Reports
Barclays' Profits Squeezed By Higher Provisions

The global pandemic hit the bank's bottom line, as has been the case with a number of other lenders around the world.
UK-listed Barclays
yesterday said that it logged a 2020 pre-tax group profit of £3.1
billion ($4.32 billion), falling from £4.4 billion a year before.
Profit attributable to shareholders fell by 38 per cent
year-on-year to £1.526 billion.
Results were hit by credit impairment charges linked to the
COVID-19 pandemic, rising to £4.8 billion from £1.9 billion a
year ago, the lender said in a statement.
The group doesn’t split out results for its wealth and investment
management sector.
Group operating costs, at £13.7 billion, inched up by 1 per cent
on a year earlier.
Barclays said it had a Common equity tier 1 – a standard
international yardstick of a bank’s capital buffer – of 15.1 per
cent, rising 130 basis points from a year before, reflecting
measures including the bank’s decision to cancel its full-year
dividend payment for 2019.
The bank, which like its peers has had to rein in dividends amid
the pandemic, said it “understands the importance of delivering
attractive total cash returns to shareholders.” It announced a
total payout equivalent to 5 pence per share. It
intends to start share buybacks of up to £700 million, due to
start from the first quarter of this year.
“It is an incredibly welcome sight to see that Barclays has
resumed its dividend payment, which is in itself a sign that it
is confident in its outlook,” Adam Vettese, analyst at
multi-asset investment platform eToro, said. “The strong
performance of the bank’s corporate and investment arm meant that
it was able to remain profitable throughout the pandemic,
something that few firms are able to say.”
“However, there are some worrying signs in Barclays’ retail arm,
which has been battered by lower margins and the fact that people
have been taking on less credit and paying down debts during
coronavirus. The deteriorating economic situation also forced
Barclays to increase the amount of cash it sets aside for bad
lending by more than 150 per cent to £4.8 billion, which could be
a canary in the coalmine for something serious coming down the
line,” Vettese added.