The Guardian, Simon Goodley, Thursday 30 August 2012
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| Barclays is under investigation by the Serious Fraud Office over payments made to Qatar Holding in 2008. Photograph: David Sillitoe for the Guardian |
The Serious
Fraud Office has launched an investigation into payments made after Barclays
tapped Middle Eastern investors for emergency funds in 2008.
The inquiry
– which relates to the disclosure of fees paid to the sovereign investor Qatar
Holding – represents the latest blow to the bank, which has just lost its chief
executive Bob Diamond and chairman Marcus Agius after being fined £290m by US
and UK regulators for its role in the Libor fixing scandal.
In a
statement issued after the stock market had closed last night, the bank said:
"Barclays confirms that the Serious Fraud Office has commenced an
investigation into payments under certain commercial agreements between
Barclays and Qatar Holding LLC". It declined to add further comment.
News of the
formal SFO investigation comes after Barclays confirmed in July that the
Financial Services Authority had begun a separate probe into Barclays on the same topic, when the bank admitted its finance director Chris Lucas was one of
four current and past employees being scrutinised over the fundraising. The
bank said at the time that it had satisfied its disclosure obligations and that
it will co-operate fully with the FSA.
The
investigation by the FSA – which does not have any powers to investigate
alleged crimes apart from insider dealing and share scams – will now run
alongside that of the SFO, which is understood to involve a broad look at the
company's conduct with the Qataris. A source close to the inquiry said:
"The SFO is looking into the role of the company [Barclays]. I wouldn't
discount anything".
The SFO has
already received information from the FSA and it is understood to have
requested further documents from the bank. Both the SFO and the FSA declined to
comment.
In June
2008, Barclays raised £4.5bn through an issue of new shares and in November
2008 it raised more than £7bn. Much of the focus appears to be on information
provided in the June 2008 fundraising that describes "an agreement for
provision of advisory services" by Qatar to Barclays in the Middle East.
The June
fundraising outlined an agreement "to explore opportunities for a
co-operative business relationship" with Sumitomo Mitsui Banking
Corporation of Japan. The fees disclosed for this fundraising totalled around
£100m.
In the
November 2008 fundraising, Barclays provided five separate disclosures of fees
that amounted in total to around £300m.
Qatar
Holding is a unit of the Qatar Investment Authority, which is the largest
shareholder in Barclays with a 6.65% stake, according to data compiled by Reuters.
While the
investigation into the fees does not involve other banks, Barclays was far from
being alone in the Libor scandal. Last month, Royal Bank of Scotland boss
Stephen Hester warned that his bank faced a huge fine for its role.
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