Britain's finance ministry said it was "working through internal due process" when asked to clarify the possible impact of a July 4 election on the government's proposed retail offer in NatWest, a spokesperson told Reuters in an emailed statement on Thursday. The heavily-anticipated stock sale, a key milestone in the full privatisation of the taxpayer-backed bank, is hanging in the balance after Prime Minister Rishi Sunak said on Wednesday Britain would be heading to the polls in less than two months. Chancellor Jeremy Hunt and UK Government Investments, the agency that manages Britain's holding in NatWest, were planning the sale to jumpstart ambitions to promote wider retail ownership of UK stocks.
Alonso committed the rest of his F1 career to Aston Martin when signing a new deal back in April
Many high earners are better at spending money than holding onto it.