Banking Overview
How much do you know about your bank? Do you know what type of businesses it lends to?
Does it refuse to lend to companies with poor human rights records, that sell arms or pollute the environment, for example? Does your bank offer services to those on low incomes or the unemployed? And how many women sit on its board?
Such questions often go unasked of the banking sector. But the same caring principles that make you buy Fairtrade goods and recycle household waste can be applied to how you bank too.
Key green and ethical issues to consider
Finding a green or ethical banking option
How banks use your money
The money that you deposit in your current or savings account doesn't just sit there untouched until you require it again - your bank lends it on to others at interest.
Banks don't just lend money to current account-holding customers either, they lend to large corporations, public institutions and even governments.
As many banks are listed on the stock exchange, they are answerable to external shareholders who expect healthy returns on their investments.
While the Treasury hands down some prohibitions as to who banks can and can't do business with, it still leaves them relatively free to engage with companies that you might not approve of and they use your money to do it.
Would you approve if your bank was lending money to heavy polluting industries or even to an oppressive regime?
Key green and ethical issues to consider
Responsible Lending
The recent global economic downturn is often attributed to the 'sub prime crisis'.
Sub prime lending means giving loans to people who are considered to be in higher risk categories - those more likely to default or who have a poor credit history, for example.
This type of lending is not problematic in itself - credit unions and community development finance institutions regularly lend to sub prime candidates. Instead, irresponsible lending to customers in the sub prime category is the problem.
In the build up to the 'crunch' some financial institutions were lending 100% mortgages (and in some cases more) to people who would not be able to make their repayments in the long term.
Lending responsibly shouldn't be limited to just mortgages - it applies to all loans, big and small, and to the provision of credit cards too. Figures from the Bank of England show that UK residents owe £233bn on credit cards, overdrafts and other loans.
Key questions to ask: Does your bank have responsible lending policies that ensure that its products are targeted in an appropriate manner? And does it provide advice or debt management services to customers who fall into financial difficulty?
Climate Change and the Environment
Banks have an impact in these areas, not just in terms of who they lend to or invest in, but how they run their own operations. It is important to find out what your bank is doing to improve its environmental performance as a business: have they pledged to go carbon neutral for example? Or do they offer any green products to their customers?
Financial Exclusion
There are an estimated two million people in the UK without even the most basic bank account. Is your bank doing anything to address this situation?
For more details see our Financial Exclusion section.
Project Finance
In its most basic form, this type of financing is for companies and governments where lenders are repaid through the revenues generated, i.e. the lender has a vested interest in the success of a project.
Common projects receiving finance are petrochemical and chemical plants, power plants, telecommunications and infrastructure. But do lenders ensure that these projects are conducted in a green or ethical way?
Use our search facility to find out about your bank's policy on the environment, ethical lending, responsibility towards its customers, equal opportunities and other issues.
Finding a green or ethical banking option
Building Societies and Credit Unions
Mutual building societies and credit unions are generally smaller, customer-owned operations that primarily lend to individuals and so are less likely to have the same exposure to issues like the arms trade, for example.
Green and Ethical Alternatives
There are a number of banks and building societies with prominent green and ethical credentials. The four examples listed below also scored the highest marks on ethical lending in our research:
- Co-operative Bank: this bank's robust green and ethical policies govern its current accounts, savings and investment products.
- Smile: this internet arm of the Co-operative Bank shares the parent company's ethical policy.
- Triodos Bank: this bank offers green and ethical savings accounts and investments. The bank was established in 1980 in the Netherlands and now has significant operations in the UK.
- Ecology Building Society: this mutual building society offers a range of green savings accounts and mortgage options.
You can use the banking section search to find the banks that perform best against our green and ethical criteria.
Your next steps
What do you do now? Check out our guide Next Steps - Banking for information on how to give your bank account a green and ethical makeover.
Banking Search
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Bank / Building Society Profile
Coventry Building Society
Green/Ethical Products
None
Ethical Lending or Insurance
As a mutual building society the bulk of Coventry’s business is with private individuals. It does not undertake any commercial lending.
Responsible Lending
1. Credit Lending
Coventry Building Society offers an LTV (loan-to-value) rate of up to LTV up to 95% (for 6.99% fixed rate mortgage). This does not compare favourably with the suggestions made in the FSA’s Turner Review that a maximum of 90% of a property’s price be loaned i.e. that borrowers should have at least a 10% deposit for a mortgage.
The building society offers LTI (loan-to-income) rates of 3.6 and 4 depending on the customer's income range. The Turner Review suggests lending 3.5 times the annual wage of a single mortgage applicant.
The building society does not offer unsecured credit, for example personal loans.
2. Debt Warning
The building society issues a generic repossession warning: ‘Your home may be repossessed if you do not keep up repayments on your mortgage.’
The building society does not use the FSA Debt Test. This test is designed to help customers find out whether they have, or are likely to have, problems with borrowing. It also has tips on what to do if customers find themselves in difficulties.
Coventry does offer a bugdet planning facility but no warnings are attached to its results.
3. Debt Management and Advice
With regard to policies on payment default and handling payment problems, Coventry Building Society, says it will:
- Talk to an external agency which gives debt advice (for example, the Citizens Advice Bureau) if requested
- Give the customer ‘reasonable time’ to pay back the debt
- Try to arrange a new payment plan taking the customer’s and the building society’s interests into account
- Change the way the customer makes payments or the date they make them
- Allow the customer to pay back their mortgage over a longer period of time, thus reducing monthly payments
- Change the type of mortgage the customer has
- Agree to let the customer stay in the property and sell it themselves
- Send a debt counsellor to discuss the customer’s financial circumstances, and add the cost of the visit to the mortgage account
The building society also outlines the steps leading up to repossession of property/court action.
Payment holidays are available for up to three months, but the circumstances under which they are granted is not made explicit.
No information was found as to whether the bank offers re-housing advice or liaises with organisations such as Shelter and the Citizens Advice Bureau to work out re-housing arrangements with mortgage customers facing re-possession.
Financial Exclusion
Coventry BS does not offer any products to the financially excluded.
While it states that it does not have formal access schemes, it tends to have bilingual staff in areas with high concentrations of speakers of other languages.
Because it does not lend commercially, Coventry is not involved in either microfinance or community lending or investment.
Environment
No set policy was found, however Coventry states that its head office has been using ‘green’ electricity since April 2007 and working with the Carbon Trust to become more energy efficient.
Carbon Neutral
No evidence was found of a pledge to make business operations carbon neutral.
Equal Opportunities
The building society’s equal opportunities policy does not address the key issue of sexuality/sexual orientation.
Women on the Board
2007 figures indicate that 27.3% of the board were women.
Voluntary Standards & Initiatives
Coventry is not a signatory of any relevant charters or initiatives, primarily because it does not lend commercially.
Charitable Giving
Coventry donated 0.16% of its pre-tax profits in 2007.
Coventry Building Society
- Current Accounts
- Savings
- Loans
- Mortgages
- Pensions
- Insurance (Home, Contents, Life and Critical Illness, Mortgage and Income)
Coventry Building Society
Coventry Building Society
PO Box 9
High Street
Coventry
CV1 5QN












