Barclays share price slips after report flags £600 million exposure to collapsed UK lender MFS

February 27, 2026
Barclays share price slips after report flags £600 million exposure to collapsed UK lender MFS

London, Feb 27, 2026, 09:17 GMT — Regular session

  • Barclays slipped 1.1% at the open, trailing gains in the wider UK bank index
  • The Times pegged the bank’s exposure to Market Financial Solutions at roughly £600 million.
  • Traders want to see specifics around possible losses, plus any ripple effect on capital returns.

Barclays PLC (BARC.L) shares slipped 1.1% to 467 pence by 08:22 GMT on Friday, lagging the FTSE 350 bank index, which nudged up 0.18%. The drop followed a Times report flagging possible losses tied to the collapse of UK mortgage lender Market Financial Solutions (MFS). Barclays, when contacted, did not immediately comment. Citi weighed in, noting “arranging a loan is very different to retaining that risk” on the books, and questioned whether any related exposure had already been accounted for. Reuters

The point here: “exposure” refers to the money a lender stands to lose, and even a limited hit can ripple through bank profits if it shows up on the balance sheet — that is, the bank’s own assets and liabilities. Provisions work as buffers for expected credit losses. Investors are watching for any hints that these buffers have to grow.

The drop was particularly notable given the upbeat mood in the UK, where the FTSE 100 had just finished at an all-time high the previous day. “It is likely that the UK index’s outperformance is here to stay,” wrote IG senior financial analyst Axel Rudolph in a Thursday note. Reuters

Barclays kept up its share buyback, a Friday filing revealed, snapping up 3,185,000 ordinary shares on Feb. 26. Prices ranged from 466.95 pence to 474.90 pence, landing on a volume-weighted average of 471.2823 pence. The bank plans to cancel these, and since kicking off the buyback, has acquired 41,431,750 shares in total, according to the filing.

The selling wasn’t limited to Barclays. Jefferies also took a hit, dropping over 8% at one stage Thursday after Bloomberg put its exposure near 100 million pounds in the MFS situation. Jefferies wouldn’t comment. Reuters noted it couldn’t independently confirm those figures.

The key issue now for Barclays: Is this exposure tied to loans the bank packaged up and sold, or does it sit on its own balance sheet? That detail will determine if investors shrug it off as a surface-level hiccup or brace for a deeper credit-cost narrative.

There’s a risk lurking. Should Barclays wind up with a bigger chunk of the exposure than investors anticipate—or if recovery rates disappoint—earnings could take a knock, putting capital return plans like buybacks under the microscope.

Now, attention shifts to whatever Barclays says next—any new disclosure or comment that sheds light on the exposure could move the needle. The bank’s results are due April 28.

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