focusIR May 2024 Investor Webinar: Blue Whale, Kavango, Taseko Mines & CQS Natural Resources. Catch up with the webinar here.

Less Ads, More Data, More Tools Register for FREE

Pin to quick picksBarclays Share News (BARC)

Share Price Information for Barclays (BARC)

London Stock Exchange
Share Price is delayed by 15 minutes
Get Live Data
Share Price: 214.70
Bid: 214.70
Ask: 214.75
Change: -2.05 (-0.95%)
Spread: 0.05 (0.023%)
Open: 215.35
High: 215.35
Low: 213.60
Prev. Close: 216.75
BARC Live PriceLast checked at -

Watchlists are a member only feature

Login to your account

Alerts are a premium feature

Login to your account

UniCredit loses fight to unwind EUR20bn capital arbitrage deals

Tue, 29th Jan 2013 14:54

* Barclays and UniCredit fight over deals at the height ofthe crisis

* UniCredit gets no capital relief but may keep guarantees

* Barclays had no time to do due diligence on portfolios

By Owen Sanderson

LONDON, Jan 29 (IFR) - The English Commercial Court foundagainst UniCredit and in favour of Barclays over EUR20.6bn ofsynthetic securitisations structured at the height of the creditcrisis, in a ruling made at the end of December 2012 that hasgone largely unnoticed. The purpose of the deals, which were struck between Septemberand December 2008, was regulatory arbitrage.

Barclays agreed, for a premium and fees, to coverthe losses in 3 defined portfolios held by UniCredit, paying theItalian bank when any of the underlying loans defaulted - up toEUR1.72bn of losses split among the three deals. Once theBarclays guarantee had run out, UniCredit would have to coverfurther losses.

This structure allowed UniCredit to tell itsregulator it did not have to hold as much capital against theseportfolios, since Barclays would cover the first losses. But theeconomic substance of the deals was that UniCredit continued tohold all of the risk, because the guaranteed premia and fees toBarclays would more than cover the losses except in extremelyunlikely circumstance.

In other words, UniCredit could get capital relief on theportfolios and improve its capital ratios, while Barclays wouldget an easy profit, taking on very little risk.

While the Court ruled in favour of Barclays, the finalamount has not been determined - the hearing was only on issuesof principle. The judgement states that if the damages Barclaysis awarded are less than the profit it would have received bykeeping the trades in place, it should be able to insist onkeeping them.

UniCredit wants to unwind the deals because BaFin, theGerman regulator, decided that it could no longer get anycapital relief in 2010, but Barclays wanted the deal to continuefor the full five years, closing them out in autumn this year.The contracts allow UniCredit to terminate the deals (with theconsent of Barclays) in various circumstances, but this was onlyinserted to get the deal over the regulatory line - Barclaysinsisted it was expected to refuse consent until the five-yearterm was up.

PROTECTION STRUCTURES

Barclays wrote protection for UniCredit on first losstranches for three trades, covering the first EUR700m of losseson a EUR9.97bn HVB portfolio, the first EUR600m in a EUR6.63bnBank Austria deal, and the first EUR420m in another HVBportfolio, this time of EUR3.98bn. The bank also sold protectionon the super-senior tranches (between 70% and 100% losses) forthe first six quarters of the deals.

The only way Barclays could have lost out is if the losseson the deals were very large, and came very close to thebeginning of the deals, meaning it would owe UniCredit money tomake good on the losses, and if interest rates had risensharply, meaning the cost of owing UniCredit also rose.UniCredit was willing to enter into the deal, despite theexpected future loss, because of the regulatory capital it wouldsave doing so.

The Basel Committee issued guidance on such deals inDecember 2011, saying: "Rather than contributing to a prudentrisk management strategy, the primary effect of these high-costcredit protection transactions may be to structure the premiumsand fees so to receive favourable risk-based capital treatmentin the short term and defer recognition of losses over anextended period, without meaningful risk mitigation or transferof risk."

Barclays booked profit on the trades immediately, using afive-year expected life of the deals to calculate its expectedprofits.

The dispute between the banks arose when BaFin, and theAustrian regulator (which was following BaFin), decided in 2010that the deals would no longer give HVB and Bank Austria capitalrelief. UniCredit wanted to unwind the trades, since it nolonger got any benefit from them, but Barclays insisted on theoriginal five-year term of the deals.

The judgement is sympathetic to the design of the deals,despite their use for regulatory arbitrage, writing thatBarclays "would not have been prepared to take such risk, at anyprice, in the current turbulent market conditions (meaningautumn 2008)", adding "the urgency of the deals and the shortnegotiating timescale gave no opportunity to carryout due diligence on the Reference Portfolios so as to be ableto assess the underlying credit risks of the borrower."

DISPUTED GROUND

The disputed clause in the original contracts allowedUniCredit to terminate in the event of a regulatory change, butBarclays had to agree consent on "commercially reasonable"grounds.

Barclays stood to receive fees for the lifetime of theguarantees, irrespective of the 'premium' it was paid to insurethe portfolios, so it refused to consent to unwinding theguarantees without payment of the EUR82m it expected to collectfrom UniCredit for the five-year expected life of deals.

This dispute itself only arose because of the complexity ofregulatory arbitrage - the intended lifetime of the deal wasfive years, but UniCredit may not have received regulatorycapital relief if this was made explicit. However, "the consentmechanism could be used by Barclays to achieve the same result,by refusing its consent unless the balance of five years' feeswere paid."

UniCredit argued, in effect, that Barclays was not beingcommercially reasonable in withholding its consent - it wassigned up to pay fees to Barlays for another three years withoutgaining any capital relief. Internal documents presented to thecourt seem to have shown that Barclays and UniCredit haddifferent understandings of how firm Barclays could be inrequiring five years of fees.

The Italian lender said that it was treating the refusal ofBarclays to unwind the trade as a waiver of the consentrequirement. After UniCredit unilaterally terminated the deal inJune 2010 Barclays started legal action.

Resolving the dispute at the forthcoming damages hearingcould prove challenging as UniCredit said that it had not beenmonitoring the deals since 2010, and that it would be"impossible" to recreate the portfolios and credit events sinceJune 2010.

The judgement notes: "The unsatisfactory way in which thispoint emerged meant that there was no evidence given by UniCredit to support this allegation in either form, still lessas to what the difficulty was or when the difficulty orimpossibility arose. That is fatal to the submission."

More News
17 Jan 2024 18:39

Bank CEOs, huddled in private in Davos, worry about competition, economy - sources

DAVOS, Jan 17 (Reuters) - Bank CEOs meeting in private at the World Economic Forum on Wednesday aired concerns about the competitive risks from fintech firms and private lenders, and complained about onerous regulations, a source familiar with the matter said.

Read more
16 Jan 2024 12:51

Ex-Barclays duo agree Panmure and Liberum investment bank merger

Jan 16 (Reuters) - Former Barclays veterans Bob Diamond and Rich Ricci have agreed an all-share merger of Panmure Gordon and UK rival Liberum, the firms said on Tuesday, creating Britain's largest independent investment bank amid an extended dealmaking slump.

Read more
16 Jan 2024 09:14

LONDON BROKER RATINGS: UBS raises GSK and cuts AstraZeneca

(Alliance News) - The following London-listed shares received analyst recommendations Tuesday morning:

Read more
16 Jan 2024 08:21

TOP NEWS: Panmure Gordon and Liberum merge to "reinvigorate" UK market

(Alliance News) - City brokers Panmure Gordon and Liberum on Tuesday said they have agreed an all-share merger that will create the "UK's largest independent investment bank" with over 250 quoted corporate clients.

Read more
15 Jan 2024 06:01

London finance job vacancies slumped nearly 40% in 2023, recruiter says

LONDON, Jan 15 (Reuters) - Job opportunities in London's financial sector plummeted nearly 40% last year, recruiter Morgan McKinley said on Monday, as market turbulence and high inflation led employers to tighten their belts on costs.

Read more
11 Jan 2024 17:03

M&S shares, Wall Street sell-off drag FTSE lower

U.S. inflation data sparks selloff

*

Read more
11 Jan 2024 11:36

UK finance watchdog probes possible motor finance misconduct

LONDON, Jan 11 (Reuters) - Britain's finance watchdog said on Thursday it would start looking into the motor finance industry, amid rising tensions between thousands of consumers and finance providers about commission arrangements.

Read more
11 Jan 2024 09:26

TOP NEWS: Big Yellow rent hike saves revenue from decreased occupancy

(Alliance News) - Big Yellow Group PLC on Thursday said that revenue and lettable area had increased despite occupancy dropping during the "seasonally weaker third quarter".

Read more
10 Jan 2024 17:07

European shares end lower, with miners and travel stocks leading losses

Norway's Dec core inflation lower than expected

*

Read more
10 Jan 2024 13:00

Global activist investors pressed companies to sell or spin in 2023 as M&A dropped off

NEW YORK, Jan 10(Reuters) - "Sell" or "split" was the favorite word for activist investors across the world last year when their demands for companies to pursue some form of mergers and acquisition-related activity hit a new record and appeared in roughly half of their 2023 campaigns even as M&A activity dropped off, according to new data from Barclays.

Read more
9 Jan 2024 07:44

LONDON BRIEFING: B&M to declare special payout; strong start for Unite

(Alliance News) - Stocks in London are tipped for a solid start on Tuesday, following a strong performance on Wall Street and in Asian markets.

Read more
5 Jan 2024 09:50

IN BRIEF: Prudential to buy back 4 million shares to offset awards

Prudential PLC - London-based, Asia-focused life and health insurer and asset manager - Contracts Barclays Capital Securities Ltd, part of Barclays PLC, to conduct a share buyback programme that will repurchase about 3.9 million shares at a maximum cost of GBP38 million. At the current market price, 3.9 million Prudential shares are worth GBP32.3 million. The buybacks are intended to offset the dilution that will be caused by the vesting of awards under Prudential's employee and agent share schemes.

Read more
21 Dec 2023 12:59

Barclays extends lease on Canary Wharf headquarters until 2039

LONDON, Dec 21 (Reuters) - Barclays has signed an agreement with Canary Wharf Group (CWG) to extend the lease on its British headquarters in the financial district until 2039, CWG said on Thursday.

Read more
20 Dec 2023 09:25

LONDON BROKER RATINGS: UBS cuts DS Smith; Kepler likes Genus

(Alliance News) - The following London-listed shares received analyst recommendations Wednesday morning and Tuesday:

Read more
20 Dec 2023 08:48

LONDON MARKET OPEN: Stocks feeling festive on UK, US rate cut hopes

(Alliance News) - Stock in London enjoyed a broad-based rally at Wednesday's open, as a surprise UK inflation print boosted risk sentiment, with investors pinning their hopes on UK and US interest rate cuts next year.

Read more

Login to your account

Don't have an account? Click here to register.

Quickpicks are a member only feature

Login to your account

Don't have an account? Click here to register.