Monday, February 9, 2026

Creating liberating content

Choose your language

hello@global-herald.net

Jimmy Lai severely sentenced...

Hong Kong media entrepreneur and pro-democracy activist Jimmy Lai Chee-ying was sentenced...

The anatomy of India’s...

In the high-stakes world of trade diplomacy, agreements are usually forged quietly...

Fans erupt as Lungi...

The Narendra Modi Stadium bore witness to a clinical exhibition of...

Ford worker who heckled...

The Ford worker who heckled President Trump during his visit to a...
HomePoliticsEuropeNatWest dips after...

NatWest dips after $3.7 billion deal to acquire Evelyn Partners agreed


NatWest’s shares fell 9% on Monday after the company announced a £2.7 billion ($3.7 billion) deal to acquire one of the U.K.’s largest wealth managers, Evelyn Partners.

The deal will see NatWest double its total assets under management to £127 billion, up from £59 billion, the British bank said in a press release Monday.

NatWest is looking to boost its wealth management services as fee-based businesses can help counter a decline in interest income from falling central bank rates. Europe’s banking sector thrived in 2025, as stronger organic growth left many lenders flush with excess capital — fueling expectations of increased M&A in 2026.

Shares were last seen down almost 9%, with the stock up just 1.2% so far this year after gaining 62% in 2025.

Stock Chart IconStock chart icon

hide content

NatWest shares year-to-date

“This transaction creates the UK’s leading Private Banking and Wealth Management business, delivering the scale and capabilities needed to succeed in a market with significant growth potential,” NatWest Group’s CEO Paul Thwaite said in the release.

Paul Geddes, CEO of Evelyn Partners, added that the deal marks an “exciting new chapter” for the wealth manager.

NatWest is reported to have outbid rival bank Barclays in recent days for the merger, according to Sky News.

Evelyn Partners, previously known as Tilney Smith & Williamson, offers services from financial planning, discretionary investment management, and its direct-to-consumer platform, BestInvest. It’s currently owned by private equity firms Permira and Warburg Pincus.

The deal, which is expected to close by this summer and is still subject to customary regulatory approvals, will be funded from NatWest’s existing resources, reducing its core capital by 1.3%.

NatWest is due to publish its fourth-quarter results and provide a strategic update on Friday.



Source link

Get notified whenever we post something new!

spot_img

Create a website from scratch

Just drag and drop elements in a page to get started with Newspaper Theme.

Continue reading

Jimmy Lai severely sentenced despite Trump calling for his release

Hong Kong media entrepreneur and pro-democracy activist Jimmy Lai Chee-ying was sentenced to 20 years’ imprisonment by a Hong Kong court on charges of colluding with foreign forces, partly because he had called on Washington to speak up...

The anatomy of India’s trade capitulation to Trump

In the high-stakes world of trade diplomacy, agreements are usually forged quietly through painstaking negotiations behind closed doors, dense legal texts and carefully calibrated “reciprocity” and “give and take.” The recently announced India-US “interim trade deal” departs radically...

Fans erupt as Lungi Ngidi’s four-wicket burst powers South Africa to a dominant win against Canada in T20 World Cup 2026

The Narendra Modi Stadium bore witness to a clinical exhibition of T20 cricket on February 09, 2026, as South Africa dismantled Canada by 57 runs in their Group D clash of the ICC Men’s T20 World Cup...

Enjoy exclusive access to all of our content

Get an online subscription and you can unlock any article you come across.