Royal
Bank of Scotland has confirmed it will relocate its registered headquarters to
London if Scotland votes for independence next week.
The
bank said in a statement that it believed it would be "necessary to
re-domicile the bank's holding company".
In a
letter to staff, the bank's chief executive said it had no intention to move
operations or jobs.
Meanwhile,
Scotland's largest fund manager's boss said an independent Scotland would be a
huge success.
Martin
Gilbert, chief executive of Aberdeen Asset Management said:
"I think an
independent Scotland would be a big success, but it is a secret ballot and I
will abide by that.
"Most
sensible people now accept that Scotland would be prosperous with either
outcome in the current constitutional debate."
Scottish
First Minister Alex Salmond told BBC Scotland he had been given a letter which
was sent to RBS staff on Thursday morning by the bank's chief executive Ross
McEwan.
Mr
Salmond said the letter had stated: "It is my view as chief executive that
any decision to move our registered headquarters would have no impact on our
everyday banking services used by our customers in Scotland.
"This
is a technical procedure regarding the rotation of our registered head office
based on our current strategy and business plan. It is not an intention to move
operations or jobs".
The
bank has been based in Scotland since 1727.
Companies
are increasingly setting out their post-referendum contingency plans.
Lloyds
Banking Group said it could shift some of its business from Scotland.
'Necessary
action'
However,
Lloyds said it was just a legal procedure and "there would be no immediate
changes or issues".
The
statement from Lloyds said: "Lloyds Banking Group has seen an increased
level of enquiries from our customers, colleagues and other stakeholders about
our plans post the Scottish referendum.
"While
the scale of potential change is currently unclear, we have contingency plans
in place which include the establishment of new legal entities in England. This
is a legal procedure and there would be no immediate changes or issues which
could affect our business or our customers.
"There
will be a period between the referendum and the implementation of separation,
should a Yes vote be successful, that we believe is sufficient to take any
necessary action."
Lloyds,
in which the UK government has a 25% stake, owns Bank of Scotland and Halifax.
The
move of what Lloyds describes as "legal entities" indicates that the
banking group is not suggesting there will be a mass relocation of its 16,000
Scottish-based staff. The move would simply mean that the bank would remain
protected and regulated by the Bank of England.
Elsewhere,
John Lewis chairman Sir Charlie Mayfield claimed shoppers in Scotland could
face higher prices if the country votes in favour of independence.
Sir
Charlie said the retailer had no intention of reducing its commercial presence
north of the border, where it has nine shops, a contact centre and employs more
than 3,000 people.
But
he cautioned that firms were unlikely to continue sharing the burden of higher
operating costs in Scotland across all UK customers in the event of the break
up of the Union.
He
told BBC Radio 4's Today programme: "From a business perspective there
will be economic consequences to a Yes vote, not just in uncertainty but some
of the turmoil we are hearing about.
"And
it is also the case that it does cost more money to trade in parts of Scotland
and therefore those hard costs, in the event of a Yes vote, are more likely to
be passed on."
But
he added: "On the day after the referendum the shops are going to open on
time, nothing will change."
Angus
Grossart, chairman of merchant bank Noble Grossart, said that people should
"not panic" following the decisions made by the two banks. He told
the Financial Times that the impact of a Yes vote was "severely
overstated".
BBC
economics editor Robert Peston said that that if RBS, 81%-owned by the UK
government and which owns 11,500 people in Scotland, moved its head office and
registered office to London it "would involve some jobs moving
south".
'Head office'
However,
he said the situation with Lloyds was different: "Lloyds would move its
legal home to its head office, which is already in London - and that's unlikely
to have much impact on Scottish employment."
A
Treasury source told the BBC that it had discussed the plans with RBS.
On
Wednesday, insurance and pensions giant Standard Life said it was
"planning for new regulated companies in England to which we could
transfer parts of our business if there was a need to do so".
Treasury
Chief Secretary Danny Alexander told BBC2's Newsnight: "When a company
like Standard Life says that it would, unfortunately, sadly, have to relocate
its business to London that is not some sort of decision that they make
lightly.
"They
make it on the basis that they regard that as the best way to protect their
customers under the new circumstances.
"When
we hear Lloyds and other banks making clear that they would have to do the
same, again that is not something that they say lightly. They say it having
thought about it, having talked to their board and to the senior people in
those companies."
First
Minister Alex Salmond has described reports of banks moving out of Scotland as
"nonsense" and "scaremongering".
And
Mr Grossart, one of the most senior figures in Scotland's financial
establishment, said people were "overreacting" to the threats of
exodus of firms.
"I
think it is getting out of hand," he told the Financial Times. "To
hear some of the comments you almost expect people to be predicting a plague of
locusts or mice next."
BBC
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