Adam Davidson, CEO of Trident Royalties, discusses offtake milestones and catalysts to boost FY24. Watch the video here.
Barclays (LON:BARC) has become one of the UK’s top three blue-chip stockbrokers, the Financial Times has reported. The news comes as the blue-chip lender steps up its efforts to win market share from rivals. Barclays’ share price has fallen deep into the red in today’s session, having lost 1.11 percent to 209.30p as of 14:29 BST, underperforming the broader London market, with the benchmark FTSE 100 index currently 0.31 percent worse off at 7,524.34 points. The group’s shares have added more than 12 percent to their value over the past year, but are down by some six percent in the year-to-date. The FT reported yesterday that Barclays had notched up 21 FTSE 100 clients, the highest for the group since it began expanding into corporate broking in 2010, according to quarterly rankings. It also has 52 corporate clients overall. Alisdair Gayne, head of corporate broking at the blue-chip lender, told the newspaper that “if you look at the banks with big corporate broking businesses, they tend to have a very good share in equity capital market transactions, they tend to have a very good share in [mergers and acquisitions]” — transactions which produce hefty advisory fees. The news comes after Reuters recently reported that Barclays was set to hire 100 new staff in its private bank in an effort to win more business from wealthy clients. The company will reportedly seek to bolster staff in its private banking hubs of London, Dublin, Geneva, Monaco, India, Dubai, Jersey, Guernsey and the Isle of Man. The 21 analysts offering 12-month price targets for Barclays for the Financial Times have a median target of 232.00p on the shares, with a high estimate of 265.00p and a low estimate of 180.00p. As of May 26, 2017, the consensus forecast amongst 25 polled investment analysts covering the blue-chip group advises investors to hold their position in the company. As of 14:48 BST, Tuesday, 30 May, Barclays share price is 209.20p.
Our analysis is based on comparing Barclays Plc with the following peers – Royal Bank of Scotland Group plc, HSBC Holdings plc, Lloyds Banking Group plc, Deutsche Bank AG, Allied Irish Banks p.l.c., Banco Santander S.A. and Close Brothers Group plc (RBS-GB, HSBA-GB, LLOY-GB, 0H7D-GB, AIB1-IE, BNC-GB and CBG-GB). Fundamental Overview Barclays Plc has a fundamental score of 29 and has a relative valuation of UNDERVALUED. Fundamental Score Company Overview It trades at a lower Price/Book multiple (0.57) than its peer median (1.03). The market expects BARC-GB‘s earnings to grow at about the same rate as its chosen peers and also does not seem to expect much improvement in its below peer median returns. BARC-GB‘s relative capital efficiency and net profit margins are both around the median level. Changes in annual earnings (relative to peers) are better than the change in its revenues (relative to peers), implying the company is focused more on earnings. BARC-GB‘s return on equity currently and over the past five years has trailed the peer median and suggests the company might be operationally challenged relative to its peers. While BARC-GB‘s revenues growth has been below the peer median in the last few years, the market still gives the stock a P/E ratio that is around peer median and seems to see the company as a long-term strategic bet. The company’s relatively low level of equity capital investment and below peer median returns on capital suggest that the company is in maintenance mode. BARC-GB seems too levered to raise additional debt. Drivers of Margin Margins do not suggest any relative benefit from a pricing or an operating cost advantage. The company’s net interest income (net interest income/total revenues) of 55.29% is around peer median suggesting that BARC-GB‘s lending operations does not benefit from any differentiating pricing advantage. In addition, BARC-GB‘s pre-tax margin of 19.20% is also around the peer median suggesting no operating cost advantage relative to peers. The company’s proportion of fee based income (i.e. non interest income/total revenues) of 44.71% is around peer median. In addition, BARC-GB‘s proportion of overhead costs (i.e. non interest expense/total revenues) of 77.03x is also around peer median — suggesting no cost advantage on fee-based overhead operations.
Barclays: Goldman Analysts Are Getting This All Wrong $BCS http://www.seekingalpha.com/article/4076637
https://www.newsday.co.zw/2017/05/25/employees-seek-stop-barclays-bank-zimbabwe-sale/
Barclays PLC (LON:BARC)‘s stock had its “buy” rating reaffirmed by research analysts at HSBC Holdings plc in a report released on Thursday. They currently have a GBX 260 ($3.36) target price on the financial services provider’s stock. HSBC Holdings plc’s target price indicates a potential upside of 24.11% from the stock’s previous close. BARC has been the subject of several other research reports. Credit Suisse Group AG reiterated an “outperform” rating and issued a GBX 260 ($3.36) price objective on shares of Barclays PLC in a research report on Thursday, February 16th. Morgan Stanley set a GBX 230 ($2.97) price objective on Barclays PLC and gave the company a “neutral” rating in a research report on Thursday, February 16th. Deutsche Bank AG reiterated a “buy” rating and issued a GBX 270 ($3.49) price objective on shares of Barclays PLC in a research report on Monday, February 20th. Goldman Sachs Group Inc set a GBX 250 ($3.23) price objective on Barclays PLC and gave the company a “neutral” rating in a research report on Monday, February 20th. Finally, S&P Global set a GBX 280 ($3.61) price objective on Barclays PLC and gave the company a “buy” rating in a research report on Thursday, February 23rd. Five investment analysts have rated the stock with a sell rating, six have given a hold rating and nine have issued a buy rating to the company’s stock. Barclays PLC presently has an average rating of “Hold” and an average target price of GBX 220.11 ($2.84).
Needle moving action has been spotted in Barclays PLC (BAL) as shares are moving today on volatility -2.82% or -1.54 from the open. The NYSE listed company saw a recent bid of 53.08 and 13318 shares have traded hands in the session. Deep diving into the technical levels for Barclays PLC (BAL), we note that the equity currently has a 14-day Commodity Channel Index (CCI) of 135.73. Active investors may choose to use this technical indicator as a stock evaluation tool. Used as a coincident indicator, the CCI reading above +100 would reflect strong price action which may signal an uptrend. On the flip side, a reading below -100 may signal a downtrend reflecting weak price action. Using the CCI as a leading indicator, technical analysts may use a +100 reading as an overbought signal and a -100 reading as an oversold indicator, suggesting a trend reversal. Barclays PLC’s Williams Percent Range or 14 day Williams %R currently sits at -42.28. The Williams %R oscillates in a range from 0 to -100. A reading between 0 and -20 would point to an overbought situation. A reading from -80 to -100 would signal an oversold situation. The Williams %R was developed by Larry Williams. This is a momentum indicator that is the inverse of the Fast Stochastic Oscillator. Currently, the 14-day ADX for Barclays PLC (BAL) is sitting at 21.14. Generally speaking, an ADX value from 0-25 would indicate an absent or weak trend. A value of 25-50 would support a strong trend. A value of 50-75 would identify a very strong trend, and a value of 75-100 would lead to an extremely strong trend. ADX is used to gauge trend strength but not trend direction. Traders often add the Plus Directional Indicator (+DI) and Minus Directional Indicator (-DI) to identify the direction of a trend. The RSI, or Relative Strength Index, is a widely used technical momentum indicator that compares price movement over time. The RSI was created by J. Welles Wilder who was striving to measure whether or not a stock was overbought or oversold. The RSI may be useful for spotting abnormal price activity and volatility. The RSI oscillates on a scale from 0 to 100. The normal reading of a stock will fall in the range of 30 to 70. A reading over 70 would indicate that the stock is overbought, and possibly overvalued. A reading under 30 may indicate that the stock is oversold, and possibly undervalued. After a recent check, the 14-day RSIfor Barclays PLC (BAL) is currently at 62.55, the 7-day stands at 65.13, and the 3-day is sitting at 62.14.
In 2010, he joined JPMorgan to run its European equity derivatives business. It was there he caught the eye of Mr Staley, who was heading up the lender’s investment bank at the time. By 2012 Mr Throsby was in charge of JPMorgan’s lagging equities division. He helped overhaul electronic trading and attract more hedge fund business. He pushed to bring more capital to the equities division and to allow clients to take more risks. At times, he butted heads with other managers at the bank by encroaching on their territory, such as by helping clients trade in regions overseen by other managers. Between 2012 and 2016, JPMorgan’s equity markets income rose 30 per cent to $US5.74bn, in part fuelled by its equity-derivatives business. Mr Throsby, who has six children, also found time to buy and renovate his old family home, Throsby Park, near Moss Vale in NSW. Last year Mr Staley spent months wooing Mr Throsby away from JPMorgan. He was hired in part on the understanding he would join the bench of Mr Staley’s long-term successors, which include COO Paul Compton, another former JPMorgan executive. Juggling Barclays International will be difficult, analysts say. Mr Throsby will have to encourage big corporate banking clients to do business with the investment bank. Capital will be tight and his success will be determined by his ability squeeze out returns from his unit’s balance sheet. One focus will be ensuring the bank’s US unit passes the Federal Reserve’s upcoming stress tests. Barclays acquired a large chunk of that franchise from Lehman Brothers after it collapsed during the financial crisis. And it will be from offices on a trading floor of the old Lehman building in New York and another in London that Mr Throsby will help steer the bank.
Barclays’ new corporate and investment banking boss, Tim Throsby, recently stood in a hall at the bank’s London offices to address over 100 members of his team and dozens of others who had dialled in from abroad. He started by explaining who he was. Last year Barclays chief executive Jes Staley turned to Mr Throsby, a relatively unknown former JPMorgan Chase executive, to run Barclays International, which accounts for more than two-thirds of the bank’s revenue. The 50-year-old Australian spent most of his career overseeing equities-trading desks. Now he is responsible for a franchise that includes German credit cards, rich clients in Switzerland and a bond trading desk in New York. In 2016, Mr Staley unveiled a sweeping restructuring of Barclays, which included paring its 100-year presence in Africa in favour of a bet to stick with its unloved investment bank. Its shares have rallied 50 per cent over the past 12 months, helped by the prospect of rising rates. “The key question is whether Barclays is benefiting from a rising tide or whether the action he is taking is a dominant driver,” said Thomas Moore, an investment director at Standard Life Investments. To turn around the British lender, Mr Staley handpicked a team from his former employer JPMorgan. Barclays’ chief financial officer, chief risk officer and chief operating officer are alumni of the US bank. Finding someone to run Barclays International was the last piece of the puzzle. Known for his tieless appearance, Mr Throsby built a reputation as a decisive, and at times abrasive, operator over a three-decade career. At JPMorgan, he overhauled the equities franchise, competing fiercely to access the bank’s huge balance sheet and allow clients to take more risk. Former colleagues and clients expect the rugby-loving executive to repeat the feat at Barclays’ investment bank. “He has significant global experience,” said Francis Troise, chief executive of ITG, a New York-based brokerage, who previously worked closely with Mr Throsby at JPMorgan. Under Mr Throsby, he said, “business gets done”. Barclays has no plans to pump more capital into Mr Throsby’s unit. However, he will have the freedom to reallocate resources to the investment bank from within his wider business, which includes big corporate customers, a US credit card business and wealth management. Mr Throsby forged his career in Asia jumping between big investment banks. After stints at Macquarie Group, Goldman Sach and Lehman Brothers, he moved to Citadel in Hong Kong. When the hedge fund firm retreated from Asia in the throes of the financial crisis, Mr Throsby quit and travelled to Britain to study law at the University of Oxford. He never finished. In 2010, he joined JPMorgan to run its European equity derivatives business. It was there he caught the eye of Mr Staley, who was heading up the lender’s investment
5. Barclays investment bank is big in the UK, but does it need to be? Barclays has already said that it’s focusing more on the U.S. and UK, that it won’t upsticks from London after Brexit and that it’s aiming to pick up more British advisory business. Maybe this will mean more hiring in London, but Barclays is among the larger investment banks in the UK anyway. Analysts at J.P. Morgan estimate that 10,000 investment banking employees – or 51% of the total – are based in the UK. The Credit Suisse numbers below are dated – it has moved 4,300 employees out of the UK already – so Barclays may be the biggest investment bank in London. In theory, this isn’t a problem – the latest round of 1,200 job cuts and a global hiring freeze is likely to have reduced this figure significantly. But it’s also a potential target for any necessary cuts. However, Sir Gerry Grimstone, who took over as deputy chairman at Barclays after Staley took over, told the FT that: “We are moving into a position where we are the only significant investment bank left in Europe.” JPMorgan jobs in London 6. There are two potential looming issues in the U.S. Barclays is aiming to build in the U.S. be a ‘tier one’ investment bank, and Donald Trump’s election as President will benefit its focus on fixed income. But despite this, there are some looming clouds for Barclays’ investment bank in the U.S, which Throsby will have to deal with this year. Firstly, while Deutsche Bank has now settled with the Department of Justice over its part in mis-selling mortgage-backed securities, Barclays is still fighting its corner. Barclays is reported to have been willing to pay $2bn to settle the case, but the DoJ wanted double that. Whether this gamble pays off remains to be seen. Then there’s the capital requirements around its U.S. IHC (international holding company). European banks are required to set up these bodies to abide by the same capital and liquidity requirements as their domestic competitors, even if their HQ is based elsewhere. It’s cost them billions already, but Barclays is among a handful of European banks that look under-capitalised compared to their U.S. peers. This is likely to be a headache this year. Barclays capital gap 2 7. How can Throsby keep Barclays’ bankers motivated? Barclays’ hiring freeze has been very effective. It lost 8,000 employees in just four months simply by not hiring anyone and – despite the occasional recruit last year – very few people have made it through the door. That’s all very well when banks across the street are firing people, but what if you need to retain staff? Barclays’ fixed income trading division has been outperforming could be much better positioned this year, and its advisory business has also been doing well. New figures from Dealogic suggest that Barclays rose from 8th to
Barclays’ investment bankers now have a new boss. Having been named as Barclays’ new corporate and investment bank CEO in September, J.P. Morgan’s former global head of equities Tim Throsby has now officially started as of today. Throsby is another former J.P. Morgan executive to move across to Barclays after Jes Staley’s appointment as CEO. He joins Barclays’ chief risk officer, C.S. “Venkat” Venkatakrishnan, its chief operating officer, Paul Crompton, and new investment banking CIO, Mark Ashton-Rigby who all came from J.P. Morgan. But Throsby arguably has the biggest job on his hands to turn around Barclays’ ailing investment bank. Here’s what you need to know about the man and the challenges he’s facing. 1. He’s always been an equities man, but nearly changed careers Throsby has worked at Macquarie, Lehman Brothers, Goldman Sachs, Citadel and J.P. Morgan. Aside from a brief period in fixed income at Credit Suisse early in his career, he’s always been focused on equities. The story goes that Throsby was handpicked by Jamie Dimon to head up J.P. Morgan’s EMEA equities division in 2010 from Citadel, having previously been president of its Asian and Japan business. This isn’t strictly true. He left Citadel in 2008, and by 2009 was studying Law at Oxford University, presumably with an eye to switching out of banking. But J.P. Morgan came knocking in 2010 and the degree was never completed. 2. He’s a ‘posh Australian’ According to the FT’s Lex column, Throsby is described as a “posh Australian”, but the “the bar isn’t set very high”. 3. He’s job-hopped, but not too much Some senior bankers believe the key to a successful finance career is to remain in the same place and seize opportunities as they arise. But Throsby has moved about a fair bit. We mentioned his employers above, but Throsby has worked across the Asia-Pacific and London, and never stayed with one employer for much more than seven years. His longest tenure was at Goldman Sachs, where he stayed for seven years and five months. 4. He gets results, but Barclays has a big challenge in its equities division During his time at J.P. Morgan, Throsby increased revenues in its equities division from $4.5bn in 2012 to $5.7bn last year, and catapulted it up the league tables. There’s a bigger challenge at Barclays. In the nine months to September 2016, Barclays was the worst of a bad bunch in equities – with revenues down 41% year on year. Deutsche was closest with a 25% decline. Barclays has already pulled out of cash equities trading in Asia, and is largely focused on the U.S. and UK across the investment bank now. Maybe some tough decisions need to be taken. 5. Barclays investment bank is big in the UK, but does it need to be? Barclays has already said that it’s focusing more on the U.S. and UK, th
Barclays’ investment bank has got a new chief executive. As we noted yesterday, Tim Throsby has joined from J.P. Morgan to take the malingering business in hand. Needless to say, Barclays’ group CEO Jes Staley hails from J.P. Morgan and has made several other senior hires from his former employer. Barclays’ new chief risk officer, C.S. “Venkat” Venkatakrishnan, came from JPM. So did Barclays’ new chief operating officer, Paul Crompton. So too did Barclays’ new investment banking CIO, Mark Ashton-Rigby. Throsby has more to recommend him than a shared past with Jes though. Throsby is good; he is very, very good. In 2010, Financial News reports that Throsby was “personally recruited” to join J.P. Morgan from Citadel by Jamie Dimon. Dimon wanted Throsby to reorient J.P. Morgan’s equities business away from equity derivatives and towards cash products. Throsby did just that, rebuilding J.P. Morgan’s electronic equities trading business and creating an electronic equities trading operation that’s now regarded as “top tier.” It’s in the numbers that Throsby’s contribution really stands out though. After being promoted to head global equities, Bloomberg notes that he increased J.P. Morgan’s equities revenues from $4.5bn in 2012 to $5.7bn last year. Barclays’ equities revenues declined over the same period. Maybe Barclays’ senior equities staff should be worried for their futures? Separately, banks are notoriously fussy about who they hire. And with good reason. New research from British polling organization YouGov shows that most people (in Britain at least), experience a serious decline in motivation after the age of 25. Between 18 and 24, a declining majority think high stress is the worthwhile side effect of a life of high achievement. Thereafter, they change their minds. Banks want to hire the minority who are prepared to sacrifice relaxation for achievement throughout their careers.
Nearly ten years after the financial crisis and US banks look to be out of the woods - but UK lenders are still struggling with fines and payouts According to the ratings agency Standard & Poor's, the UK's four biggest banks face paying out £19.5billion in fines, compensation and legal expenses this year and next. http://www.dailymail.co.uk/money/markets/article-4409416/Nearly-10yrs-crash-banks-floundering.html?ito=email_share_article-top
Just read stobarts final results, should have stayed with this one , bought in at 98p sold at 148p then there went south back to the 90tis I then jump in to Barclays .. At my average sp 246. Stobart A 50% increase in the quarterly dividend! They doubled it only a year ago. Total dividend 18p sp up today 5p at 235
Jes Staley Says Barclays May Need 18 Months to Turnaround https://www.bloomberg.com/news/videos/2017-05-11/staley-barclays-may-need-18-months-to-turnaround-video?utm_source=yahoo&utm_medium=bd&utm_campaign=headline&cmpId=yhoo.headline&yptr=yahoo