US banks draw up early plans for move to Ireland if UK leaves EU

Wall Street banks considering relocating some of their London-based activities

People familiar with Bank of America, Citigroup and Morgan Stanley say they have considered Ireland a favourable location for some of their European business if they need to move them out of the UK. Photograph: Bobby Yip/Reuters
People familiar with Bank of America, Citigroup and Morgan Stanley say they have considered Ireland a favourable location for some of their European business if they need to move them out of the UK. Photograph: Bobby Yip/Reuters

SAM FLEMING

Wall Street banks are drawing up preliminary plans to move some London-based activities to Ireland to address concerns that the UK is drifting apart from the EU.

People familiar with Bank of America, Citigroup and Morgan Stanley said that they considered Ireland a favourable location for some of their European business if they needed to move them out of the UK. One said he was already planning to move some activities to Ireland.

The people said their plans were in most cases still at very early stages. But they said the US banks had started preparing for the euro zone’s impending banking union that threatens to isolate Britain and, ultimately, for a possible UK exit from the EU.

READ MORE

“I’m frankly looking at moving some activities to Ireland,” said one senior UK-based manager at a Wall Street bank. “I think the Irish Central Bank and Government would welcome this. It is not so much Brexit, more about legal entity optimisation.”

Most US and Asian banks have chosen to base their main European operations in the UK, giving them an automatic passport to carry out their services across all 27 countries in the EU.

But senior US banking executives said the UK was unlikely to be granted the same “passporting” rights if it left the EU – the “Brexit” scenario.

Passported activities

Executives at American banks in

Europe

are reluctant to speak publicly about the issue for fear of upsetting the UK regulators. One said: “I don’t think people are making enough of it – a lot of passported activities that cannot take place in London will not exist here any more.”

As the European Central Bank prepares to take charge of the biggest banks in the euro zone later this year, there are fears among some executives at US banks that this will drive a wedge between the UK and the rest of Europe's financial system.

Britain is already challenging an ECB policy in the European Court of Justice that would force clearing houses handling euro-denominated transactions to decamp from London to the euro zone.

The UK hosts more than 250 foreign banks and last year it generated a financial services trade surplus of $71 billion, about a third of which came from trade with the EU, according to TheCityUK, a financial lobby group.

“Dublin is selling itself very hard at the moment,” said one banker. – (Copyright The Financial Times Ltd 2014)