I visited Halifax on Wednesday shopping for an account for a business. Halifax were the least helpful - they could submit information for Lloyds to call us back (and as yet they have not).
DVB Cornwall wrote:Post Project Verde ... the forced disposal of the 'TSB' brand, Lloyds will be a brand throughout the UK. Halifax will remain in England and Wales, and Bank of Scotland will remain North of the border. There might be a couple of BoS branches exceptionally in London though, mainly for Political reasons.
Halifax and BoS are relatively strong brands in their respective territories.
As far as I can tell, Lloyds/HBOS have already closed down BoS in England and Wales, certainly the only branches I know of closed in January 2011 and a search on their branch finder returns nothing for 'London'.
scottishtv wrote:This is getting a bit confusing then.
I don't really know why I care so much, but I'm wondering if customers will still be able to service Halifax accounts in BoS branches? or will they be moved onto BoS products? Won't it be odd for a Scottish customer who has a Halifax current account to have to service it at via a fully BoS-branded branch network.
Also, if they do keep Halifax elsewhere in the UK, it would be a bit weird.
You'll have in Scotland:
TSB (Co-Op), Bank of Scotland (Lloyds product range)
Elsewhere:
TSB (Co-op), Lloyds (Lloyds product range), Halifax (Lloyds Banking Group, but off doing it's own thing?)
It's more complicated than that. For an indefinite period TSB (under the Co-operative's ownership) will continue to run the Lloyds TSB system. Lloyds Banking Group have 2 infrastructures, their own and HBOS'. By the sounds of things, Halifax and BOS are going to be moved to the Lloyds TSB system also!
What would make sense from (where I'm sitting) is for Lloyds Banking Group to move all the non-TSB Lloyds customers, staff and branches over to HBOS infrastructure (which I believe is relatively modern), then sell the Lloyds TSB network (sans Lloyds customers) whole for the Co-op to deal with. Of course, that would mean Lloyds wouldn't get what I imagine will be a proposterous sum of money indefinitely.