RBS ‘advised to sell’ majority Ulster Bank stake

state-backed lender Royal Bank of Scotland has been formally advised by Morgan Stanley to sell its majority stake in Ireland’s Ulster Bank, the Irish Sunday Business Post reported.
Ross McEwan, RBS head of retail bankingRoss McEwan, RBS head of retail banking
Ross McEwan, RBS head of retail banking

RBS commissioned the investment bank earlier this year to advise it on potential merger opportunities for Ulster Bank, the biggest bank in Northern Ireland and the third largest in the Republic of Ireland.

An announcement could be made as early as next week and could trigger a formal bidding process, the Sunday Business Post said, without quoting any sources.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

RBS said on Friday that attracting private equity firms to inject cash into its Irish arm was one of several options it was considering as part of a restructuring of Ulster Bank.

The Irish Examiner said last week that RBS was considering selling Ulster’s operations in the Irish Republic to a private equity firm in a proposed deal that would leave in place the current management team under chief executive Jim Brown.

RBS chief executive Ross McEwan told reporters on Friday that the bank was looking at the opportunities it had for Ulster Bank and would be in a position to discuss them “probably in the next two or three months”.

An RBS representative declined to comment on the newspaper’s report.

The lender, which is 81 per cent owned by the UK taxpayer, boosted its chances returning to private ownership earlier than expected, after posting a surprise £1bn second-quarter profit.