The Mail on Sunday

Bankers set to reap £4billion bonanza

- By Emma Dunkley

BRITAIN’S biggest banks are preparing to trigger a bonus bonanza totalling more than £4billion as profits soar to their highest for more than 15 years.

Barclays, HSBC, Lloyds Banking Group and NatWest will reveal the bumper payout over the next fortnight as the cost of living crisis engulfs the rest of the nation.

Barclays will lead the way with a bonus pot that could reach £2 billion largely thanks to its investment banking arm advising firms on raising cash and making acquisitio­ns.

Banks have been benefiting from a boom in corporate deals, rising interest rates and lower-thanexpect­ed losses on loans handed out through the pandemic.

The Big Four along with Londonbase­d internatio­nal bank Standard Chartered are expected to announce pre-tax profits of £36.5 billion for 2021 – up from £12.4billion the previous year. That would mean the stellar profits exceed even the £35.8 billion reported in 2007 before the financial crisis took hold.

Billions of pounds of dividends and share buybacks are also expected as the banks hand out excess cash to shareholde­rs, according to investment firm AJ Bell.

The return of the good times for banks comes as ordinary Britons grapple with the biggest fall in disposable income in three decades. The cost of goods is surging, energy bills are set to double, interest rates are rising and National Insurance contributi­ons are increasing.

Luke Hildyard, director of the High Pay Centre, said: ‘It undermines the idea that the super rich are somehow good for society and that there’s a trickle-down effect benefiting the rest of us. ‘If that

were the case, a golden age for bankers would be mirrored by better living standards for wider society, but we’re seeing the opposite. Those at the top are doing very wellwherea­s those at the bottom are struggling.’

Barclays has been turbocharg­ed by its investment bank which advised on mergers and flotations in a year of record deals – including the £8 billion listing of payments firm Wise. The bank’s bonus pool is set to be higher than the £1.58billion it paid out in the previous year.

Jes Staley, who quit as chief executive in November amid a probe into his ties with convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, could receive payments of about £22million over the coming years if the bank hits performanc­e targets.

HSBC is expected to dish out more than the $2.65billion (£1.95billion) it paid in 2020.

NatWest is to pay nearly £300 million – up from £206 million. Chief executive Alison Rose will get an annual incentive award of shares despite last year’s £265million fine for breaking money laundering rules.

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