Company:Adam and Company

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Adam and Company
TypeTrading division
IndustryFinance and Insurance
Founded1983
HeadquartersEdinburgh, Scotland, United Kingdom
ProductsFinancial Services
Number of employees
c 100
ParentRoyal Bank of Scotland
Websitewww.adambank.com

Adam and Company is a trading division of The Royal Bank of Scotland plc catering for the needs of private bank customers based in the United Kingdom . It offers a range of private banking services including discretionary investment management and financial planning services to high net worth clients in the UK.

The bank was founded in Edinburgh in 1983 by a group of Scottish business people including Iain Noble and Charles Fraser[1].[2] Edinburgh is often referred as the birthplace of Scottish Enlightenment, and one of the leading lights of that era, Adam Smith, published ‘An inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations’ in 1776 which revolutionised economic theory. Adam & Company was named after this leading figure of the time.

The bank's principal office is located at 25 Saint Andrew Square in Edinburgh and they have three further offices.

History

The bank was founded in 1983, opening its first branch in Charlotte Square, Edinburgh, Scotland on 29 May 1984. In 1986, Adam and Company acquired London-based Continental Trust (London) Limited; and later established an international arm in Guernsey. Branches in Glasgow, Manchester and Aberdeen were also opened between 1987 and 2005.

In 1993, following substantial foreign-exchange related losses, Adam and Company was acquired by the Royal Bank of Scotland who provided the capital needed to rebuild the Bank's weakened balance sheet.[2] After the Royal Bank of Scotland acquired NatWest in 2000, restructuring of the group saw Adam and Company placed in the Bank's Wealth Management Services Division, alongside rival Coutts, the largest private bank in the UK.

In 2002, Adam and Company acquired Stewart Ivory Wealth Management.

During the years until 2012, Adam & Company established a place as a major force in niche private banking and became the bank of choice for the elite of industry, politics and family wealth in Scotland.[citation needed] In 2012, Adam & Company became the first UK bank to implement the Avaloq investment and banking platform which paved the way for integration with Coutts and a range of efficiency savings leading to job losses for almost half of the workforce.

In late 2011 the company moved its registered office to a newly refurbished Georgian townhouse at 25 Saint Andrew Square where it remains today. The facility is said to enjoy an enviable art collection, fine furnishings and exclusive private dining facilities where client entertaining takes place.

In 2014 and as part of a wider and more radical shake-up to the divisional structure of parent RBS, Adam & Company, under the leadership of RBS Group Exec Graham Storrie, was made a subsidiary of Coutts and consolidated into the Commercial and Private Banking division of RBS, under divisional CEO Alison Rose.

In early 2018, The Royal Bank of Scotland Group announced its plans for restructuring to comply with new UK-wide rules on ring-fencing retail banking operations from investment banking operations. As part of this restructuring, all retail banking assets of the existing Royal Bank of Scotland plc will be transferred to Adam and Company plc which will be renamed as Royal Bank of Scotland plc in the process. Adam and Company will continue as an RBS private banking brand in Scotland, along the same lines as the Drummonds and Child & Co businesses in England.[3]

Office locations

Adam and Company has four offices in Edinburgh (HO), Glasgow, Aberdeen and London. The Adam International business in Guernsey closed its doors in 2012. An office in Manchester closed in 2014 after some 15 years of operations.

See also

There are three other private banking brands within the Royal Bank of Scotland Group

Both Child & Co and Drummonds ceased operating as banks soon after acquisition by RBS but remain as brands operating on the main PRA licence of RBS where customers enjoy privileged services such as relationship management and discounts on standard retail banking products but where FSCS protection for deposits and other regulatory matters are not distinct from those relating to high street banking customers of RBS.

References

External links