London, March 27, 2026, 15:13 GMT
Barclays slipped in London trading Friday, down 0.9% to 382.1 pence by 1503 GMT, after Germany’s BaFin slapped the bank with a 1.65 million euro penalty for delayed voting-rights disclosures. The fine capped a week of heightened attention on Barclays’ risk controls. The shares had closed Thursday at 385.45 pence. 1
This shift is significant, coming as Barclays deals with its own credit and conduct issues while UK regulators prepare for fallout tied to rising energy costs and market swings. On Thursday, Britain’s finance minister sat down with Barclays and other big banks to talk through the latest Middle East shock. Shares have slumped, now trading roughly 31% under their 52-week high of 554.1 pence. 2
According to BaFin, the violations occurred between June 2022 and March 2023, tied to delayed updates about shifts in voting rights at a company that wasn’t identified. These filings are designed to flag significant changes in major shareholders at listed firms. 3
Investors sifted through a Reuters piece out Wednesday, detailing how Barclays is scaling back certain asset-based loans—those backed by collateral like property or receivables—for smaller clients. The shift comes in the wake of Market Financial Solutions Ltd’s collapse and the failure of U.S. subprime auto lender Tricolor Holdings. Earlier this month, Reuters said Barclays faces a £495 million exposure tied to MFS. The bank has not commented on the reported pullback. 4
The MFS situation continues to spotlight private credit, the rapidly expanding corner of lending that operates outside traditional bond markets. Back in February, “These types of things pop up,” said Joe Saluzzi, co-head of equity trading at Themis Trading, speaking to Reuters after MFS rattled lenders. Barclays, Santander, and Jefferies shares came under pressure then, with investors worried the fallout could widen. 5
Jitters across the wider market didn’t provide any relief. “Stocks will not start to find their footing” until discussions directly address reopening the Strait of Hormuz, IG chief markets analyst Chris Beauchamp said Friday. The ongoing Middle East conflict dragged on European shares and put inflation worries back in play. 6
March 30 is circled for the next big test: that’s when the Financial Conduct Authority will lay out its strategy for handling motor-finance redress — a scheme targeting reimbursement for car-loan customers stung by hidden commissions. Barclays, Lloyds, Santander and Close Brothers have all flagged that they might fight back legally if the regulator doesn’t revise its proposed framework. 7
Barclays heads into this period with underlying earnings outpacing what its share movement might indicate. Back in February, the bank reported a 12% jump in 2025 pretax profit to 9.1 billion pounds, raised its performance goals, and outlined plans to return over 15 billion pounds of capital by 2028. 8
The risks remain clear. Should MFS recoveries fall short, or if the FCA’s compensation scheme hits lenders harder than anticipated, Barclays faces an uphill fight to regain investor confidence—even if it pledges stronger profit targets. Then there’s oil: stubbornly high prices could keep inflation and funding costs sticky, a scenario Barclays strategists flagged this week as a potential pressure point for private credit. 4