Government no longer majority owner of NatWeston March 28, 2022 at 8:02 am

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The Treasury sells £1.2bn of shares back to NatWest Group after it bailed out the bank in 2008.

NatWest bank branch

Image source, Getty Images

The government is no longer a majority shareholder in NatWest after it sold £1.2bn worth of shares in the banking group.

NatWest bought the shares at 220.5p each, their closing price on Friday, as part of an off-market purchase.

The government took a majority stake in the group, formerly known as Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS), after bailing it out for £45bn in the 2008 financial crisis.

NatWest boss Alison Rose called the share buyback an “important milestone”.

Following the sale of a chunk of its shares, government ownership in NatWest group is now at 48.1% – down from 50.6%.

Ms Rose said the deal would be a “good use of capital for the bank and our shareholders”.

“Reducing government ownership below 50% is an important milestone for NatWest Group and a further demonstration of the progress we are making as we continue to deliver for our customers and shareholders,” she added.

Alison Rose

Image source, Reuters

NatWest Group’s main banking brands are NatWest, Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS) and Coutts. It was renamed as NatWest Group in 2020 after more than 40 years under the RBS Group moniker.

The government has said previously it intends to sell £15bn worth of shares in the group by 2023. In this latest transaction, the Treasury authorised the sale of around 550 million shares.

John Glen, Economic Secretary to the Treasury, said the sale was an “important landmark in our plan to return the bank to the private sector”.

“We will continue to prioritise delivering value for money for the taxpayer as we take forward this plan,” he added.

‘Government needs the cash’

Susannah Streeter, senior investment and markets analyst, Hargreaves Lansdown said the share sale came at time when “the government sorely needs the cash with the costs of borrowing mounting”.

“It’s been a long road back from emergency purchase of the beleaguered Royal Bank of Scotland group, with a re-brand, and the step by step repurchase of the government holdings,” she added.

When the financial crisis struck in 2008, the government started to build a stake in the then RBS Group which was teetering on the brink of collapse.

The initial investment, which resulted in the government owning 57% of the bank, was extended a couple of times before peaking at 84% in 2009.

Since 2015, the Treasury has been selling off its stake and the process of selling off NatWest shares is likely to continue for some time to come.

It has already taken considerably longer than disposal of the public ownership of Lloyds, which was finally unwound in 2017.

The government was first handed shares in the banks in 2008 after announcing a huge injection of cash into the sector.

Gordon Brown, who was prime minister at the time of the crisis, said the investment was not an attempt to nationalise the banks and that the shares would be sold back “at the right time”.

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