Should You Buy Barclays PLC Or Rising Challenger OneSavings Bank PLC Today?

Harvey Jones examines whether you should you bet on a return to form at troubled Barclays PLC (LON: BARC) or continuing growth from buoyant OneSavings Bank PLC.

| More on:

The content of this article was relevant at the time of publishing. Circumstances change continuously and caution should therefore be exercised when relying upon any content contained within this article.

You’re reading a free article with opinions that may differ from The Motley Fool’s Premium Investing Services. Become a Motley Fool member today to get instant access to our top analyst recommendations, in-depth research, investing resources, and more. Learn More.

RISK WARNING: should you invest, the value of your investment may rise or fall and your capital is at risk. Before investing, your individual circumstances should be assessed. Consider taking independent financial advice. The Motley Fool believes in building wealth through long-term investing and so we do not promote or encourage high-risk activities including day trading, CFDs, spread betting, cryptocurrencies, and forex. Where we promote an affiliate partner’s brokerage products, these are focused on the trading of readily releasable securities.

Small is beautiful they say. Investors in FTSE 250 stock OneSavings Bank (LSE: OSB) certainly think so, with the stock leaping 18% yesterday, and another 6% this morning. By comparison, Barclays (LSE: BARC) looks big, bad and ugly. Looks aren’t everything, however, so which bank makes the better investment today?

Eight in one

Challenger bank OneSavings is a specialist lender offering residential, buy-to-let and commercial mortgages, secured loans and development finance. It is actually made up of eight different brands, including Kent Reliance, InterBay Commercial, Prestige Finance and Heritable Development Finance.

The beauty of being small is that you have plenty of room to grow — plus you avoid the toxic legacy issues dogging Barclays, et al. OneSaving’s preliminary 2015 results show a whopping 52% rise in underlying profit before taxation to ÂŁ105.9m, up from ÂŁ69.7m in 2014. Loans and advances grew 31% to ÂŁ5.1bn, helped by organic growth and a second charge mortgage portfolio acquisition, while earnings per share leapt 43%. Barclays can never produce figures like these. 

Good as Golding

Chief executive Andy Golding said the bank also strengthened its capital ratio, and boosted both its net interest margin and cost-to-income ratio. It is a pleasant change to write about a clean and transparent bank, after years are squinting at the big banks’ murky balance sheets, but it’s also shocking to see how tiny OneSavings really is. Its ÂŁ758m market cap is dwarfed by Barclays’ ÂŁ27.4 bn cap — that’s roughly 36 times bigger.

Small may be beautiful but it can also be volatile. Despite this week’s growth, OneSavings trades at 311p which is well below its year high of 412p. My big concern is what happens to buy-to-let from April, when Chancellor George Osborne’s new 3% surcharge on second property purchases kicks in. The deadline has sparked a buying frenzy today but OneSavings is rightly positioning itself for tougher times ahead.

Last year buy-to-let accounted for 15% of new mortgage lending but the Chancellor’s tax crackdown, which also sees higher rate tax relief on mortgage interest phased out from April next year, could put paid to that. It would only take a small rise in interest rates to turn many landlords’ buy-to-let profits into losses. OneSavings has its charms, trading at 8.66 times earnings and yielding 2.97%, but also carries risks.

Bad as Barclays

Barclays has fallen a down-and-dirty 38% over the past year and, in contrast to OneSavings, is looking to shrink its operations to offer investors a tidier proposition. It still has to offload an incredible £50bn of non-core assets as the road to recovery only seems to get longer and windier eight years after the financial crisis. It recently announced plans to dispose of its African operations, but dispensing with its underperforming investment bank is proving a psychological step too far for a bank that once dreamed being a Master of the Universe.

I have warned of volatility at OneSavings, but Barclays’ vastly greater size has clearly been no defence against share price turbulence, and it will also suffer if the economic storm clouds burst. Trading at 9.67 times earnings and yielding 3.98%, some of the problems are in the price, but others may be lurking below the surface. The challenging question is: do you want to invest in the past or the future?

RISK WARNING: should you invest, the value of your investment may rise or fall and your capital is at risk. Before investing, your individual circumstances should be assessed. Consider taking independent financial advice. The Motley Fool believes in building wealth through long-term investing and so we do not promote or encourage high-risk activities including day trading, CFDs, spread betting, cryptocurrencies, and forex. Where we promote an affiliate partner’s brokerage products, these are focused on the trading of readily releasable securities.

Harvey Jones has no position in any shares mentioned. The Motley Fool UK has recommended Barclays. We Fools don't all hold the same opinions, but we all believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors.

More on Investing Articles

Investing Articles

Publish Test

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua. Ut…

Read more »

Investing Articles

JP P-Press Update Test

Read more »

Investing Articles

JP Test as Author

Test content.

Read more »

Investing Articles

KM Test Post 2

Read more »

Investing Articles

JP Test PP Status

Test content. Test headline

Read more »

Investing Articles

KM Test Post

This is my content.

Read more »

Investing Articles

JP Tag Test

Read more »

Investing Articles

Testing testing one two three

Sample paragraph here, testing, test duplicate

Read more »