Stock Market news at lse.co.uk - RSS News Feeds

Barclays Share News (BARC)



Share News for Barclays (BARC)


Share Price: 326.80Bid: 326.65Ask: 326.80Change: 0.00 (0.00%)No Movement on Barclays
Spread: 0.15Spread as %: 0.05%Open: 319.95High: 330.00Low: 319.00Yesterday’s Close: 326.80




UPDATE 2-Barclays shares rise as Walker comes in to clean up

Fri, 10th Aug 2012 12:56

By Steve Slater and Sinead Cruise

LONDON, Aug 10 (Reuters) - Barclays shares rose on Frid
ay after the British bank named finance industry veteran David Walker as its new chairman, moving quickly to fill a void and picking an expert in business best-practice to lead its recovery from an interest rate rigging scandal.

Walker, 72, is a former Bank of England and UK Treasury official who wrote one of the most significant corporate governance manuals for British banks and has investment banking experience from 17 years at Morgan Stanley.

'We hope it marks the beginning of a new chapter - a chapter of change - for Barclays. We are confident that Sir David is the right man for the job,' said Guy Jubb, global Head of Governance & Stewardship at Standard Life Investments, a top 10 shareholder.

'This will be good for Barclays and good for the City of London,' Jubb added.

Walker has been offered a three-year term to spearhead the bank's recovery efforts and will find the tasks of cutting pay, improving business culture and picking a new CEO bold enough to change strategy at the top of his agenda.

'I sat in many meetings with him where we would debate the appropriate way of doing business. And his view always is that reputation and integrity go far beyond short-term profit,' said Jonathan Chenevix-Trench, who succeeded Walker as chairman of Morgan Stanley International in 2004.

Barclays shares were up 2.5 percent at 1135 GMT, the strongest performer in the European bank index, which was down 0.1 percent.

Barclays said late on Thursday that Walker would become a director at the start of September and take the chairman's seat two months later.

He replaces Marcus Agius, who quit following Barclays' record $453 million fine for manipulating Libor lending rates in a scandal that forced the resignation of Bob Diamond as chief executive and exposed deep cracks in the bank's relations with U.S. regulators.

While welcoming an end to uncertainty over Barclays' leadership, investors hoped Walker would have the stamina to steer the bank through one of the most challenging periods in its history.

'I am sure 70 is the new 50 but it will be tricky,' one top 40 shareholder told Reuters.

'What they have to do for the next year or 18 months is to rebuild relationships ... he will have to help find a CEO who is good with the Americans,' the investor said.

Walker said he would be 'fully engaged' in the hunt for a new CEO, picking up the baton from Agius who has told staff he was encouraged by the quality of candidates seen so far.

'David is an enormously courteous and measured man but you would underestimate his strength at your peril. He's also tough and uncompromising on what he believes is important,' said Chenevix-Trench, who left Morgan Stanley late in 2007.

Another key issue for new bosses is the future of the investment bank, which many analysts expect to be shrunk.

'His strong regulatory background and preference towards longer deferral of bonuses will be a positive in terms of lowering the cost of equity and improving returns for shareholders,' said Andrew Lim, analyst at Espirito Santo.

But Lim added that Walker may 'rein in Barclays' more ambitious investment banking operations', which could negatively affect returns in a business that is doing well against rivals.



(Additional reporting by Douwe Miedema, Editing by Helen Massy-Beresford and Mark Potter) Keywords: BARCLAYS CHAIRMAN/SHARES

(steve.slater@thomsonreuters.com)(+44)(0)(20 7542 4367 and follow me on twitter @reuterssteves)

COPYRIGHT
Copyright Thomson Reuters 2012. All rights reserved.
The copying, republication or redistribution of Reuters News Content, including by framing or similar means, is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of Thomson Reuters.


Related Shares: Barclays (BARC) 





UPDATE 1-EU bonus cap could hit 10 times as many London bankers

* EBA set to publish draft proposal next week* Bankers already calling up lawyers for adviceBy Huw JonesLONDON, May 17 (Reuters) - European Union offi
[Fri 15:31]

UPDATE 1-Bankers see M&A recovery after deals drop 7 pct so far in 2013


[Fri 15:27]

COMMENT: How many banks does it take to sell a CoCo?

By Aimee DonnellanLONDON, May 17 (IFR) - Why would a Swiss bank selling what appears to be a vanilla Tier 2 CoCo bond need 13 lead managers? Distribut
[Fri 13:48]

Dish asks FCC to suspend review of SoftBank's Sprint bid

NEW YORK, May 16 (Reuters) - Dish Network Corp asked U.S. regulators on Thursday to stop reviewing SoftBank Corp's proposed acquisition of Sprint Nex
[Thu 22:29]

MOVES-Barclays


[Thu 13:58]

STOCKS NEWS EUROPE-Banking index breaks key resistance level

Technical charts show the STOXX Europe 600 banking index, home of lenders such as Barclays, UBS and Banco Santander, breaking above a major resistance
[Thu 10:27]

UPDATE 1-Dish lines up banks to finance Sprint bid -sources

By Soyoung Kim and Olivia OranNEW YORK, May 15 (Reuters) - Dish Network Corp has lined up four banks to finance its $25.5 billion bid for Sprint Nexte
[Wed 21:07]

Dish lines up banks to finance Sprint bid -sources

By Soyoung Kim and Olivia OranNEW YORK, May 15 (Reuters) - Dish Network Corp has lined up four banks to finance its $25.5 billion bid for Sprint Nexte
[Wed 20:31]



Sign up for Live Prices





Datafeed and UK data supplied by NETbuilder and Interactive Data. While London South East do their best to maintain the high quality of the information displayed on this site,
we cannot be held responsible for any loss due to incorrect information found here. All information is provided free of charge, 'as-is', and you use it at your own risk!
The contents of all 'Chat' messages should not be construed as advice and represent the opinions of the authors, not those of London South East Limited, or its affiliates.
London South East does not authorise or approve this content, and reserves the right to remove items at its discretion.