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: 215.10
Bid: 215.10
Ask: 215.20
Change: -1.65 (-0.76%)
Spread: 0.10 (0.046%)
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

UPDATE 3-JPMorgan to pay $410 mln to settle U.S. power market case

Tue, 30th Jul 2013 16:31

By Scott DiSavino

NEW YORK, July 30 (Reuters) - JPMorgan Chase & Co agreed on Tuesday to pay $410 million to settle allegations ofpower market manipulation in California and the Midwest, thelatest in a series of high-profile inquiries by U.S. federalenergy regulators.

The settlement, announced by the Federal Energy RegulatoryCommission (FERC), will allow Chief Executive Jamie Dimon toclose the books on one of several costly run-ins with regulatorsover the past year. It came days after the bank said it wasquitting the physical commodities business.

JPMorgan Ventures Energy Corp, the commodity trading unitthat became one of the biggest U.S. electricity traders with the2008 acquisition of Bear Stearns, agreed to pay a civil penaltyof $285 million and disgorge $125 million for "manipulativebidding strategies" from September 2010 through November 2012.

It is the second largest penalty in FERC history, and comesas the once-quiet government regulator steps up its pursuit ofmarket malfeasance after gaining expanded powers from Congressin 2005, part of efforts to crack down on market manipulationafter Enron Corp's spectacular collapse.

JPMorgan spokesman Brian Marchiony said the settlement would"not have a material impact on our earnings" because the bankhad previously set aside reserves.

FERC said JPMorgan admitted the facts in the agreement, but"did not admit or deny the violations."

Dimon has moved this year to resolve multiple governmentinvestigations and correct problems regulators have found at thebank in an effort to take a more conciliatory stance as newrules are imposed more than five years after the start of thefinancial crisis.

The deal also came amid unprecedented political scrutiny ofWall Street's involvement in the raw materials supply chain.Lawmakers have questioned whether banks should own metalswarehouses and power plants, while the U.S. Federal Reservereviews a landmark 2003 decision that first let them tradecommodities.

The FERC deal did not cite specific traders or JPMorgan'scommodities chief Blythe Masters for any wrongdoing. Mastersspent billions of dollars over the past five years to buildJPMorgan's oil, power, gas and metals business into the biggeston Wall Street.

JPMorgan had vowed in May to fight the FERC charges anddisputed allegations that employees lied or actedinappropriately during the investigation. After a court battleover the disclosure over documents, the bank entered settlementdiscussions.

On Tuesday, FERC laid out Masters knowledge of the tradersabusive bidding strategies, including spreadsheets given to herdetailing a seven-year plan to churn up to $2 billion in profitsfrom potentially loss-making power plants.

FERC Commissioner Tony Clark heralded the settlement as"historic," but said he was frustrated over the bank'sevasiveness during the investigation. FERC had accused JPMorganon several occasions of being late in responding to datarequests and alleged it sometimes submitted "misleadinginformation."

"In this investigation and others, it has become too commonfor subjects of an investigation to take steps to obfuscate thetrue intent of their business strategies as a litigation posturefor dealing with their regulators," he said in a statement.

(For a FACTBOX on JPMorgan's power deals: )

(For details of one of the trading schemes: )

MANIPULATIVE BIDDING

In May, JPMorgan sold the so-called "tolling agreements" itowned for several power plants in California owned by AES Corp, for which it had been paying $170 million a year inrent. The agreements effectively gave the bank the right tooperate the plants, supplying natural gas as fuel and thenselling electricity into the market.

FERC said its investigators found the bank's Houston-basedtraders engaged in 12 "manipulative bidding strategies designedto make profits from power plants." The plants built in the1950s and 1960s were less efficient than modern units andwithout the bidding strategies would not have operated veryoften, potentially costing the bank millions.

FERC said the company created "artificial conditions" bymanipulating power grid operators into paying the bank to runthe plants at low levels and getting "premium rates."

Lawyers for three JPMorgan employees from the trading desk -Francis Dunleavy, Andrew Kittell and John Bartholomew - who wereidentified in the investigation, said the decision not to presscharges against them indicated they had done nothing that brokethe law. The three oversaw the bidding strategies, according toFERC.

"Francis, Andrew and John were very clear in theircommunications with the commission," said their attorney,William Scherman of Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher LLP, "that if thecommission were to make any finding that they had engaged in anymisconduct, they were fully prepared to defend and prove thelegality of their conduct in court."

Dunleavy reported to Masters and was head of JPMorganVentures' Principal Investments unit. Dunleavy joined the bankafter the takeover of Bear Stearns and supervised Kittell andBartholomew, according to the FERC order.

FERC levied a $470 million penalty against British bankBarclays Plc and four of its traders earlier thismonth. The tougher enforcement has rattled many traders in thepower market, who say FERC is delving into a gray area thatseparates legitimate entrepreneurial trading from intentionalmanipulation.

Barclays said it will fight the fine in court.

More News
9 Feb 2024 07:59

TOP NEWS: Barclays buys Tesco Bank as supermarkets refocus on food

(Alliance News) - Barclays PLC and Tesco PLC on Friday announced an agreement for Barclays to buy the retail banking business of Tesco Bank, as the big UK supermarkets scale back their forays into financial services.

Read more
9 Feb 2024 07:51

LONDON BRIEFING: Barclays buys Tesco's retail banking business

(Alliance News) - Stocks in London are called to open higher on Friday, closing off a busy corporate week.

Read more
9 Feb 2024 07:03

Tesco sells banking unit to Barclays for £600m

(Sharecast News) - UK supermarket giant Tesco has sold its most of its retail banking business to Barclays for £600m, the two companies said on Friday.

Read more
4 Feb 2024 11:12

Sunday newspaper round-up: Asda, Barclays, McLaren

(Sharecast News) - Zuber Issa, one of the two billionaire brothers at the helm of Asda, has been sounding out potential buyers for his 22.5% stake in the grocer. Instead, Zuber wishes to focus on EG Group, their petrol station empire. Meanwhile, Asda's next phase may include a bid for Boots. According to City sources, it was also possible that Zuber might use the funds raised through a sale to fund the purchase of his brother's stake in EG Group. - The Sunday Telegraph

Read more
26 Jan 2024 17:39

Texas bans Barclays from local govt debt business over ESG concerns

NEW YORK, Jan 26 (Reuters) - Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton on Friday said Barclays bank would not be permitted to underwrite municipal bonds after failing to respond to questions from state authorities about its pledges to cut greenhouse gas emissions.

Read more
26 Jan 2024 17:08

Texas bans Barclays from local debt business over ESG concerns

NEW YORK, Jan 26 (Reuters) - Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton said on Friday that Barclays bank would not be permitted to underwrite municipal bonds after failing to respond to questions from state authorities about its carbon emissions reduction commitments.

Read more
25 Jan 2024 10:36

BoE says 'ring fencing' capital rules for retail banks need no big overhaul

LONDON, Jan 25 (Reuters) - The Bank of England said on Thursday that its rules requiring banks to "ring fence" their retail arms with bespoke buffers of capital have worked satisfactorily with no major overhaul needed.

Read more
25 Jan 2024 10:05

Bank of England says 'ring fencing' capital rules for retail banks need no major overhaul

LONDON, Jan 25 (Reuters) - The Bank of England said on Thursday that its rules requiring banks to "ring fence" their retail arms with bespoke buffers of capital have worked "satisfactorily" with no major overhaul needed.

Read more
23 Jan 2024 12:37

UK Chancellor Hunt meets top UK bank heads over plans to boost City

(Alliance News) - Jeremy Hunt has met the UK's biggest banks as part of efforts among the government to boost interest in the City.

Read more
22 Jan 2024 17:14

European shares rise as Wall Street rallies; ECB decision in focus

Kindred jumps on takeover bid from FDJ

*

Read more
22 Jan 2024 16:59

London stocks climb as homebuilders shine, China weakness drags miners

Barclays up after bullish view from MS

*

Read more
22 Jan 2024 08:34

LONDON MARKET OPEN: FTSE 100 follows New York into the green

(Alliance News) - Stock prices in London opened higher on Monday, propelled by gains on Wall Street at the end of last week.

Read more
19 Jan 2024 09:28

LONDON BROKER RATINGS: BofA cuts Pearson, raises Just Eat Takeaway

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

Read more
18 Jan 2024 14:33

Britain's finance minister Hunt to quiz bank bosses on UK lending

LONDON, Jan 18 (Reuters) - Britain's finance minister Jeremy Hunt will meet the bosses of top British banks next Tuesday to seek reassurance they can keep lending to the economy, four sources familiar with the matter said on Thursday.

Read more
18 Jan 2024 09:26

Sainsbury's to gradually withdraw from banking

LONDON, Jan 18 (Reuters) - British supermarket Sainsbury's said on Thursday it would wind down its banking business and instead offer financial products through third parties, as part of a strategy to focus on its core retail operations.

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.