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Carney: bankers should focus on clients, not Ferraris
Markets
by Sarah Miloudi on Feb 26, 2013 at 08:15
Incoming Bank of England governor Mark Carney has said financiers should focus on their clients and not the trimmings of a luxury lifestyle.
In a speech at Western University in Canada's London, Carney (pictured) said bankers should see themselves as 'custodians' of their institutions, focusing on how to improve them and the way to best serve their clients.
Carney, who is due to take over from Mervyn King as governor of the Bank of England this summer, made the comments at a time when banks are increasingly under pressure and facing criticism from the public and politicians.
The libor rigging scandal still hangs over Barclays - despite its 26% rise in adjusted pre-tax profit for the last year - and state-backed Royal Bank of Scotland is on Thursday expected to announce sweeping cuts to its bonus pool and investment banking division to appease to angry investors over its role in the scandal.
To buck up their ideas, Carney said: 'Bankers need to see themselves as custodians of their institutions, improving them before passing them along to their successors.'
He added: 'It has been said that "trust arrives on foot, but leaves in a Ferrari".'
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