Troubled NatWest makes £3.6bn profits after two chiefs quit over Nigel Farage row

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NatWest Group has reported a rise in half-year profits amid turmoil at the top involving the resignations of two chief executives over the leaking of details of Nigel Farage’s bank account.

The bank was dragged into an embarrassing row when Mr Farage revealed that his account with private bank Coutts, owned by the NatWest Group, was closed partly because of his political views.

The taxpayer-backed lender revealed an operating pre-tax profit of £3.6 billion for the latest half-year, up from £2.6 billion in the same period last year.

But senior bosses are set to face scrutiny from shareholders after the shock departure of NatWest chief executive Dame Alison Rose wiped 3.6 per cent from the bank’s share price on Wednesday. It knocked £850m from NatWest’s value and hit taxpayer shares by more than £320m.

And on Thursday, the furore claimed a second bank boss’s scalp, when Peter Flavel, chief executive of upmarket bank Coutts resigned over his role in the closure of the accounts of the former Ukip leader.

Dame Alison apologised and admitted making a “serious error of judgment” when she discussed his bank account with a BBC journalist.

The BBC News story had wrongly said the closure had been motivated by commercial reasons only, citing a “failure” by Mr Farage to meet a £1m borrowing requirement.

But Brexiteer Mr Farage presented a dossier showing his Coutts account had been closed partly due to his political views. Internal documents labelled him as “xenophobic and racist”.

Dame Alison later admitted she was the source of the inaccurate BBC story.

Earlier this year, she received a substantial payout of more than £5m following robust profits – the first time NatWest had granted a bonus to a chief executive since the government’s rescue of the company during the 2008 financial crisis.

NatWest, which is 39 per cent-owned by British taxpayers, in April reported a 50 per cent jump in profits to £1.9bn in the first three months of the year.

The departures of Dame Alison and Mr Flavel increase pressure on Sir Howard Davies the chairman of NatWest, who initially expressed “full confidence” in Dame Alison.

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