Home / Banks / Comparison

Standard Chartered vs NatWest Group

Side-by-side credit pricing comparison from Pillar 3 disclosures.

Last updated: March 2026 · Data source: public Pillar 3 disclosures
Verdict:

On a representative BBB+ EUR 25M 5-year term loan, NatWest Group is the cheaper lender by 23bp in minimum spread. For a EUR 25M facility, that's EUR 57,240 per year.

Bank profiles compared

Metric Standard Chartered
United Kingdom
NatWest Group
United Kingdom
IRB approachA-IRBA-IRB
Cost-to-income53.0%48.6%
Effective tax rate28.0%24.3%
Avg corporate PD1.64%1.20%
Avg LGD unsecured15.7%37.0%
Avg LGD secured10.0%20.0%
Funding spread (bp)20bp15bp
Corporate EADEUR 183bnEUR 109bn

Sample RAROC: BBB+ EUR 25M 5Y term loan

Both banks priced on the exact same deal — 150bp spread, 20bp commitment fee, 60-month maturity. Higher RAROC means the bank earns more from this deal. Lower min-spread means the borrower gets a better rate.

Component Standard Chartered NatWest Group
Annual revenueEUR 385,000EUR 385,000
Operating costEUR 154,000EUR 154,000
Expected lossEUR 28,750EUR 28,750
Capital required (FPE)EUR 2,451,320EUR 2,451,320
RAROC (after tax)6.59%7.37%
Min spread for 12% RAROC273bp250bp
This is just one sample deal.

Your actual portfolio has different ratings, sizes, maturities, and collateral. The cheapest bank for one deal isn't always cheapest for another. Upload your real facilities and OpenRAROC will run the same calculation on each, against Standard Chartered, NatWest Group, and 57 other banks.

Compare your portfolio

Read more

Standard Chartered full profile NatWest Group full profile All banks RAROC methodology

FAQ: Standard Chartered vs NatWest Group

Which bank is cheaper on corporate credit: Standard Chartered or NatWest Group?
On a BBB+ EUR 25M 5-year term loan, NatWest Group requires a minimum spread of 250bp to reach a 12% RAROC hurdle, versus 273bp at the other bank — a difference of 23bp on the same deal.
How do Standard Chartered and NatWest Group compare on corporate PD?
Standard Chartered reports an EAD-weighted corporate PD of 1.64%, while NatWest Group reports 1.20%. The gap reflects differences in obligor mix and geography rather than underwriting quality.
How do the two banks differ on IRB approach?
Standard Chartered uses A-IRB and NatWest Group uses A-IRB. The IRB approach determines whether internal LGD models or supervisory LGDs apply, which materially affects capital required on every corporate facility.
What deal is used in this comparison?
A single standardised facility: BBB+ rated, EUR 25M drawn on a EUR 30M commitment, 5-year tenor, 150bp spread, 20bp commitment fee. Both banks are priced on this exact deal using their own disclosed Pillar 3 parameters.