Barclays lifts profit, raises targets as looks to AI to trim costs
Published by Global Banking & Finance Review®
Posted on February 10, 2026
3 min readLast updated: February 10, 2026
Published by Global Banking & Finance Review®
Posted on February 10, 2026
3 min readLast updated: February 10, 2026
Barclays sees a 12% profit rise, announces a 1 billion pound buyback, and sets a new equity return target of over 14% by 2028.
By Lawrence White
LONDON, Feb 10 (Reuters) - Barclays increased its profit by 12% in 2025 and on Tuesday raised its performance targets as the British bank looks to improve returns by focusing on its core U.S. and UK markets and using technology such as AI to cut costs.
Profit before tax for 2025 of 9.1 billion pounds ($12.45 billion) was up from 8.1 billion pounds the year before and broadly in line with an average of analysts' forecasts.
Barclays also said it now expects to make a return on tangible equity of greater than 14% by 2028, up from previous guidance of greater than 12% in 2026.
Like many European banks, Barclays has enjoyed rising profits and a share price that has soared towards highs not seen since the aftermath of the financial crisis.
A favourable interest rate environment and more supportive economic backdrop have enabled banks to finally put nearly two decades of post-2008 crisis restructuring behind them.
Barclays CEO C. S. Venkatakrishnan, known as Venkat, said the bank's aim was "to secure sustainably higher returns", with a focus on profitability and returning more than 15 billion pounds of capital to shareholders between 2026 and 2028.
Barclays will harness artificial intelligence to increase productivity and efficiency, for example by designing better and faster products, Venkat said, without giving details on how much the bank will cut jobs as a result of such changes.
The results and new targets were overall somewhat muted, analysts at Citi said, with investors likely to be sceptical about its ambition to grow revenue from its U.S. consumer bank in particular, given heavy competition from domestic incumbents.
Shares in Barclays were little changed at the market open.
INVESTMENT BANKING FEES DISAPPOINT AGAIN
Barclays reported income at its investment bank rose 11% to 13 billion pounds in 2025, as its Global Markets trading business grew revenue 15% amid volatile markets.
However, investment banking fees fell 2%, undershooting double-digit gains from Wall Street rivals after missing out on key transactions, a problem previously flagged by the CEO.
London-based Barclays also announced 1 billion pounds in share buybacks and a 5.6 pence per share final dividend, taking total capital distribution for 2025 to 3.7 billion pounds, in line with analysts' expectations for 3.8 billion pounds.
Barclays follows rival Lloyds in setting out more ambitious profit guidance, as British banks benefit from higher rates, a more favourable regulatory and economic environment and the cost-saving potential of technology.
NatWest, which reports earnings on Friday, and HSBC on February 25 are expected to announce more ambitious targets, Reuters reported last month.
UK banks are looking for ways to increase fee-based income from areas like wealth management to offset an expected drop in interest income as rates fall.
NatWest on Monday announced its largest acquisition since the financial crisis with a 2.7 billion pound ($3.68 billion) deal, including debt, to buy one of Britain's biggest wealth managers, Evelyn Partners.
Barclays had been among the bidders, Reuters reported.
($1 = 0.7312 pounds)
(Reporting by Lawrence White; Editing by Tommy Reggiori Wilkes and Alexander Smith)
Profit before tax is a company's revenue minus its expenses, excluding taxes. It represents the earnings available to shareholders before tax liabilities are deducted.
Return on tangible equity measures a company's profitability by comparing net income to tangible equity. It indicates how effectively a company uses its tangible assets to generate profits.
A share buyback occurs when a company purchases its own shares from the marketplace, reducing the number of outstanding shares. This can increase the value of remaining shares and improve financial metrics.
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