By Margot Patrick 

LONDON-- Royal Bank of Scotland Group PLC on Thursday said it would dismantle its global investment bank and exit 25 more countries as it edged closer to shedding state support with a smaller net loss in 2014.

The 80% government-owned bank posted a GBP3.47 billion ($5.39 billion) net loss, narrower than 2013's GBP9 billion net loss. Operating profit was GBP3.5 billion, against a GBP7.5 billion operating loss in 2013.

Chief Executive Ross McEwan said a series of one-off charges had hit the bank's earnings last year, including a GBP4 billion write-down on the value of part-owned U.S. unit Citizens Financial Group and GBP2.2 billion in conduct and litigation charges. He said the bank is paying the price for its past ambitions to be a global investment bank, and now needs to take more radical measures to make RBS a sound investment for shareholders.

Mr. McEwan said the bank will "substantially reduce" the size of its investment banking operations in Asia and the U.S., and fully exit its markets businesses in Central and Eastern Europe, the Middle East and Africa. He declined to say how many jobs will go in the bank's U.S. operation, where the bank employed around 2,400 people as of last year, many of them on the vast trading floor in Stamford, Conn.

"This is a plan for a smaller, more focused, but ultimately more valuable bank with the vast majority of its assets in the U.K., and for RBS marks the end of the stand-alone global investment bank model," Mr. McEwan said.

Outside the U.K., only Singapore and Stamford will host sales and trading operations. There will be a sales office in Japan, and client coverage teams in several European countries.

Analysts welcomed the move as a way to reduce assets and improve the bank's capital ratios. But the bank's shares fell 4% after investors digested the bank's warnings that there could be further fines for past misconduct at the bank.

At around 387 pence, the shares are well below the roughly 455 pence price needed for the government to break even on its investment.

Since requiring a series of government bailouts to survive 2008's financial crisis, RBS has drastically cut its size and ambitions. It halved the number of countries it operates in, to around 25, and aims to bring that total down to 15 or less. Last year, it sold a 29% stake in Citizens in an initial public offering and plans to fully exit the bank by the end of 2016.

It has been steadily reducing the size of the investment banking unit for a few years, but Thursday's announcement sent the strongest message yet that the bank will focus on servicing U.K. and European clients rather than try to be a force in global trading markets.

The bank on Thursday named Howard Davies as its new chairman from Sept. 1, replacing Philip Hampton. It also announced the sale of a $36.5 billion loan portfolio to Mizuho Financial Group.

Write to Margot Patrick at margot.patrick@wsj.com

Corrections & Amplifications

RBS said it would exit 25 more countries. An earlier version of the story said RBS would exit around 10 countries this year. (Feb.26, 2014)

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