UK banks’ £14.6bn legal costs account for over half of FTSE 100 litigation liabilities

In the post-Lehman landscape, banking and litigation have become common bedfellows, and research published by Thomson Reuters this week shows that the UK’s four biggest banks’ litigation and regulatory provisions make up over half of the FTSE 100’s litigation costs.

The research showed that overall the FTSE 100 set aside £26.2bn during 2016 to tackle litigation and regulatory investigation expenses (including fines), with £14.6bn of that figure being spent exclusively by the four biggest banks in the UK: Barclays, HSBC, Lloyds Banking Group and Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS). However this is down on 2015, when FTSE 100 litigation provisions hit a record £31.1bn, with money set aside by banks also hitting a record £17.3bn.

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