Barclays hikes dividend 20%, targets highest payout since 2008

  • 8/2/2019
  • 00:00
  • 5
  • 0
  • 0
news-picture

Barclays cut around 3,000 jobs in the second quarter of the year LONDON: Barclays raised its interim dividend by 20 percent on Thursday thanks to a more resilient performance at its trading unit and an absence of regulatory fines that have blighted past earnings. The British lender unveiled a 3 pence per share payout and said it expected to treble the distribution over the full year, in a sign of confidence in its ability to improve returns from its consumer and corporate lending businesses. “We are accumulating capital at a very strong rate and we feel good about that,” CEO Jes Staley, right, said, adding that a 9 pence full-year dividend would be the highest payout to Barclays shareholders since 2008. The robust investment banking performance, however, was marred by lower than expected half-year profits in UK retail and business lending, which were down 11 percent on the previous year, excluding one-off costs. Analysts also said that Barclays was compensating for weaker income and higher costs by ramping up the dividend payments. Barclays blamed the income fall on squeezed margins resulting from intense competition in Britain’s mortgage market and decisions to take less risk in its credit card business. The UK unit’s net interest margin — a measure of underlying profitability — fell to 3.11 percent from 3.24 percent the previous year, while its return on tangible equity dropped to 15.1 percent from 17.3 percent. Group pretax profit dropped to £1.58 billion, in line with forecasts, from £1.9 billion a year ago. Barclays’ transatlantic lending strategy has been overshadowed since early 2018 by a debate about the performance of its investment bank sparked by activist investor Edward Bramson. Bramson’s bid to gain a board seat was defeated in a May shareholder vote but the New York-based financier, who controls a 5.5 percent stake, has said he will continue to agitate for cuts to the lender’s trading unit. Staley has instead doubled down on Barclays’ investment banking strategy, including a fresh push into securitization and a gradual revival of its mothballed Asian advisory business. Barclays also said it expected full-year costs to come in at less than £13.6 billion, below the minimum threshold it previously said it was targeting for 2019. It has cut around 3,000 roles in the second quarter and said the positive financial impact of the cuts would be felt in its fiscal second half.

مشاركة :