Tuesday, October 13, 2015

Barclays set to name former JPMorgan banker Staley as new CEO

Barclays set to name former JPMorgan banker Staley as new CEO

[NEW YORK] British bank Barclays PLC is close to naming former JPMorgan Chase banker Jes Staley as chief executive, signaling a renewed focus on an investment banking division that has been pared back over the past three years.
Barclays offered the position to Staley, currently managing partner of US hedge fund firm BlueMountain Capital Management, and he accepted the offer, a person with knowledge of the situation told Reuters on Monday.
Boston-born Staley ran JPMorgan's investment bank and asset management business and had been at the bank for 34 years before leaving in early 2013 to join BlueMountain. He made the shortlist when Barclays last looked for a CEO three years ago. "His appointment will indicate a greater commitment to the IB (investment bank), but then Barclays' profitability problems are linked to the IB and not the traditional bank," said Chintan Joshi, analyst at Nomura.
Joshi said Staley is likely to have a close relationship with Barclays Finance Director Tushar Morzaria, another former JPMorgan banker, which bodes well for a coordinated strategy and execution, though he said investors don't want to see the investment bank built back up aggressively. "On his appointment, he needs to clearly indicate that the core IB will not form a bigger proportion of the group RWAs (risk-weighted assets) than under the current strategy as investors are unlikely (to) take a growing investment bank positively," Joshi said.
Barclays shares were down 1.3 per cent at 253.7 pence by 0710 GMT, in line with a weaker European bank index.
Any appointment would also still depend on Staley getting approval from Britain's financial regulators.
The appointment is expected to be announced in the next two weeks, according to the Financial Times, which first reported the expected appointment, citing two people familiar with the matter. "If this change is approved, it could signal that UK and U.S. regulators are comfortable with the renewed ascendancy of investment banking," said Jim Antos, analyst at Mizuho Securities Asia in Hong Kong.
Previous Barclays CEO Antony Jenkins was fired in July after losing the support of non-executive directors in a clash over style and the pace of the bank's turnaround.
He said Barclays had to reduce the importance of the investment bank after a series of scandals, while changes in regulation also made many trading activities unprofitable.
He set about shrinking the investment bank and putting its focus on its two core markets of the United States and Britain.
Chairman John McFarlane, who has been running the bank in the interim since Jenkins' exit, had said earlier in July that Barclays would look at internal as well as external candidates to make an appointment.
McFarlane has also put more emphasis back on the investment bank, and this week said European investment banks should consider merging to create a regional champion to compete with US rivals, who are gaining market share.
An appointment of Staley would see a second former JPMorgan investment bank boss running a British bank, after Standard Chartered this year picked Bill Winters as its new CEO.
The two British banks are not alone in picking new CEOs, and new bosses also started at European rivals Deutsche Bank and Credit Suisse over the summer.
Barclays declined to comment.
REUTERS

Swiss seek 5% leverage ratio for big banks: Bloomberg

Swiss seek 5% leverage ratio for big banks: Bloomberg

[ZURICH] Switzerland's finance ministry will require the country's biggest banks to have capital equal to about 5 per cent of their total assets, the Bloomberg news agency reported on Tuesday, citing people briefed on the talks.
Switzerland has not made its final decision on the leverage ratio targets, a government spokesman said when asked about the report. "It's not yet decided," said Mario Tuor, head of communications for the State Secretariat for International Financial Matters. "It will be a government decision before the end of the year, that's all we can say." The report said the Swiss decision would copy the U.S. leverage ratio for its biggest banks.
Switzerland typically goes beyond the internationally agreed minimum capital requirements established by Basel III, but experts as well as the country's central bank have argued that the Swiss trail other nations in leverage ratio targets for banks.
The Swiss government said in February it would lay out tougher capital requirements for UBS and Credit Suisse , Switzerland's two biggest banks, by the end of the year.
UBS and Credit Suisse reported BIS leverage ratios at the end of the second quarter of 3.6 per cent and 3.7 per cent respectively.
Solving the "too big to fail" problem has been a priority for regulators in the United States and Europe after several banks, including Zurich-based UBS, were bailed out in the financial crisis.
A spokesman for UBS declined to comment on the Bloomberg report. Credit Suisse was not immediately available for comment.
REUTERS

HKMA sells HK$6.98 bln to keep Hong Kong dollar in trading band

HKMA sells HK$6.98 bln to keep Hong Kong dollar in trading band

[HONG KONG] The Hong Kong Monetary Authority (HKMA) stepped into the currency market and sold HK$6.975 billion (US$900 million) in Hong Kong dollars on Tuesday afternoon as the local currency hit the strong end of its trading range.
According to the HKMA, the latest intervention will lift the aggregate balance - the sum of balances on clearing accounts maintained by banks with the authority - to HK$367.941 billion on Oct 15, when the injected funds will be settled.
The Hong Kong dollar is pegged at 7.8 to the US dollar, but can trade between 7.75 and 7.85. Under the currency peg, the HKMA is obliged to intervene when the Hong Kong dollar hits 7.75 or 7.85 to keep the band intact.
REUTERS

Builders with good productivity records to have advantage in public tenders: BCA

Builders with good productivity records to have advantage in public tenders: BCA

By
THE Building and Construction Authority (BCA) said on Tuesday that it has revised the tender evaluation framework for government construction projects, raising the productivity weightage to 10 per cent of the overall score.
The revised tender evaluation framework will be fully rolled out from January next year.
This means that builders with good productivity records in their past projects and their investment in technology adoption and workforce development will soon have an advantage when tendering for government construction projects.
BCA said it has also launched the first grant call for construction productivity under a research fund by the Ministry of National Development (MND). Under this grant call, S$2.6 million will be used to fund research institutes and industry players to further develop game-changing construction technologies and increase their adoption in the built environment sector.
Research projects will focus on solutions to drive Design for Manufacturing and Assembly (DfMA) in the sector and improve integration across the construction value chain. These are areas which BCA has been championing through its second Construction Productivity Roadmap launched earlier this year.

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