ROYAL Bank of Scotland is expected to post higher profits this week amid a drop in litigation and conduct charges.
RBS releases results alongside competitors Barclays and Lloyds. A consensus of City analysts is forecasting a rise in attributable profits to £507 million for the three months to September, up from £392m a year earlier.
The banking giant is set to benefit in part from a drop in conduct and litigation costs, which are believed to have shrunk to around £83m from £125m during the same period in 2017.
Earlier this month, RBS paid out its first dividend in 10 years, after reaching a long-awaited $4.9 billion (£3.bn) settlement with US regulators over claims it mis-sold mortgages in the run-up to the financial crisis.
It was considered the largest of a string of legacy issues that the bank – which is still 62% owned by the UK Government – is starting to put to rest a decade on from its bailout in 2008.
RBS will report its earnings on Friday. Lloyds will release its third-quarter earnings report a day earlier, with analysts expecting bottom line pre-tax profits to drop to £1.7bn, down from £1.95bn last year.
The bank enjoyed a bumper set of earnings a year earlier, when it took no additional charges to cover payment protection insurance (PPI).
Some analysts are now pointing to a PPI provision of around £34m.
PPI claims have ramped up following a Financial Conduct Authority advertising campaign featuring Arnold Schwarzenegger as part of an effort to encourage people to come forward before an August 2019 deadline for final claims.
However, Ian Gordon, an analyst at Investec, does not expect Lloyds to book further PPI charges in the third quarter.
“Lloyds took an extra £550m for PPI in H1 2018. We anticipate no top-up in Q3 2018, and we model only a further £500m through Q4-Q3 2019,” he said.
However, Gordon is forecasting some charges around exceptional items, “most likely in relation to our assumptions around restructuring costs and non-PPI conduct issues”.
Barclays will report its third-quarter results on Wednesday. When stripped of litigation and conduct costs, third-quarter pre-tax profit at Barclays is set to come in at around £1.3bn. Pre-tax profit was around £1.1bn in third quarter 2017.
Credit impairment charges and other provisions are forecast to hit £510m.
UBS analysts have warned that investors will be keeping a close eye on how Barclays is managing its investment versus cost controls. Barclays said costs were expected to grow 3% in the second half of the year, a move which UBS said was “a disappointment to us given completion of ring-fencing and shrinking restructuring.”
It added: “Management positioned this cost inflation as foreign exchange and investment driven, with next year’s £13.75bn cost target retained”
But if topline growth misses expectations in the third quarter, UBS says “investors will want to see cost discipline not investment plans”.
Consensus figures are pointing to total income, net of insurance claims, of £5.1bn.
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