Qataris bank £615m profit on rescue of Barclays
One of Barclays' Middle Eastern saviours has bagged a £615m cash profit from its £1.75bn gamble on the bank's recovery last year.
By Philip Aldrick, Banking Editor
Published: 8:51PM BST 20 Oct 2009
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Towering profit: Qatar's sovereign wealth fund has banked £615m in a year from its investment in Barclays Photo: Ian Jones Qatar Holdings, the country's sovereign wealth fund, on Tuesday cashed in half of the £1.5bn of warrants it received in return for supporting last October's £7bn rescue fund-raising to keep the lender out of UK Government hands.
The warrants, which Qatar exercised at 197.775p a share, were sold in the market at 360p, realising a £615m cash profit for the Middle Eastern investor.
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UKFI rules out quick sale of bank sharesQatar is sitting on a £615m paper profit for the other half of the warrants it holds and a further £690m profit on the £500m of shares acquired at 153.276p. It has also been paid £175m in interest for the £1.25bn of reserve capital instruments that formed the bulk of the deal.
In total, Qatar has made a £2.14bn cash and paper profit on its £1.75bn investment in just one year.
Qatar was one of three Middle Eastern investors that came to Barclays' rescue after UK institutions shunned management attempts to raise capital when Lloyds Banking Group and Royal Bank of Scotland were part-nationalised last year. Barclays stayed out of state hands, but it had to offer highly generous terms to the three investors.
Between them, they have made a cash and paper profit of £5.4bn on a combined £5.3bn investment in just one year. His Highness Sheikh Mansour bin Zayed al-Nahyan, a member of the Abu Dhabi royal family, sold £2bn of his investment for a £1.45bn profit in June but has retained £1.5bn of warrants that are currently £1.2bn in profit.
Challenger, a vehicle owned by the Qatari royal family, is sitting on a £410m paper profit and has earned £25m in interest on its investment.
Credit Suisse placed Qatar's shares at an average of 360p largely with UK institutions.
Analysts pointed out that Barclays' shareholders were offered the chance to support the bank but declined and are now paying more than twice as much for the stock.
They were also given the opportunity at the time of the rescue refinancing to buy £1.5bn of manadatory convertible notes that switched into shares in June at 153.276p, under the same terms as the Middle Eastern investors. Only £1.25bn was taken up.
"They missed an opportunity and the Qataris are profiting handsomely for taking the risk," one analyst said
Qatar stressed that it remained "a long-term strategic shareholder in Barclays". It continues to be the bank's largest shareholder with a 7.1pc stake, diluted from 7.4pc due to the issue of 379m new shares as a result of the warrants being exercised.
John Varley, Barclays chief executive said the placing "will further broaden the base of our share register" and added: "Qatar is our largest shareholder and a key partner of the Barclays group."
The deal will also improve Barclays' core tier one ratio, the key measure of financial strength, from 8.8pc in June to roughly 8.95pc. The boost came about because Qatar had to pay the bank £750m for the new shares before selling them at a profit.
Bringing the Middle East investors on to the share register was highly controversial last year. The price paid was significantly more than what it would have cost to raise similar funds from the Government and the speed of the deal meant shareholders were not given first refusal on the deal, as is best practice.
However, the strategy of remaining independent has proved a success. Barclays shares have recovered from around 200p to 363¾p, down 18.3p yesterday due to the dilutive effect of the deal, while RBS shares have fallen from 66p to 46.58p and Lloyds from around 200p to 91.35p in the same period.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/newsbysector/banksandfinance/6390133/Qataris-bank-615m-profit-on-rescue-of-Barclays.html
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Wednesday, 21 October 2009
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