When RBS went bust, and HBOS did, it wasn’t because of government ownership, was it? They were in the private sector then.
The bankers’ dirty secret is that one way or another they operate on a permanent subsidy from the rest of us anyway.
NatWest remains too big to fail. If it goes bust again, well, we’ll bail it out again. No other industry has this sort of inherent guarantee.
So why doesn’t the government just keep its stake, perhaps forever?
You are plainly a dangerous communist. Seriously, there is no particularly good reason why not.
NatWest could exist as a permanent counter to the private sector banks such as Barclays and Lloyds. A point of comparison.
But £14 billion is a lot, no?
A billion here and a billion there, before long you’re talking about real money. But you wouldn’t personally see what the government did with that cash, and compared to a national debt of £2.3 trillion it isn’t that significant.
Should I buy shares in NatWest?
I thought so back in 2010. I was wrong. If you are confident that Covid is almost over and that the roaring 20s are on, then why not. There should at least be a regular income stream from here on.
Would it be cynical of me to think that it is easier for a bank to pay high bonuses if there is no government stake, and that this could be a motivation for wanting a sale as soon as possible?
The cynicism is not yours.
Come to think of it, if bankers want our shares to be sold, partly to them, doesn’t that suggest they think they are undervalued, and that therefore we should wait a bit?