Barclays (LON:BARC) trades higher as £750 million Canary Wharf investment puts buyback plans in focus

Barclays (LON:BARC) falls after £750m HQ lease raises questions about buyback premium

July 3, 2026

Barclays (LON:BARC) traded lower as the bank’s £750 million headquarters lease put the spotlight on its buyback premium. LONDON, July 3, 2026, 12:05 BST

  • Barclays traded 0.29% lower at 520.60p during the regular London session.
  • The shares are now 14.6% higher than the average price paid in the completed £500 million buyback.
  • The £750 million leasehold for One Churchill Place is equal to about 1.5x the last buyback spend and represents roughly 1.1% of market cap.

Barclays PLC (LON:BARC) traded lower in London on Friday, giving back 0.29% to 520.60 pence by 11:50 BST. The drop didn’t put much of a dent in the bank’s recent buyback math. Shares moved during normal London Stock Exchange hours, which run 0800 to 1630.

The key number isn’t how much the stock dropped on the day. It’s the difference versus what Barclays just paid to buy its own shares. Barclays wrapped up a £500 million buyback on June 25, purchasing 110,060,483 shares at a volume-weighted average of 454.2957p each. On Friday, shares closed at 520.60p. At that price, buying back the same number of shares would have cost around £573 million—about £73 million more.

Barclays capital mathFigureInvestor read-through
Friday close520.60pMarket anchor
Average price for buyback454.2957pBarclays paid 14.6% less than Friday’s price
Total shares repurchased110.1 millionMakes up roughly 0.8% of shares in issue after buyback
Total buyback spend£500 millionLatest bar for capital returns
Cost to buy same shares at Friday’s price£573 millionWould have cost £73 million more
One Churchill Place leasehold value£750 millionThat’s 1.5 times what they spent on the buyback

Barclays and Canary Wharf Group said the 999-year leasehold deal values the London headquarters at £750 million and gives Barclays control after its current lease ends in 2039. The companies said the impact on Barclays’ CET1 ratio and earnings should be broadly neutral, with expected lease-payment savings mainly balanced out by higher financing costs and depreciation. Chief Executive C.S. Venkatakrishnan called the deal a move that brings “long-term certainty” and “greater flexibility over our London footprint.” CWG

This is where the stock move counts. If capital plans stay neutral, attention stays on whether Barclays can keep buying back shares at prices that look cheap in hindsight. The £750 million spend on property isn’t much compared to Barclays’ £70.27 billion market cap, but it is a big number versus the last buyback.

The property story is central. Reuters said the Barclays deal was Europe’s biggest office sale in almost four years and the first time in more than two years a Canary Wharf building sold for over £50 million. Docklands vacancy edged down to 18.1% from a peak of 19.1%. The Barclays tower went for around £750 per square foot, below City of London prices of £800 to £1,200 per square foot. Richard Bloxam, JLL (NYSE:JLL) capital markets CEO, called that level of capital hitting a big city “encouraging.” Reuters

Reuters Breakingviews said Barclays is paying about £40 per square foot in annual rent for the deal, which is less than the near-£60 average seen for Docklands offices in Q1. But the £750 per square foot leasehold value beat several other Canary Wharf Group office valuations.

UK bank/market snapshotLatest priceOne-day moveTime stamp
Barclays (LON:BARC)520.60pdown 0.29%11:50 BST
NatWest Group (LON:NWG)674.40pdropped 0.62%12:04 BST
Lloyds Banking Group (LON:LLOY)113.80pfell 0.74%12:04 BST
FTSE 100off 0.31%delayed quote

Peer move data pulled from Google Finance and Hargreaves Lansdown.

Barclays shares are trading close to their 12-month highs. According to Google Finance, the 52-week range is 325.05p to 554.10p, and the stock closed Friday about 6% off the top and roughly 60% above the bottom. Market cap stood at £70.27 billion.

Barclays’ buyback was already a sticking point. In April, the bank rolled out a £500 million repurchase—short of the £614 million analysts expected, according to Reuters. That came as first-quarter pre-tax profit climbed to £2.8 billion and investment-bank income went up 4% to £4 billion.

Barclays is set to release its second-quarter earnings on July 28. Investors will watch to see if the bank sticks to its capital-return plan after buying its headquarters.

Mateusz Brzeziński

Mateusz Brzeziński is a financial and technology journalist at Bez-kabli.pl, covering stocks, artificial intelligence, semiconductors and global market developments. He graduated from the Prague University of Economics and Business in the Czech Republic and previously worked in financial analysis before moving into business journalism. His reporting focuses on the companies, technologies and market trends shaping the global economy.

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