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Introduction: Barclays announces £2bn cost-cutting drive as profits drop
Good morning, and welcome to our rolling coverage of business, the financial markets and the world economy.
UK bank Barclays is planning a £2bn cost-cutting drive as it shakes up its operations, and reported a drop in profits for last year.
Pre-tax profits at Barclays fell to £6.6bn in 2023, the bank reports this morning, down from £7bn in 2022 â a slightly larger fall than expected.
Higher interest rates pushed up earnings at Barclays UK, where income rose 5% to £7.6bn thanks to growth in net interest income â the gap between income from loans and payments to savers.
But Barclaysâ investment bankers had a tougher year. Income at the Corporate and Investment Bank (CIB) fell by 4% to £12.6bn, driven by lower client activity in both Global Markets and Investment Banking.
Barclays also spent £900m on âstructural cost actionsâ in the final quarter of last year, its latest financial results show, taking the total bill for cost cutting in 2023 to £1.0bn.
And there are more cuts to come, as CEO C. S. Venkatakrishnan unveils Barclaysâ first major strategy update in a decade.
Barclays says it is aiming for £1bn of gross efficiency savings in 2024 and total gross efficiency savings of £2bn by 2026.
These cuts are designed to lift Barclays return on tangible equity â a key measure of a bankâs performance.
C. S. Venkatakrishnan says the bankâs new three-year plan will improve performance, with the bank also announcing a new £1bn share buyback.
Venkatakrishnan explains:
âIn 2023 Barclays delivered solid performance against a mixed macroeconomic backdrop, meeting its financial targets.
Our strong 13.8% Common Equity Tier 1 (CET1) ratio enables us to deliver increased total capital distributions of £3.0bn to shareholders, up c.37% on 2022, which includes a further share buyback of £1.0bn.
Our new three-year plan, which we will be announcing at the Investor Update today, is designed to further improve Barclaysâ operational and financial performance, driving higher returns, and predictable, attractive shareholder distributionsâ
This shake-up will see Barclays reorganised into five new divisions: Barclays UK; Barclays UK Corporate Bank; Barclays Private Bank and Wealth Management; Barclays Investment Bank; and Barclays US Consumer Bank.
More to followâ¦.
Also coming up today
MPs will grill the Bank of England governor, Andrew Bailey, and members of the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) about interest rates, the future path of inflation, and how households and businesses are coping with higher borrowing costs.
The BoE could feel some heat over Britainâs fall into recession last week too, with former chief economist Andy Haldane warning it risks making the UKâs recession worse unless it cuts interest rates soon.
Yesterday, Conservative MP Sir Jacob Rees-Mogg told parliament that the Bank was âno longer showing itself to be competentâ and its independence must be questioned.
Britainâs agricultural industry is gathering in Birmingham today for the National Farmers Union conference
Rishi Sunak will be there, and is expected to announce a package of grant support â including £220m to help farmers access new equipment.
The head of the National Farmersâ Union, Minette Batters, has warned that UK food security risks becoming a âpoor relationâ to other national priorities.
The agenda
-
10am GMT: Eurozone construction output data for December
-
10.15am GMT: Treasury committee to quiz Bank of England governor and colleagues on inflation and interest rates
-
10.15am GMT: National Farmers Union annual conference begins
-
3pm GMT: Conference Board Leading Economic Index of US business cycle
Key events
XTB: market approves of Barclays big giveaways and ambitious targets
Barclays will need a âlaser focusâ to hit the targets outlined today, says Kathleen Brooks, research director at XTB:
Barclays strategic review was punchy, and it essentially boils down to two things: cut costs aggressively and boost profits and continue to return capital to shareholders, to the tune of £10bn by 2026. This is exactly the type of message that shareholders love at the moment, and it is why the market has reacted with glee on Tuesday morning.
Barclays is reorganizing into 5 new operating divisions, with more focus on the retail bank and a wealth management arm. Investment banking will still be one of the five divisions, although with less allocation of capital and in future the IB arm will get 50% compared to 63% currently.
Barclays new financial targets set a high bar: a 12% return on tangible equity. The return on equity in the investment bank was 7% last year, so this division will have the furthest to go to reach this target. The $30bn revenue target for 2026, which is 13% above analyst estimates, is a brave move from Barclays, and the bank has only given itself 3 years to do this. Itâs not quite a moon shot, but it does require a laser focus on not only the bottom line, but maximizing revenue opportunities, and building a greater institution than what Barclays is today. However, that will require job cuts, although management were not willing to give a specific headcount target.
As expected, the CEO said that the main aim of its three-year plan is to drive higher returns and âpredictable, attractive, shareholder distributions.â The main theme of the Q4 earnings season was shareholder sweeteners, and Barclays is right at the top when it comes to sweet talking shareholders.
UK middle classes âstruggling despite incomes of up to £60,000 a yearâ
Larry Elliott
Away from Barclaysâ¦Britainâs insecure jobs market and high housing costs are leading to the growth of a precarious middle class struggling to maintain a decent living standard on household incomes as high as £60,000 a year.
A study released by abrdn Financial Fairness Trust, a research body set up by the fund manager, said the uncertain nature of work meant there was a one in three chance that someone earning a middle income today would not be doing so next year.
The report â Caught in the Middle â said that problems of middle-class insecurity were especially acute for single parents, with those in employment more likely than not to be in an insecure job.
Donald Hirsch, a policy adviser at the FFT and one of the reportâs authors, said 20% of those in the middle fifth of the income distribution were struggling to pay for food and other essentials.
He said:
âIt is people earning between £30,000-£60,000 a year, depending on the type of household, people who you would expect to be doing OK.â
Barclays CEO’s bonus falls 27%
Barclaysâ annual report is also out this morning, and it shows that CEO C.S. Venkatakrishnanâs bonus fell by a quarter last year.
Venkatakrishnanâs annual bonus dropped to £1.425m for 2023, down from £1.949m in 2022.
The bonus was calculated against a range of measures, including profits, various strategic non-financial targets, and individual performance. The final bonus was set at 53.3% of the maximum available.
So while his fixed pay rose by 3%, to £2.86m (half in cash, half in shares), Venkatakrishnanâs overall remuneration decreased to £4.641m from £5.197m.
The âmedian employee of Barclays PLCâ only saw their fixed pay rise by 1%, while their annual bonus fell 43%, the annual report shows.
Barclays shares jump 6%
Barclaysâ share price has risen by 6% at the start of trading in London, as traders welcome its plans to cut costs by £2bn and return £10bn to investors in 2024-2026.
Analysts at Jefferies say Barclays has announced âa relatively ambitious set of 2026 targetsâ, as it aims to lift its return on tangible equity to 12% (up from a statutory RoTE of 9.0% last year).
Barclaysâ plan to cut £2bn of cuts could mean heavy job cuts among its staff.
Max Georgiou, analyst at Third Bridge, says:
Barclays now plans to reduce costs in the CIB by £2b by 2026, our experts believe a 20% reduction in headcount is needed and would not impact day-to-day operations.
Previous cost reduction programmes have not been executed effectively, in some part due to its political culture. A coherent strategy is needed for future success but is an uphill battle.
Barclays has a habit of delivering mixed news â and todayâs results are no different â says John Moore, senior investment manager at RBC Brewin Dolphin:
While the bankâs results for last year are more or less in line with expectations, they are still behind 2022.
Plans to make cost reductions and revise its corporate structure should help drive improved profitability in the next few years, underpinning shareholder returns of £10bn.
The acquisition of Tesco Bank [earlier this month] also looks like a good, low-risk deal in terms of overlap, cost savings, and gaining some market share. Barclays is in a reasonable position and appears to be cautiously optimistic about the future, but execution of the plan set out today will be key to its performance.â
Kalyeena Makortoff
Barclays is briefing journalists now about its new strategic plans, and its results for last year.
It says it cut headcount by around 5,000 full-time equivalent roles in 2023.
Going forward, there is no headcount target, they add.
Barclays says the reorganising of its operations into five divisions will provide âan enhanced and more granular disclosure of the performance of each of these operating divisionsâ.
It will also mean âmore accountability from an operational and management standpointâ.
It has appointed leaders for these new divisions:
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Vim Maru appointed CEO of Barclays UK;
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Matt Hammerstein appointed CEO of Barclays UK Corporate Bank (heâll also be head of Public Policy and Corporate Responsibility)
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Sasha Wiggins appointed CEO of Barclays Private Bank & Wealth Management; and
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Denny Nealon will continue in his current role as CEO of Barclays US Consumer Bank and Barclays Bank Delaware.
That leaves the Investment Bank, which will have several co-leaders:
-
Adeel Khan appointed sole head of Global Markets;
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Cathal Deasy and Taylor Wright will continue in their current roles as Co-Heads of Banking; and
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Stephen Dainton appointed President of Barclays Bank PLC and Head of Investment Bank Management.
Despite the 6% drop in profits last year, Barclaysâ bonus pool only became slightly shallower.
Bonuses for 2023 fell 3% to £1.2bn, down from £1.24bn in 2022.
There was little change in deferred bonuses either, with the total dipping to £543m from £549m a year ago.
Barclays to return £10bn to shareholders by 2026
Barclays says it plans to return âat least £10bn of capitalâ to shareholders over the next three years, through todayâs plan to boost returns and cut costs.
The Bank says it will do this through dividends and share buybacks, with âa continued preference for buybacksâ.
The plan is to maintain its total dividend pot, but lift the payment per share by buying back (and then cancelling) shares.
Introduction: Barclays announces £2bn cost-cutting drive as profits drop
Good morning, and welcome to our rolling coverage of business, the financial markets and the world economy.
UK bank Barclays is planning a £2bn cost-cutting drive as it shakes up its operations, and reported a drop in profits for last year.
Pre-tax profits at Barclays fell to £6.6bn in 2023, the bank reports this morning, down from £7bn in 2022 â a slightly larger fall than expected.
Higher interest rates pushed up earnings at Barclays UK, where income rose 5% to £7.6bn thanks to growth in net interest income â the gap between income from loans and payments to savers.
But Barclaysâ investment bankers had a tougher year. Income at the Corporate and Investment Bank (CIB) fell by 4% to £12.6bn, driven by lower client activity in both Global Markets and Investment Banking.
Barclays also spent £900m on âstructural cost actionsâ in the final quarter of last year, its latest financial results show, taking the total bill for cost cutting in 2023 to £1.0bn.
And there are more cuts to come, as CEO C. S. Venkatakrishnan unveils Barclaysâ first major strategy update in a decade.
Barclays says it is aiming for £1bn of gross efficiency savings in 2024 and total gross efficiency savings of £2bn by 2026.
These cuts are designed to lift Barclays return on tangible equity â a key measure of a bankâs performance.
C. S. Venkatakrishnan says the bankâs new three-year plan will improve performance, with the bank also announcing a new £1bn share buyback.
Venkatakrishnan explains:
âIn 2023 Barclays delivered solid performance against a mixed macroeconomic backdrop, meeting its financial targets.
Our strong 13.8% Common Equity Tier 1 (CET1) ratio enables us to deliver increased total capital distributions of £3.0bn to shareholders, up c.37% on 2022, which includes a further share buyback of £1.0bn.
Our new three-year plan, which we will be announcing at the Investor Update today, is designed to further improve Barclaysâ operational and financial performance, driving higher returns, and predictable, attractive shareholder distributionsâ
This shake-up will see Barclays reorganised into five new divisions: Barclays UK; Barclays UK Corporate Bank; Barclays Private Bank and Wealth Management; Barclays Investment Bank; and Barclays US Consumer Bank.
More to followâ¦.
Also coming up today
MPs will grill the Bank of England governor, Andrew Bailey, and members of the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) about interest rates, the future path of inflation, and how households and businesses are coping with higher borrowing costs.
The BoE could feel some heat over Britainâs fall into recession last week too, with former chief economist Andy Haldane warning it risks making the UKâs recession worse unless it cuts interest rates soon.
Yesterday, Conservative MP Sir Jacob Rees-Mogg told parliament that the Bank was âno longer showing itself to be competentâ and its independence must be questioned.
Britainâs agricultural industry is gathering in Birmingham today for the National Farmers Union conference
Rishi Sunak will be there, and is expected to announce a package of grant support â including £220m to help farmers access new equipment.
The head of the National Farmersâ Union, Minette Batters, has warned that UK food security risks becoming a âpoor relationâ to other national priorities.
The agenda
-
10am GMT: Eurozone construction output data for December
-
10.15am GMT: Treasury committee to quiz Bank of England governor and colleagues on inflation and interest rates
-
10.15am GMT: National Farmers Union annual conference begins
-
3pm GMT: Conference Board Leading Economic Index of US business cycle
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