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A building society is a financial institution, owned by its members, that offers banking and other financial services, especially mortgage lending.

The term building society first arose in the 19th century, in the United Kingdom, from working men\'s co-operative savings groups: by pooling savings, members could buy or build their own homes.

In the UK today building societies actively compete with banks for most "banking services" especially mortgage lending and deposit accounts. As of 2007 there are 60 building societies in the UK with total assets exceeding £305 billionBuilding Societies Association.

Contents

Origins

The original Building Society was formed in Birmingham in 1774. Most of the original societies were fully terminating, where they would be dissolved when all members had a house: the last of them was wound up in 1980. In the 1830s and 1840s a new development took place with the Permanent Building Society, where the society continued on a rolling basis, continually taking in new members as earlier ones completed purchases. The main legislative framework for the Building Society was the Building Society Act of 1874, with subsequent amending legislation in 1894, 1939 (see Coney Hall), and 1960.

In their heyday, there were hundreds of building societies: just about every town in the country had a building society named after that town. Over succeeding decades the number of societies has decreased, as various societies merged to form larger ones, often renaming in the process. Most of the existing larger building societies are the end result of the mergers of many smaller societies.

1980s and 1990s

In the 1980s, British banking laws were changed to allow building societies to offer banking services equivalent to normal banks. The management of a number of societies still felt that they were unable to compete with the banks, and a new Building Society Act was passed in response to their concerns. This permitted societies to \'demutualise\'. If more than 75% of members voted in favour, the building society would then become a limited company like any other. Members\' mutual rights were exchanged for shares in this new company. A number of the larger societies made such proposals to their members and all were accepted. Some became independent companies quoted on the London Stock Exchange, others were acquired by larger financial groups.

A movement arose whereby investors would open a savings account with a mutual building society, thereby getting voting rights in the society, and pressurise for a vote on demutualisation, with the intent of getting a windfall payment as a result. A number of societies\' members and managers were very unhappy about such investors, who were termed carpetbaggers, maintaining that as mutual societies, they could supply better and cheaper home loans than the banks and demutualised societies, as they only had to make a profit to cover their operational costs, and had no need to generate an additional profit to return to shareholders.

In the end, after a number of large demutualisations, and pressure from carpetbaggers moving from one building society to another to cream off the windfalls, most of the remaining societies modified their rules of membership in the late 1990s. The method usually adopted were membership rules to ensure that anyone newly joining a society would, for the first few years, be unable to get any profit out of a demutualisation. With the chance of a quick profit removed, the demutualisations have slowed considerably, as of December 2001.

One academic study (Heffernan 2003) found that demutualised societies\' pricing behaviour on deposits and mortgages was more favourable to shareholders than to customers, with the remaining mutual building societies offering consistently better rates. Shelagh Heffernan. The Effect of UK Building Society Conversion on Pricing Behaviour (March 2003) (pdf). Faculty of Finance, CASS Business School, City of London. Retrieved on 2007-10-10.

List of building societies in the United Kingdom that have demutualised

The following is an incomplete list of building societies in the United Kingdom that have since demutualised and hence become banksBuilding Society Takeovers and Flotations Building Societies Association website (Retrieved 5 April 2007). It is shown in order of demutualisation. Some of these institutions have since been taken over by larger financial services companies.

Building SocietyDateDetailsCurrent position
Abbey National 1989 Converted to PLC now known as "Abbey", a subsidiary of Banco Santander
Cheltenham and Gloucester 1994 takeover by
Lloyds Bank
Now part of Lloyds TSB
National & Provincial Building Society 1995 takeover by
Abbey National
Business merged into Abbey National, name no longer used
Alliance & Leicester 1997 Converted to PLC Remains independent
Bristol and West 1997 takeover by the
Bank of Ireland
Remains a division of Bank of Ireland but its savings balances and
branch network were transferred to the Britannia Building Society in 2005
*Halifax 1997 Converted to PLC Merged with Bank of Scotland in 1999, now part of HBOS
Northern Rock 1997 Converted to PLC Nationalised in February 2008
The Woolwich 1997 Converted to PLC Now part of Barclays plc
Birmingham Midshires 1999 takeover by the Halifax Now part of HBOS
Bradford & Bingley 2000 Converted to PLC Remains independent

List of building societies in the United Kingdom that no longer exist

Main article: List of former building societies

The following is an incomplete list of building societies in the United Kingdom that no longer exist, since they either merged with or were taken over by other building societies Building Society Mergers and Conversions since 1980 Building Societies Association website (Retrieved 5 April 2007).

*Abbey Road Building Society and
National Building Society
merged to form the Abbey National Building Society in 1944
*Bingley Permanent Building Society and
Bradford Equitable Building Society
merged to form the Bradford & Bingley Building Society in 1964
*Co-operative Permanent Building Society changed its name to Nationwide Building Society in 1970
*Huddersfield & Bradford Building Society and
West Yorkshire Building Society
merged to form Yorkshire Building Society in 1982
*Burnley Building Society and
Provincial Building Society
merged to form the National & Provincial Building Society in 1984
*Alliance Building Society and
Leicester Building Society
merged to form the Alliance & Leicester Building Society in 1985
*Birmingham & Bridgwater Building Society and
Midshires Building Society
merged to form the Birmingham Midshires Building Society in 1986
*Anglia Building Society and
Nationwide Building Society
merged to form
which reverted to the
Nationwide Anglia Building Society
Nationwide Building Society
in 1987
in 1991
*Heart of England Building Society merged with the Cheltenham & Gloucester Building Society in 1993
*Leeds Permanent Building Society merged with the Halifax Building Society in 1995
*Staffordshire Building Society merged with the Portman Building Society in 2003
*Lambeth Building Society merged with the Portman Building Society in 2006
*Mercantile Building Society merged with the Leeds Building Society in 2006
*Universal Building Society merged with the Newcastle Building Society in 2006
*Portman Building Society merged with the Nationwide Building Society in 2007

Remaining building societies in the United Kingdom

The remaining building societies are:

(Total group assets of building societies, as of January 2007.) Source: Building Societies Association

Building societies
Name Asset share Name Asset share
1 Nationwide Building Society £150,586m 31 Melton Mowbray Building Society* £385m
2 Britannia Building Society £32,431m 32 Market Harborough Building Society £380m
3 Yorkshire Building Society £16,298m 33 Barnsley Building Society* £346m
4 Coventry Building Society* £11,090m 34 Marsden Building Society £343m
5 Chelsea Building Society £9,656m 35 Hanley Economic Building Society £322m
6 Skipton Building Society £9,156m 36 Ipswich Building Society* £321m
7 West Bromwich Building Society £7,208m 37 Tipton & Coseley Building Society £287m
8 Leeds Building Society £7,065m 38 Teachers\' Building Society £240m
9 Derbyshire Building Society £5,097m 39 Loughborough Building Society* £239m
10 Cheshire Building Society £4,678m 40 Mansfield Building Society* £229m
11 Principality Building Society £4,384m 41 Dudley Building Society £228m
12 Newcastle Building Society £3,863m 42 Vernon Building Society £217m
13 Norwich & Peterborough Building Society £3,403m 43 Scottish Building Society £211m
14 Stroud & Swindon Building Society £2,514m 44 Chesham Building Society* £196m
15 Nottingham Building Society £2,428m 45 Bath Investment & Building Society £157m
16 Dunfermline Building Society £2,318m 46 Chorley & District Building Society* £147m
17 Scarborough Building Society £1,733m 47 Holmesdale Building Society* £142m
18 Kent Reliance Building Society £1,619m 48 Buckinghamshire Building Society £135m
19 Progressive Building Society* £1,248m 49 Stafford Railway Building Society* £132m
20 Cumberland Building Society £1,185m 50 Harpenden Building Society * £126m
21 National Counties Building Society £956m 51 Beverley Building Society £117m
22 Furness Building Society £770m 52 Swansea Building Society* £95m
23 Cambridge Building Society £751m 53 Earl Shilton Building Society* £88m
24 Saffron Building Society £662m 54 Shepshed Building Society £79m
25 Leek United Building Society £661m 55 Penrith Building Society* £74m
26 Hinckley & Rugby Building Society £649m 56 Ecology Building Society* £63m
27 Manchester Building Society £565m 57 Catholic Building Society * £38m
28 Newbury Building Society £565m 58 City of Derry Building Society* £28m
29 Darlington Building Society £548m 59 Century Building Society* £22m
30 Monmouthshire Building Society £485m

* These societies do not form part of a corporate business group, although they may own other businesses.

Other countries

  • Australia: In Australia, building societies evolved along British lines. Because of strict regulations on banks, building societies flourished until the deregulation of the Australian financial industry in the 1980s. Eventually many of the smaller building societies disappeared, while some of the largest (such as St. George) officially attained the status of banks.

References

Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopædia Britannica article Building Societies.

See also

External links


This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from Wikipedia


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