By Kirstin Ridley
LONDON, Nov 25 (Reuters) - Former senior Barclays
executive Roger Jenkins told a fraud trial over undisclosed
payments by the bank during the credit crisis that Qatar had
wanted to be the British bank's "special" Gulf partner in 2008.
The former head of Barclays' Middle East business, and
co-defendants Tom Kalaris, who ran its wealth division, and
Richard Boath, a former head of European financial institutions,
deny conspiring to commit fraud by false representation and
fraud by false representation.
Giving evidence for the first time in the landmark London
case, Jenkins, 64, said on Monday he first met former prime
minister Sheikh Hamad bin Jassim bin Jabr al-Thani, who was also
head of Qatar's sovereign wealth fund, in July 2007 in Sardinia.
Jenkins said the two men had dinner on a boat on the Italian
island and met subsequently on the French Riviera at Cannes, in
Los Angeles, Doha and London to discuss business deals in
retail, real estate and banks as their relationship developed.
The case revolves around how Barclays avoided the fate of
Lloyds and Royal Bank of Scotland and averted a
state bailout with an 11 billion pound ($14 billion) fundraising
in June and October 2008.
Prosecutors allege the bankers lied to the market and other
investors by not properly disclosing 322 million pounds of extra
payments to Qatar, disguising them as "bogus" advisory services
agreements.
Qatar, a major investor in Britain, and Sheikh Hamad are not
accused of any wrongdoing.
When Barclays started to cast around for cornerstone
investors during the financial crisis Jenkins, who was known as
"Big Dog" by colleagues, wanted to bring in Qatar, which was
seeking to diversify its vast oil and gas wealth.
On May 14, 2008, Kalaris emailed Jenkins to ask whether
Sheikh Hamad had "any sensitivity" about Barclays approaching
other potential investors, such as Abu Dhabi or Kuwait, or
whether he wanted to be an exclusive Middle East player.
Jenkins, who read his emailed response out in court, said:
"Oh yes he won't like that. He wants to be (the) special Gulf
guy."
But Qatar had also watched RBS's steeply-discounted
emergency rights, Jenkins said, and was a tough negotiator.
"They will have seen the RBS rights issue with a 42%
discount so they would be pushing us as hard as possible to
apply that discount to this transaction and apply an appropriate
fee to this transaction," he told the jury.
The one-time graduate trainee rose to prominence at
Barclays' structured capital markets division, which grew
rapidly by helping clients navigate tax rules.
Qatar's sovereign wealth fund, which was only set up in
2005, was also booming and seeking investments. As cracks
appeared in financial markets, Jenkins said Sheikh Hamad became
increasingly interested in investing in banks.
Jenkins, who described his relationship with the sheikh as
close, is due to continue giving evidence in a trial scheduled
to last around five months.
($1 = 0.7794 pounds)
(Reporting by Kirstin Ridley;
Editing by Alexander Smith)