Reports
Barclays' Profits Surge As Impairments Unwind, Income Rises

The UK-listed group typically doesn't say much about wealth management in its results, but it did include a short line on its private banking income for 2021, rising from a year ago.
Barclays yesterday
reported profit attributable to shareholders of £6.375 billion
($8.67 billion) for 2021, surging from £1.526 billion a year
before, with results benefiting from a reversal of the large
credit impairments in 2020 and rising income.
The UK-listed bank, which does not typically break out separate
financial results for its wealth and investment business, said
pre-tax profit came in at £8.414 billion against £3.065 billion.
Total income rose 1 per cent year-on-year to £21.94
billion.
However, Barclays did publish a line about its private bank,
noting that total private bank total income for 2021 was £781
million, up from £707 million the previous year. Earlier in
February,
Credit Suisse signed a pact with Barclays to serve high net
worth clients in Africa after the Zurich-listed lender decided to
shut services in a variety of markets. It is also stepping up its
presence in the
Spanish wealth management market, celebrating its
100th anniversary of business in Monaco, and has been
reviving its private banking business in Asia-Pacific.
Late yesterday morning, shares in Barclays were up by
approximately 2.73 per cent.
Barclays said that its cost/income ratio was 66 per cent,
widening a touch from a year before. Return on average tangible
shareholders’ equity skyrocketed to 13.4 per cent from 3.2 per
cent a year earlier. Banks around the world conserved capital in
2020, halting dividends, as the pandemic broke, but have since
loosened some restrictions. Basic earnings per share also soared
to 37.5 pence from 8.8 pence.
The Common Equity Tier 1 ratio – a standard international measure
of a bank’s capital buffer – was 15.1 per cent at the end of
2021, unchanged from a year before.
In early November last year, Jes Staley, stepped
down as chief executive of UK banking group Barclays amid
pressure from regulators about how he described his relationship
with convicted sex offender and financier Jeffrey
Epstein. CS Venkatakrishnan, head of global markets,
replaced him.
As
noted here, Barclays is targeting ultra-high net worth
individuals and family offices in Asia. The move also
suggests that although the UK-listed lender had spun off some
wealth and investment business in Asia half a decade ago, its
links to Asia were never severed. Barclays has operated in the
Asia-Pacific region for more than 50 years and, as far as the
private bank goes, it is stepping up its presence.