RBS raises City hopes after posting first profit since 2015

Nice try: RBS, which sponsors the Six Nations, made a £259 million first-quarter profit
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Royal Bank of Scotland turned its first profit since September 2015 today, offering hope it has finally turned the corner and suggesting the Government could start selling its 72% stake.

The bank, which sponsors the Six Nations rugby tournament, still faces massive headwinds in the face of a settlement of at least $10 billion (£7.7 billion) with the US Department of Justice over mis-sold mortgage bonds and a potentially embarrassing court case that could see former boss Fred Goodwin give evidence against it.

RBS made a profit of £259 million for the first quarter, compared with a loss of £968 million last time.

Shares jumped 4% to 259p on the news — still a long way off what the Government paid for them. Without restructuring costs, RBS made a profit of £1.3 billion.

City analysts think it should make at least that much in pure profit every quarter once the bank is finally cleaned up.

RBS made a loss last year of £7 billion. Next month’s court case is over whether investors were misled about a rights issue before the bank went bust. Goodwin is likely to be a controversial witness.

Richard Hunter, head of research at Wilson King Investment Management, said: “Though it’s too early to hang out the bunting, there are some signs of recovery at the beleaguered bank.”

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