London, June 16, 2026, 14:03 BST
- NatWest Group Plc shares were quoted at 624.80p, up 10.00p, or 1.63%, while the FTSE 100 was up 0.60%. Davy Group
- The move looked mostly sector-driven: Reuters reported that financials helped lead the FTSE 100 higher as lower oil prices improved risk appetite. Reuters
- Investors’ next near-term tests are the Bank of England rate decision on June 18 and NatWest’s half-year results on July 31. Bank of England
NatWest Group Plc rose on Tuesday as UK banking shares caught a broader bid, helped by a stronger FTSE 100 and a risk-on tone in London markets. The stock was recently quoted at 624.80p, up 1.63%, giving the bank a market value of about £49.7 billion. The day’s gain was not tied to a fresh earnings release from NatWest. It came as Reuters reported that London’s blue-chip index advanced 0.6%, with financials and industrials among the leading sectors after easing oil prices improved investor appetite for risk. Davy Group
That matters for NatWest because bank stocks are highly sensitive to the interest-rate cycle and investor confidence in the economy. Net interest income — the gap between what a bank earns on loans and pays on deposits — tends to benefit when rates stay high, though weak economic growth can push up bad-loan risks. The Bank of England says Bank Rate is currently 3.75%, with its next decision due on June 18. A steady-rate message could support earnings expectations, but any sign of a faster path to cuts would put more pressure on margin assumptions. Bank of England
NatWest’s recent financial base remains solid. In its Q1 2026 update, the bank reported attributable profit of £1.4 billion and earnings per share of 17.9p, up 15.5% from a year earlier. Return on tangible equity, a profitability measure comparing earnings with tangible shareholder capital, was 18.2%. Its CET1 ratio, the core capital buffer regulators watch most closely, stood at 14.3%. Chief executive Paul Thwaite said NatWest’s “strong performance” reflected “consistent delivery for customers and shareholders.” Natwestgroup
Shareholder returns are another support for the stock. NatWest’s latest buyback disclosures showed it had bought 3.45 million ordinary shares between June 8 and June 11, with the shares intended for cancellation. A buyback reduces the number of shares in issue; if profits hold steady, that can lift earnings per share and support valuation. The group also has a prospective dividend yield of 5.20% and a price-to-earnings ratio of 9.04, according to Hargreaves Lansdown data. Investegate
The bull case is clear enough: NatWest is profitable, well capitalised, paying income, and analysts still see room for upside. MarketScreener’s consensus page lists 17 analysts with a mean “Outperform” view and an average target price of £7.376, above the latest quoted level. The bear case is also straightforward. A UK-focused lender is exposed to rate cuts, mortgage competition, deposit repricing and any rise in credit losses if household or business finances weaken. On the verified numbers, the stock looks reasonably valued and income-backed, not risk-free. The next company-specific catalyst is the half-year result on July 31, when investors will look for confirmation that NatWest can keep margins, credit quality and capital returns on track. Marketscreener