LONDON: A High Court clash between Barclays and British businesswoman Amanda Staveley, over whether she was deceived while negotiating a financial lifeline for the bank at the height of the credit crisis, drew to a close on Friday.
Staveley is claiming hundreds of millions of pounds in damages from Barclays in a civil case that started in June and hinges on how the bank secured emergency funds from Qatar and Abu Dhabi and averted a state bailout in October 2008.
Staveleyâs PCP Capital Partners, which led a ÂŁ3.25 billion ($4.2 billion) Abu Dhabi-backed investment, alleges it was induced to fund Barclays on much worse terms than Qatar â despite assurances it would get the same deal.
PCP, which reduced its maximum damages claim to ÂŁ836 million from ÂŁ1.5 billion during the trial, alleges Barclays paid Qatar ÂŁ346 million in secret fees and handed the Gulf state a $3 billion loan that almost matched Qatarâs investment.
Qatar said after the February fraud trial that two additional services agreements with Barclays, agreed in June and October 2008, were genuine.
Had PCP been aware of these âvery sweetâ terms, it would have sought a better deal, it alleged.
The case turned the spotlight back on Barclaysâ arrangements with Qatar four months after three senior bank executives were acquitted of fraud in a criminal case over advisory service agreements it struck with the Gulf nation in 2008.
Barclays alleged it had struck separate commercial agreements with Qatar and that PCPâs case was âwrong at every stage.â Testifying during the trial, Barclaysâ former top rainmaker Roger Jenkins accepted he might have used the words âsame dealâ to Staveley, but said he would have intended to refer to Qatar subscribing for the same instruments.
HIGHLIGHTS
â Case revolves around Barclaysâ October 2008 fundraising.
â Staveleyâs PCP reduces maximum damages claim to ÂŁ836 million.
â Alleges Barclays handed rival Qatari investors âsweeterâ deal.
After a dispute about whether PCP was a potential investor or merely an adviser to Abu Dhabi, Barclays noted Staveley may have hoped to participate as a principal â but alleged she did not suffer a loss due to Barclaysâ actions.
The bank said PCP was paid a âhandsomeâ ÂŁ30 million by Abu Dhabi and attacked Staveley as a âthoroughly unreliable witness,â who used âembellishment and inventionâ and whose modus operandi was to âduck and weave.â
Twelve years ago, bankers used sexist and demeaning language when discussing the financier and criticized her professional competence.
Apologising, one resigned as a senior bank lobbyist in June before the comments were aired.
Nevertheless, the bank relied on the then 34-year-old to bring on board Abu Dhabi royal Sheikh Mansour bin Zayed Al-Nahyan to help secure its independent future. A judgment is expected later.