businessSee all
A picture

Government sells final shares in NatWest 17 years after £45bn bailout

The UK has sold its final shares in NatWest Group, ending 17 years of state ownership since the £45bn taxpayer bailout that saved the bank from collapse at the height of the 2008 financial crisis.The full privatisation of NatWest is a symbolic moment for the banking group – formerly known as Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS) – and draws a line under the most tumultuous chapter in its near 300-year history.However, it comes at a £10bn loss to the taxpayer, with the state having only recouped about £35bn of its costs, because its shares have long languished below the average 502p level paid in the bailout.That compares with the £900m profit recouped from the sale of shares in Lloyds Banking Group, which was privatised in 2017, nine years after receiving £20.3bn in state aid for rescuing HBOS during the banking crash

A picture

Trump says China ‘totally violated’ tariff truce after US warns trade talks have ‘stalled’ – as it happened

Donald Trump has accused China of breaking the tariff truce the two nations agreed in Geneva just a few weeks ago.Both countries had agreed to temporarily pause their escalating tariffs, which at one point hit 145%.The president wrote on his social media platform Truth Social:I made a FAST DEAL with China in order to save them from what I thought was going to be a very bad situation, and I didn’t want to see that happen. Because of this deal, everything quickly stabilized and China got back to business as usual. Everybody was happy! That is the good news!!! The bad news is that China, perhaps not surprisingly to some, HAS TOTALLY VIOLATED ITS AGREEMENT WITH US

A picture

Sir Bob Reid obituary

In the spring of 1990, the chief executive’s office at British Rail received an urgent telephone call from the area manager at Newcastle upon Tyne saying there was a one-armed Scotsman wandering around the main signal box claiming to be BR’s new chairman and wanting to know how everything worked. Was it all right to tell him?The man was Bob Reid, who had recently moved from Shell, where he was the UK chairman, and was now on the brink of a difficult five-year stint at BR that would end in a privatisation about which he had serious misgivings. His foray into the signal box, matched by an excursion into the drivers’ restroom at Waterloo, was typical of the man. Determined, impulsive and impatient to get things moving, he had a liking for human contact and an easy manner, regardless of rank.The offer to take over BR had come in 1990

A picture

Burberry pays new boss almost £2.6m in nine months while axing jobs

Burberry has paid its new chief executive, Joshua Schulman, almost £2.6m in his first nine months in the job, including £380,000 in house moving costs, as the ailing British brand announced hundreds of job cuts.The company also gave its former boss Jonathan Akeroyd a payoff worth about £1.5m – a year’s notice including salary, pension and cash benefits – after he exited the company in July last year, according to the group’s annual report. The former Versace boss left less than three years after he was appointed in 2021

A picture

Volkswagen to make ‘massive’ investment in US in bid to avoid tariffs

Volkswagen, Europe’s largest industrial group, has said it will make a “massive” investment in the US. The group, which includes Porsche, revealed it has been in direct talks with Donald Trump’s administration as it faces damaging tariffs.Oliver Blume, who heads the group, said the talks were “constructive” and “fair”, in an interview that suggests the company, whose market capital is £44bn, is not willing to leave tariff negotiations to Brussels alone.Speaking to Süddeutsche Zeitung, Blume said he had been to Washington himself and had a direct line to the US commerce secretary, Howard Lutnick, but had agreed to keep details of the talks confidential.He hoped that plans for substantial investment would help shape Trump’s ultimate decision on the 25% tariffs the US imposed on auto imports in April

A picture

Inflation data shouldn’t deter us from rate cuts, says Bank policymaker

A member of the Bank of England’s interest rate-setting committee has warned that higher-than-expected inflation and growth figures should not distract policymakers from continuing to cut borrowing costs.Alan Taylor, who was one of two monetary policy committee members to call for a bigger 0.5 percentage point cut last month, said that while he was not going to forecast his future votes, he felt that recent economic data was being led by one-off factors.“I’m not going to pre-emptively announce my vote, but I think I indicated in my dissent that I thought we needed to be on a lower [monetary] policy path,” Taylor told the Financial Times in an interview.The latest figures show UK inflation jumped by more than expected in April, to 3