peeyam
- 06 May 2009 10:47
barclays will ge coming out with trading update on 07.05.2009 It is expected to report profits higher than market expectations.
A good Buy Medium to Long term
skinny
- 30 Oct 2013 07:04
- 1200 of 1362
Interim Management Statement
Group Performance Review
Funding and Liquidity1
- Consistent with our plans to optimise the size of the liquidity pool, within our established liquidity risk appetite framework, the Group liquidity pool reduced £8bn during Q3 13 to £130bn2 as at 30 September 2013. It remains in excess of our internal and regulatory requirements. During the first nine months of 2013, the month end liquidity pool ranged from £130bn to £157bn (Full Year 2012: £150bn to £173bn)
- Cash and deposits with central banks accounted for £61bn of the liquidity pool (30 June 2013: £71bn)3, Government bonds accounted for £49bn (30 June 2013: £47bn)4, and other available liquidity accounted for £20bn (30 June 2013: £20bn)
- The Group estimated itsLiquidity Coverage-Ratio (LCR) at 107% at the end of Q3 13 (30 June 2013: 111%) based upon the latest standards published by the Basel Committee. This is equivalent to a surplus of £9bn above the 100% ratio (30 June 2013: £14bn)5. The reduction since 30 June 2013 is consistent with our plans to optimise the size of the liquidity pool
- The customer loan to deposit ratio for RBB, Corporate Banking and Wealth and Investment Management was unchanged at 94% (30 June 2013: 94%). The loan to deposit ratio for the Group decreased to 100% as at 30 September 2013 (30 June 2013: 102%)5
- The Investment Bank activities are primarily funded through wholesale markets. The Investment Bank does not rely on customer funding from RBB, Barclaycard, Corporate Banking and Wealth and Investment Management. Total Group wholesale funding outstanding (excluding repurchase agreements) was £198bn (30 June 2013: £217bn ), of which £85bn matures in less than one year (30 June 2013: £93bn) and £25bn matures within one month (30 June 2013: £30bn). The Group has £3bn of term funding maturing in the remainder of 2013 and £24bn maturing in 2014
Dividends
- We will pay a third interim dividend for 2013 of 1.0p per share on 13 December 2013 resulting in a 3.0p dividend year to date
Outlook
- We continue to remain cautious about the environment in which we operate and our focus remains on costs, capital, leverage and returns to drive sustainable performance improvements
HARRYCAT
- 30 Oct 2013 07:55
- 1201 of 1362
(Reuters) - Barclays said it is cooperating with regulators investigating the possible manipulation of currency trading by major banks after reporting profits fell by a quarter following a slump in its investment bank earnings.
Barclays said on Wednesday it was reviewing its foreign exchange trading "covering a several year period" and was cooperating with authorities investigating possible attempts to manipulate certain benchmark currency exchange rates.
It joined UBS and Deutsche Bank, who said on Tuesday they were cooperating with regulators probing alleged rigging in the $5.3 trillion-a-day foreign exchange market.
The investigation adds to a string of regulatory probes to hinder Barclays boss Antony Jenkins, who took over as chief executive 14 months ago and is trying to rebuild the bank's reputation after a series of scandals.
Barclays reported an underlying pretax profit of 1.4 billion pounds for the three months to the end of September, down from 1.9 billion a year ago but above an average forecast of 1.25 billion from analysts polled by the company.
Profits at its investment bank fell to 463 million pounds, down from 988 million a year ago and below expectations. It was the unit's lowest profit since the end of 2011 and was largely due to a 44 percent slump in revenues in its fixed income, currency and commodities in the latest quarter.
Barclays said its common equity Tier 1 capital ratio under full Basel rules improved to an estimated 9.6 percent including the 5.8 billion pounds it raised in a rights issue last month.
skinny
- 30 Oct 2013 10:59
- 1202 of 1362
Goldman Sachs Neutral 274.93 263.25 310.00 310.00 Reiterates
skinny
- 31 Oct 2013 08:52
- 1203 of 1362
Societe Generale Buy 269.38 320.00 320.00 Reiterates
JP Morgan Cazenove Overweight 269.38 315.00 315.00 Reiterates
Nomura Buy 269.38 330.00 330.00 Reiterates
Beaufort Securities Hold 269.38 - - Initiates/Starts
Bank of America Merrill Lynch Buy 269.38 325.00 345.00 Reiterates
Deutsche Bank Buy 269.38 325.00 320.00 Retains
skinny
- 15 Nov 2013 10:36
- 1204 of 1362
Barclays will make 1,700 of its branch staff redundant as it scrambles to boost returns. Five per cent of employees in the 33,600-strong retail network will lose their jobs next year, staff were told last night in a conference call to the 1,577 branches. Barclays said it was making the cuts as fewer customers were visiting branches and more were doing their banking over the internet. The redundancies, which will start as voluntary but will become compulsory if insufficient staff come forward, was criticised by Unite, The Times reports.
HARRYCAT
- 02 Dec 2013 12:38
- 1205 of 1362
Investec note today:
"We regard today’s announcement from the Prudential Regulatory Authority on “key decisions on capital standards” as strongly positive for Barclays relative to fearful market expectations. Ever since publication of CP5/13 on 2 August, and more particularly in the light of RBS’ comments on 1 November, investors have feared a radical departure from the uncharacteristically reassuring statement issued by the PRA on 30 July, which roundly endorsed Barclays’ existing capital plan. This outcome is a victory for common sense.
As discussed in our note, Off the floor but fighting for more!, 27 Nov, Barclays’ optical cheapness, trading on just 0.85x 2014e tNAV, reflects the fact that the near-term investment case had become little more than a capital arbitrage play. For once, an optimistic view has paid off, and, in our view, fears of a further round of capital issuance in 2014 should now all but evaporate.
The devil is in the detail, and we don’t have all the detail yet, but in terms of what we do know, the PRA has agreed that firms may meet all Pillar 2A risks with a mix of 56% Common Equity Tier 1 (CET1) capital and, by implication, up to 44% of CoCos/CCNs. (CP5/13 consulted on 100% CET1). Barclays’ “capital stack” as presented to investors when it successfully raised US$2bn of CoCos 3 weeks ago had not changed (at all) from its capital plan of 30 July.
Similarly, the PRA confirms that it will require firms to meet a 4% Pillar 1 CET1 requirement in 2014, rising to 4.5% in 2015, and the required Pillar 1 Tier 1 capital ratio is 5.5% rising to 6% in 2015. This (appears to) accord precisely with Barclays’ existing capital plan which targets 10.5% CET1 in 2015.
Banks are “expected to meet” 7% CET1 capital and a 3% adjusted leverage ratio from 1 January 2014, but Barclays’ side-agreement on leverage until 30 June 2014 still holds. Expect continuing upward pressure on capital/leverage requirements, but with an orderly transition, there is so much less to fear. Buy recommendation and 300p RoE-g/CoE-g derived TP reaffirmed."
Stan
- 13 Dec 2013 15:54
- 1206 of 1362
Numis Securities has upgraded its rating for UK banking group Barclays from 'reduce' to 'hold' and hiked its target price from 222p to 274p, saying that investment risks have already partially been priced in.
Analysts Mike Trippitt said that while Barclays awaits announcements from regulators on leverage ratios, its dividend "may well be the release valve for any leverage pressure". However, he said: "Whilst the investment case is muddied by leverage uncertainties, some uncertainty is discounted in recent share price weakness."
halifax
- 23 Dec 2013 12:44
- 1207 of 1362
sp 264p moving up ahead of final results due 11th February 2004
Fred1new
- 08 Jan 2014 17:00
- 1208 of 1362
It would be good to go back 10years with what I know now.
halifax
- 08 Jan 2014 17:07
- 1210 of 1362
What goes around comes around!
cynic
- 08 Jan 2014 17:10
- 1212 of 1362
5 years ago was still a better deal if you caught the price at the bottom (about 50p)
Nar1
- 08 Jan 2014 17:33
- 1213 of 1362
I remember when it was 50p only if I wasn't fearful like everyone else and just bought in big all hindsight tho !!
Back in today a bit higher then I liked at 285 but lets see.
Chart wise I think it looking like a steady up trend.
cynic
- 08 Jan 2014 17:39
- 1214 of 1362
it's prob the best of the big banks to buy into
halifax
- 08 Jan 2014 18:13
- 1215 of 1362
the market thinks Lloyds atm, results early February will show.
goldfinger
- 16 Jan 2014 17:07
- 1216 of 1362
This one was pointed out by Fred last week, now broken out of channel.
Down today but Banks do well (in a so called) recovery. A few resistance points coming up to look out for.
Chris Carson
- 26 Jan 2014 17:34
- 1217 of 1362
Kamal Ahmed
By Kamal Ahmed
9:30PM GMT 25 Jan 2014
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CommentsComments
Barclays is considering ending its £40m-a-year sponsorship of the Premier League after senior figures at the bank said it had “zero value” in the UK.
The bank’s present deal runs until the end of the 2015-16 football season and members of Barclays’ leadership team are concerned that rapid price inflation for sports rights will mean a much higher amount will be demanded by the Premier League for the next three-year deal.
Barclays has been the sponsor of the Premier League since 2001 and agreed to pay £120m in 2012 for the present rights. That was 50pc higher than the previous deal, which cost £82m.
With the battle for television rights between BSkyB and BT driving up costs, Barclays is now concerned that there will be a knock-on effect.
BSkyB’s present Premier League television deal is worth £2.3bn, 40pc more than it paid for its previous agreement. The bank also has to pay additional “activation costs”, such as using social media and television to promote the deal.
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The move is part of a wider review of the bank’s business, which will mean pulling out of “glamour projects” and focusing instead on much higher levels of technology for customers, far fewer staff and fewer branches.
Sources at the bank said that the 140,000 global employees of the bank could fall to 100,000 and the number of branches in the UK will drop from 1,600 to 1,200 over the next six years. Smaller branch-style operations in supermarkets such as Asda will be extended.
“We have some tough decisions to take,” one source said about the loss of staff.
Mobile apps, Skype-style services and “intelligent ATMs” will improve customer service while reducing cost, the bank will argue.
Antony Jenkins, the chief executive of Barclays, wants to see the cost-to-income ratio at the bank fall from above 60pc to around 55pc.
Next month, the bank will publish its “goals” document, which will commit the bank to increasing the return on capital employed so it is higher than the cost of capital and maintaining Core Tier 1 capital above 10.5pc.
It will also demand improvements in customer service in its retail, commercial and investment divisions.
Sources at the bank stressed that Mr Jenkins had yet to come to a final decision on the Premier League but it is understood that senior figures on the board, as well as executives, do not believe it provides value for money.
One said that Barclays did not need promotion in the UK as the bank has high street branches around the country and its name is well known.
“We just need to shut up for five years and get on with our job,” the source said.
Sources at the bank said that the Premier League’s sponsorship deal was most useful for promoting the bank in Asia and Africa but Barclays could now explore other ways of getting its name recognised in overseas territories.
Diageo, for example, sponsors SuperSport television coverage in Africa, which broadcasts Premier League football to 200m viewers. It also directly sponsors leading stars, such as Samuel Eto’o, who plays football for Chelsea and the Cameroon national team.
In December, the bank announced it was pulling out of sponsoring Boris Johnson’s bike hire scheme in London as part of a wider review of its commercial relationships. Mr Jenkins is looking at a number of deals drawn up when his predecessor, Bob Diamond, was chief executive.
Barclays said that it would continue with the bike deal until the end of 2015, at a cost of around £25m.
halifax
- 26 Jan 2014 18:40
- 1218 of 1362
common sense seems to be taking hold at Barclays if this news is to be believed, good for shareholders.