UK government no longer NatWest's controlling shareholder

Reuters

Published Mar 25, 2024 13:10

Updated Mar 25, 2024 19:51

LONDON (Reuters) -The British government is no longer the controlling shareholder in NatWest - the bank it bailed out at the height of the global financial crisis - and has reduced its stake in the lender to below 30%, the finance ministry said on Monday.

"This is a significant milestone demonstrating we're making excellent progress on fully returning NatWest to private ownership," economic secretary Bim Afolami said in a statement.

The government's ownership of the former Royal Bank of Scotland (LON:NWG) dipped below 30% after the sale of further stock to institutional investors under the government's trading plan. The state's holding in the bank was once as high as 84%.

The government has taken steps to try to accelerate the return of NatWest to private hands by a target of 2026, and is planning the sale of a chunk of its stock to the public as early as June.

The reduction below 30% means the government is technically no longer classed as a controlling shareholder under UK listing rules, which eases some restrictions on appointments of directors.