"Message from John Varley: My perspective on Barclays Capital Raising
Monday, 3 November 2008)Dear Colleague
Dear Colleague
There was a lot said and written in the media on Friday and over the weekend about our capital raising and I wanted to write today to share my perspective on what has been said so far (there will be more coverage in due course – of that I am in no doubt).
Often when I write to you I am trying to make sure that you have the arguments at your fingertips so that, if you are challenged by friends or family, or indeed by customers and colleagues, as to what we are doing and why, you have been able to develop your own views.
I am going to cover three areas in particular in this letter:
• Why we chose to raise capital in the way that we did
• How the path we have chosen looks in hindsight – especially versus the UK Government option"
Read the whole thing:
"It was very clear from the conversations that I had with the UK Government over that weekend that it would, as a shareholder, influence our dividend policy; it would influence our lending policy; and it would become involved in the formulation of strategy. Of course the role of the Board is to protect the interest of shareholders and to create the circumstances in which, over time, we can maximise value on their behalf. And that was what was in the mind of the Board as we came to our decisions: we felt that our ability to do what our shareholders would expect of us would be compromised if Barclays was nationalised."
Of course the government would get involved if the taxpayer's money is involved. He is actually saying that the government would make poor decisions, otherwise, why care about the involvement?
"First of all, the cost of the reserve capital instruments (or RCIs) that we intend to issue is not significantly different to the cost of the preference shares which those who took UK government money will issue, and that is true even if we take into account the cost of the warrants which attach to the RCIs. Second, the discount on the new shares that we are issuing is bigger than the discount that we would have got from the UK Government. But it is significantly smaller than the discount that would have been forced on us had we done a conventional rights issue.
My next point is rather complex but it’s important: it seems to me very clear that the only reason that we would have taken UK Government support was because we had lost the right to choice – i.e., because the FSA would have concluded that it was not safe for us to open for business on the morning of Monday, 13 October"
They're actually paying more to keep the government out. Wow. I approve.
This is what TARP should have done. Make the terms so onerous that only insolvent banks would apply. However, I would have let those banks fail, or have taken them over to get the taxpayers the best deal on saving an insolvent bank, assuming that makes sense. Given AIG, someone must believe that it is.
Here was my comment:
Posted by Don the libertarian Democrat [report]"It was very clear from the conversations that I had with the UK Government over that weekend that it would, as a shareholder, influence our dividend policy; it would influence our lending policy; and it would become involved in the formulation of strategy."
Obviously, for the worse, otherwise why would you care?
"not significantly different to the cost of the preference shares which those who took UK government money will issue"
But it is more. However, these investors will allow us to make money and run our business correctly.
Take that government.
No comments:
Post a Comment