Nationwide's £2.9bn expansion exposes mutual governance flaw
A failed board challenge at Britain's largest building society highlights how outdated mutual rules fail to keep pace with its rapid expansion.
James Sherwin-Smith secured just 12% of the vote in his bid to become the first member-nominated director at Nationwide in almost 25 years. The result handed a comfortable victory to the building society's board, which secured over 95% on all other resolutions, including an advisory vote on executive pay.
The modest rebellion masks a deeper structural tension within Europe's financial sector regarding how large mutuals are governed. Nationwide is undeniably successful, boasting customer satisfaction scores that outstrip traditional shareholder-owned banks. However, its sheer size and recent acquisition strategy are colliding with an outdated regulatory framework.
This mismatch was highlighted by the £2.9bn takeover of Virgin Money in 2024, a deal that expanded Nationwide's balance sheet by a third. Under the 1986 Building Societies Act and takeover code rules, members were denied a vote on the transaction. For a continent where cooperative and mutual banks play a vital role in regional financing, Nationwide's trajectory raises a systemic question: if a mutual is executing multibillion-pound takeovers, the legal owners must have a genuine mechanism to approve or block such strategic risks.
Executive compensation compounds this accountability gap. Chief executive Debbie Crosbie received £4.7m. While below the payouts at Lloyds or NatWest, the figure is substantial. Yet Nationwide continues to issue only non-binding advisory votes on pay, relying on what critics see as outdated legalistic rules rather than showing the leadership it claims in its advertising.
Turnout at the annual meeting was just 600,000 out of 19 million eligible members. The society uses a "quick vote" system that lets members back the entire board slate with a single click, a mechanism that sends a "trust us" message from the boardroom that is at odds with the mutual ethos of ownership.
The building society does not need a radical overhaul, and tighter financial regulations make it harder for member-nominated candidates to gain traction. However, incoming chair Mike Rogers, formerly of Experian and Admiral, takes over amid heightened political scrutiny of mutual governance. At a minimum, securing binding votes on takeovers and executive pay would align Nationwide's operations with the realities of its newly expanded scale.