NatWest Group Plc (LSE: NWG) is trading near 2025 highs as buybacks continue, Cushon sale plans take shape, and UK rate-cut expectations shift bank earnings forecasts.
NatWest Group Plc shares are ending 2025 with a very “UK bank” cocktail of drivers: steady capital returns, incremental strategy tweaks, and macro forces (read: Bank of England rate expectations) that can move net interest income by the mile.
As of the latest London close (Friday, 12 December 2025), NatWest shares finished at £6.12, down 1.35% on the day and still just a short step below the £6.41 52‑week high hit earlier this month. The broader FTSE 100 also fell in the session. [1]
Below is a roundup of the current news, forecasts, and analyst takes shaping NatWest stock as of 13 December 2025—with the context that matters for Google News/Discover readers: what happened, why it matters, and what’s next.
NatWest share price today: where the stock stands heading into mid‑December
NatWest’s latest close at £6.12 puts the stock roughly 4.6% below its recent £6.41 52‑week high, with trading volume reported below its recent average—often a sign that the move was more “market drift” than “new conviction.” [2]
For US-market readers, NatWest also trades via an ADR on the NYSE under ticker NWG (and 1 ADR represents 2 ordinary shares). [3] The ADR last traded around $15.05 in the most recent quoted session.
The headline NatWest news moving the story right now
1) NatWest buyback activity continues with fresh daily repurchases
NatWest disclosed another slice of share repurchases under its ongoing buyback program: 865,257 ordinary shares purchased on 12 December 2025 at a volume-weighted average price of 618.21p, with the high and low prices paid disclosed as well. The bank stated the repurchased shares are intended to be cancelled (a key detail for investors watching per‑share metrics). [4]
Why it matters for the stock:
Buybacks don’t guarantee a rising share price, but they can act as a steady bid and—more importantly—lift earnings per share over time by shrinking the share count. With NatWest, the market has increasingly treated capital return as part of the “core proposition,” not a bonus.
Zooming out, this buyback sits inside the bank’s previously announced up to £750 million repurchase program (the “2025 Programme”), launched after its mid‑2025 results. [5]
2) NatWest agrees to sell its ~85% stake in Cushon to WTW
One of the most concrete strategic updates late in 2025: NatWest announced an agreement for WTW (Willis Towers Watson) to acquire NatWest’s c.85% stake in Cushon, as part of a wider transaction that results in WTW acquiring 100% of the workplace pensions and savings fintech. The deal is expected to complete in the first half of 2026, subject to regulatory approval. [6]
NatWest also highlighted that since joining the group, Cushon grew from roughly 500,000 customers to ~730,000, and assets under administration/management rose from £1.7bn to almost £4bn. [7]
Why it matters for shareholders:
This looks less like a “fire sale” and more like portfolio gardening—a disposal aligned with NatWest’s simplification theme, while still keeping commercial distribution via a referral arrangement. [8]
If you’re modelling NatWest stock, the key question isn’t just “what’s the sale price?” (not disclosed in the companies’ announcements), but whether the bank continues to trim non-core complexity while protecting distribution economics and freeing management bandwidth.
3) NatWest shows up as a lender in DMGT’s Telegraph takeover financing
NatWest also appeared in a very different kind of headline: the Financial Times reported that DMGT secured £500 million of funding for its Telegraph takeover efforts, with financing including increased debt through long‑time lender NatWest. [9]
Why it matters:
This isn’t about NatWest “buying a newspaper.” It’s a reminder that NatWest’s Commercial & Institutional engine still matters—relationship banking, structured lending, and the reputational/regulatory framing around UK media ownership are all part of the background noise investors sometimes forget… until it becomes a headline. [10]
4) NatWest takes a minority stake in SME finance startup Bourn
Sky News reported NatWest is acquiring a minority shareholding in Bourn, a London-based startup focused on flexible secured funding for SMEs. [11]
Why it matters:
This is small in pure financial terms (based on what’s public), but it fits the pattern: NatWest wants to be seen as a bank that can still innovate in the SME ecosystem without trying to be a sprawling global universal bank again.
Forecast watch: NatWest’s own guidance and the next big catalyst date
In its Q3 2025 update, NatWest said it expects for 2025:
- Income excluding notable items of around £16.3bn
- Return on Tangible Equity (RoTE) of greater than 18%
It also stated it will introduce guidance for 2026 and new targets for 2028 alongside its Full Year 2025 results on 13 February 2026. [12]
Why that February date matters for the stock:
Markets can tolerate ambiguity… right up until they can’t. A formal 2026 outlook (and longer-term targets) is likely to become a focal point for:
- sustainable earnings power in a potentially falling-rate UK environment
- the cadence of dividends and buybacks
- the “shape” of cost discipline after years of simplification talk
Analyst forecasts: what price targets say about NatWest stock upside
Consensus numbers vary by data provider, but one widely followed snapshot (as of this week) shows:
- 16 analysts covering NatWest with an average target around 663p
- High estimate around 765p, low around 550p
- Consensus stance labelled “Buy” (with a mix of buy/hold/sell calls underneath) [13]
The recent tone shift: “still good,” but valuation is tighter
A notable late-2025 data point: Goldman Sachs downgraded NatWest from Buy to Neutral, trimming its target to £6.65 (from £6.85) and flagging that—after big earnings revisions and a rerating—the shares look more fairly valued even though profitability and capital generation remain attractive in their view. [14]
How to read this as a non-broker:
When a stock runs hard (NatWest has), analyst language often morphs from “valuation is compelling” to “execution is good but priced in.” That doesn’t mean “down it goes.” It means the next leg higher usually needs new information—stronger guidance, faster capital returns, or better-than-feared margin outcomes.
The macro variable that refuses to stay quiet: Bank of England rates
Where UK rates are now
The Bank of England’s Bank Rate is 4%, with the next decision due 18 December 2025. [15]
Where markets (and economists) think rates are going
A Reuters poll published this week suggested economists expect a 25bp cut on 18 December to 3.75%, with another cut expected in Q1 2026 by many respondents. [16]
Meanwhile, UK economic data and commentary in the financial press has been feeding that rate-cut narrative—weak growth prints tend to do that. [17]
Why NatWest stock cares:
For banks, rate cuts can compress net interest margins (NIM) as asset yields reset faster than deposit costs fall—or vice versa—depending on product mix and deposit behaviour.
The NatWest-specific twist: the “structural hedge” tailwind
S&P Global Ratings, in a December 2025 note, called NatWest’s structural hedge a “material revenue tailwind,” describing it as smoothing net interest income over time and noting the hedge yield is expected to keep growing into the late 2020s as maturing positions are reinvested at higher rates. S&P also said it expects further net interest margin expansion over its two‑year outlook horizon, even as the BoE is set to lower policy rates further. [18]
That’s an important counterbalance to the simplistic “rate cuts = bank profits down” story.
Balance sheet strength and credit quality: what the rating agencies are watching
Credit quality doesn’t usually trend on social media, which is exactly why it matters.
S&P’s December 2025 update reiterated NatWest’s issuer credit rating context (and noted the report itself was not a rating action). [19] It also pointed to:
- 19.5% reported RoTE in the first nine months of 2025 (with a note about some nonrecurring gains), and management expectations of RoTE above 18% for full‑year 2025 and greater than 15% in 2027 [20]
- A view that capitalization supports the rating, including an expectation that S&P’s risk‑adjusted capital (RAC) ratio trends higher by 2027, and noting NatWest reported a 14.2% CET1 ratio at September 2025 (with management operating in a 13%–14% target range) [21]
- “Benign” asset quality metrics in the period discussed, including commentary on impairment charges and Stage 3 loans [22]
Separately, NatWest referenced the Bank of England’s 2025 stress test outcome, stating the scenario results showed the group remains above key regulatory thresholds under stress assumptions. [23]
Stock relevance:
If investors believe credit costs stay contained while capital returns continue, the equity story remains credible even if revenue growth cools.
The bull case and bear case for NatWest stock into 2026
The bull case (why investors still like the setup)
NatWest’s near‑high share price isn’t just vibes; it’s the market pricing in a combination of:
- ongoing capital returns via buybacks and dividends [24]
- strong profitability guidance (RoTE >18% for 2025) [25]
- margin support from the structural hedge even as policy rates drift down [26]
- simplification moves like the Cushon sale that reduce distraction and complexity [27]
The bear case (what can still bite)
Risks investors keep on the dashboard:
- Faster-than-expected rate cuts or competitive deposit pricing that pressures margins (even with hedging support) [28]
- UK growth shocks feeding into impairments and slower credit demand [29]
- execution risk around simplification, technology resilience, and regulatory expectations (a constant for UK banks)
- valuation: after a strong run, upgrades can slow and downgrades can pick up, as seen with Goldman’s move to Neutral [30]
What to watch next for NatWest shares
A short, practical catalyst calendar for anyone tracking NatWest stock:
- 18 Dec 2025: Bank of England rate decision (and guidance on the path ahead) [31]
- Ongoing: daily/regular buyback disclosures (the program itself is an underappreciated source of “steady newsflow”) [32]
- H1 2026: expected completion window for the Cushon transaction, subject to approvals [33]
- 13 Feb 2026: full-year 2025 results and (crucially) new guidance for 2026 and targets for 2028 [34]
Bottom line
NatWest stock is behaving like a company that has moved from “turnaround narrative” to “cash-generation narrative.” The shares are near their 2025 highs, but the driver’s seat is now crowded: buybacks support per‑share value, strategy simplification continues (Cushon), and macro rate expectations are swinging the spotlight back onto margins—while the structural hedge story complicates the usual “rate cuts are bad for banks” shorthand.
References
1. www.marketwatch.com, 2. www.marketwatch.com, 3. investors.natwestgroup.com, 4. www.investegate.co.uk, 5. www.investegate.co.uk, 6. www.natwestgroup.com, 7. www.natwestgroup.com, 8. www.natwestgroup.com, 9. www.ft.com, 10. www.ft.com, 11. news.sky.com, 12. www.natwestgroup.com, 13. www.investing.com, 14. www.investing.com, 15. www.bankofengland.co.uk, 16. www.reuters.com, 17. www.theguardian.com, 18. investors.natwestgroup.com, 19. investors.natwestgroup.com, 20. investors.natwestgroup.com, 21. investors.natwestgroup.com, 22. investors.natwestgroup.com, 23. www.investegate.co.uk, 24. www.investegate.co.uk, 25. www.natwestgroup.com, 26. investors.natwestgroup.com, 27. www.natwestgroup.com, 28. www.reuters.com, 29. www.theguardian.com, 30. www.investing.com, 31. www.bankofengland.co.uk, 32. www.investegate.co.uk, 33. www.natwestgroup.com, 34. www.natwestgroup.com


