Daily Mail

Barclays unveils £10 billion bid to bolster shares

- By John-Paul Ford Rojas

The boss of Barclays hailed Britain’s ‘resilient’ economy as he outlined a three-year turnaround plan aimed at reviving the bank’s dismal share price performanc­e.

The lender is targeting £2bn in cost savings and £10bn in dividends and stock buy-backs, as well as a restructur­ing of the group into five business units.

Barclays – which axed 5,000 jobs from its global workforce last year – did not give any detail on how many more would go as a result of its further belt-tightening.

The lender’s beleaguere­d investment banking arm will still grow – but shrink as a proportion of the business – while it shifts focus to more profitable consumer and corporate operations.

Boss CS Venkatakri­shnan – known as Venkat – also said he aimed to utilise the group’s position as the world’s largest non US-based investment bank, operating across leading global financial centres. Amid persistent speculatio­n about the division’s future, Venkat insisted: ‘It is an important part of Barclays and will continue to be so.’

he also put Britain at the centre of the group’s plans with a £30bn boost to lending allocated to its UK arm – including the aim of reviving credit card and other consumer borrowing.

Those plans will be bolstered by the recent takeover of Tesco’s banking operations, though Venkat did not directly address the question of whether some of the 2,800 staff from the newly-acquired business will keep their jobs, saying it was ‘very early days yet’.

At the same time, Barclays will end its retail presence in the eU as it exits consumer banking in Germany and continues the previously announced plan to dispose of its mortgage book in Italy.

Venkat said: ‘The UK has shown itself to be resilient, we think it’s a great consumer economy. We are very, very bullish on the UK as a place to do business and from which to do business.

‘I am hopeful that it is not just the consumer economy in the UK, it’s the business economy.’

he acknowledg­ed that it would ‘take some time’ to restore Britain’s ‘ equity culture’ and revive the market for new listings. Those comments came amid concerns over low valuations for UK-listed firms. ‘This is the start of a longer journey,’ Venkat added. The shake- up came as Barclays reported a 6pc fall in annual profits to £6.6bn as it took a £927m hit from restructur­ing costs while global markets income and investment banking fees fell. Shares rose 8.6pc, but are down 20pc since Venkat took over in 2021.

RBC Capital Markets analyst Benjamin Toms gave a cautious reaction to the latest update.

‘The market is likely to want to see tangible progress before rewarding the bank with a higher valuation multiple,’ he said.

 ?? ?? Towering ambitions: Barclays boss CS Venkatakri­shnan
Towering ambitions: Barclays boss CS Venkatakri­shnan

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