Unlock the Editor’s Digest without spending a dime
Roula Khalaf, Editor of the FT, selects her favorite tales on this weekly publication.
The UK authorities has bought the final of its stake in NatWest, returning the financial institution totally to non-public arms 17 years after its £46bn bailout on the peak of the monetary disaster.
The ultimate sale by the federal government, which took an 84 per cent stake in what was then the Royal Financial institution of Scotland by two rescue financings in 2008 and 2009, got here as NatWest’s shares this month returned above the bailout value for the primary time since 2011.
The federal government had accelerated its selldown of NatWest shares in current months. Its stake fell under 1 per cent earlier this month, down from 38 per cent in December 2023.
The taxpayer rescue of RBS was one of many world’s largest bailouts and a defining second of the monetary disaster within the UK, putting a heavy burden on the general public purse and fuelling resentment in opposition to bankers.
The Treasury has obtained £35bn by share gross sales, dividends and costs — £10.5bn lower than it paid to rescue the financial institution, having accepted over the previous decade that it could by no means recuperate the total price.
“Almost 20 years in the past, the then authorities stepped in to guard hundreds of thousands of savers and companies from the results of the collapse of RBS,” stated UK chancellor Rachel Reeves. “That was the best resolution then to safe the financial system, and NatWest’s return to non-public possession turns the web page on a major chapter on this nation’s historical past.”
NatWest chair Rick Haythornthwaite stated the financial institution was “deeply grateful to the federal government — and to UK taxpayers — for his or her intervention and help”.
“At a time of worldwide disaster, this intervention stabilised our banking system and, by extension, our financial system; defending hundreds of thousands of savers, owners and companies,” he added.
RBS, which was renamed NatWest in 2020, collapsed a 12 months after it purchased Dutch financial institution ABN Amro in a £49bn deal that saddled the lender with poisonous, mortgage-backed securities.
The dimensions of the disaster and the next authorities possession necessitated an overhaul of the financial institution’s technique, shrinking RBS from the most important financial institution on the earth by property to a home lender.
Nearly all the financial institution’s complete earnings was generated within the UK in 2024, in contrast with 62 per cent in 2007.
The UK authorities was a lot faster to return rival Lloyds Banking Group to non-public arms after its £20.3bn crisis-era rescue.
Not like with NatWest, this reprivatisation generated a return for taxpayers. The federal government totally exited Lloyds in 2017, having recouped all its bailout prices in addition to an extra £900mn.
Though NatWest returned to profitability in 2017 and restored its dividend the next 12 months, the federal government has waited till now to totally exit the financial institution due to a mix of political uncertainty and a protracted interval of very low rates of interest that held again European financial institution share costs.
NatWest shares have climbed virtually 70 per cent prior to now 12 months, as larger rates of interest restored European banking shares to favour with traders.
The Treasury briefly halted its selldown due to market turmoil after US President Donald Trump’s tariff bulletins, in keeping with folks aware of the main points, when the financial institution’s share value fell under the minimal value at which the federal government was prepared to promote.
The federal government’s exit may pave the best way for NatWest to undertake a extra aggressive technique as a result of the financial institution will have the ability to spend surplus money extra imaginatively than by shopping for again shares from the federal government.
Paul Thwaite, the chief govt who has run the financial institution since 2023, has signalled his want to make acquisitions. The Monetary Instances has beforehand reported that Santander rejected an £11bn bid from NatWest for its UK retail financial institution earlier this 12 months.