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Britain’s Natwest share sale to test UK equity market upswing

- By SINEAD CRUISE and TOMMY WILKES Sinead Cruise and Tommy Wilkes write for Reuters. The views expressed here are the writers’ own.

BRITAIN’S plans to sell shares in Natwest Bank to the public this summer will be a test of a long-awaited upswing in the UK stock market that saw the FTSE 100 hit a record high last week – months after similar milestones for benchmark indexes elsewhere.

Finance Minister Jeremy Hunt hopes the sale of government-owned stock in the bailedout bank, Britain’s biggest casualty of the 2008 global financial crisis, will spur Britons to invest more in Uk-listed companies.

In November, Hunt evoked memories of Margaret Thatcher by saying it was “time to get Sid investing again”, a reference to the marketing campaign the former prime minister launched for the privatisat­ion of British Gas in the 1980s.

By the end of that decade, thousands of Britons held shares in some of the UK’S biggest firms.

But encouragin­g investors to buy Natwest now, against a backdrop of global geopolitic­al turmoil and economic uncertaint­y, could backfire, wealth managers and investors say.

“Despite the FTSE 100 hitting record highs, sentiment surroundin­g UK investment­s is pretty low and I think a retail offer is a higher risk option for improving equity ownership and sentiment towards the UK market,” said Dan Boardman-weston, CEO at BRI Wealth Management.

“Financial literacy is poor in the UK and we need to address that problem before we can start to tackle the lack of equity ownership by the public. I fear a sale of Natwest to the public is not something to ‘tell Sid’ about.”

Slow progress

The task of attracting more domestic and foreign investment into Uk-listed firms has occupied ministers and CEOS for years but progress has been slow, with reforms like a tax-efficient British ISA (individual savings account) still in design.

“It strikes me as a bit of a political stunt,” said Mark Bentley, a director at Sharesoc, one of Britain’s largest associatio­ns of retail investors, pointing to the government’s aim to hold the sale in the run-up to a general election.

“Banks are very complex entities to invest in ... A ‘tell Sid’ marketing campaign could be very problemati­c if it makes things look too simplistic.”

Hunt is yet to confirm the sale but UK Government Investment­s, which manages the taxpayers’ stake, is working with banks and other advisers including ad firm M&C Saatchi on the details, including size, discount and structure.

“Already we’re seeing market research that shows a sale would be supported by all sections of society, particular­ly young adults and ethnic minorities,” financial services minister Bim Afolami told Reuters by email.

Any sale, he said, would be subject to “market conditions and achieving value for money”.

The government scrapped a similar proposal to sell Lloyds Banking Group stock to the public in 2016, citing poor market conditions triggered by Brexit.

Unlike in an initial public offering, Hunt faces a test to get investors excited about shares they can already easily buy on the market.

What’s more, while Natwest’s stock is still around 40% cheaper than the 502-pence price the government paid at its bailout, it has jumped more than 80% since hitting a 2½-year low in October.

“Why should they (investors) be interested now?” said Nicholas

Hyett, investment manager at retail investment platform Wealth Club.

A spokespers­on for Natwest, which reported a smaller-than-expected drop in first-quarter earnings last Friday, said decisions on a retail offer were “a matter for the government”.

Natwest CEO Paul Thwaite said last Friday the bank was taking steps to be ready should the government push ahead with a sale.

“I think the retail sharing offer, should it happen, is an important opportunit­y because it further reduces the (government) shareholdi­ng,” he told reporters on a call following Natwest’s earnings.

The government has already reduced its stake in Natwest to below 30% and wants to fully exit by the end of 2026.

Discount dilemma

In previous privatisat­ions, like Royal Mail, the government had greater freedom to set a price that offered room to rise after the sale. But with Natwest, it is constraine­d by both market price and recent volatility.

British bank shares have proven tricky investment­s since the financial crisis, with prices buffeted by the pandemic, scandals and erratic profitabil­ity.

To compensate, lenders are striving to rebrand as income-driven investment­s and now that higher interest rates are bolstering profit, they are paying handsome dividends to woo long-term shareholde­rs. Natwest has paid out almost £12.5bil (Us$15.7bil) to investors over the last three years and hiked its dividend per share 26% in 2023.

Banking and investment industry sources say Natwest could time a bumper buyback from the government alongside a retail offer to support the stock.

Sharesoc’s Bentley said he doubted the sale would revive a UK share-owning culture by itself, as most buyers would probably be content to make “a quick buck”.

Data from Calastone shows monthly outflows from Uk-focused equity funds hit their highest in more than a year in March, the 34th consecutiv­e month of net selling by investors.

These outflows were recorded just weeks before the FTSE 100 set its record high, underscori­ng how nervous many investors still feel about British stocks.

Existing Natwest shareholde­rs hope a government exit will erase what some call an “interferen­ce discount” on its valuation.

“The bank itself is in good shape,” said Richard Marwood, portfolio manager at Royal London Asset Management, one of Natwest’s largest investors.

“The sell-down of the government stake clearly could cause collateral damage to the bank’s public reputation if it doesn’t go well but it’s outside of management’s control.”

“Financial literacy is poor in the UK and we need to address that problem before we can start to tackle the lack of equity ownership by the public.” Dan Boardman-weston

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