Pre-tax figure of £6.2bn comes as bank confirms Paul Thwaite will take over permanently as CEO

NatWest made its biggest annual profit last year since the 2007 financial crisis, helped by high interest rates, as the bank confirmed the interim boss Paul Thwaite would permanently take over as its chief executive before a sale of its government-owned shares.

The UK lender – which is still 35% government-owned – said pre-tax profits rose 20% to £6.2bn in the year to December. That is the highest annual profit recorded since it made £10bn in 2007, the year before excesses led to a public rescue that has yet to be fully unwound 16 years later.

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