Should You Buy Barclays plc Today?

Published in Company Comment on 22 March 2013

How attractive are the shares of Barclays plc (LON: BARC)?

British banking giant Barclays' (LSE: BARC) (NYSE: BCS.US) attempts to repair its battered reputation took another body blow this week. The bank announced that it was making a bumper bonus payment of £38.5 million to its top bankers, including £17.6 million to investment banking head Rich Ricci.

Barclays has endured a terrible time over the past year, including a £290 million fine for its part in the Libor rigging scandal, prompting a radical overhaul of its corporate culture and forcing the resignation of chairman Marcus Agius and CEO Bob Diamond. But I believe that the company is gradually putting its past troubles behind it.

A bubbly start to 2013

Barclays announced in its results last month that the company had made a promising start to the current year. And although ongoing travails in developed markets -- particularly in light of fresh turbulence in the eurozone -- could cause fresh share price turbulence, I reckon that the bank's current growth strategy should deliver strong long term expansion.

The company has seen UK retail business pick up in recent months, with deposits, loans and mortgages all steadily ticking higher, and the bank is implementing new customer service targets to attract fresh business. Elsewhere, planned restructuring of its African operations and new product introductions should underpin rocketing returns from these regions.

And its Barclaycard division is also set to drive higher across the globe -- the number of customers here leapt to 28.8 million in 2012 from 22.6 million the previous year, the company noted in February, pushing adjusted pre-tax profit 25% higher to £1.5 billion.

Cost-cutting initiatives set to accelerate

The bank is also set to deliver significant cost savings in the coming years, following the 3% dip in adjusted operating expenses to £18.5 billion last year. The firm has spent £500 million on 'restructuring' during the first quarter of 2013, with cost-saving work set to pick up pace as the year progresses.

And at its Barcap division -- responsible for more than half of estimated group pre-tax profit this year -- the cost:net operating income ratio dropped to 64% in 2012 from 72% the previous year, and is forecast by Investec to slip below 55% by 2015.

Earnings growth primed to take off

City forecasts expect earnings per share to rise 6% this year to 37p before marching 20% higher in 2014 to 44p.

The bank currently trades on a prospective P/E ratio of 8.1, providing a chunky discount to a reading of 13 for the wider banking sector, and which is expected to dive to 6.7 in 2014. I consider this to represent true value for money given Barclays' succulent growth drivers.

Zone in on other sterling stocks

If you already hold shares in Barclays, check out this newly updated special report which highlights a host of other FTSE winners identified by ace fund manager Neil Woodford.

Woodford -- head of UK Equities at Invesco Perpetual -- has more than 30 years' experience in the industry, and boasts an exceptional track record when it comes to selecting stock market stars.

The report, compiled by The Motley Fool's crack team of analysts, is totally free and comes with no further obligation. Click here now to download your copy.

> Royston does not own shares in Barclays.

Share & subscribe

Comments

The opinions expressed here are those of the individual writers and are not representative of The Motley Fool. If you spot any comments that are unsuitable hit the flag to alert our moderators.

craigant 22 Mar 2013 , 3:42pm

i did actually buy today...
what a coincidence!

:)

Join the conversation

Please take note - some tags have changed.

Line breaks are converted automatically.

You may use the following tags in your post: [b]bolded text[/b], [i]italicised text[/i]. All other tags will be removed from your post.

If you want to add a link, please ensure you type it as http://www.fool.co.uk as opposed to www.fool.co.uk.

Hello stranger

To add your own comment, please login.

Not yet registered? Register now.