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Signs for Lloyds, Barclays, Natwest and HSBC banks
All eyes will be on UK high street banks when they report third-quarter results this week. Photograph: Bloomberg via Getty Images
All eyes will be on UK high street banks when they report third-quarter results this week. Photograph: Bloomberg via Getty Images

PPI and Brexit to loom large when high street banks report results

This article is more than 7 years old

Investors awaiting guidance on further charges for PPI claims at Barclays, Lloyds and RBS as analysts brace for Brexit impact

Further charges for the payment protection insurance mis-selling scandal and details of the impact of Brexit will be in the sights of investors when the high street banks report their third-quarter results this week.

The financial services industry has already incurred £37bn of costs associated with PPI and is now expected to face an even bigger bill after the Financial Conduct Authority set June 2019 – rather than spring 2018– as a deadline for claims.

When Barclays and the bailed-out Lloyds Banking Group and Royal Bank of Scotland report their results for the three months to the end of September they may have to set aside hundreds of millions of pounds more to handle claims.

Analysts are also braced for admissions that the Brexit vote and the cut to interest rates could dent future profits. “We think the focus will be updates to guidance for core UK earnings post the EU referendum, but we expect to need to wait until [full year] results for substantive new guidance or rebooted strategic plans,” said analysts at Morgan Stanley.

More on this story

More on this story

  • RBS paid consortium including Church of England at least £180m for flotation

  • UK to avoid recession in 2016, official figures expected to show

  • 30 years after big bang, will Brexit cost City of London its status?

  • Brexit vote has created instability for banking sector, says Santander

  • PPI deadline extension offers cold comfort for banks. Deservedly so

  • Despite a wall of worry, now is the time for investors to scale up

  • RBS suffers fresh setback in Williams & Glyn spin-off plan

  • UK economy is braced for interesting times as Brexit phoney war ends

  • This week’s growth figures may show we picked a bad year to vote for Brexit

  • European banks warn against political 'intrusion'

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