Strategy
ABN Amro Shuts Down More Indian Businesses

ABN Amro Bank has announced the imminent shutdown of its
personal loan and credit card operations in India, as the bank
realigns its focus onto retail deposits, wealth management, and
corporate banking, a report by Live Mint reveals.
Employees working under the two departments are being asked to
resign, the news service said, citing people close to the matter.
The consumer banking team reportedly had around 2850 staff at the
start of the fiscal year and at least 500 have left since
then.
An unnamed executive at the bank had told the publication that
ABN intends to shrink the book size of its consumer finance
division from Rs1200 crore to just around Rs190 crore ($40.98
million). The bank's Indian businesses had suffered a 93 per cent
drop in earnings in the year to 31 March 2009 due to a slowing
economy and has consistently seen profit declines in the past
months.
"We continue to maintain our service for existing card and loan
customers and remain focused on the branch banking and wealth
management businesses in the retail arm of the bank," a
spokesperson for the
Royal Bank of Scotland was quoted as having said.
RBS had taken over ABN's Indian units in 2007 as part of its
global acquisition strategy and has since then been selling off
the latter's non-core businesses to raise funds. "RBS is in
ongoing discussions for the remaining retail and SME assets it
has decided to sell in Asia and we will not be making any further
comment at this stage," the spokesperson said.