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The bank said the second half of the year would be challenging but said a broadly based business outside of Britain would help the bank weather the recession. "The investments we have made, particularly in our international businesses, are driving very strong income performance and allowing us to absorb the consequences of the economic downturn," Chief Executive John Varley said in a statement. Barclays has expanded operations in Pakistan, India, Indonesia and Africa. "Our capital base is stronger and we have significantly reduced leverage. Our goal for 2009 is very clear: we seek to deliver another year of solid profitability. Our first half performance is a good start to this." Barclays chose to raise additional capital from Middle Eastern investors rather than participate in government bailouts, and it has said it doesn't expect to participate in the government's asset protection scheme to insure against bad loans. The bank will also raise 8.2 billion pounds by selling its Barclays Global Investors unit, the world's largest asset manager, to U.S. fund manager BlackRock Inc. The deal, in which Barclays would retain a 20 percent stake of BGI, is subject to approval by shareholders at their annual general meeting on Thursday and was not reflected in first-half results.
"Barclays' decision to plow its own furrow without aid from the government has to date served it well. Despite a meteoric rise in the share price over the last six months, the shares remain down 11 percent over the last year, against a wider FTSE100 fall of 14 percent," Hunter said. ___ On the Net: http://group.barclays.com/
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