Barclays-Qatar Deal Made without ex-Chairman’s Knowledge
Former Barclays
chairman Marcus Agius has said he was unaware of documents detailing £280m
worth of payments to the bank’s Qatari investors in 2008 that is at the center
of a fraud trial in London.
The Serious Fraud Office (SFO) has questioned
Agius over his knowledge of a key document from October 31 that year, detailing
the payment terms of an advisory services agreement that would result in the
bank paying £280m to the Qataris.
“Absolutely not … I saw this document for the
first time some years afterward,” Agius told a jury at Southwark crown court on
Wednesday. “Not only did I not see this document, I was not aware of its
existence, ” the veteran banker said on his second day in the witness box. He
said he first saw the document in 2012.”
The SFO’s lead prosecutor, Edward Brown QC,
went on to ask whether the former chairman was aware of how it was negotiated
or how the figure was arrived at. To both questions, Agius answered “no”.
The SFO alleges four
former Barclays executives – Richard Boath, John Varley, Roger Jenkins and Tom
Kalaris – lied to the stock market and other investors about how £322m in fees
were paid to Qatar in relation to emergency fundraising of more than £11bn in
2008.
Varley and Agius had
been jointly handed full authority to carry out a second capital raising after
a meeting of a board finance committee, established by Barclays on October 28,
2008. This included approving fees that were “fair and reasonable”, according
to documents presented to the court.
“Matters were moving
almost on an hourly basis,” Agius said, noting that a smaller decision-making
group was more practical to secure strategic investors as markets gyrated in
the credit crunch.
Agius, the first
prosecution witness to give evidence, said he had been aware of underwriting
fees and a 66 million pound payment for Qatar.