EXCLUSIVE by DOUGLAS SHEPHERD
Local authorities with high-risk LOBO loans are being urged to reschedule their debts to save billions of pounds in interest charges amid calls for a sweeping inquiry into treasury management within the public sector which saw 240 councils signing up for the controversial funding system.
Scottish Borders Council was among those authorities which brokered loans from a number of banks in the early years of the Twenty-first Century. In some cases the LOBO arrangements can run for up to 70 years before the debt is paid off.
A profile of the Borders situation is included on a new national database assembled by the action group Research for Action which is campaigning for councils to exit their high interest LOBO agreements and source money instead from the UK Government's Public Works Loans Board (PWLB).
LOBO is a long-term loan, typically 40-70 years. The acronym stands for “Lender Option Borrower Option”. The lender’s (bank’s) option is to change the interest rate at pre-agreed call dates (e.g. once or twice a year). The borrower (the council) can then repay the loan in full or agree to the new interest rate. The borrower can only use their option when the lender uses theirs. Should the council want to exit the loan on any other occasion they will have to pay breakage fees at the discretion of the bank.He added: "A root and branch inquiry of council treasury
management practice is required, to understand why borrowing and investment in
the public interest appears to be the
exception, not the rule".
Ludovica Rogers, database project lead, said: "Our new database
is the first comprehensive, publicly-accessible depository of information about
LOBO loans. We hope it will enable more UK councils to exit the loans,
restoring public accountability and reclaiming public money for much-needed
local services."
The research shows that 95% of outstanding LOBO debt is now
owed to European Banks, with councils projected to pay at least £14bn in
interest payments until the loans end.
Here are the details of SBC's existing LOBO loans as they appear on the Research for Action website:
NOTE: The table shows the name of each bank, the sum borrowed, the year the money was drawn down, the number of years left on the loan, the current interest rate, the annual interest payments and the estimated remaining interest to be paid.
Barclays £6 million 2005 44 4.4% £264,000 £11,616,000
Commerz £2 million 2007 16 4.99% £99,800 £1,596,000
Dexia £5 million 2005 44 3.75% £187,500 £8,250,000
Dexia £5 million 2005 45 3.8% £190,000 £8,550,000
Dexia £5 million 2005 45 3.82% £191,000 £8,595,000
Dexia £3 million 2004 33 4.5% £135,000 £4,455,000
Dexia £3 million 2004 33 4.5% £135,000 £4,455,000
Dexia £3 million 2004 33 4.5% £135,000 £4,455,000
Erste £3 million 2006 45 4.938% £148,140 £6,666,300
TOTALS £35 million £1,485,440 £58,639,100
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