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Wikipedia

NatWest Group

NatWest Group plc[2] is a British banking and insurance holding company, based in Edinburgh, Scotland. The group operates a wide variety of banking brands offering personal and business banking, private banking, investment banking, insurance and corporate finance. In the United Kingdom, its main subsidiary companies are National Westminster Bank, Royal Bank of Scotland,[3] NatWest Markets and Coutts.[4] The group issues banknotes in Scotland and Northern Ireland; as of 2014, the Royal Bank of Scotland was the only bank in the UK to continue to print £1 notes.[5]

NatWest Group plc
NatWest Group Registered Office
FormerlyNational and Commercial Banking Group Ltd. (1968–1979)
The Royal Bank of Scotland Group Ltd. (1979–1982)
The Royal Bank of Scotland Group plc (1982–2020)
TypePublic limited company
Industry
Founded25 March 1968; 55 years ago (1968-03-25)
Headquarters,
Scotland, UK
Area served
United Kingdom
Key people
Products
Revenue £13.156 billion (2022)[1]
£5.132 billion (2022)[1]
£3.595 billion (2022)[1]
Total assets £720.053 billion (2022)[1]
Total equity £36.496 billion (2022)[1]
OwnerUK Government Investments (39%)
Number of employees
57,900 (2022)[1]
Subsidiaries
Websitewww.natwestgroup.com

Before the 2008 collapse and the general financial crisis, the Group was very briefly the largest bank in the world, and for a period was the second-largest bank in the UK and Europe and the fifth-largest in the world by market capitalisation. Subsequently, with a slumping share price and major loss of confidence, the bank fell sharply in the rankings, although in 2009 it was briefly the world's largest company by both assets (£1.9 trillion) and liabilities (£1.8 trillion).[6] It had to be bailed out by the UK government through the 2008 United Kingdom bank rescue package.[7]

The government retained a majority share until 28 March 2022, held and managed through UK Government Investments. Following a buyback by the NatWest Group, the government now holds a 39% share in the company.[8]

In addition to its primary share listing on the London Stock Exchange, the company is also listed on the New York Stock Exchange.

History

The Royal Bank of Scotland Group

By the late 1960s, economic conditions were becoming more difficult for the banking sector. In response, the National Commercial Bank of Scotland merged with the Royal Bank of Scotland.[9] The merger resulted in a new holding company, the National and Commercial Banking Group being founded in 1968 with the merger formalised in 1969. The holding company was renamed The Royal Bank of Scotland Group on 4 July 1979.[10][11][12]

The late 1990s saw a new wave of consolidation in the financial services sector. In 1999, the Bank of Scotland launched a hostile takeover bid for English rival National Westminster Bank.[13] The Bank of Scotland intended to fund the deal by selling off many of NatWest's subsidiary companies, including Ulster Bank and Coutts. However, the Royal Bank of Scotland subsequently tabled a counter-offer, sparking off the largest hostile takeover battle in UK corporate history.[14] A key differentiation from the Bank of Scotland's bid was the Royal Bank of Scotland's plan to retain all of NatWest's subsidiaries.[15] Although NatWest, one of the "Big Four" English clearing banks, was significantly larger than either Scottish bank, it had a recent history of poor financial performance and plans to merge with insurance company Legal & General were not well received, prompting a 26% fall in share price.[16]

On 11 February 2000, The Royal Bank of Scotland was declared the winner in the takeover battle, becoming the second largest banking group in the UK after HSBC Holdings.[17] NatWest as a distinct banking brand was retained, although many back-office functions of the bank were merged with the Royal Bank's, leading to over 18,000 job losses throughout the UK.[18]

Further expansion

 
The new headquarters nearing completion in 2005

In August 2005, the bank expanded into China, acquiring a 10% stake in the Bank of China for £1.7 billion,[19] which it had sold by 2009.[20]

In 2005, the bank built a new international headquarters at Gogarburn on the outskirts of Edinburgh, and was opened by Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh.[21]

The group was part of a consortium with Belgian bank Fortis and Spanish bank Banco Santander that acquired Dutch bank ABN AMRO in October 2007.[22] Rivals speculated that RBS had overpaid for the Dutch bank[23] although the bank pointed out that of the £49bn paid for ABN AMRO, RBS's share was only £10bn (equivalent to £167 per citizen of the UK).[24][23]

Much later, the bank announced it was to scale back its international presence. "Let me spell it out very clearly: the days when RBS sought to be the biggest bank in the world, those days are well and truly over", Chief Executive Ross McEwan, who had been in charge of the bank for four months, said in unveiling plans to reduce costs by £5bn over four years. "Our ambition is to be a bank for UK customers", he added.[24]

2008–2009 financial crisis

On 22 April 2008 RBS announced a rights issue which aimed to raise £12bn in new capital to offset a writedown of £5.9bn resulting from credit market positions and to shore up its reserves following the purchase of ABN AMRO. This was, at the time, the largest rights issue in British corporate history.[25]

The bank also announced that it would review the possibility of divesting some of its subsidiaries to raise further funds, notably its insurance divisions Direct Line and Churchill.[26] Additionally, the bank's stake in Tesco Bank was bought by Tesco for £950 million in 2008.[27][28]

On 13 October 2008, in a move aimed at recapitalising the bank, it was announced that the British Government would take a stake of up to 58% in the Group. The aim was to "make available new tier 1 capital to UK banks and building societies to strengthen their resources permitting them to restructure their finances, while maintaining their support for the real economy, through the recapitalisation scheme which has been made available to eligible institutions".[29]

HM Treasury injected £37 billion ($64 billion, €47 billion, equivalent to £617 per citizen of the UK) of new capital into Royal Bank of Scotland Group plc, Lloyds TSB and HBOS plc, to avert financial sector collapse. The government stressed, however, that it was not "standard public ownership" and that the banks would return to private investors "at the right time".[30][31]

Alistair Darling, the Chancellor of the Exchequer, stated that the UK government would benefit from its rescue plan, for it would have some control over RBS in exchange for £5 billion in preference shares and underwriting the issuance of a further £15 billion in ordinary shares. If shareholder take-up of the share issue was 0%, then total government ownership in RBS would be 58%; and, if shareholder take-up was 100%, then total government ownership in RBS would be 0%.[32] Less than 56 million new shares were taken up by investors, or 0.24pc of the total offered by RBS in October 2008.[33]

As a consequence of this rescue, the Chief Executive of the group, Fred Goodwin, offered his resignation and it was duly accepted. Sir Tom McKillop confirmed that he would stand down from his role as chairman when his contract expired in March 2009. Goodwin was replaced by Stephen Hester, previously the Chief Executive of British Land, who commenced work at the Royal Bank of Scotland in November 2008.[34]

On 19 January 2009, the British Government announced a further injection of funds into the UK banking system in an attempt to restart personal and business lending. This would involve the creation of a state-backed insurance scheme which would allow banks to insure against existing loans going into default, in an attempt to restore the banks' confidence.[35]

At the same time the government announced its intention to convert the preference shares in RBS that it had acquired in October 2008 to ordinary shares. This would remove the 12% coupon payment (£600m p.a.) on the shares but would increase the state's holding in the bank from 58% to 70%.[36]

On the same day RBS released a trading statement in which it expected to post full-year trading losses (before writedowns) of between £7bn and £8bn. The group also announced writedowns on goodwills (primarily related to the takeover of Dutch bank ABN-AMRO) of around £20bn. The combined total of £28bn would be the biggest ever annual loss in UK corporate history (the actual figure was £24.1bn). As a result, during the Blue Monday Crash, the group's share price fell over 66% in one day to 10.9p per share, from a 52-week high of 354p per share, itself a drop of 97%.[36]

Mid-2008 onwards

RBS' contractual commitment to retain the 4.26% Bank of China (BoC) stake ended on 31 December 2008, and the shares were sold on 14 January 2009. Exchange rate fluctuations meant that RBS made no profit on the deal. The Scottish press suggested two reasons for the move: the need for a bank mainly owned by HM Treasury to focus scarce capital on British markets, and the growth possibility of RBS's own China operations.[37][38]

Also in March 2009, RBS revealed that its traders had been involved in the purchase and sale of sub-prime securities under the supervision of Fred Goodwin.[39]

In September 2009, RBS and NatWest announced dramatic cuts in their overdraft fees including the unpaid item fee (from £38 to £5), the card misuse fee (from £35 to £15) and the monthly maintenance charge for going overdrawn without consent (from £28 to £20).[40] The cuts came at a time when the row over the legality of unauthorised borrowing reached the House of Lords. The fees were estimated to earn current account providers about £2.6bn a year.[41] The Consumers' Association chief executive, Peter Vicary-Smith, said: "This is a step in the right direction and a victory for consumer pressure."[40]

In November 2009, RBS announced plans to cut 3,700 jobs in addition to 16,000 already planned, while the government increased its stake in the company from 70% to 84%.[42]

In December 2009, the RBS board revolted against the main shareholder, the British government. They threatened to resign unless they were permitted to pay bonuses of £1.5bn to staff in its investment arm.[43]

More than 100 senior bank executives at the Royal Bank of Scotland were paid more than £1 million in late 2010 and total bonus payouts reached nearly £1 billion – even though the bailed-out bank reported losses of £1.1 billion for 2010. The 2010 figure was an improvement on the loss of £3.6 billion in 2009 and the record-breaking £24bn loss in 2008. The bonuses for staff in 2010 topped £950 million. The CEO Stephen Hester got £8 million in payments for the year. Len McCluskey, the general secretary of Unite the Union, said: "Taxpayers will be baffled as to how it is possible that while we own 84% of this bank it continues to so handsomely reward its investment bankers."[44]

In October 2011, Moody's downgraded the credit rating of 12 UK financial firms, including RBS, blaming financial weakness.[45]

In January 2012, there was press controversy about Hester's bonus—Hester was offered share options with a total value of £963,000 that would be held in long-term plans, and only paid out if he met strict and tough targets. If he failed to do this, it would be clawed-back. The Treasury permitted the payment because they feared the resignation of Hester and much of the board if the payment was vetoed by the government as the majority shareholder.[46] After a large amount of criticism[47][48][49][50] in the press, news emerged of Chairman Sir Philip Hampton turning down his own bonus of £1.4 million several weeks before the controversy.[48] Hester, who had been on holiday in Switzerland at the time, turned down his own bonus shortly after.[51]

In June 2012, a failure of an upgrade to payment processing software meant that a substantial proportion of customers could not transfer money to or from their accounts. This meant that RBS had to open a number of branches on a Sunday – the first time that they had had to do this.[52]

RBS released a statement on 12 June 2013 that announced a transition in which CEO Stephen Hester would stand down in December 2013 for the financial institution "to return to private ownership by the end of 2014". For his part in the procession of the transition, Hester would receive 12 months' pay and benefits worth £1.6 million, as well as the potential for £4 million in shares. The RBS stated that, as of the announcement, the search for Hester's successor would commence.[53] Ross McEwan, the head of retail banking at RBS, was selected to replace Hester in July 2013.[54]

On 4 August 2015 the UK government began the process of selling shares back to the private sector, reducing its ownership of ordinary shares from 61.3% to 51.5% and its total economic ownership (including B shares) from 78.3% to 72.9%. On 5 June 2018 the government reduced its ownership through UK Government Investments to 62.4%[55] at a loss of £2 billion.[56]

Restructuring

In June 2008 RBS sold its subsidiary Angel Trains for £3.6bn as part of an assets sale to raise cash.[57]

In March 2009, RBS announced the closure of its tax avoidance department, which had helped it avoid £500m of tax by channelling billions of pounds through securitised assets in tax havens such as the Cayman Islands.[58] The closure was partly due to a lack of funds to continue the measures, and partly due to the 84% government stake in the bank.[58]

On 29 March 2010, GE Capital acquired Royal Bank of Scotland's factoring business in Germany.[59] GE Capital signed an agreement with the Royal Bank of Scotland plc (RBS) to acquire 100% of RBS Factoring GmbH, RBS's factoring and invoice financing business in Germany, for an undisclosed amount. The transaction is subject to a number of conditions, including regulatory approval.[59][60]

In January 2012, due to pressure from the UK government to shut down risky operations and prepare for tougher international regulations, the bank announced it would cut 4,450 jobs and close its loss-making cash equities, corporate broking, equity capital markets, and mergers and acquisitions businesses.[61] This move brought the total number of jobs cut since the bank was bailed out in 2008 to 34,000.[61][62]

During 2012, RBS separated its insurance business from the main group to form the Direct Line Group,[63] made up of several well-known brands including Direct Line and Churchill. RBS sold a 30% holding in the group through an initial public offering in October 2012.[64][65] Further shares sales in 2013 reduced RBS' holding to 28.5% by September 2013,[65] and RBS sold its remaining shares in February 2014.[66]

In October 2015, RBS sold its remaining stake in Citizens Financial Group, having progressively reduced its stake through an initial public offering (IPO) started in 2014.[67]

Williams & Glyn divestment

As a condition of the British Government purchasing an 81% shareholding in the group, the European Commission ruled that the group sell a portion of its business, as the purchase was categorised as state aid.[68] In August 2010, the group reached an agreement to sell 318 branches to Santander UK, made up of the RBS branches in England and Wales and the NatWest branches in Scotland.[69] Santander withdrew from the sale on 12 October 2012.[70]

In September 2013, the group confirmed it had reached an agreement to sell 314 branches to the Corsair consortium, made up of private equity firms and a number of institutional investors, including the Church Commissioners, which controls the property and investment assets of the Church of England.[71] The branches, incorporating 250,000 small business customers, 1,200 medium business customers and 1.8 million personal banking customers, were due to be separated from the group in 2016 as a standalone business.[72] The planned company would have traded as an ethical bank,[73] using the dormant Williams & Glyn's brand.[72]

In August 2016, RBS cancelled its plan to spin off Williams & Glyn as a separate business, stating that the new bank could not survive independently. It revealed it would instead seek to sell the operation to another bank.[74]

In February 2017, HM Treasury suggested that the bank should abandon the plan to sell the operation, and instead focus on initiatives to boost competition within business banking in the United Kingdom.[75] This plan was formally approved by the European Commission in September 2017.[75]

2020 group rebranding

On 14 February 2020, it was announced that RBS Group was to be renamed NatWest Group, taking the brand under which the majority of its business is delivered.[76][77][78] On 16 July 2020 the company announced that the rebrand would take place on 22 July 2020.[79] The change took effect on 23 July 2020.[80] The NatWest Group is likely to remain state-owned until March 2025, a deadline which the UK Treasury has announced for selling all government shares in the business.[81]

Further Government share sales

The government reduced its holding in NatWest to 59.8% in March 2021, losing the taxpayer £1.8bn,[82] followed by a further sale in May 2021 bringing it to 54.8%.[83] The government announced that a further sale would take place in late 2021 (bringing the holding down to 50.6%)[84] and a sale in March 2022 reduced it further to 48.1%.[85][86]

Corporate structure

NatWest Group is split into four main customer-facing franchises, each with several subsidiary businesses, and it also has a number of support functions.[87]

Retail banking

 
Child & Co.'s headquarters in Fleet Street. The brand focuses on private banking.

The NatWest Holdings segment comprises the retail banking division of the bank:[88] the business operates in the United Kingdom and the Republic of Ireland under the NatWest, Royal Bank of Scotland and Ulster Bank names. The CEO of this franchise is David Lindberg appointed in September 2020. Key subsidiaries include:

Private banking

This franchise serves high-net-worth customers, the CEO of this franchise is Peter Flavel appointed in March 2016. The key private banking subsidiaries and brands of NatWest Group that are included in this franchise are Coutts, Drummonds Bank and NatWest and RBS Premier Banking.

Commercial and Institutional

 
NatWest Group offices in Brindleyplace, Birmingham

This franchise serves UK corporate and commercial customers, from SMEs to UK-based multinationals, and is the largest provider of banking, finance and risk management services to UK corporate and commercial customers. It also contains Lombard entity providing asset finance to corporate and commercial customers as well as some of the clients within the Private Banking franchise. The CEO of this franchise is Paul Thwaite appointed in November 2019.

NatWest Markets is the investment banking arm of NatWest Group. It provides integrated financial solutions to major corporations and financial institutions around the world. NWMs areas of strength are debt financing, risk management, and investment and advisory services. NatWest Markets Securities is a key subsidiary, operating in the United States. The CEO of this franchise is Robert Begbie appointed in June 2020.[89]

The Royal Bank of Scotland International, trading as NatWest International, RBS International, Coutts Crown Dependencies and Isle of Man Bank, is the offshore banking arm of NatWest Group. It provides a range of services to personal, business, commercial, corporate and financial intermediary customers from its base in the Channel Islands.

Support functions

The group is supported by a number of functions and services departments – procurement, technology, payments, anti-money laundering, property, etc. – and support and control functions: the areas which provide core services across the bank – human resources, corporate governance, internal audit, legal, risk, etc.

Senior leadership

List of former Chairmen

  1. Sir James Blair-Cunynghame (1969–1978)[92]
  2. Sir Michael Herries (1978–1991)[93]
  3. Lord Younger (1991–2001)[94]
  4. Sir George Mathewson (2001–2006)[95]
  5. Sir Tom McKillop (2006–2008)[96]
  6. Sir Philip Hampton (2009–2015)[97]

List of former Chief Executives

Prior to 1976, the Group served as a holding company and had no executive powers; the position of Managing Director was created in 1976, and was renamed Group Chief Executive following the merger with Williams & Glyn's Bank in 1985.[98]

  1. John Burke (1976–1982)[98]
  2. Sid Procter (1982–1985)[99]
  3. Charles Winter (1985–1991)[100]
  4. Sir George Mathewson (1992–2001)[95]
  5. Fred Goodwin (2001–2008)[101]
  6. Stephen Hester (2008–2013)[102]
  7. Ross McEwan (2013–2019)[103]

Controversies

Media commentary and criticism

During Goodwin's tenure as CEO he attracted some criticism for lavish spending, including on the construction of a £350m headquarters in Edinburgh opened by Queen Elizabeth II in 2005[104] and a $500m headquarters in the US begun in 2006,[105] and the use of a Dassault Falcon 900 jet owned by leasing subsidiary Lombard for occasional corporate travel.[106]

In February 2009 RBS reported that while Fred Goodwin was at the helm it had posted a loss of £24.1bn, the biggest loss in UK corporate history.[107] His responsibility for the expansion of RBS, which led to the losses, has drawn widespread criticism. His image was not enhanced by the news that emerged in questioning by the Treasury Select Committee of the House of Commons on 10 February 2009, that Goodwin has no technical bank training, and has no formal banking qualifications.[108]

In January 2009 The Guardian's City editor Julia Finch identified him as one of twenty-five people who were at the heart of the financial meltdown.[109] Nick Cohen described Goodwin in The Guardian as "the characteristic villain of our day", who made £20m from RBS and left the government "with an unlimited liability for the cost of cleaning up the mess".[110] An online column by Daniel Gross labelled Goodwin "The World's Worst Banker",[105][111] a phrase echoed elsewhere in the media.[112][113] Gordon Prentice MP argued that his knighthood should be revoked as it is "wholly inappropriate and anomalous for someone to retain such a reward in these circumstances."[114]

Other members have also frequently been criticised as "fat cats" over their salary, expenses, bonuses and pensions.[115][116][117][118][119][120][121]

Fossil fuel financing

RBS was challenged over its financing of oil and coal mining by charities such as Platform London and Friends of the Earth. In 2007, RBS was promoting itself as "The Oil & Gas Bank", although the website www.oilandgasbank.com was later taken down.[122] A Platform London report criticised the bank's lending to oil and gas companies, estimating that the carbon emissions embedded within RBS' project finance reached 36.9 million tonnes in 2005, comparable to Scotland's carbon emissions.[123]

RBS provides the financial means for companies to build coal-fired power stations and dig new coal mines at sites throughout the world. RBS helped to provide an estimated £8 billion from 2006 to 2008 to energy corporation E.ON and other coal-utilising companies.[124] In 2012, 2.8% of RBS' total lending was provided to the power, oil and gas sectors combined. According to RBS' own figures, half of its deals to the energy sector were to wind power projects; although, this only included project finance and not general commercial loans.[125]

Canadian oil sands

Climate Camp activists criticise RBS for funding firms which extract oil from Canadian oil sands.[126] The Cree indigenous people describe RBS as being complicit in "the biggest environmental crime on the planet".[127] In 2012, 7.2% of RBS' total oil and gas lending was to companies who derived more than 10% of their income from oil sands operations.[125]

Huntingdon Life Sciences

In 2000 and 2001, staff of the bank were threatened over its provision of banking facilities for the animal-testing company Huntingdon Life Sciences. The intimidation resulted in RBS withdrawing the company's overdraft facility, requiring the company to obtain alternative funding within a tight deadline.[128][129]

Nigel Farage

In July 2023, former MEP Nigel Farage had his account closed by Coutts, reportedly for failing to meet the required minimums.[130] However, revelations published in The Daily Telegraph newspaper not only dispelled the BBC's report, but showed Farage's accounts were closed after an internal risk committee at Coutts judged his "views were at odds with our position as an inclusive organisation", whilst financially his account's "economic contribution is now sufficient to retain on a commercial basis”.[131]

See also

References

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External links

  • Official website

natwest, group, british, banking, insurance, holding, company, based, edinburgh, scotland, group, operates, wide, variety, banking, brands, offering, personal, business, banking, private, banking, investment, banking, insurance, corporate, finance, united, kin. NatWest Group plc 2 is a British banking and insurance holding company based in Edinburgh Scotland The group operates a wide variety of banking brands offering personal and business banking private banking investment banking insurance and corporate finance In the United Kingdom its main subsidiary companies are National Westminster Bank Royal Bank of Scotland 3 NatWest Markets and Coutts 4 The group issues banknotes in Scotland and Northern Ireland as of 2014 update the Royal Bank of Scotland was the only bank in the UK to continue to print 1 notes 5 NatWest Group plcNatWest Group Registered OfficeFormerlyNational and Commercial Banking Group Ltd 1968 1979 The Royal Bank of Scotland Group Ltd 1979 1982 The Royal Bank of Scotland Group plc 1982 2020 TypePublic limited companyTraded asLSE NWG NYSE NWG FTSE 100 ComponentIndustryBanking Financial servicesFounded25 March 1968 55 years ago 1968 03 25 HeadquartersEdinburgh Scotland UKArea servedUnited KingdomKey peopleSir Howard Davies Chairman Dame Alison Rose Group Chief Executive ProductsFinance and insurance Retail banking Corporate banking Investment banking Private banking Mortgages Credit cardsRevenue 13 156 billion 2022 1 Operating income 5 132 billion 2022 1 Net income 3 595 billion 2022 1 Total assets 720 053 billion 2022 1 Total equity 36 496 billion 2022 1 OwnerUK Government Investments 39 Number of employees57 900 2022 1 SubsidiariesNatWest Holdings NatWest Markets RBS InternationalWebsitewww wbr natwestgroup wbr comBefore the 2008 collapse and the general financial crisis the Group was very briefly the largest bank in the world and for a period was the second largest bank in the UK and Europe and the fifth largest in the world by market capitalisation Subsequently with a slumping share price and major loss of confidence the bank fell sharply in the rankings although in 2009 it was briefly the world s largest company by both assets 1 9 trillion and liabilities 1 8 trillion 6 It had to be bailed out by the UK government through the 2008 United Kingdom bank rescue package 7 The government retained a majority share until 28 March 2022 held and managed through UK Government Investments Following a buyback by the NatWest Group the government now holds a 39 share in the company 8 In addition to its primary share listing on the London Stock Exchange the company is also listed on the New York Stock Exchange Contents 1 History 1 1 The Royal Bank of Scotland Group 1 2 Further expansion 1 3 2008 2009 financial crisis 1 4 Mid 2008 onwards 1 5 Restructuring 1 6 Williams amp Glyn divestment 1 7 2020 group rebranding 1 8 Further Government share sales 2 Corporate structure 2 1 Retail banking 2 2 Private banking 2 3 Commercial and Institutional 2 4 Support functions 2 5 Senior leadership 2 5 1 List of former Chairmen 2 5 2 List of former Chief Executives 3 Controversies 3 1 Media commentary and criticism 3 2 Fossil fuel financing 3 2 1 Canadian oil sands 3 3 Huntingdon Life Sciences 3 4 Nigel Farage 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksHistory EditFurther information National Westminster Bank and The Royal Bank of Scotland The Royal Bank of Scotland Group Edit By the late 1960s economic conditions were becoming more difficult for the banking sector In response the National Commercial Bank of Scotland merged with the Royal Bank of Scotland 9 The merger resulted in a new holding company the National and Commercial Banking Group being founded in 1968 with the merger formalised in 1969 The holding company was renamed The Royal Bank of Scotland Group on 4 July 1979 10 11 12 The late 1990s saw a new wave of consolidation in the financial services sector In 1999 the Bank of Scotland launched a hostile takeover bid for English rival National Westminster Bank 13 The Bank of Scotland intended to fund the deal by selling off many of NatWest s subsidiary companies including Ulster Bank and Coutts However the Royal Bank of Scotland subsequently tabled a counter offer sparking off the largest hostile takeover battle in UK corporate history 14 A key differentiation from the Bank of Scotland s bid was the Royal Bank of Scotland s plan to retain all of NatWest s subsidiaries 15 Although NatWest one of the Big Four English clearing banks was significantly larger than either Scottish bank it had a recent history of poor financial performance and plans to merge with insurance company Legal amp General were not well received prompting a 26 fall in share price 16 On 11 February 2000 The Royal Bank of Scotland was declared the winner in the takeover battle becoming the second largest banking group in the UK after HSBC Holdings 17 NatWest as a distinct banking brand was retained although many back office functions of the bank were merged with the Royal Bank s leading to over 18 000 job losses throughout the UK 18 Further expansion Edit The new headquarters nearing completion in 2005In August 2005 the bank expanded into China acquiring a 10 stake in the Bank of China for 1 7 billion 19 which it had sold by 2009 20 In 2005 the bank built a new international headquarters at Gogarburn on the outskirts of Edinburgh and was opened by Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip Duke of Edinburgh 21 The group was part of a consortium with Belgian bank Fortis and Spanish bank Banco Santander that acquired Dutch bank ABN AMRO in October 2007 22 Rivals speculated that RBS had overpaid for the Dutch bank 23 although the bank pointed out that of the 49bn paid for ABN AMRO RBS s share was only 10bn equivalent to 167 per citizen of the UK 24 23 Much later the bank announced it was to scale back its international presence Let me spell it out very clearly the days when RBS sought to be the biggest bank in the world those days are well and truly over Chief Executive Ross McEwan who had been in charge of the bank for four months said in unveiling plans to reduce costs by 5bn over four years Our ambition is to be a bank for UK customers he added 24 2008 2009 financial crisis Edit Main articles 2008 United Kingdom bank rescue package and 2009 United Kingdom bank rescue package On 22 April 2008 RBS announced a rights issue which aimed to raise 12bn in new capital to offset a writedown of 5 9bn resulting from credit market positions and to shore up its reserves following the purchase of ABN AMRO This was at the time the largest rights issue in British corporate history 25 The bank also announced that it would review the possibility of divesting some of its subsidiaries to raise further funds notably its insurance divisions Direct Line and Churchill 26 Additionally the bank s stake in Tesco Bank was bought by Tesco for 950 million in 2008 27 28 On 13 October 2008 in a move aimed at recapitalising the bank it was announced that the British Government would take a stake of up to 58 in the Group The aim was to make available new tier 1 capital to UK banks and building societies to strengthen their resources permitting them to restructure their finances while maintaining their support for the real economy through the recapitalisation scheme which has been made available to eligible institutions 29 HM Treasury injected 37 billion 64 billion 47 billion equivalent to 617 per citizen of the UK of new capital into Royal Bank of Scotland Group plc Lloyds TSB and HBOS plc to avert financial sector collapse The government stressed however that it was not standard public ownership and that the banks would return to private investors at the right time 30 31 Alistair Darling the Chancellor of the Exchequer stated that the UK government would benefit from its rescue plan for it would have some control over RBS in exchange for 5 billion in preference shares and underwriting the issuance of a further 15 billion in ordinary shares If shareholder take up of the share issue was 0 then total government ownership in RBS would be 58 and if shareholder take up was 100 then total government ownership in RBS would be 0 32 Less than 56 million new shares were taken up by investors or 0 24pc of the total offered by RBS in October 2008 33 As a consequence of this rescue the Chief Executive of the group Fred Goodwin offered his resignation and it was duly accepted Sir Tom McKillop confirmed that he would stand down from his role as chairman when his contract expired in March 2009 Goodwin was replaced by Stephen Hester previously the Chief Executive of British Land who commenced work at the Royal Bank of Scotland in November 2008 34 On 19 January 2009 the British Government announced a further injection of funds into the UK banking system in an attempt to restart personal and business lending This would involve the creation of a state backed insurance scheme which would allow banks to insure against existing loans going into default in an attempt to restore the banks confidence 35 At the same time the government announced its intention to convert the preference shares in RBS that it had acquired in October 2008 to ordinary shares This would remove the 12 coupon payment 600m p a on the shares but would increase the state s holding in the bank from 58 to 70 36 On the same day RBS released a trading statement in which it expected to post full year trading losses before writedowns of between 7bn and 8bn The group also announced writedowns on goodwills primarily related to the takeover of Dutch bank ABN AMRO of around 20bn The combined total of 28bn would be the biggest ever annual loss in UK corporate history the actual figure was 24 1bn As a result during the Blue Monday Crash the group s share price fell over 66 in one day to 10 9p per share from a 52 week high of 354p per share itself a drop of 97 36 Mid 2008 onwards Edit RBS contractual commitment to retain the 4 26 Bank of China BoC stake ended on 31 December 2008 and the shares were sold on 14 January 2009 Exchange rate fluctuations meant that RBS made no profit on the deal The Scottish press suggested two reasons for the move the need for a bank mainly owned by HM Treasury to focus scarce capital on British markets and the growth possibility of RBS s own China operations 37 38 Also in March 2009 RBS revealed that its traders had been involved in the purchase and sale of sub prime securities under the supervision of Fred Goodwin 39 In September 2009 RBS and NatWest announced dramatic cuts in their overdraft fees including the unpaid item fee from 38 to 5 the card misuse fee from 35 to 15 and the monthly maintenance charge for going overdrawn without consent from 28 to 20 40 The cuts came at a time when the row over the legality of unauthorised borrowing reached the House of Lords The fees were estimated to earn current account providers about 2 6bn a year 41 The Consumers Association chief executive Peter Vicary Smith said This is a step in the right direction and a victory for consumer pressure 40 In November 2009 RBS announced plans to cut 3 700 jobs in addition to 16 000 already planned while the government increased its stake in the company from 70 to 84 42 In December 2009 the RBS board revolted against the main shareholder the British government They threatened to resign unless they were permitted to pay bonuses of 1 5bn to staff in its investment arm 43 More than 100 senior bank executives at the Royal Bank of Scotland were paid more than 1 million in late 2010 and total bonus payouts reached nearly 1 billion even though the bailed out bank reported losses of 1 1 billion for 2010 The 2010 figure was an improvement on the loss of 3 6 billion in 2009 and the record breaking 24bn loss in 2008 The bonuses for staff in 2010 topped 950 million The CEO Stephen Hester got 8 million in payments for the year Len McCluskey the general secretary of Unite the Union said Taxpayers will be baffled as to how it is possible that while we own 84 of this bank it continues to so handsomely reward its investment bankers 44 In October 2011 Moody s downgraded the credit rating of 12 UK financial firms including RBS blaming financial weakness 45 In January 2012 there was press controversy about Hester s bonus Hester was offered share options with a total value of 963 000 that would be held in long term plans and only paid out if he met strict and tough targets If he failed to do this it would be clawed back The Treasury permitted the payment because they feared the resignation of Hester and much of the board if the payment was vetoed by the government as the majority shareholder 46 After a large amount of criticism 47 48 49 50 in the press news emerged of Chairman Sir Philip Hampton turning down his own bonus of 1 4 million several weeks before the controversy 48 Hester who had been on holiday in Switzerland at the time turned down his own bonus shortly after 51 In June 2012 a failure of an upgrade to payment processing software meant that a substantial proportion of customers could not transfer money to or from their accounts This meant that RBS had to open a number of branches on a Sunday the first time that they had had to do this 52 RBS released a statement on 12 June 2013 that announced a transition in which CEO Stephen Hester would stand down in December 2013 for the financial institution to return to private ownership by the end of 2014 For his part in the procession of the transition Hester would receive 12 months pay and benefits worth 1 6 million as well as the potential for 4 million in shares The RBS stated that as of the announcement the search for Hester s successor would commence 53 Ross McEwan the head of retail banking at RBS was selected to replace Hester in July 2013 54 On 4 August 2015 the UK government began the process of selling shares back to the private sector reducing its ownership of ordinary shares from 61 3 to 51 5 and its total economic ownership including B shares from 78 3 to 72 9 On 5 June 2018 the government reduced its ownership through UK Government Investments to 62 4 55 at a loss of 2 billion 56 Restructuring Edit In June 2008 RBS sold its subsidiary Angel Trains for 3 6bn as part of an assets sale to raise cash 57 In March 2009 RBS announced the closure of its tax avoidance department which had helped it avoid 500m of tax by channelling billions of pounds through securitised assets in tax havens such as the Cayman Islands 58 The closure was partly due to a lack of funds to continue the measures and partly due to the 84 government stake in the bank 58 On 29 March 2010 GE Capital acquired Royal Bank of Scotland s factoring business in Germany 59 GE Capital signed an agreement with the Royal Bank of Scotland plc RBS to acquire 100 of RBS Factoring GmbH RBS s factoring and invoice financing business in Germany for an undisclosed amount The transaction is subject to a number of conditions including regulatory approval 59 60 In January 2012 due to pressure from the UK government to shut down risky operations and prepare for tougher international regulations the bank announced it would cut 4 450 jobs and close its loss making cash equities corporate broking equity capital markets and mergers and acquisitions businesses 61 This move brought the total number of jobs cut since the bank was bailed out in 2008 to 34 000 61 62 During 2012 RBS separated its insurance business from the main group to form the Direct Line Group 63 made up of several well known brands including Direct Line and Churchill RBS sold a 30 holding in the group through an initial public offering in October 2012 64 65 Further shares sales in 2013 reduced RBS holding to 28 5 by September 2013 65 and RBS sold its remaining shares in February 2014 66 In October 2015 RBS sold its remaining stake in Citizens Financial Group having progressively reduced its stake through an initial public offering IPO started in 2014 67 Williams amp Glyn divestment Edit Further information Williams amp Glyn As a condition of the British Government purchasing an 81 shareholding in the group the European Commission ruled that the group sell a portion of its business as the purchase was categorised as state aid 68 In August 2010 the group reached an agreement to sell 318 branches to Santander UK made up of the RBS branches in England and Wales and the NatWest branches in Scotland 69 Santander withdrew from the sale on 12 October 2012 70 In September 2013 the group confirmed it had reached an agreement to sell 314 branches to the Corsair consortium made up of private equity firms and a number of institutional investors including the Church Commissioners which controls the property and investment assets of the Church of England 71 The branches incorporating 250 000 small business customers 1 200 medium business customers and 1 8 million personal banking customers were due to be separated from the group in 2016 as a standalone business 72 The planned company would have traded as an ethical bank 73 using the dormant Williams amp Glyn s brand 72 In August 2016 RBS cancelled its plan to spin off Williams amp Glyn as a separate business stating that the new bank could not survive independently It revealed it would instead seek to sell the operation to another bank 74 In February 2017 HM Treasury suggested that the bank should abandon the plan to sell the operation and instead focus on initiatives to boost competition within business banking in the United Kingdom 75 This plan was formally approved by the European Commission in September 2017 75 2020 group rebranding Edit On 14 February 2020 it was announced that RBS Group was to be renamed NatWest Group taking the brand under which the majority of its business is delivered 76 77 78 On 16 July 2020 the company announced that the rebrand would take place on 22 July 2020 79 The change took effect on 23 July 2020 80 The NatWest Group is likely to remain state owned until March 2025 a deadline which the UK Treasury has announced for selling all government shares in the business 81 Further Government share sales Edit The government reduced its holding in NatWest to 59 8 in March 2021 losing the taxpayer 1 8bn 82 followed by a further sale in May 2021 bringing it to 54 8 83 The government announced that a further sale would take place in late 2021 bringing the holding down to 50 6 84 and a sale in March 2022 reduced it further to 48 1 85 86 Corporate structure EditNatWest Group is split into four main customer facing franchises each with several subsidiary businesses and it also has a number of support functions 87 Retail banking Edit Main article NatWest Holdings Child amp Co s headquarters in Fleet Street The brand focuses on private banking The NatWest Holdings segment comprises the retail banking division of the bank 88 the business operates in the United Kingdom and the Republic of Ireland under the NatWest Royal Bank of Scotland and Ulster Bank names The CEO of this franchise is David Lindberg appointed in September 2020 Key subsidiaries include NatWest Royal Bank of Scotland Ulster BankPrivate banking Edit This franchise serves high net worth customers the CEO of this franchise is Peter Flavel appointed in March 2016 The key private banking subsidiaries and brands of NatWest Group that are included in this franchise are Coutts Drummonds Bank and NatWest and RBS Premier Banking Commercial and Institutional Edit NatWest Group offices in Brindleyplace BirminghamFurther information NatWest Markets This franchise serves UK corporate and commercial customers from SMEs to UK based multinationals and is the largest provider of banking finance and risk management services to UK corporate and commercial customers It also contains Lombard entity providing asset finance to corporate and commercial customers as well as some of the clients within the Private Banking franchise The CEO of this franchise is Paul Thwaite appointed in November 2019 NatWest Markets is the investment banking arm of NatWest Group It provides integrated financial solutions to major corporations and financial institutions around the world NWMs areas of strength are debt financing risk management and investment and advisory services NatWest Markets Securities is a key subsidiary operating in the United States The CEO of this franchise is Robert Begbie appointed in June 2020 89 The Royal Bank of Scotland International trading as NatWest International RBS International Coutts Crown Dependencies and Isle of Man Bank is the offshore banking arm of NatWest Group It provides a range of services to personal business commercial corporate and financial intermediary customers from its base in the Channel Islands Support functions Edit The group is supported by a number of functions and services departments procurement technology payments anti money laundering property etc and support and control functions the areas which provide core services across the bank human resources corporate governance internal audit legal risk etc Senior leadership Edit Chairman Sir Howard Davies since February 2015 90 Chief Executive Dame Alison Rose since November 2019 91 List of former Chairmen Edit Sir James Blair Cunynghame 1969 1978 92 Sir Michael Herries 1978 1991 93 Lord Younger 1991 2001 94 Sir George Mathewson 2001 2006 95 Sir Tom McKillop 2006 2008 96 Sir Philip Hampton 2009 2015 97 List of former Chief Executives Edit Prior to 1976 the Group served as a holding company and had no executive powers the position of Managing Director was created in 1976 and was renamed Group Chief Executive following the merger with Williams amp Glyn s Bank in 1985 98 John Burke 1976 1982 98 Sid Procter 1982 1985 99 Charles Winter 1985 1991 100 Sir George Mathewson 1992 2001 95 Fred Goodwin 2001 2008 101 Stephen Hester 2008 2013 102 Ross McEwan 2013 2019 103 Controversies EditMedia commentary and criticism Edit During Goodwin s tenure as CEO he attracted some criticism for lavish spending including on the construction of a 350m headquarters in Edinburgh opened by Queen Elizabeth II in 2005 104 and a 500m headquarters in the US begun in 2006 105 and the use of a Dassault Falcon 900 jet owned by leasing subsidiary Lombard for occasional corporate travel 106 In February 2009 RBS reported that while Fred Goodwin was at the helm it had posted a loss of 24 1bn the biggest loss in UK corporate history 107 His responsibility for the expansion of RBS which led to the losses has drawn widespread criticism His image was not enhanced by the news that emerged in questioning by the Treasury Select Committee of the House of Commons on 10 February 2009 that Goodwin has no technical bank training and has no formal banking qualifications 108 In January 2009 The Guardian s City editor Julia Finch identified him as one of twenty five people who were at the heart of the financial meltdown 109 Nick Cohen described Goodwin in The Guardian as the characteristic villain of our day who made 20m from RBS and left the government with an unlimited liability for the cost of cleaning up the mess 110 An online column by Daniel Gross labelled Goodwin The World s Worst Banker 105 111 a phrase echoed elsewhere in the media 112 113 Gordon Prentice MP argued that his knighthood should be revoked as it is wholly inappropriate and anomalous for someone to retain such a reward in these circumstances 114 Other members have also frequently been criticised as fat cats over their salary expenses bonuses and pensions 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 Fossil fuel financing Edit RBS was challenged over its financing of oil and coal mining by charities such as Platform London and Friends of the Earth In 2007 RBS was promoting itself as The Oil amp Gas Bank although the website www oilandgasbank com was later taken down 122 A Platform London report criticised the bank s lending to oil and gas companies estimating that the carbon emissions embedded within RBS project finance reached 36 9 million tonnes in 2005 comparable to Scotland s carbon emissions 123 RBS provides the financial means for companies to build coal fired power stations and dig new coal mines at sites throughout the world RBS helped to provide an estimated 8 billion from 2006 to 2008 to energy corporation E ON and other coal utilising companies 124 In 2012 2 8 of RBS total lending was provided to the power oil and gas sectors combined According to RBS own figures half of its deals to the energy sector were to wind power projects although this only included project finance and not general commercial loans 125 Canadian oil sands Edit Climate Camp activists criticise RBS for funding firms which extract oil from Canadian oil sands 126 The Cree indigenous people describe RBS as being complicit in the biggest environmental crime on the planet 127 In 2012 7 2 of RBS total oil and gas lending was to companies who derived more than 10 of their income from oil sands operations 125 Huntingdon Life Sciences Edit In 2000 and 2001 staff of the bank were threatened over its provision of banking facilities for the animal testing company Huntingdon Life Sciences The intimidation resulted in RBS withdrawing the company s overdraft facility requiring the company to obtain alternative funding within a tight deadline 128 129 Nigel Farage Edit In July 2023 former MEP Nigel Farage had his account closed by Coutts reportedly for failing to meet the required minimums 130 However revelations published in The Daily Telegraph newspaper not only dispelled the BBC s report but showed Farage s accounts were closed after an internal risk committee at Coutts judged his views were at odds with our position as an inclusive organisation whilst financially his account s economic contribution is now sufficient to retain on a commercial basis 131 See also EditList of banks in the United Kingdom List of systemically important banks Systemically important financial institution Too big to fail European Financial Services Roundtable High yield debt Inter Alpha Group of BanksReferences Edit a b c d e f Annual Results 2022 PDF NatWest Group Retrieved 18 February 2023 NATWEST GROUP PLC Overview free company information from Companies House beta companieshouse gov uk The Scottish Gaelic name Scottish Gaelic Banca Rioghail na h Alba is used by its retail banking branches in parts of Scotland especially in signage and customer stationery The Royal Bank of Scotland Scotbanks org Archived from the original on 19 July 2011 Retrieved 18 April 2011 Current Banknotes Committee of Scottish Bankers Retrieved 14 March 2014 RBS et mon droit HM deficits FT Alphaville accessed 20 January 2009 Barker Alex 8 October 2008 Brown says UK leads world with rescue Financial Times Retrieved 8 October 2008 UK government sells 1 26bn of NatWest shares The Guardian 22 May 2023 Retrieved 22 March 2023 Macfarlane Laurie Taking control of RBS New Economics Foundation Retrieved 20 August 2020 Lunar Funding Debt Issue PDF Irish Stock Exchange p 2 Retrieved 20 August 2020 Letter to shareholders PDF NatWest Group Companies House Retrieved 21 August 2020 Scotched The Economist ISSN 0013 0613 Retrieved 20 August 2020 RBS issues ultimatum in 27bn bid for NatWest The Guardian 28 November 1999 Retrieved 20 August 2020 Who pushed NatWest Euromoney November 1999 Retrieved 20 August 2020 NatWest takeover a chronology BBC News 10 February 2000 Retrieved 10 April 2010 RBS to change name to NatWest and shrink investment bank Financial Times 14 February 2020 Archived from the original on 10 December 2022 Retrieved 20 August 2020 NatWest merger s mixed fortunes BBC News 2000 RBS leads 3 1bn China investment BBC News 18 August 2005 Retrieved 10 April 2010 RBS chief regrets sale of 4 3pc stake in Bank of China South China Morning Post 9 November 2010 Retrieved 11 April 2021 New RBS headquarters Scottish Government 14 September 2005 Retrieved 17 March 2013 Consortium Wins Control of ABN Amro The New York Times 9 October 2007 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 20 August 2020 a b Sunderland Ruth 8 October 2007 Barclays boss RBS overpaid for ABN Amro The Guardian London Retrieved 10 April 2010 a b RBS Ross McEwan speech in full BBC 27 February 2014 Retrieved 20 August 2020 RBS rights issue CNN Archived from the original on 18 May 2008 RBS sets out 12bn rights issue BBC News 22 April 2008 Retrieved 10 April 2010 Tesco Pays 950m To Become Bank Sky News 28 July 2008 Retrieved 28 July 2008 Thelwell Emma Butterworth Myra 28 July 2008 Tesco eyes mortgages and current accounts in plan to take on UK s high street banks The Telegraph Retrieved 28 July 2008 dead link Treasury statement on financial support to the banking industry Press release HM Treasury 13 October 2008 Archived from the original on 15 October 2008 Retrieved 14 October 2008 Brown We ll be rock of stability BBC News 13 October 2008 Retrieved 18 April 2011 Jones Sarah 13 October 2008 bloomberg com Stocks Rebound After Government Bank Bailout Lloyds Gains Bloomberg Retrieved 18 April 2011 Helene Mulholland 13 October 2008 Darling UK taxpayer will benefit from banks rescue The Guardian UK Retrieved 18 April 2011 RBS now 58 owned by UK Government Telegraph 28 November 2008 It is a good time for Hester to quit property for RBS Thisislondon co uk 14 October 2008 Archived from the original on 26 January 2009 Retrieved 18 April 2011 UK banking plan faces criticism BBC News 19 January 2009 a b RBS shares plunge on loss BBC News 19 January 2009 RBS confirms sale of 1 6bn China stake Edinburgh Evening News January 14 2009 Martin Flanagan 2009 RBS sells Bank of China stake in a clear sign that retrenchment rules The Scotsman January 14 Winnett Robert 20 March 2009 RBS traders hid toxic debt The Daily Telegraph UK Archived from the original on 22 March 2009 Retrieved 18 April 2011 a b Jones Rupert Royal Bank of Scotland and NatWest cut overdraft charges The Guardian 7 September 2009 Osborne Hilary Bank charges appeal reaches House of Lords The Guardian 23 June 2009 Jill Treanor 2 November 2009 RBS axes 3 700 jobs as taxpayer stake hits 84 Guardian UK Retrieved 18 April 2011 RBS board could quit if government limits staff bonuses BBC News 3 December 2009 Retrieved 18 April 2011 Treanor Jill 21 February 2011 RBS bankers get 950 million in bonuses despite 1 1bn loss The Guardian London UK financial firms downgraded by Moody s rating agency BBC News 7 October 2011 Treasury feared Hester and board would quit BBC 26 January 2012 Stephen Hester bonus puts David Cameron under pressure Guardian 27 January 2012 a b Sir Philip Hampton waives 1 4m share award The Telegraph 28 January 2012 RBS chairman waives share based bonus Reuters 28 January 2012 Ed Miliband must block Hester s Bonus Metro 22 January 2012 RBS boss Stephen Hester waives bonus reaction The Guardian 30 January 2012 Natwest Branches Open on Sunday To Help Customers After Computer Glitch The Huffington Post UK 24 June 2012 Retrieved 21 March 2015 Robert Peston 12 June 2013 Royal Bank of Scotland CEO Stephen Hester to stand down BBC News Retrieved 13 June 2013 Patrick Jenkins 31 July 2013 RBS selects McEwan as new chief Financial Times Archived from the original on 10 December 2022 Retrieved 25 September 2014 RBS Equity Ownership Statistics accessed 9 June 2018 Agini Samuel Government faces questions over 2bn hit on RBS share sale Fnlondon com Retrieved 7 September 2018 RBS sells off rail stock business BBC News 13 June 2008 Retrieved 20 September 2013 a b RBS avoided 500m of tax in global deals The Guardian 13 March 2009 a b General Electric Capital Acquires RBS Factoring Mergr mergr com Retrieved 20 August 2020 GE Capital Acquired Royal Bank of Scotland s Factoring Business in Germany Businesswire co uk 29 March 2010 Retrieved 18 April 2011 a b RBS to cut 3 500 jobs over 3 years 13 January 2012 Archived from the original on 15 January 2012 RBS to cut 4 450 jobs in fresh jobs cull Reuters 12 January 2012 Direct Line nears RBS separation BBC News 3 September 2012 Retrieved 20 September 2013 Steve Slater 13 March 2013 RBS races ahead with Direct Line sell off Reuters Retrieved 20 September 2013 a b RBS makes 630m from sale of 20 of Direct Line BBC News 20 September 2013 Retrieved 20 September 2013 RBS set to make 1bn from remaining Direct Line stake BBC News 26 February 2014 Retrieved 24 February 2015 RBS profits rise on Citizens sale BBC News 30 October 2015 Retrieved 30 October 2015 Van De Casteele Koen 14 December 2009 The EU Commission approves state aid measures concerning the recapitalization of a UK bank Royal Bank of Scotland E Competitions Bulletin Concurrences December 2009 Retrieved 20 August 2020 Wray Richard 4 August 2010 Santander overtakes HSBC as it buys 318 RBS branches The Guardian RBS sale of 316 branches to Santander collapses BBC News 12 October 2012 Retrieved 20 September 2013 Treanor Jill 27 September 2013 RBS sells 314 branches to church backed Corsair consortium The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 20 August 2020 a b RBS sells 314 bank branches to Corsair consortium BBC News 27 September 2013 Retrieved 29 September 2013 Church Commissioners Statement on RBS bid The Church of England 27 September 2013 Archived from the original on 1 October 2013 Retrieved 7 October 2013 RBS cancels Williams amp Glyn project and loses another 2bn The Telegraph 5 August 2016 Retrieved 5 August 2016 a b RBS plans Williams amp Glyn sale should be dropped UK says BBC News 17 February 2017 Retrieved 17 February 2017 Makortoff Kalyeena RBS will change name to NatWest as Alison Rose begins overhaul The Guardian 14 February 2020 RBS Group to change its name to NatWest BBC News 14 February 2020 Our plan to change our parent name RBS 14 February 2020 Retrieved 7 April 2020 RBS to rebrand as Natwest Group next Wednesday Practive Investor 16 July 2020 Retrieved 16 July 2020 Change of Name 14 00 05 22 Jul 2020 RBS News article London Stock Exchange www londonstockexchange com Crow David 11 March 2020 Treasury puts back deadline for divestiture of RBS shares by one year Financial Times Archived from the original on 10 December 2022 Treasury sells 1 1bn of NatWest shares back to bank The Guardian 19 March 2021 Retrieved 19 March 2021 Partington Richard UK government sells 1 1bn worth of shares in NatWest Treasury to sell off further NatWest shares worth up to 1 2bn The Guardian 22 July 2021 Retrieved 28 March 2022 NatWest poised to report biggest profits since 2008 financial crisis Guardian News 12 February 2023 Retrieved 12 February 2023 Government NatWest stake cut to below half for first time since financial crash Wimbledon Guardian Retrieved 28 March 2022 Our executive management team The Royal Bank of Scotland Group Retrieved 1 May 2020 RBS Announces Proposed Future Ring Fenced Legal Entity Structure and Investment in Customer Brands London Stock Exchange RNS No 2659L 30 September 2016 Robert Begbie NatWest Group www natwestgroup com Sir Howard Davies returns to his financial roots with RBS job The Guardian 26 February 2015 Retrieved 14 February 2023 Jones Huw 20 September 2019 Alison Rose gets top job at RBS first woman to lead major UK lender Reuters Retrieved 1 November 2019 Jame Ogilvie Blair Cunynghame NatWest Group Heritage Hub www natwestgroup com Michael Herries NatWest Group Heritage Hub www natwestgroup com Obituary Viscount Younger of Leckie The Independent 9 April 2010 a b Business profile Dynasty ends as a banking royal abdicates The Daily Telegraph 19 April 2006 McKillop takes responsibility for RBS plight The Guardian 20 November 2008 Retrieved 14 February 2023 Tyler Richard 28 January 2012 Sir Philip Hampton waives 1 4m share award The Daily Telegraph London a b John Burke NatWest Group Heritage Hub www natwestgroup com Charles Winter NatWest Group Heritage Hub www natwestgroup com How Royal Bank came back from the brink The Scotsman 16 April 2005 Retrieved 14 February 2023 The Journal 26 January 2009 RBS s Fred Goodwin the world s worst banker Archived 4 March 2009 at the Wayback Machine Stephen Hester Profile CEO Behind Transformation of RBS International Business Times UK 14 May 2013 Arnold Martin 8 February 2015 Monday interview Ross McEwan Royal Bank of Scotland CEO Financial Times Archived from the original on 10 December 2022 The Scotsman 14 September 2005 Queen opens 350m bank HQ a b Slate 1 December 2008 Who s the World s Worst Banker The Times 6 April 2004 Banking star brought down to earth over jet set perk The Guardian 26 February 2009 RBS record losses raise prospect of 95 state ownership Exchiefs of Royal Bank of Scotland And HBOS Admitted To Having No Formal Banking Qualifications The Herald Archived from the original on 4 March 2009 Retrieved 27 February 2009 Julia Finch 26 January 2009 Twenty five people at the heart of the meltdown Business The Guardian UK Retrieved 27 February 2009 Cohen Nick 18 January 2009 It s not the poor the middle class really fear The Guardian UK Retrieved 20 January 2009 Economy The World s Worst Banker Newsweek Voices Daniel Gross Newsweek 18 December 2008 Retrieved 27 February 2009 The Times 20 January 2009 Hubris to nemesis how Sir Fred Goodwin became the world s worst banker The Journal 26 January 2009 RBS s Fred Goodwin the world s worst banker Archived 4 March 2009 at the Wayback Machine Ex RBS chief should lose knighthood Politics co uk Retrieved 27 February 2009 The Times 13 October 2008 Brown targets fat cat pay after nationalising banks in 37 billion bailout The Mirror 7 May 2009 RBS fat cat Gordon Pell given 10M pension pot The Guardian 13 January 2010 Stephen Hester s fat cat flap The Independent 19 April 2004 RBS braced for shareholder showdown over fat cat bonuses dead link Evening Standard 5 February 2009 Bailed out bankers facing curbs on fat cat bonuses Archived 5 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine The Scotsman 1 February 2010 Billy Bragg takes his fight to limit RBS bonuses to Speakers Corner The Telegraph 27 March 2009 A game in which people are encouraged to get their revenge on the former Royal Bank of Scotland chief Sir Fred Goodwin has gone viral Dirty Money Corporate Greenwash amp RBS coal finance PDF Platform March 2011 Retrieved 13 February 2014 The Oil amp Gas Bank PDF Platform March 2007 Archived from the original PDF on 7 February 2018 Retrieved 13 December 2013 Terry Macalister 11 August 2008 Climate change High street banks face consumer boycott over investment in coal projects Guardian UK Retrieved 18 April 2011 a b Energy sector lending Royal Bank of Scotland Royal Bank of Scotland 2013 Archived from the original on 12 December 2013 Retrieved 13 December 2013 Katharine Ainger 27 August 2009 The tactics of these rogue climate elements must not succeed The Guardian UK Retrieved 18 April 2011 Terry Macalister 23 August 2009 Cree aboriginal group to join London climate camp protest over tar sands Guardian UK Retrieved 18 April 2011 Animal Rights news in the UK Animal testing lab faces ruin as bank cancels overdraft Archived from the original on 25 September 2006 Bright Martin 21 January 2001 Inside the labs where lives hang heavy in the balance The Observer UK Retrieved 27 April 2008 Nigel Farage bank account shut for falling below wealth limit BBC News Retrieved 4 July 2023 The dossier that blows apart the Coutts claims about closing Nigel Farage s account The Telegraph 18 July 2023 Retrieved 18 July 2023 External links EditOfficial website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title NatWest Group amp oldid 1166454814, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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