The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

RBS poised for profits surge

-

Royal Bank of Scotland is set to book its second consecutiv­e year of annual profits this week, providing further impetus for the government to continue selling down its stake in the lender.

A consensus of City analysts is forecastin­g the bank will see bottom-line profits nearly double from £752 million last year to £1.4 billion when it reports on Friday.

It will mark the bank’s second year in the black following a decade-long run of stinging losses, during a period marred by crisis-era legacy and conduct charges.

However, under chief executive Ross McEwan’s stewardshi­p, the bank drew a line under the last of the major misconduct settlement­s in August, reaching a $4.9bn agreement with US authoritie­s over alleged mis-selling of residentia­l mortgage-backed securities.

Moreover, the 62.4%taxpayer owned lender has recently gained shareholde­r approval that allows it to buy back up to £1.5bn worth of shares from the Treasury.

The move, which aims to speed up its privatisat­ion and deploy excess capital, permits RBS to purchase up to 4.99% of the government’s stake in any one year.

The bank’s shares have rallied since December and Ian Gordon, analyst at Investec, believes another upward spurt could see the Treasury offload another tranche.

He said: “RBS shares have already rallied by 23% over the past two months. It’s (almost) time for the UK Government to leave.

“Another circa 10% or so and we suspect that it will become a willing seller again.”

Chancellor Philip Hammond said in his Autumn Statement that the government plans to dispose of its stake in full by 2024, but Investec is pencilling in an exit by 2023.

This is based on the assumption of directed share buybacks of 4.99% per year, supplement­ed by yearly market placings by the government of £3bn.

Mr Gordon also believes that RBS will declare a 10p special dividend alongside its results.

RBS has been majority taxpayer-owned since 2008, when it received a £45bn bailout at the height of the financial crisis.

 ??  ?? Royal Bank of Scotland is expected to nearly double its profits.
Royal Bank of Scotland is expected to nearly double its profits.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom