TSB’s troubled past, notably its catastrophic 2018 IT meltdown, casts a shadow over its impending acquisition by Santander for £2.65 billion. While the deal promises a new chapter, it prompts reflections on TSB’s efforts to repair its reputation and the challenges Santander may inherit.
The sale by TSB’s current owner, Sabadell, is driven by an intense corporate battle in Spain, where Sabadell is attempting to fend off an €11 billion (£9.4 billion) hostile takeover bid from rival BBVA. Selling TSB is a strategic defensive move to strengthen Sabadell’s financial position against this aggressive approach.
This would be the third major ownership change for TSB in just over 12 years, a period marked by significant upheaval. Its history includes being spun off from Lloyds after the 2008 financial crisis, a brief period as a publicly traded company, and then its acquisition by Sabadell in 2015, which followed its own attempt to sell TSB in 2020 after the IT fiasco.
While Santander’s executive chair, Ana Botín, expressed confidence in the acquisition’s strategic and financial merits, the integration process raises concerns for TSB’s staff and customers. The potential for job cuts, branch closures, and the uncertain future of the TSB brand add layers of complexity to this significant banking merger.