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The Henley on Thames branch of Natwest, which closed earlier this month.
The Natwest branch in Henley-on-Thames, Oxfordshire, which closed earlier this month. Photograph: Geoffrey Swaine/Rex/Shutterstock
The Natwest branch in Henley-on-Thames, Oxfordshire, which closed earlier this month. Photograph: Geoffrey Swaine/Rex/Shutterstock

NatWest profits as customers lose out

This article is more than 1 year old

Bank closures | Johnson’s manor | Oat cuisine | Cursing children | First hayfever of spring

NatWest made bumper profits of £5.1bn in 2022, increased the bonus pool for its bankers from £298m to £367m and gave its CEO a 46% pay rise to £5.2m (NatWest accused of ‘unjust’ profiteering after CEO paid £5.2m, 17 February). So why is it closing its branch in our market town on 1 March, leaving customers 9 miles from the nearest NatWest?
Ann Newell
Thame, Oxfordshire

After reading that Boris Johnson may be buying a £4m manor house in Oxfordshire (Report, 17 February), I was amused to see on my Ordnance Survey map that the area hosts a donkey sanctuary. How fitting.
Philip Davies
Winchester

I was surprised to read that the prosecco-and-strawberry flavour porridge bought for Valentine’s Day remained untouched (Letters, 17 February). Surely it represented classic oat cuisine?
Adrian Brodkin
London

A mother came to see if my reception class would be suitable for her son, who accompanied her. “I don’t know what you’re going to do with him,” she said. “He’s a little bugger for swearing” (Letters, 13 February).
Janet Mansfield
Aspatria, Cumbria

The first lawnmower of spring (Letters, 15 February)? No wonder I’ve got the first hayfever of spring, with sore eyes and a runny nose.
Dr Sam Brier
Pinner, London

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