An insulated boardroom is an ineffective boardroom

People did trust the financial services sector, but it broke that trust, several times over, and it is going to be a long road back.

“The level of ignorance seems staggering to the point of incredulity. Not only were you ignorant of what was going on, but you were out of your depth.”

Andrew Tyrie, MP, chairman of the Parliamentary Commission on Banking Standards (PCBS)

Last week senior executives of UBS testified before a British parliamentary panel about their part in the Libor-rigging scandal. What they said sent a discouraging signal that they, and others in the banking sector, are still operating as if they are out of touch and tone-deaf in a sound-proof room.

U.S. and British authorities have implicated UBS, Citibank, Deutsche Bank and Royal Bank of Scotland, among others, in fixing the Libor rate over several years. UK lawmakers, responding to a public outcry, set up the Parliamentary Commission on Banking Standards to look into the UK banking sector’s professional standards and culture; discover lessons to be learned about corporate governance, transparency and conflicts of interest; and clarify the implications for regulation and government policy.

Andrea Orcel, chief executive officer of UBS’s investment bank, told the committee that “the whole executive board and board are very focused at recovering the honor and the standing that the organization had in the past.” But that’s still putting the emphasis and focus on the wrong thing. What these institutions need to be thinking about is rebuilding trust and stability. Using phrases like “recovering the honor” sends the message that they are focused on themselves and not on the effect their actions have on those around them – their clients, the employees and the global financial system.

The global financial system has depended on “trust me” and “we’re the experts,” and an implication that the whole thing is too complicated for people outside the upper echelons of the financial services industry to understand. But now, with the Libor-rigging scandal, with JPMorgan’s London Whale and with the perceived collapse of the banking system and bank bailouts, the financial services industry has broken that trust. It has become clear that a lot of the people in the industry, – indeed, a lot of people sitting around the industry’s board tables ‑ don’t understand what is happening there, either.

It is time for financial executives to think about the changes they can make to earn back people’s trust and demonstrate that they are trustworthy and can bring stability back. A blueprint would look something like this:

Action: Enough talk. There have been plenty of mea culpas, including in last week’s PCBS hearing, and lots of talk about what the financial services industry should do and what it needs to do. UBS’s Orcel talked about the need to “reform the governance, incentive structure and the overall supervisory approach right across the global financial industry.” People have lost trust, and no one is going to believe it until they do it. The focus is now on results.

Governance: Bank boards and senior management need more people who understand what the banks are doing, understand what they need to be doing, are unafraid to ask hard questions and are able to take swift, strong action. Barclays has a new chairman and a new chief executive, and they have set out clear ideas about re-examining what happens around the board table. They are saying all the right things, but they’ll have to demonstrate that they can bring about real change.

Transparency: If banks are taking action and making changes, people need to see it happening. JPMorgan’s board voted this week to make public an internal review on the failures that led to the loss of more than $6.2 billion. That is a step in the right direction. Any time there is a question of openness, the default answer has to be “yes.”

Accountability and performance: It is earnings week for some of the biggest financial services firms. It’s being reported that Barclays and Deutsche Bank will cut investment banker pay up to 20 percent. Pay packages and bonuses need to reflect the down times as well as up. If they do not, people will know it is business as usual. Also, it was reported this week that Goldman Sachs toyed with the idea of delaying UK bonuses to take advantage of a fall in tax rates but decided against it. Even considering such a move rekindles mistrust and the feeling that banks are simply not getting the public mood.

***

Lastly, the public has a part to play in all this. It was taxpayer money that bailed out a number of these institutions around the world. We cannot be passive and hope that others will sort this out for us. We all need to be speaking up on this issue, asking the questions of the institutions that we have bailed out and holding lawmakers to account to ensure they continue to monitor the financial services industry.

People did trust the financial services sector, but it broke that trust, several times over, and it is going to be a long road back. The industry will need to prove it is willing to be action-oriented and bring about real change, have oversight that counts and be transparent and accountable. Most of all, they have to know that people are watching, and that the attention is not going away.

In this edition of "In the Boardroom with Lucy Marcus" I talk about trust and the financial sector. UBS says it's focusing on recovering its lost 'honor' after being fined $1.5bn over the Libor scandal. Banks need to make real and concrete changes to regain lost trust. Deeds speak louder than words.

This piece appeared in my Reuters column, where I write about boards, leadership, and ethics. The video is from the tv series I host for Reuters “In the Boardroom with Lucy Marcus”.

I look forward to hearing your thoughts here and on Twitter via @lucymarcus

Photo credit Christopher Michel

Arthur Williams

Blindside Solutions and Collaborative Discovery

11y

The part of the problem as I see it: inadequate oversight? These are all good comments but I think we all suffer from blindness to the elephant in the room, operations risk. What is the appropriate degree of risk for a business? Should risk level analysis be a portion of the strategy plan? Should the Board have direct oversight to sectors where new risks may be emerging? The popular guide line for directors when it comes to penetrating “operations” may be “Noses and toes in, fingers out”. That may not be adequate advice anymore, at least when the longer range strategy does not fit seamlessly with what is going on or being planned to happen in the business day to day. The financial community has talked about this for years and do perform assessments of Enterprise Risk Management. However, the ERM emphasis looks at risk with a financial view point for safeguards and financial procedures. With what has happened over the past few years, that is not adequate. ERM must be broader, more penetrating and done by experienced teams with extensive operations experience that can go from top to bottom in a business in a reasonable time. Operations procedures delve into operations, board communications, security, business planning, I.T., product development, client relationships, stockholder/investor relationship, external services and Boardroom strengths and weaknesses are several but not all of the sectors in risk discovery. I believe when there is a regular risk discovery sweep searching for embedded or increasing risks that business should not tolerate, everyone will have a chance to be trusted. They will earn it and eventually may be awarded the trust.

Board of Directors = dominant, narcissistic, overpowering, agressive chairman + a bunch of other people too afraid to speak = real issue! 11 giorni fa

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Chris Przybyszewski

US BIOLOGIC - Aspire. Innovate. Deliver.

11y

True: "Bank boards and senior management need more people who understand what the banks are doing, understand what they need to be doing, are unafraid to ask hard questions and are able to take swift, strong action."

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Caron Pittman

Sales Support & Accounts Admin & Marketing at Hygieneco Washrooms Ltd

11y

Lack of accountability... as always.

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