RBS to unveil up to $37 billion of losses: report
RBS will say it incurred about 7 billion pounds of losses in 2008 and that it is taking a goodwill writedown of between 15 billion and 20 billion pounds, The Daily Telegraph reported, calling it the "biggest loss in UK history."
RBS declined to comment on the report.
Britain is set to throw its banks another multi-billion pound lifeline on Monday by allowing them to insure against steep losses and guaranteeing their debt to stop the credit crunch pushing the economy into a deep slump.
The British government will swap up to 5 billion pounds of preference shares in Royal Bank of Scotland for ordinary shares, increasing its stake in the British bank, a person familiar with the matter said on Sunday.
The move aims to remove pressure on RBS -- whose shares fell 13 percent on Friday -- to pay 12 percent annual interest on the preference shares.
The government owns 58 percent of RBS after buying 15 billion pounds of ordinary shares last November. The stake could rise to near 70 percent if all the preference shares are converted. RBS again declined to comment.
RBS, once Britain's second-biggest bank, was left short of capital as a result of hefty write-offs against debt-backed securities. The 2007 acquisition of parts of Dutch rival ABN AMRO put further strain on its capital reserves.
(Reporting by Adrian Croft; Editing by Kim Coghill)