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Barclays finds support in Middle East

British bank Barclays said it would get $12 billion from the Middle East, mainly from sovereign wealth funds in Quatar and Abu Dhabi. Stephen Beard reports why the bank would rather go anywhere but the British government.

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Scott Jagow: If you’re a bank and you don’t want to take money from your own government, how about getting it from someone else’s? That’s what Barclays, the British bank, is doing. Today, Barclays said it’s getting $12 billion from the Middle East. Our man in London, Stephen Beard, has more.


Stephen Beard: Barclays is planning to raise the money mainly from sovereign wealth funds in Quatar and Abu Dhabi. The bank had earlier talked about deals with Russian and even Libyan investors.

Anyone, it seems, rather than the British government. Barclays rebuffed the offer of British taxpayers’ cash, because that would involve the government taking a stake in the bank — and that, says Andrew Hilton of the CSFI think tank, would have strings attached.

Andrew Hilton: In particular, limitations on dividends. Certainly having somebody looking over your shoulder when it comes to executive remuneration. And on both of those counts, I think the people who run Barclays would rather go to the private markets than have the government’s discipline imposed upon them.

He says that banks both in Britain and the U.S. feel that seeking help from their own governments is a desperate last resort.

In London, this is Stephen Beard for Marketplace.

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