Barclays today reported a forecast-beating 18% rise in third-quarter profit, as slower than expected interest rate cuts and upbeat investment banking prospects helped it raise its income outlook for the year.
The buoyant earnings performance shows early promise for Barclays in its challenge, along with European rivals, to sustain earnings even as interest rates fall.
Barclays said it now forecasts three Bank of England rate cuts this year to a final policy rate of 4.5%, having previously forecast five cuts and a final rate of 4%.
The British bank's pretax profit for the July-September period was £2.2 billion, up from £1.9 billion a year ago and higher than the average of analysts' forecasts of £2 billion.
Barclays upgraded its forecast for net interest income for the year, saying it now expects to exceed £11 billion rather than just hit that target.
Barclays' shares - which have rocketed 61% so far this year and are trading close to a nine-year high - were 4% higher in London trade this morning, outperforming a 0.8% rise in the FTSE 100.
"Overall, these numbers are positive on any number of fronts, and the warm share price reaction to the update is well-won given the high expectations which the bank was up against going into the results," Interactive Investor analyst Richard Hunter said.
Barclays' domestic corporate and consumer lending business once again performed well, vindicating a drive to invest in the division, with the £600m acquisition of Tesco's banking arm in February.
The unit's third-quarter return on tangible equity, a closely watched measure of performance, rose to 23.4% from 21% a year ago.
"Default levels remain low, mortgage activity is picking up, and deposit migration headwinds are easing," Matt Britzman, senior equity analyst at Hargreaves Lansdown said.
Barclays said third-quarter income in its investment bank rose 6% year on year, a strong performance that exceeded expectations as corporate fundraising and dealmaking increased and equities trading was boosted by the bullish stock market.
Germany's Deutsche Bank also produced an 11% year-on-year rise in investment banking revenues, smashing expectations for gains of 6.5% over the third quarter.
At Barclays, third-quarter fixed income, currencies and commodities and equities revenue both rose 3% year on year to £1.18 billion and £692m respectively.
Advisory fee income surged 133% to £186m while fees generated in the bank's debt capital markets business rose 48% year on year to £344m.
Equity fundraising income came in at £64m - 3% higher year on year but almost half the income was reported in the second quarter of 2024.
The investment bank's performance, however, lagged behind some US and European rivals.
CFO Anna Cross, speaking to reporters, said she felt Barclays was faring well against US rivals, with the impact of reporting dollar revenues in pounds making performance appear relatively worse against Wall Street peers.
Barclays' advisory gains follow an extensive reorganisation of its sector coverage and investment in staff, executives at the bank said earlier this month.
The bank in February unveiled its biggest revamp since 2016 in a bid to bolster investor confidence, saying it would push further into domestic lending and reduce the financial resources consumed by its investment bank relative to other businesses.