Barclays share price has gone parabolic in the past few months, reaching its highest point since 2007. It has soared by 55% in the last 12 months, outperforming its top peers like Lloyds and NatWest, which have jumped by 52% and 37% in the same period.
Barclays Bank has two key catalysts
Barclays, a top global bank, is doing better than other UK banks because of its business strategy. Unlike NatWest and Lloyds, Barclays has a huge investment bank, whose business is doing well.
WSJ data shows that the bank is among the best in the equity capital market business. It has advised transactions worth over $24 billion this year, higher than the $11 billion it did by this time last year.
Barclays also ranks high in the debt market, where it has advised on deals valued at over $242 billion. By this time last year, it had advised on transactions worth over $220 billion.
WSJ estimates that its investment bank revenue stands at $1.8 billion so far this year, higher than last year’s $1.6 billion.
Barclays may benefit from the ongoing European M&A deals. Schroders was acquired by Nuveen in a $13.4 billion deal, while EasyJet agreed in principle to be bought by Castlelake, an American company. That buyout could trigger more consolidation in Europe’s aviation sector.
At the same time, Barclays’ trading business is expected to remain vibrant this year because of the rising volatility. This volatility was caused by the ongoing AI supercycle and the recent US-Iran war.
Most importantly, its core British business is expected to benefit from the elevated interest rates.
The Bank of England (BoE) has left interest rates unchanged at 3.75%, with traders predicting that it will not cut this year.
Banks typically benefit in a high-interest-rate environment because it boosts their net interest margin.
Barclays reported strong Q1 numbers
The most recent results showed that Barclays did well in the first quarter, helped by its investment bank, high interest rates, and its trading business. These numbers helped it to initiate a share buyback plan worth £500 million.
Barclays announced a revenue of £8.2 billion, with its profit before tax rising to £2.8 billion.
Most importantly, it boosted its forward guidance, with its 2028 return on tangible equity rising to 14%. It also expects to return £15 billion to investors through share buybacks and dividends between 2026 and 2028.
These are huge numbers for a bank with a market capitalization of £71 billion.
Barclays UK’s revenue grew by 9%, helped by high interest rates and low delinquencies, while its UK corporate bank grew by 10%. Its investment bank and US consumer bank business grew by 4% and 14%, respectively.
Barclays share price technical analysis
Technical analysis suggests that Barclays has more room to grow in the near term. It has already jumped above the crucial resistance level of 506p, its highest level since February, confirming that bulls have prevailed. Moving above that level also invalidated the forming double-top pattern.
The Average Directional Index (ADX) has jumped to 36.7, its highest level since January 16. A rising ADX is a sign that an asset is gaining momentum. The same is happening with the Relative Strength Index (RSI), which has jumped to 70.
Therefore, the path of the least resistance for the shares is upward, with the next key target to watch being at 550p.
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