How do you end a letter?

The question of how to end a business letter, or indeed any letter, has always troubled me.

It appears that the structures and strictures of business correspondence seem to be dissolving. No longer is a “Dear Mr” invariably followed by “Yours sincerely”, or a “Dear Sir” by “Yours faithfully”. “Hi there”, “Hi everyone” and “Hello ladies” now seem to be perfectly acceptable ways to begin an email to clients or colleagues, as is the brusque vocative (“John, further to our conversation this morning…”).

But it is the valediction where things really get sticky. However I end a business letter, I am always left feeling that there must have been some other, more elegant, friendly yet businesslike, way to conclude. Below are some of the most common.

Best – Efficient and breezy, but to some minds, uncaring and abrupt.
Best regards – I rather like “best regards”. The upbeat adjective “best” peps up the formal “regards”, and the combination of the two words is much less brusque than either on its own. It is the sign-off I end up using most often, but it is still very far from perfect.
Kind regards – Dull and safe.
Nothing – Not the word “nothing”, of course, but an email without any sort of sign-off at all, just a name (or even an initial with a full stop after it). This suggests that the sender is very busy and important, or alternatively cross about something. Short emails full of misspellings and contractions such as “u” for “you” are also intended to convey that someone is in a great hurry and has no time for trifles such as spelling and grammar.
Regards – Formal and businesslike, but somehow slightly chilly.
Warm regards – I have an instinctive aversion to this; the warmth somehow suggests physical contact and it reminds me of a handshake in which you find your hand clasped between two large, soft and insistent paws. But this is perhaps illogical.
Yours ever – A smooth and slippery sign-off, charming but ultimately meaningless (particularly in business letters). Apparently Tony Blair used it when writing to colleagues.
Yours sincerely – This seems to have fallen out of favour, as does “Yours faithfully”. When I was at school, letters to someone whose name you knew invariably ended “Yours sincerely”, while those to someone you didn’t know ended “Yours faithfully”. But I can’t remember the last time I received an email or a letter signed like this.
Yours etc. – Does anyone actually sign letters like this, or is it merely a form of shorthand used by authors like Jane Austen to denote a longer and more elaborate valediction? Julian Barnes, in Talking it Over, suggests that signing letters “Yours etc.” or “Yours &c.” is the “true sign of the Old Bastard”, something a “disgusted of Tonbridge Wells” might use when writing to The Times

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