Financial Results
NatWest's Q1 2026 Private Banking, Wealth Operating Profit Rises
.jpg)
The UK banking group, which is buying wealth management house Evelyn Partners, became the latest to report first-quarter results.
The private banking arm of UK-listed NatWest Group,
principally the business of Coutts, has reported today that
operating profit came in at £94 million ($124 million) in the
first quarter of this year, up from £77 million a year before,
but down from £107 million in the final three months of 2025.
Total income rose to £291 million from £265 million; operating
costs widened to £191 million from £187 million, the group,
currently in the processes of buying UK
wealth manager Evelyn Partners,
said in a statement.
The quarter-on-quarter fall in total income mostly reflected the
non-repeat of adjustments relating to transactional fees and
effective interest rate adjustment review of customer loan
repayment behaviour in in the final Q4 2025, as well as the
impact of two fewer days in the quarter, partly offset by deposit
margin expansion from strong hedge income. The year-on-year rise
was largely driven by deposit margin expansion from strong hedge
income and growth in assets under management and
administration.
Impairment losses rose to £6 million from £1 million a year
before.
The results meant that NatWest’s private banking and wealth
management return on equity rose to 21.1 per cent from 17.1 per
cent a year earlier; its net interest margin rose to 2.73 per
cent from 2.59 per cent.
There were £900 million of assets under management flows in the
quarter, up from £800 million; total AuM stood at £43.3 billion
at the end of March, up from £36.7 billion 12 months before, but
a touch lower than the end of 2025. Total assets under
administration rose to £13.4 billion from £11.8 billion, NatWest
said.
At group level, NatWest said profit after tax was £1.5 billion,
up 2 per cent from the final three months of last year.
NatWest said it achieved return on tangible equity of 18.2 per
cent, a touch lower than in Q4 2025. Its Common Equity Tier
1 ratio – a standard international measure of a bank’s capital
buffer, was 14.3 per cent – up from 14 per cent.
This news service recently covered the decision by Coutts to hike its minimum wealth threshold on new clients to £3 million, and the implications for the wider industry.