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
mnamreh
- 21 May 2012 13:29
- 981 of 1362
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Stan
- 21 May 2012 13:44
- 982 of 1362
"In September last year Barclays investment in BlackRock was written down to a fair value of £3.4bn. The subsequent increase in value of the stake has been taken to equity.
For regulatory capital purposes the increase is not recognised in Barclays core tier 1 capital. The market value of Barclays investment in BlackRock, based on the closing price of BlackRock common stock on 18 May of $171.91 and assuming conversion of preferred stock, was £3.8bn. A further statement will be issued following pricing of the offering."
So a profit of 0.4 billion, or is that to simplistic mn?
mnamreh
- 21 May 2012 13:46
- 983 of 1362
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Stan
- 21 May 2012 13:55
- 984 of 1362
mnamreh
- 21 May 2012 14:08
- 985 of 1362
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Stan
- 21 May 2012 14:27
- 986 of 1362
No immediate visible change in SP so far.
mnamreh
- 21 May 2012 14:29
- 987 of 1362
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Stan
- 21 May 2012 14:37
- 988 of 1362
To early for me thank you.. oh sorry I see what you mean now -):
mnamreh
- 21 May 2012 14:42
- 989 of 1362
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HARRYCAT
- 24 May 2012 10:15
- 990 of 1362
Analyst Ian Gordon:
"Cashing out Blackrock: sensible not transformational, 21st May, one of Barclays’ greatest triumphs was the December 2009 disposal of Barclays Global Investors to Blackrock, crystalising a disposal gain of £6.3bn. This substantially adressed a need to accelerate Barclays’ capital build as well as representing a near top-of-the-market disposal. In comparision, today’s pricing of the disposal of Barclays residual stake is much less material, but satisfactory all the same. We believe that Barclays’ motivation for the transaction was to avoid the more aggressive capital allocation which would have attached to its Blackrock stake under Basel 3, as well as candid recognition that the market was giving Barclays’ share price absolutely no credit for the “earnings diversification” afforded by its residual Blackrock ownership. As such, an exit at “par” is understandable, even if today’s “par” is c.22% below Blackrock’s 31 March 2012 share price of US$205.
For us, the Barclays story remains largely “as we were” – a bank for which RoE will disappoint against Management’s own aspirations, but not the market’s more realistic expectations, and where the ongoing drag of specific risk issues (e.g. Spain) is adequately reflected in our (and consensus) expectations. Barclays still trades below 0.5x current tNAV which is, we believe, the wrong price for a defensively positioned, well capitalised and solidly profitable bank.
Our unchanged TP of 240p equates to 0.6x tNAV – an appropriate discount for an extended period of subdued RoEs, and suggests 27% absolute share price upside plus dividend support. We remain Buyers.
hlyeo98
- 22 Jun 2012 07:50
- 991 of 1362
BARC will be interesting today.
hlyeo98
- 28 Jun 2012 10:33
- 992 of 1362
Dishonest bankers at it again...
The Treasury is preparing to make a statement on events at Barclays as pressure mounts on boss Bob Diamond after £290m penalties were slapped on the bank for manipulating crucial interest rates that affect borrowing costs for millions of customers around the world.
As Andrew Tyrie, chairman of the Treasury select committee, pledged to call Diamond to give evidence to MPs, the Barclays chief executive was facing calls to step down.
The chancellor George Osborne will make a statement to MPs at 12.15pm in which he is expected to criticise Labour's "light touch" approach to regulation.
Barclays shares were among the biggest fallers in the FTSE 100 on Thursday morning, sliding 5% to 185p. HSBC, Lloyds Banking Group and Royal Bank of Scotland also saw their shares move lower.
The former chairman of Royal Bank of Scotland Sir George Mathewson told BBC Radio 4's Today programme that as Diamond was one of the highest-earning bosses there were "very high expectations of him".
He added: "If senior management knew what was going on they deserve all they are going to get."
Sir Martin Taylor, a former boss of Barclays ousted more than a decade ago, told Today the Barclays board faced questions about restoring the bank's reputation. "Someone at senior level would have known … Really it's a matter for the board to decide … whether he [Diamond] can be the person to turn the page on this."
"He is a great leader," Taylor added. "If he can help clean out the stables … only the board can decide that."
Politicians have rounded on the bank. Tyrie described Barclays' activities as "inexcusable", while the shadow Treasury minister, Chris Leslie, asked whether there should be a criminal investigation.
Lord Myners, a former City minister under Labour, told Newsnight: "This behaviour will only change if people face the prospect of criminal charges."
The Liberal Democrat peer Lord Oakeshott said Diamond should quit: "This does terrible damage to Barclays' own reputation, the integrity of the City of London and many people's waning trust in capitalism and free markets …
"He's got to go and Barclays must be broken up – it's far too dangerous in these dangerous times."
Diamond and the Barclays chairman, Marcus Agius, spent Wednesday talking to shareholders – some of whom had already been concerned about the board following the row over Diamond's £17m pay package last year.
Diamond – who has taken home nearly £100m since 2006 – was under fire after the Financial Services Authority fined the bank £59.5m, the largest penalty ever levied by the City regulator, forcing him and other top executives to forgo any bonuses for 2012.
The FSA, and authorities in the US who hit Barclays with penalties of £230m, described repeated breaches of rules dating back to 2005. They involved "a significant number of employees", including senior managers, and called into question the integrity of the markets.
The regulators described how senior management knew about the activities of traders and "submitters" who provided crucial information to an international set of interest rates. But the FSA does not say who these managers are and has no evidence that Diamond – who ran the division at the time – knew about the actions of a number of staff.
The penalties levied on Barclays are part of an international investigation involving a number of banks – including RBS and Lloyds Banking Group – into interest rates known as the London interbank offered rate (Libor) and the Euro interbank offered rate (Euribor). The rates play a key role in determining the cost of borrowing for households and companies.
hlyeo98
- 28 Jun 2012 11:00
- 993 of 1362
Barclays' name has been tainted by Bob Diamond... he should just resign.
2517GEORGE
- 28 Jun 2012 12:52
- 996 of 1362
markymar------He's always looked a smarmy b-----d to me. Oh and yes the markets aren't doing very well either.
2517
Balerboy
- 28 Jun 2012 13:02
- 997 of 1362
buy opportunity at 150p anyone??
Balerboy
- 28 Jun 2012 13:09
- 998 of 1362
sorry, chart in header not up to date, can see it's already in the 170's
hlyeo98
- 28 Jun 2012 15:40
- 1000 of 1362
No wonder BARC sp looks so artificially high all this while with all these corrupt bankers manipulating its accounts... sub 100p looks more worthy.