Barclays PLC: Wrong Business, Wrong Management, Right Price

Barclays PLC (LON:BARC) third-quarter results reveal both past mistakes and future potential

| More on:

The content of this article was relevant at the time of publishing. Circumstances change continuously and caution should therefore be exercised when relying upon any content contained within this article.

You’re reading a free article with opinions that may differ from The Motley Fool’s Premium Investing Services. Become a Motley Fool member today to get instant access to our top analyst recommendations, in-depth research, investing resources, and more. Learn More.

Barclays

Shares in Barclays (LSE: BARC) (NYSE: BCS.US) are up around 1% on news of slightly better than expected third-quarter results, but in reality shareholders have little to cheer.

When then-new CEO Antony Jenkins unveiled Project Transform in Feb 2013, prospects for Barclays looked good: apart from its core position in UK retail and commercial banking, it had a world-class investment bank thanks to Bob Diamond’s opportunistic acquisition of Lehman Brothers in the aftermath of the financial crash, together with top-quality franchises in the guise of Barclaycard and Barclays’ African businesses. Project Transform would eliminate the more egregious excesses of the investment bank, restore Barclays’ reputation, slash costs and non-core operations, and push return on equity (RoE) above the cost of capital.

21 months later the shares are down by over 25%, investment banking revenues have fallen off a cliff, the bank is still dogged by litigation for all manner of misbehaviour, and its capital adequacy remains in the balance with tomorrow’s announcement of the results of the Bank of England’s leverage test eagerly anticipated.

What went wrong?

Undoubtedly, the biggest problem has been the investment bank. Resurgent markets should have been good for business, but Barclays’s strengths lay predominantly in so-called FICC; fixed interest, commodities and currency. An unanticipated side-effect of QE has been to reduce the volatility that drives volumes in these markets.

But it also seems that Mr Jenkins — once dubbed Saint Antony — has not proved to be strong enough to manage fat-cat American investment bankers. Nefarious practices continued, such as the unresolved issue of ‘dark’ liquidity pools. Big-hitters called Mr Jenkins’ bluff over pay and bonuses, then promptly left anyway after receiving big payouts. The bank responded by cutting the investment bank further, even as some of it was walking out the door. The equities business, a potential future star performer, shrank by 25% in Q3. That’s value-destructive death-by-a-thousand-cuts: it would have been better to spin off the investment bank in the first place. Wrong business, or wrong management? I think some of both.

The upside

Two things did go right. The surprising boom in the UK economy helped retail and commercial banking: at bottom, banks are a play on the economies they serve. Cost-cutting has been successful with a 7% drop in expenses and a 7,800 headcount reduction — though this may owe more to hard-nut finance director Tushar Morzaria, whose investment banking background might also make him a promising candidate to succeed Mr Jenkins.

Together with good results from Barclaycard, retail and commercial banking contributed 53% of Barclays’ third-quarter core income and 60% of profit. That promises more stable and reliable income in the future, and with RoEs of 12.5% and 18.5% respectively, they should exceed the cost of capital. Barclays’ capital adequacy also looks better, reporting a 3.5% leverage ratio that augurs well for the Bank of England stress-test — but the proof of that pudding will be in the eating…

Cheap

Yet Barclays’ shares are still stuck at 0.8 x tangible net asset value — that’s cheap if RoE remain stable and there aren’t too many unanticipated litigation costs. So I’m holding on to my shares, admittedly with less conviction than before. They’re risky, but the upside is starting to look more plausible than the downside.

Tony Reading owns shares in BArclays. The Motley Fool UK has no position in any of the shares mentioned. We Fools don't all hold the same opinions, but we all believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors.

More on Investing Articles

Road trip. Father and son travelling together by car
Investing Articles

How much do you need in an ISA for £1,000 a week in passive income?

Ben McPoland highlights a FTSE 250 stock down by more than 25% that offers good value and an attractive 5.5%…

Read more »

A row of satellite radars at night
Investing Articles

Is Elon Musk about to send this FTSE 100 stock into orbit?

This year is shaping up to be a big one for this FTSE 100 stock and part of the reason…

Read more »

Petrochemical engineer working at night with digital tablet inside oil and gas refinery plant
Investing Articles

Up 50% in a month! Meet Quadrise, the soaring UK penny stock that offers an alternative to oil

Mark Hartley takes a closer look at a British penny stock that envisions a future less dependent on crude oil.…

Read more »

Senior couple crossing the road on a city street. They are walking with shopping bags while Christmas shopping.
Investing Articles

How much do I need in a SIPP for a £500 monthly passive income?

Looking to earn a reliable passive income from your SIPP? Royston Wild explains how this could be possible with some…

Read more »

Hand of person putting wood cube block with word VALUE on wooden table
Investing Articles

A P/E ratio of less than 7. Is this a red-hot value share to consider now?

James Beard uses a popular tool to identify a UK share that’s potentially undervalued. But he reckons judgement is also…

Read more »

Businessman with tablet, waiting at the train station platform
Investing Articles

£5,000 invested in cheap BP shares a month ago is now worth…

BP shares have rocketed by double-digit percentages over the last month. Can the FTSE 100 oil giant keep rising? Royston…

Read more »

This way, That way, The other way - pointing in different directions
Investing For Beginners

Why the next 4 weeks are going to be big for Barclays shares

Jon Smith points out upcoming earnings and ongoing geopolitical turmoil and explains how Barclays shares could be impacted in the…

Read more »

British flag, Big Ben, Houses of Parliament and British flag composition
Investing Articles

Scottish Mortgage has made a fortune on SpaceX and Tesla! Here are 5 UK stocks it owns

This FTSE 100 investment trust holds 101 growth stocks from around the globe, but only five from the UK. Which…

Read more »