In 1904, the bank moved to its current premises at 440, The Strand. In 1914, Coutts took over the bank of Robarts, Lubbock & Co. in the City, obtaining a branch office and a clearing house seat in the process.

In 1919, Coutts merged with the National Provincial & Union Bank of England but retaining the name "Coutts". In 1961, the first branch outside London was opened in Eton, Berkshire, followed by a branch in Bristol in 1976. In 1969, Coutts became part of the National Westminster Bank.

Throughout the 20th century, Coutts opened more branches. The first West End branch outside 440 Strand was opened in 1921 in Park Lane. It was not until 1961 that the Bank moved outside the capital, opening its first out-of-town branch at Eton.

Coutts embraced modern technology, becoming one of the first banks to bring in machine-posted ledgers at the end of the 1920s. In 1963 it was the first British bank to have a fully computerised accounting system. In 1987, Coutts gained international representation when Coutts established operations in Geneva.

Further London branches were opened in the West End (1921), Cavendish Square (1927), Sloane Street (1929), Mayfair (1932), London Wall (1962), Brompton Road (1975), and Kensington (1978).[4]

Between 1974 and 1978, Coutts' Strand headquarters were redeveloped by Frederick Gibberd and Partners.[4] Francis Burdett Coutts's great grandson, Sir David Burdett Money-Coutts, became chairman in 1976, retiring in 1993, leaving his cousin Crispin Money-Coutts (heir to the title of Baron Latymer), as the last remaining Coutts name until his resignation.

In October 1990, Coutts and NatWest decided to strengthen their representation internationally and the Coutts Group was created when subsidiaries already owned by Coutts and NatWest were merged. In 2000, NatWest was purchased by The Royal Bank of Scotland Group (RBS) in one of the largest corporate transactions in the European banking sector.

Recent years

RBS sold Coutts International to Union Bancaire Privée (UBP) on 29 March 2015, for an undisclosed figure. The sale was part of the Group's strategy to reduce the number of countries it operated in, in favour of a greater focus on the United Kingdom.[1] Coutts' confirmed that it expected the transfer of its business in Europe and the Middle East to UBP to be completed by the end of 2015, and its business in Singapore and Hong Kong would follow in early 2016. UBP will be required to rebrand the business.[5]

Locations

Headquarters of Coutts in Strand at night

Coutts has offices across the UK and world-wide. There are 28 offices in the UK as well as offices in Zurich, Berne and Geneva, Hong Kong, Montevideo, Singapore, Dubai, Jersey, Isle of Man, Monaco and Cayman Islands.

In 2013, Coutts reduced its London footprint with the exit of its Canary Wharf, St Mary Axe, Cadogan Place and Fleet Street offices. The Coutts head office remains in London at 440 Strand as its flagship client-facing office, with a further office in Premier Place.[6] Outside London, the bank has offices in Birmingham, Bournemouth, Bristol, Cambridge, Cardiff, Chelmsford, Cheltenham, Eton, Exeter, Guildford, Hampshire, Leeds, Liverpool, Manchester, Milton Keynes, Newcastle upon Tyne, Norwich, Nottingham, Oxford, Reading, Sheffield, Royal Tunbridge Wells.[7]

Clients

Until the 20th century Coutts was a clearing bank to the nobility and landed gentry, but today it is a wealth manager to a wider range of clients, including entrepreneurs, entertainers, sportsmen, professionals and executives. There are however stringent requirements to being accepted as a client, not just based on average and total financial assets. Prospective clients need at least £1,000,000 in investable assets, not including real estate.<ref name="The bank that likes to say "No" to clients it considers unworthy of its services">Leonard, Tom (2001-09-03). "The bank that likes to say "No" to clients it considers unworthy of its services". London: The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 2009-09-23.</ref>

Coutts is seen as a bank for the rich and famous of British society. Like all banks, it is secretive about its client list. The bank has a regular presence at the annual Cannes Film Festival.[8] In 2013 Coutts replaced its purple 'World' charge card designed by Savile Row tailor Ozwald Boateng, with the new ‘Silk’ card. This new design is based on the traditional Chinese wallpaper which lines the walls of the boardroom at the Strand Headquarters.[9]

Design

Coutts often collaborates with British fashion designers, including previous designs for their distinctive credit and debit cards. In 2004, British fashion designer Ozwald Boateng designed the super-premium Coutts World Charge Card[10] whilst in 2006 Stella McCartney was commissioned to design the Coutts Visa Debit card.[11] The card included a translucent Coutts logo which could only be seen if held up to the light.

In 2013, Coutts launched a new card proposition, including the new Silk Charge Card. The silk design was inspired by the wallpaper brought back by Britain’s first ambassador to China, Earl Macartney in 1794, and presented to Thomas Coutts.[12]

Sponsorship

Coutts sponsorship focuses on causes and organisations that share the Coutts values and traditions.

In the early nineteenth century, Thomas Coutts became a shareholder of the Royal Opera House.[13] Today, Coutts sponsors productions at the theatre, such as the 2013 production of La rondine.[14] Since May 2011, Coutts has also been the principal sponsor of the Royal Court Theatre, the UK's leading new writing theatre based in Sloane Square.

Since 2011, Coutts has also supported the London Design Festival - an annual event, held to celebrate and promote London as the design capital of the world, and as the gateway to the international creative community.[15]

Malpractice

Breaches of money laundering rules

In March 2012 Coutts were fined £8.75m for breaches of money laundering rules after three years of "serious" and "systemic" problems in handling the affairs of customers vulnerable to corruption because of their political links.[16] The Financial Services Authority (FSA) fined Coutts because of an "unacceptable risk" that the bank could have been handling the proceeds of crime for a three-year period up to November 2010 after failing to properly deal with customers classified as "Politically exposed persons".[16]

Following an industry-wide review in 2010, the FSA found that Coutts was not conducting robust enough checks on such high-risk customers and was not monitoring relationships with them properly. The FSA reviewed a sample of 103 high-risk customer files, and identified deficiencies in 73 of them.[16] The FSA's acting director of enforcement and financial crime, Tracey McDermott, said that "Coutts's failings were significant, widespread and unacceptable. Its conduct fell well below the standards we expect and the size of the financial penalty demonstrates how seriously we view its failures".[16]

Coutts's bonus system rewarded bankers for opening accounts, providing an incentive to bring in new business without too much scrutiny, and the bank's anti-money laundering team, intended to act as a check in identifying high-risk customers, failed to identify enough "politically exposed persons".[16] In two cases reviewed by the FSA, bankers did not conduct appropriate checks on the customers, and failed to identify serious criminal allegations against them. There were five cases where sources had provided "adverse intelligence" such as allegations of criminal activity, in each case the accounts were approved by Coutts.[16]

A spokesperson for Coutts said that there was no evidence that money laundering took place as a result of its deficient controls, and said that "We recognise our systems weren't totally adequate in the past and we've taken steps to improve these". Coutts would have been fined £12.5m if they had not agreed to settle at an early stage in the investigation.[16]

Mis-selling of AIG savings product

In November 2011 the Financial Services Authority (FSA) fined Coutts £6.3m for mis-selling the American International Group (AIG) Enhanced Variable Rate Fund between December 2003 and September 2008.[17] The FSA forced Coutts to compensate all customers who suffered a loss as a result of its failings in selling the AIG Life Premier Bonds. A significant proportion of the fund's assets were invested in riskier asset-backed securities. A run was started on the fund following the late-2000s financial crisis.[17]

Coutts customers still had £748m invested in the fund when it was suspended in September 2008, but were only allowed to withdraw half of their investment. Many transferred the remaining 50 per cent to a non-interest bearing recovery fund until July 2012.[18] The FSA said Coutts failed by giving advisers inadequate training around the risks of the product.[17] Coutts recommended the fund to some customers even though it might have exposed them to more capital risk than they were willing to accept and many customers were advised to invest too large a proportion of their overall assets in the fund.[17]

Coutts agreed to settle at an early stage in exchange for a 30% discount on its fine. Its fine would have been £9m.[17]

References in culture

Coutts is mentioned in the 1889 Gilbert and Sullivan Savoy opera The Gondoliers in the following lyrics:

The Aristocrat who banks with Coutts —
The Aristocrat who hunts and shoots —
The Aristocrat who cleans our boots —
They all shall equal be!

Robert Louis Stevenson mentions Coutts in his 1886 classic novella "Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde" as being the bank of choice for Dr Jekyll: "...and presently came back with the matter of ten pounds in gold and a cheque for the balance on Coutts's drawn payable to bearer,..."

In the first episode of Michael Palin's Around The World In 80 Days, Michael visits the bank to inquire about the safeguarding and ease of replacing money whilst on his trip. His bank manager suggests a code-word, which will alert a less knowledgeable member of his staff that Michael is indeed who he says he is, the code-word in question being Jabberwocky.

In chapter three of Bram Stoker's classic novel, Dracula, Jonathan Harker lists the recipients of several of Dracula's letters in his journal, including: "... the third was to Coutts & Co., London".

Coutts is referred to discreetly in series 2, episode 1 of BBC drama Sherlock ('A Scandal in Belgravia') with Sherlock Holmes stating that he "...took a safety deposit box at a bank in the Strand..." in which to store a mobile telephone.

See also

Other private banks owned by The Royal Bank of Scotland Group

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 "RBS sells Coutts International to UBP". BBC News. 27 March 2015. Retrieved 29 March 2015.
  2. E. Healey, 'The Portrait of a Private Bank 1692-1992', Hodder & Stoughton, 1992, p. 3
  3. E. Healey, 'The Portrait of a Private Bank 1692-1992', Hodder & Stoughton 1992, p. 375
  4. 4.0 4.1 Christopher Hibbert Ben Weinreb; John & Julia Keay (9 May 2011). The London Encyclopaedia (3rd Edition). Pan Macmillan. pp. 213–. ISBN 978-0-230-73878-2. Retrieved 28 March 2012.
  5. "Sale of our internationally managed Private Banking and Wealth Management business". Coutts & Co. Retrieved 29 March 2015.
  6. http://citywire.co.uk/wealth-manager/coutts-seeks-a-buyer-for-its-11m-fleet-street-home/a686103
  7. Coutts site — Locations
  8. Kay, Richard (2009-05-18). "One last soiree". London: Daily Mail. Retrieved 2009-09-23.
  9. http://berkshire.b4-business.com/content/coutts-launches-new-range-cards
  10. Coutts & Co to introduce 'super-premium' credit card designed by Ozwald Boateng Marketing Week
  11. STELLA BANKS IT Vogue, 10 October 2006]
  12. http://www.coutts.com/news-and-insights/press-releases/2013/coutts-launches-new-range-of-cards/
  13. http://www.coutts.com/about-us/sponsorship/coutts-and-the-arts/
  14. http://www.roh.org.uk/productions/la-rondine-by-nicolas-joel
  15. http://www.londondesignfestival.com/supporters#nid-1226
  16. 16.0 16.1 16.2 16.3 16.4 16.5 16.6 "Queen's banker fined for poor money laundering checks". The Guardian. 2011-03-26. Retrieved 2012-03-27.
  17. 17.0 17.1 17.2 17.3 17.4 "Coutts fined £6m for mis-selling savings product". The Guardian. 2011-08-25. Retrieved 2012-03-27.
  18. http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/58c73950-0960-11e1-a2bb-00144feabdc0.html#axzz2neenpHz1

External links