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Bradford & Bingley

Bradford & Bingley
Public
Industry Finance
Fate Nationalised due to insolvency. Its deposits were sold to Abbey National plc, which was eventually renamed Santander UK plc. Its mortgages are still held by Bradford & Bingley.
Founded 1964
Headquarters Bingley, West Yorkshire, UK
Key people
Richard Pym, Executive Chairman
Products Financial Services
£572.3m (2007)
Profit £93.2m (2007)
Number of employees
2,862 (FTE in 2007)
Parent HM Government (UKFI / UK Asset Resolution Ltd), Santander UK plc
Website www.bbg.co.uk

Bradford & Bingley plc was a British bank with headquarters in the West Yorkshire town of Bingley.

The bank was formed in December 2000 by demutualisation of the Bradford & Bingley Building Society following a vote of the building society's members, who swapped their nominal share of the building society for at least 250 shares of the newly formed bank.

In 2008, partly due to the credit crunch, the bank was nationalised and in effect split into two parts; the mortgage book and investment portfolios remained with the now publicly owned Bradford & Bingley plc, and the deposits and branch network (and a licence to use the B&B name for those aspects) was sold to Abbey National, itself owned by the Spanish Santander Group. The branch network was rebranded Santander on 11 January 2010 and the Bradford & Bingley name now solely relates to the nationalised section of the bank.

Bradford & Bingley Building Society was formed in 1964 as a result of the merger of the Bradford Equitable Building Society and the Bingley Permanent Building Society, both of which were established in 1851.

In May 1997 the Society bought Mortgage Express from Lloyds TSB for £64 million.

In December 2000 the Society demutualised and floated on the (using the symbol BB.) with former members of the Society each receiving a minimum of 250 shares worth £567.50 at the time, and savers with more savings receiving more shares worth up to £5,000 each.

In order to combat the effects of the subprime mortgage crisis, in June 2008 the company launched a £400 million rights issue which was not well subscribed by shareholders, leaving much of issue with underwriters. The issue had not been helped when TPG Capital, who had previously agreed to take a 23% stake in the Company, withdrew their support.


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