@ebel @stefanieschulte @mattcropp
I think it was the building societies that demutualised. This was sold to the customers on the claim there was quicker access to money (cheque clearing times went from 10 to 3 days), access to ATMs via magnetic strip cards instead of passbooks etc..

@vfrmedia @ebel @mattcropp This is the story of the UK building societies, to my knowledge: https://www.thenews.coop/85589/sector/big-bang-demutualisation-building-societies-failed/

"Demutualisation was an undoubted failure, as the shareholder owned mortgage banks that resulted all failed."

@mattcropp @ebel @vfrmedia
Furthermore...

"Sensing the opportunity, speculative investors, dubbed ‘carpet-baggers’ opened accounts so they could vote for demutualisation and share the spoils."

https://www.thenews.coop/85589/sector/big-bang-demutualisation-building-societies-failed/

(The term "carpet-bagging" as such is kind of controversial, though, as I learned on Twitter, because of its history in the US.)

@stefanieschulte @mattcropp @ebel I remember this starting around era of a short term boom in UK economy and easier credit for all. To be fair it did seem UK was doing well internationallly but in hindsight much of the money seems to clearly have come from this madness + (over)valuations of UK's service/"creative" industries whilst neglecting manufacturing,engineering and agriculture..
@stefanieschulte @mattcropp @ebel
my old town (Reading, just 50km West of London) has suffered loads from this, now the finance companies have heavily downsized there are empty offices everywhere, rising crime/drugs problems due to lack of entry level jobs and even high schools closing for lack of funding (where I live now isn't so bad as there are many farms and two active ports)