Barclays restores dividend but fails to hit estimates on profits

Reuters  |  LONDON 

By and Emma Rumney

LONDON (Reuters) - on Thursday reported a below-forecast 10 percent rise in its annual profit for 2017, and pledged to restore its full dividend with a payout of 6.5 pence per share in 2018.

Barclays posted a pretax profit of 3.5 billion pounds ($4.86 billion) for 2017, up from 3.2 billion pounds a year ago but worse than the 4.7 billion pound average of analysts' forecasts compiled by the

The however kept investors waiting on the fate of its Jes Staley, as he faces a probe by Britain's banking regulators over his attempts to unmask a whistleblower who had raised concerns about a Barclays

Investors had hoped Barclays would update them on the status of the regulatory investigation, which the announced on April 10 last year.

The said it would resume paying its full dividend, which it had slashed by 50 percent in March 2016 in order to provide extra funds to pay for a hefty restructuring that included selling the majority of its stake in Group.

The reported an attributable loss of 1.9 billion pounds, thanks to a 2.5 billion pound loss from the sale.

Barclays was the in the index in 2017, falling nine percent on investors' concerns about both the underperformance of its investment bank, and its host of legal and regulatory troubles.

Central to both concerns is Staley, who has championed a strategy of aggressive investment in the that has so far largely failed to bear fruit.

Profit in the division which houses its investment fell 22 percent, driven by a 4 percent percent decline in income from its investment and rising impairments.

Barclays' investment has underperformed its U.

S. peers in recent results quarters, despite plans announced in October to shift some 20 billion pounds in assets from corporate lending to riskier but higher-yielding trading activities.

The recorded a 901 million pound tax writedown in the

Barclays in December had forecast the tax hit, which was caused by a reform to the tax system in the U. S. signed into law by The reform forces banks to reduce the value of their deferred tax assets.

($1 = 0.7204 pounds)

(Reporting By and Emma Rumney, editing by Sinead Cruise)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Thu, February 22 2018. 13:11 IST
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