Barclays CEO in bid to stem US talent flight
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[June 02, 2023] By
Milana Vinn, Abigail Summerville and David Carnevali
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Barclays Chief Executive C.S. Venkatakrishnan held
a virtual town hall this week to address management changes that have
led to about two dozen U.S. investment bankers fleeing in the last few
weeks, people familiar with the matter said.
The bankers have left for rivals including Citigroup Inc, UBS Group AG
and Jefferies Financial Group Inc, Reuters has reported.
Venkatakrishnan's intervention underscores the pressure that the British
bank is under to protect its U.S. investment banking franchise.
Barclays slipped to 14th from sixth in Refinitiv's Americas mergers and
acquisitions league table in the first quarter of 2023, even as it
jumped from ninth to fifth in the Europe, Middle East and Africa league
table, as its U.S. dealmakers struggled to preserve market share amid a
slowdown in transactions.
Venkatakrishnan promised during the meeting to invest in the investment
banking business to boost morale, the sources said.
While he did not name bankers by name, Venkatakrishnan addressed
management changes that led to former Credit Suisse Group AG investment
banking and capital markets co-head Cathal Deasy and former Morgan
Stanley global capital markets co-head Taylor Wright taking over in
January as Barclays global co-heads of U.S. investment banking.
The elevation of these newcomers to the bank bypassed tenured Barclays
bankers that had been seen as possible successors, including those
popular with their colleagues such as Marco Valla, who subsequently
joined UBS, the sources said.
Barclays in January had said it was in talks with Deasy and Wright's
predecessors, John Miller and Jean-Francois Astier, about new roles.
Miller left Barclays to join Jefferies last month, while Barclays only
announced a new role for Astier this week, naming him global head of
financial sponsors.
Venkatakrishnan said the changes were part of a succession plan and
reflected the bank's strategic focus on covering big clients and the
smart use of its balance sheet when it comes to financing the deals of
private equity firms.
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The Barclays logo is seen in front of
displayed stock graph in this illustration taken June 21, 2017.
REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo
Responding to a question from one of the attendees at the meeting
about compensation, Venkatakrishnan said this would reflect each
employee's value and performance.
Barclays declined to comment on the meeting.
It was the second such meeting that Venkatakrishnan has held with
bankers in recent weeks. The first was a shorter 10-minute call last
month where he did not take any questions, according to one of the
sources.
To be sure, Barclays has also been seeking to replenish talent,
hiring five managing directors in the United States and another five
around the world this year. Last year, the bank brought in Jim
Rossman as global head of shareholder advisory from Lazard Ltd and
this year it hired Christopher Ludwig from Credit Suisse to work on
shareholder advisory.
Still, the exodus that Venkatakrishnan and other Barclays executives
have been trying to stem has continued apace. In recent days,
information services head Pete Contrucci left to join UBS, while
U.S. financial sponsors co-head Evan Rothenberg and head of
strategic finance Daniel Kerstein also exited, said people familiar
with the matter.
Contrucci and Rothenberg did not respond to requests for comment,
while Kerstein declined to comment.
Overall, the United States has been a bright spot for Barclays,
helping it score a 16% pre-tax profit jump in the first quarter that
beat analysts expectations. But it was its consumer, cards and
payments division, rather than investment banking, that led the
charge. Fees from advising on corporate mergers and fundraising were
down 7%.
(Reporting by Milana Vinn, Abigail Summerville and David Carnevali
in New York; Additional reporting by Svea Herbst-Bayliss in Rhode
Island; Writing by Anirban Sen; Editing by Greg Roumeliotis and
Christopher Cushing)
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