Western Daily Press

Focus on bonuses and dividends

- HOLLY WILLIAMS business@westerndai­lypress.co.uk

BONUSES and shareholde­r dividend payouts will be in sharp focus when the bank reporting season gets into full swing this week with figures due from Barclays and NatWest Group.

Speculatio­n is mounting over the payouts the major players will hand to bosses, staff and investors as they risk stoking controvers­y against a backdrop of economic carnage caused by the pandemic.

Lenders last year scrapped dividends after pressure from the Bank of England.

But the Prudential Regulation Authority (PRA) recently allowed lenders to resume paying divis, albeit on a limited basis, and all eyes are now on what the banks will announce alongside their full-year results.

Barclays kicks off proceeding­s on Thursday, when it is expected to announce underlying pre-tax profits, with charges and litigation costs stripped out, tumbling 55% to £2.8 billion for 2020 due to mammoth charges set aside for loans turned sour.

Reports suggest boss Jes Staley is still in line for a bonus – but probably a fraction of the £2 million maximum for the annual award and far less than the £3.1 million he landed in bonuses and long-term share incentives for 2019.

He joined counterpar­t bosses in announcing a cut to his fixed pay at the height of the crisis last year, but declined to rule out bonuses for his employees at third quarter results in October.

State-backed giant NatWest, which reports on Friday, is understood to be planning to share out a bonus pool for staff, but the smallest since its Government bailout more than 12 years ago.

The group – formerly Royal Bank of Scotland until a rebrand last year – is said to be proposing a bonus pot of around £200 million for employees, down sharply on the £304 million it handed out in 2019.

Chief executive Alison Rose, who took the reins in November 2019, has already said she would forgo any long-term incentive bonus shares – worth a potential £1.9 million – for 2020.

HSBC boss Noel Quinn and Lloyds Banking Group chief executive Antonio Horta-Osorio have likewise waived any payouts for last year.

Lloyds said at the end of 2020 that all staff bonuses would be scrapped due to the pressure on profits in a sign of the woes faced by retail lenders.

Barclays set aside an eye-watering £4.3 billion for expected loan losses in the first nine months of 2020 as it braced for a slew of households and businesses defaulting on their repayments.

The bad debt charges sent its interim profits tumbling to £1.27 billion from £3 billion a year earlier.

But the Government’s furlough scheme and support measures have been helping cushion the blow and Barclays revealed a better than expected profit of £1.1 billion in the third quarter.

NatWest also beat gloomy third quarter expectatio­ns as it swung to a £355 million profit against prediction­s of a loss.

This came despite it putting by another £254 million for bad debts, putting it on track for a full-year hit below the £3.5 billion to £4.5 billion it previously predicted.

Most analysts expect NatWest to swing to a £418 million pre-tax operating loss for 2020 due to the loan loss charges, against earnings of £4.2 billion the year before.

Richard Hunter, head of markets at interactiv­e investor, said the coronaviru­s vaccine developmen­ts have boosted the outlook for the economy and banks.

He said: “Should the rollout of the vaccine lead to a quicker than expected economic recovery, it could even result in provisions for bad debts being significan­tly lower than the ones the banks announced last year.”

But he warned: “Headwinds remain for the sector in light of historical­ly low interest rates, which put severe downward pressure on margins.”

 ?? Evan Agostini ?? Reports suggest Barclays boss Jes Staley is still in line for a bonus - but probably a fraction of the £2 million maximum for the annual award
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