Co-op will float to fill £1.5bn hole

The Co-operative Bank is going public in order to stave off nationalisation and plug a £1.5bn capital shortfall.

Britain's biggest mutual bank, the Co-operative, is going public. In order to stave off nationalisation and plug a £1.5bn capital shortfall, the Co-op Bank will float around a quarter of its shares on the stock exchange. It will also ask its bondholders, including private investors, to take a 'haircut' likely to total around 30% in return for new shares. The Co-op Bank has been sunk by its takeover of the Britannia Building Society in 2009, which left it with huge losses on property and commercial loans.

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