Barclays hit by $361 million U.S. penalty for 'staggering' blunder
						
		 
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		 [September 30, 2022]  By 
		John McCrank, Michelle Price and Iain Withers 
		 
		(Reuters) - British lender Barclays agreed 
		a $361 million penalty with U.S. regulators on Thursday for "staggering" 
		failures that led it to oversell $17.7 billion of structured products, 
		racking up further costs for an error that has blighted CEO C.S. 
		Venkatakrishnan's first year in charge. 
		 
		Barclays shares rose 2% in early trading on Friday following the news, 
		and were last up 0.5% at 08.46 GMT - broadly in line with gains made by 
		the wider FTSE 100. 
		 
		The conduct concerned dates back to March this year when Barclays 
		disclosed that it had accidentally oversold complex structured and 
		exchange-traded notes, overshooting by about 75% a $20.8 billion limit 
		on such sales it had agreed with the Securities and Exchange Commission.
		 
		 
		The bank had failed to implement any internal controls to track such 
		transactions in real time, the SEC found.  
		  
						
		
		  
						
		 
		"While we acknowledge Barclays' efforts to identify, disclose and 
		remediate this conduct, the control deficiencies and the scope of the 
		conduct at issue here was simply staggering," Gurbir Grewal, director of 
		the SEC's Division of Enforcement, said in a statement.  
		 
		Barclays was not immediately available for comment on Friday. A 
		spokesperson for Barclays, which did not admit or deny the SEC's 
		findings, declined to comment on Thursday.  
		 
		Buyers of the notes, considered "unregistered securities," had the right 
		to demand Barclays buy back the products at the original price plus 
		interest. The bank took a charge of 1.3 billion pounds in the second 
		quarter to cover the costs of buying back the securities, denting its 
		profits. 
						
		On Thursday, the SEC said Barclays had also agreed to pay a $200 million 
		civil penalty for the control lapses. In addition, it agreed to pay 
		disgorgement and interest of more than $161 million, although the 
		regulator said that additional charge was satisfied by the buyback 
		offer.  
						
		
		  
						
		
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            The logo of Barclays bank is seen on 
			glass lamps outside of a branch of the bank in the City of London 
			financial district in London September 4, 2017. REUTERS/Toby 
			Melville 
            
			
			  
            While the SEC settlement helps draw a line under the incident, which 
			has been an embarrassment for Venkatakrishnan - known at the bank as 
			'Venkat' - it still faces private litigation relating to the 
			incident.  
			 
			Barclays also still has to outline the final costs of its so-called 
			rescission offer to buy back the securities it sold in error. Venkat 
			told an investor event this month that it would do so in "relatively 
			short order". 
			 
			Barclays said this month that investors had submitted claims for $7 
			billion out of the $17.7 billion worth of securities it over-sold. 
			 
			WELL-SEASONED ISSUER 
			 
			Under a previous enforcement settlement Barclays agreed with the SEC 
			in 2017, the bank was stripped of its "well known seasoned issuer" 
			status that had allowed it to sell notes in the United States with 
			flexible filing requirements. 
			 
			As a result, Barclays had to quantify the total number of securities 
			that it anticipated offering and selling and pay registration fees 
			for those offerings in advance. In August 2019, the bank and the SEC 
			agreed Barclays could offer or sell approximately $20.8 billion of 
			securities, for a period of three years.  
			 
			Given this requirement, staff knew they had to keep close track of 
			actual offers and sales of securities against the amount of 
			registered offers and sales on a real-time basis, but the bank 
			failed to establish a mechanism to do this, the SEC said. 
			 
            
			  
			Around March 9, staff realized that they had oversold the agreed 
			amount of securities and alerted regulators a few days later, the 
			SEC said.  
			 
			(Reporting by John McCrank in New York, Kanishka Singh in Washington 
			and Iain Withers in London; editing by Deepa Babington and Jason 
			Neely) 
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