London, Feb 11, 2026, 07:49 (GMT) — Premarket
- NatWest ended Tuesday at 605p, slipping 2.4%.
- Investors continue to sift through the £2.7 billion Evelyn Partners acquisition and what it means for the bank’s capital position.
- NatWest flagged a fresh on-market share buyback Tuesday evening.
NatWest Group Plc dropped 2.4% on Tuesday, closing at 605 pence, and the stock heads into Wednesday’s London trade still weighed down by questions over its wealth strategy. 1
The timing isn’t ideal. UK banks are deep into a packed reporting week, and investors are pushing for answers on earnings momentum and capital returns—not only the reasoning behind the deal.
NatWest has been turning more toward fee income—the cash brought in from various services—as shifting market expectations of lower rates threaten to crimp those interest margins. The move for Evelyn puts that approach front and center, and fast.
NatWest is picking up Evelyn Partners for 2.7 billion pounds ($3.68 billion), including debt—the bank’s largest move since its 2008 bailout. The lender plans to use existing funds for the buy, announced Monday. Shares slid roughly 4.5% after the news broke. Jefferies flagged the price tag, estimating the acquisition could shave about 2% off earnings per share through 2028. Analyst Benjamin Toms at RBC Capital Markets called the deal “transformational,” though he admitted he was “somewhat surprised” NatWest came out on top in the bidding. 2
Paul Thwaite, chief executive at NatWest, called the deal “a strategically and financially compelling use of capital.” Over at Evelyn, CEO Paul Geddes said the company was “delighted to join NatWest Group.” NatWest added that the purchase will shave about 130 basis points, or 1.3 percentage points, from its CET1 ratio. No new buybacks are expected before the first-half 2027 results, the bank said. 3
NatWest picked up 914,095 of its own shares on Feb. 10, paying a volume-weighted average of 611.77 pence each, according to a regulatory filing Tuesday. The bank plans to cancel the repurchased stock. 4
No lift from the broader market. London’s FTSE 100 finished 0.3% lower Tuesday. Barclays slid 2.5%—this, after the bank posted a 12% jump in 2025 profit. Investors kept the pressure on the sector. 5
Traders are zeroed in on the next move: the tug-of-war between shareholder rewards and caution. Keep an eye out for fresh numbers on net interest income—the difference between returns on loans and costs for deposits—plus credit impairment charges and word on capital targets. All that, on top of the deal calculations, will be key.
Still, it’s easy to see how things could sour. If growth stalls, bad loans tend to climb. There’s also the risk that a major wealth integration falls short on synergies or hits regulatory snags, which could squeeze buyback capacity if capital cushions shrink.
NatWest’s annual results are up next, dropping at 0700 GMT on Friday. After the numbers hit, management will address investors later in the morning. 6