LawDebenture

The challenge 

When Bank of Baroda, one of India's largest nationalised banks, decided to exit the UK retail market and close all its branches, it faced a problem familiar to any institution undergoing wind-down: customers who hadn't reclaimed their funds. 

The complexity was significant. Among the unclaimed accounts were customers who: 

  • Had emigrated and lost touch with their UK banking 

  • Were elderly and not digitally savvy 

  • Had inherited accounts from deceased relatives 

  • Simply ignored closure communications 

The solution 

LawDeb was engaged to navigate the regulatory and operational complexity of winding down a retail bank while protecting thousands of customers' interests. 

Multi-stakeholder engagement 

Over three years, LawDeb worked with: 

  • The Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) and Prudential Regulation Authority (PRA) 

  • Three separate law firms 

  • Lloyds Bank (as receiving institution) 

  • Bank of Baroda's internal legal, compliance, IT, and marketing teams 

Innovative trust structure 

The solution centred on establishing a bare trust to hold unclaimed funds, ensuring: 

  • Full Financial Services Compensation Scheme (FSCS) protection for each customer 

  • Regulatory compliance with FCA consumer protection standards 

  • A clear, accessible reclaim process 

Customer-first technology 

Working with a digital identify provider LawDeb designed a streamlined Know Your Customer (KYC) verification process, making it simple for customers to prove their identity and reclaim funds, regardless of their technical sophistication. 

The outcome 

After extensive FCA review, with regulators scrutinising every detail of customer protection, the wind-down was approved. Bank of Baroda successfully exited the UK market. 

Today, customers are beginning to reclaim their funds through the simplified process. The trust structure ensures their money remains protected and accessible for 12 years, while the tech integration removes traditional barriers to recovery. 

Key takeaways 

This case demonstrates that successful bank wind-downs require: 

  1. Patient, multi-year stakeholder management across regulators, financial institutions, and service providers 

  1. Creative structural solutions that balance regulatory requirements with customer accessibility 

  1. Technology-enabled simplicity to serve diverse customer demographics 

  1. Rigorous customer protection that withstands extensive regulatory scrutiny 

LawDeb's experience with the Bank of Baroda wind-down represents a replicable framework for financial institutions facing similar exits from UK markets, transforming a potentially chaotic process into a structured, compliant transition that puts customers first. 

To find out more do reach out to jessica.dennis@lawdeb.com 

The latest from LawDeb