The Mercury

Barclays is back in the pound seats

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BARCLAYS shares rose to the highest in more than a year as its capital ratio climbed more than expected and the bank signalled progress in efforts to divest its Africa unit and sell off unwanted assets.

Fourth-quarter pretax profit was £330 million (5.39 billion), from a loss of £2.1bn a year ago, the London-based lender said yesterday. Adjusted pretax profit of £284m fell short of the £646m average estimate of five analysts surveyed, as the firm took a charge for accelerati­ng the costs of deferred bonuses.

The results mark the end of chief executive Jes Staley’s first year in charge, in which he rebuffed calls to spin off or radically shrink the investment bank, instead opting to speed up business sales and sell down the firm’s African business. The bank said yesterday it will close the unit that houses its unwanted assets six months earlier than expected, and that it reached a separation agreement with management of the Africa division.

“Management are continuing to deliver ahead of expectatio­ns on the restructur­ing plan,” JPMorgan Chase analysts led by Raul Sinha wrote in a note to clients. “The next leg of upside is dependent on earnings and dividend growth.”

Highest level

Shares of the British bank rose 3.1 percent to 242.45 pence (R39.58) at 8.34am in London yesterday, the highest level since October 2015.

The firm’s common equity Tier 1 ratio, a measure of capital strength, rose to 12.4 percent from 11.6 percent at the end of the third quarter. That surpassed analyst expectatio­ns for an 11.8 percent ratio.

“We look forward to ending the restructur­ing of Barclays that’s been going on for years in a matter of months,” Staley, 60, said. The firm has “resolved the issue of do we have the capital base to manage this bank going forward. I think we do and Africa is going to be an important part of that.”

The firm has resolved the issue of do we have the capital base to manage this bank going forward.

Fixed-income revenue jumped 33 percent to £766m, while the five major US investment banks collective­ly posted a 43 percent jump. Analysts at Sanford C Bernstein and Deutsche Bank had expected income at the unit to climb by about 40 percent to £800m, while those at Credit Suisse Group forecast a 52 percent gain to £875m.

Equities trading revenue climbed 29 percent to £410m, a bigger jump than analysts expected.

Bond-market volatility has been spurred by the UK’s surprise vote to leave the EU, the victory of Donald Trump in the US election in November and divergent views on the direction and timing of central-bank interest rates.

The charge on bonus deferrals was £395m. Banks typically recognise the cost of deferred bonuses only when the awards vest, not when they’re first awarded. Barclays said for 2016, it awarded more upfront bonuses and recognised the cost of awards sooner, leading to the charge.

Barclays will reintegrat­e the £25bn of risk-weighted assets it expects to have left in its non-core unit at the end of June, instead of a previous target to close the unit with £20bn at the end of the year. The division will generate about £1bn of pretax losses this year, the bank said.

The bank said it’s awaiting regulatory approval on the separation agreement with Barclays Africa, which involves the UK lender paying £765m. – Bloomberg

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