Form 6-K
Table of Contents

 

 

UNITED STATES

SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION

Washington, DC 20549

 

 

FORM 6-K

 

 

Report of Foreign Private Issuer

Pursuant to Rule 13a-16 or 15d-16

under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934

March 25, 2014

 

 

Barclays PLC

(Name of Registrant)

 

 

1 Churchill Place

London E14 5HP

England

(Address of Principal Executive Offices)

 

 

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant files or will file annual reports under cover of Form 20-F or Form 40-F.

Form 20-F  x         Form 40-F  ¨

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is submitting the Form 6-K in paper as permitted by Regulation S-T Rule 101(b)(1):        

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is submitting the Form 6-K in paper as permitted by Regulation S-T Rule 101(b)(7):        

 

 

 


Table of Contents

This Report is a Report on Form 6-K filed by Barclays PLC.

The Report comprises the following:

 

Exhibit No.  

Description

1  

Barclays PLC Annual Report 2013

2  

Barclays PLC Strategic Report 2013

3   Barclays PLC Notice of AGM 2014
4   Barclays PLC – proxy cards


Table of Contents

SIGNATURES

Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorised.

 

  BARCLAYS PLC
  (Registrant)
Date: March 25, 2014   By:  

/s/ Patrick Gonsalves

  Name:  

Patrick Gonsalves

  Title:  

Deputy Secretary


Table of Contents

 

 

LOGO  

Building the

‘Go-To’ bank

  LOGO   LOGO
     

Barclays PLC

Annual Report 2013


Table of Contents

Barclays PLC >

Chairman’s letter

   The Strategic Report was approved by the Board of Directors on 3 March 2014 and signed on its behalf by the Chairman.

 

LOGO

Barclays is going through a major transition. Critical progress was made in 2013 in putting in place the foundations for sustainable long-term success. The journey is incomplete, with major cultural change well in train but still requiring time to be fully entrenched and, externally, a continuing unsettled economic and financial market environment, and a demanding and changing regulatory agenda.

We must focus not only on what we do but on how we do it, and we are committed to embedding a values-driven culture in Barclays. To deliver sustainable performance, we have to balance the needs of all our stakeholders across the short and long-term. You can read elsewhere in this Report how our values: Respect, Integrity, Service, Excellence and Stewardship, are being driven down into the organisation. In 2013 we introduced a balanced scorecard for Barclays which seeks to ensure that we are meeting the needs of all of our stakeholders by measuring performance against metrics in five key areas:

 

¡   Customer & Client
¡   Colleague
¡   Citizenship
¡   Conduct
¡   Company

We have set ourselves stretching but achievable goals in all of these areas which are designed to drive, and which are starting to deliver, mutually reinforcing outcomes. You can read more about the Balanced Scorecard in the following pages.

There has been understandable concern and criticism of the increase in the incentive pool in a year in which the bank’s profits were down. The immediate challenge for the Board Remuneration Committee and Board for 2013 was to find the right practical balance between the need to give shareholders a greater share of the income we generate, to bear down on costs, and to meet society’s expectations without eroding the long-term competitiveness of the Investment Bank, and thus damaging the interests of our shareholders. Whilst the conclusion reached was an extremely difficult one, we believe that it was the right decision for shareholders in the long term. Looking forward, we remain committed to achieving a compensation to adjusted net operating income ratio in the mid 30s over the medium term. There is more detail on this in the Remuneration Report in the following pages.

There have been a number of changes to both the composition of the Board and to our governance structures during 2013. In particular, we created a new Board Conduct, Reputation and Operational Risk Committee to provide clear and dedicated focus on each of these major areas in complement to the role of the Board Financial Risk Committee. You can read more on these changes in my corporate governance report.

Elements in the global economic environment and prospects now seem more favourable than at the beginning of 2013, but financial markets face uncertainty created by structually lower economic growth over a prolonged period and an uncertain political outlook in many of the areas in which we operate. And, while substantial progress has been made in strengthening the balance sheet, further regulation in prospect, including in particular retail ring-fencing in the UK and rules to be put in place under the Dodd Frank legislation in the United States, and the emerging business environment will inevitably call for rigorous review and adaptation of the mix and structure of the businesses of the Bank.

This year the Annual Report incorporates the Strategic Report in line with reporting requirements. The changes are intended to facilitate more effective communication with all our stakeholders, improve corporate accountability and to provide more concise and relevant narrative reports. These objectives are entirely in line with our aim to become more clear and transparent on our journey to be the ‘Go-To’ bank. We will continue to engage with stakeholders to identify ways in which we can further advance this agenda.

2014 will be a critical year for Barclays as we work toward meeting the needs and expectations of all our stakeholders in terms of both the business we do and how we do it. Your Board and the executive team led by Antony Jenkins are encouraged by what was accomplished in 2013 and are focused and determined to complete the Transform Programme, and we are confident of doing so.

 

LOGO

Sir David Walker

Chairman

 

 

Notes

The term ‘Barclays PLC Group’ or the ‘Group’ means Barclays PLC together with its subsidiaries and the term ‘Barclays Bank PLC Group’ means Barclays Bank PLC together with its subsidiaries. ‘Barclays’ and ‘Group’ are terms which are used to refer to either of the preceding groups when the subject matter is identical. The term ‘Company’, ‘Parent Company’ or ‘Parent’ refers to Barclays PLC and the term ‘Bank’ refers to Barclays Bank PLC. In this report, the abbreviations ‘Łm’ and ‘Łbn’ represent millions and thousands of millions of pounds sterling respectively; the abbreviations ‘$m’ and ‘$bn’ represent millions and thousands of millions of US Dollars respectively; ‘m’ and ‘bn’ represent millions and thousands of millions of euros respectively and ‘C$m’ and ‘C$bn’ represent millions and thousands of millions of Canadian dollars respectively.

Unless otherwise stated, the income statement analyses compare the 12 months to 31 December 2013 to the corresponding 12 months of 2012 and balance sheet comparisons, relate to the corresponding position at 31 December 2012. Unless otherwise stated, all disclosed figures relate to continuing operations. Relevant terms that are used in this document but are not defined under applicable regulatory guidance or International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) are explained in the glossary online at www.barclays.com/annualreport. A hard copy can be provided on request by contacting Barclays Investor Relations, Barclays PLC, 1 Churchill Place, London E14 5HP.

Adjusted profit before tax and adjusted performance measures have been presented to provide a more consistent basis for comparing business performance between periods. Adjusted profit before tax is explained further on page 24 and defined in the online glossary at www.barclays.com/annualreport

Forward-looking statements

This document contains certain forward-looking statements within the meaning of Section 21E of the US Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, and Section 27A of the US Securities Act of 1933, as amended, with respect to certain of the Group’s plans and its current goals and expectations relating to its future financial condition and performance. Barclays cautions readers that no forward-looking statement is a guarantee of future performance and that actual results could differ materially from those contained in the forward-looking statements. These forward-looking statements can be identified by the fact that they do not relate only to historical or current facts. Forward-looking statements sometimes use words such as “may”, “will”, “seek”, “continue”, “aim”, “anticipate”, “target”, “projected”, “expect”, “estimate”, “intend”, “plan”, “goal”, “believe”, “achieve” or other words of similar meaning. Examples of forward-looking statements include, among others, statements regarding the Group’s future financial position, income growth, assets, impairment charges and provisions, business strategy, capital, leverage and

other regulatory ratios, payment of dividends (including dividend pay-out ratios), projected levels of growth in the banking and financial markets, projected costs, original and revised commitments and targets in connection with the Transform Programme, deleveraging actions, estimates of capital expenditures and plans and objectives for future operations and other statements that are not historical fact. By their nature, forward-looking statements involve risk and uncertainty because they relate to future events and circumstances. These may be affected by changes in legislation, the development of standards and interpretations under International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS), evolving practices with regard to the interpretation and application of accounting and regulatory standards, the outcome of current and future legal proceedings and regulatory investigations, future levels of conduct provisions, the policies and actions of governmental and regulatory authorities, geopolitical risks and the impact of competition. In addition, factors including (but not limited to) the following may have an effect: capital, leverage and other regulatory rules (including with regard to the future structure of the Group) applicable to past, current and future periods; UK, United States, Africa, Eurozone and global macroeconomic and business conditions; the effects of continued volatility in credit markets; market related risks such as changes in interest rates and foreign exchange rates; effects of changes in valuation of credit market exposures; changes in valuation of issued securities; volatility in capital markets; changes in credit ratings of the Group; the potential for one or more countries exiting the Eurozone; the implementation of the Transform Programme; and the success of future acquisitions, disposals and other strategic transactions. A number of these influences and factors are beyond the Group’s control. As a result, the Group’s actual future results, dividend payments, and capital and leverage ratios may differ materially from the plans, goals, and expectations set forth in the Group’s forward-looking statements. Additional risks and factors are identified in our filings with the SEC including our Annual Report on Form 20-F for the fiscal year ended 31 December 2012, and in the Form 6-K (Film No. 131097818) dated 16 September 2013, both of which are available on the SEC’s website at http://www.sec.gov.

Any forward-looking statements made herein speak only as of the date they are made and it should not be assumed that they have been revised or updated in the light of new information or future events. Except as required by the Prudential Regulation Authority, the Financial Conduct Authority, the London Stock Exchange plc (LSE) or applicable law, Barclays expressly disclaims any obligation or undertaking to release publicly any updates or revisions to any forward-looking statements contained herein to reflect any change in Barclays’ expectations with regard thereto or any change in events, conditions or circumstances on which any such statement is based. The reader should, however, consult any additional disclosures that Barclays has made or may make in documents it has published or may publish via the Regulatory News Service of the LSE and/or has filed or may file with the SEC.

 


Table of Contents
  

 

 

 

 

LOGO  

 

‘We’ve made some changes to this year’s Strategic Report to give readers a clearer picture of how we operate, what our plans are and how they link to Barclays’ goal and purpose.’

 

In line with new regulatory reporting requirements and our commitment to transparent disclosures, this year’s Strategic Report gives greater information on the business model and strategy of the Group and its divisions.

  LOGO  

 

 

The Strategic Report

An overview of our 2013 performance, a focus on our new strategic direction, and a review of the businesses underpinning our strategy

 

Group overview      02   
Chief Executive’s strategic review      04   
Strategy and operating environment      06   
Business model/Value creation      08   
Balanced Scorecard      10   
Group Finance Director’s review      12   
Strategic risk overview      14   
UK Retail and Business Banking (UK RBB)      18   
Europe Retail and Business Banking (Europe RBB)      22   
Africa      26   
Barclaycard      30   
Investment Bank      34   
Corporate Banking      38   
Wealth and Investment Management      42   
Chairman’s governance overview      46   
Summary remuneration report      48   

 

LOGO  

Corporate website

We maintain a corporate website at www.barclays.com containing a wide range of information of interest to institutional and private investors including:

 

¡   Latest news and press releases
¡   Annual reports and investor presentations

 

   LOGO  

 

See further content for the

  2013 Annual Report online at

  www.barclays.com/annualreport

 

Governance

The governance process of Barclays and reports from each of the Board committees presenting how the Board support the delivery of the strategy

 

Corporate governance report      52   
Directors’ report      78   
Board of Directors      83   
Executive Committee      85   
People      86   
Remuneration report      89   
Implementation of the Salz Review recommendations      126   

 

 

Risk review

Insight into the level of risk across Barclays’ businesses and portfolios, the material risks and uncertainties faced and the key areas of management focus.

 

Risk factors    133
Credit risk    142
Market risk    190
Funding risk – Capital    199
Funding risk – Liquidity    208
Operational risk    225
Reputation risk    226
Conduct risk    228
Supervision and regulation    230

 

 

The Financial review

A review of the performance of Barclays, including the key performance indicators, and our businesses’ contribution to the overall performance of the Group

 

Key performance indicators      238   
Consolidated summary income statement      245   
Income statement commentary      246   
Consolidated summary balance sheet      247   
Balance sheet commentary      248   
Analysis of results by business      249   
Margins and balances      267   

Financial statements

Detailed analysis of our statutory accounts, independently audited and providing in-depth disclosure and transparency on the financial performance of the business

 

Independent Auditors’ report      271   
Consolidated financial statements      277   
Parent company accounts      282   
Notes to the financial statements      284   

 

 

Risk management

A comprehensive overview of Barclays’ approach to risk management and more specific information on policies that the Group determines to be of particular significance in the current operating environment

 

Barclays risk management strategy    378
Credit risk management    392
Market risk management    405
Operational risk management    415
Liquidity risk management    418
Capital risk management    420

 

 

 

Shareholder information

Resources for shareholders including the Company articles of association, classes of shares and contact details for shareholder enquiries

 

Shareholder information      424   
Shareholder enquiries      428   
Index      429   
 

 

LOGO
 

 

barclays.com/annualreport    Barclays PLC Annual Report 2013 > 01


Table of Contents

Group overview

    

     

 

 

 

 

 

Barclays is a major global financial services provider engaged in personal banking, credit cards, corporate and investment banking, and wealth and investment management with an extensive international presence in Europe, the Americas, Africa and Asia.

 

With over 300 years of history and expertise in banking, Barclays operates in over 50 countries and employs approximately 140,000 people. Barclays moves, lends, invests and protects money for customers and clients worldwide.

   

 

Return on Equity

4.5%

Adjusted return on average shareholders’ equity decreased from 9.0% principally reflecting the decrease in profit before tax, a £440m write down of deferred tax assets and the £5.8bn equity raised from the rights issue

 

   

 

Dividends per share

6.5p

Full year dividend of 6.5p maintained at same level as 2012

 

 

Adjusted profit before tax

£5,167m

Down 32% due to costs to achieve Transform and a 4% reduction in income. Statutory profit before tax was up from £797m to £2,868m

 

   

 

Gross new lending to UK

£88bn

We provided £88bn of Funding for Lending eligible gross new lending to UK households and businesses in 2013

 

 

CRD IV fully loaded Common Equity Tier 1 Ratio

9.3%

Up from 8.4% in September 2013 principally due to the issuance of additional shares through the rights issue

 

   

 

Diverse employees

139,600

Of our 139,600 global workforce,

71,300 were female and 68,300 male

 

 

Key performance indicators (KPIs)

 

The KPIs presented below reflect the indicators management used during 2013 whilst transitioning to use of the Balance Scorecard (see page 10).   

Following the announcement of the Transform programme, a number of additional metrics have been monitored against the financial commitments made. These can be seen on pages 238 to 240.

 

 

               Statutory       Adjusted

 

   Measures       2013     2012    2011       2013     2012    2011  

 

   

 

Capital    Core Tier 1 ratio    13.2%     10.8%    11.0%            
  

 

         
   Estimated PRA leverage ratioa    3.0%                 

 

         
                        

 

   

 

Returns    Return on average shareholders’ equity (RoE)    1.0%     (1.2)%    5.9%       4.5%     9.0%    6.7%  
  

 

   

 

   Return on average tangible shareholders’ equity (RoTE)    1.2%     (1.4)%    7.1%       5.3%     10.6%    8.1%  
  

 

   

 

   Profit before tax    2,868     797    5,770       5,167     7,599    5,482  
  

 

   

 

   Cost: income ratio    79%     84%    65%       71%     63%    68%  
  

 

   

 

   Loan loss rate    64bps     70bps    77bps            
  

 

         
   Dividend per share    6.5p     6.5p    6.0p            

 

   

 

Income    Total income      27,935       25,009      32,292           28,155       29,361      28,513  
  

 

   

 

growth    Income by geography: UK    11,461     7,461    15,819       11,681     12,040    11,981  
  

 

   

 

                                         Europe    4,019     4,457    4,207       4,019     4,457    4,207  
  

 

   

 

                                         Americas    7,034     7,554    6,025       7,034     7,327    6,083  
  

 

   

 

                                         Africa and Middle East    4,137     4,472    4,967       4,137     4,472    4,967  
  

 

   

 

                                         Asia    1,284     1,065    1,274       1,284     1,065    1,274  
  

 

   

 

                  

 

   
Citizenship    Gross new lending to UK households and businessesb    £88bn     £44bn    £45bn      
  

 

   
   Global investment in our communities    £72m     £64.5m    £63.5m      
  

 

   
   Colleagues involved in volunteering, regular giving and fundraising initiatives    71,000     68,000    70,000      
  

 

   
   Group Employee Opinion Survey (EOS) – Proud to be Barclaysc       78%    81%      
  

 

   
   Percentage of senior managers who are femaled    23%     22%    21%      

 

   

 

Notes

a   In 2013, the adjusted gross leverage metric was superseded by the estimated PRA leverage ratio as the primary leverage measure used by management.

     Refer to page 240 for further details.

b   In 2013, we tracked Funding for Lending Scheme eligible gross new lending, a new measure introduced in June 2012.

c   In 2013, the EOS was not undertaken, having been superseded by the Sustained engagement of colleagues score in the Balanced Scorecard.

d   Based upon percentage of females in the Director corporate grade.

 

  

 

 

 

02 > Barclays PLC Annual Report 2013    barclays.com/annualreport


Table of Contents
             
    

Group overview

    02          

The Group overview provides a view on how Barclays is segmented and reported, the services the businesses provide, and the performance of the Group as a whole

 
    

Chief Executive’s strategic review

    04            
    

Strategy and operating environment

    06            
    

Business model/Value creation

    08            
    

Balanced Scorecard

    10            
    

Group Finance Director’s review

    12            
    

Strategic Risk overview

    14            
    

Performance review by division

    18            
    

Chairman’s governance overview

    46            
    

Summary remuneration report

    48            
             

 

 

 

LOGO

 

Barclays banking and financial service businesses work together to provide customers and clients the best offerings across our chosen markets.

UK Retail and Business Banking (UK RBB)

£4,523m

A leading UK high street bank providing retail banking services and general insurance to individuals and business banking services to small and medium enterprises (SMEs)

Europe Retail and Business Banking (Europe RBB)

£666m

A local presence for Barclays customers in Spain, Italy, Portugal and France, providing retail banking services to mass affluent individuals and business banking services to SMEs

Africa Retail and Business Banking (Africa RBB)

£2,617m

A leading pan-African retail and business bank serving customers and clients in 12 countries with a range of banking and bancassurance solutions

Barclaycard

£4,786m

A leading international payments business, offering payments and lending to individuals, and a range of business services including card issuing and payment acceptance services

Investment Bank

£10,733m

A global investment bank serving large corporate clients, financial institutions, governments and institutional investors with financial advisory, capital-raising, financing and risk management services

Corporate Banking

£3,115m

A leading provider of cash management, lending and trade financing to corporate clients in the UK and South Africa, and global businesses, financial institutions and international organisations

Wealth and Investment Management

£1,839m

A leading global wealth manager and advisor, providing private and intermediary clients with international and private banking, investment management, fiduciary services and brokerage

 

   LOGO

 

 

 

For more detailed information on the performance of divisions please refer to pages 18 to 45

 

 

 

LOGO
 

 

barclays.com/annualreport    Barclays PLC Annual Report 2013 > 03


Table of Contents
Chief Executive’s strategic review   

 

 

 

 

 

LOGO

LOGO   

‘We have made good progress in 2013 and we start 2014 in a better position than for several years. While recognising there is much more to do, we have every reason to feel positive about our prospects and confident that we will become the ‘Go-To’ bank for all our stakeholders.’

  LOGO  

2013 has been a year of significant change for Barclays. A year ago we set out the outcome of our strategic review and our Transform plan to make Barclays the ‘Go-To’ bank for all our stakeholders. We continue to take steps to de-risk the business, strengthen the balance sheet, increase the efficiency of our operations and are making good progress against our plan.

Our 2013 results clearly demonstrate the benefits of the diversity we enjoy in the Group, as well as the strength of our core franchises. While impacted by the restructuring and de-risking activity, underlying business performance has been resilient, with adjusted income of £28.2bn and adjusted profit before tax of £5.2bn. Our core franchises remain strong, with UK Retail and Business Banking, Barclaycard, UK Corporate Banking, and within the Investment Bank our Equities and Investment Banking businesses all delivering good performances in 2013. Important progress has also been made in repositioning our African, European and Wealth businesses, although further work is required to get returns to acceptable levels. Our Fixed Income, Currency and Commodities business in the Investment Bank saw revenues fall, in line with our European peers, as market conditions remained subdued.

We are making good headway across the financial commitments we set out as part of our Transform plan as well as on de-leveraging to meet the PRA’s revised target. I am pleased by our progress on RWAs and leverage. We have been able to move more quickly than anticipated in managing down CRD IV RWAs, bringing us a little below our Transform target well ahead of the 2015 timeline. Through rigorous analysis and focus, we have also virtually achieved the PRA leverage target six months in advance of the June 2014 deadline.

We have invested considerably in transforming our businesses. In the months ahead we expect to see the benefits of this coming through. We narrowly missed our cost guidance for 2013, largely due to a £331m increase at year-end in certain litigation provisions, but the true operating performance of Barclays was on track. Costs are a key area of focus for us and we remain committed to our 2015 Transform cost target of £16.8bn. Compensation for key talent is one area that we were prepared to invest in strategically. Our aim is to deliver a greater share of the income we generate to shareholders while remaining competitive on pay. Although profits for 2013 were down, the 38% reduction in incentives in the previous two years had begun to cause demonstrable damage to our business through increased attrition, with a near doubling of resignations of senior staff in the US for example. We concluded that a 2013 incentive pool of £2,378m was appropriate. Whilst this is up 10% on the final 2012 incentive pool, before adjustment for risk and conduct events it is down 18% on 2012 and remains 32% below the pool level in 2010 when we started to reposition Barclays’ remuneration. This was a difficult decision, but the right one for the long term interest of our shareholders.

We have also made progress against the two non-financial commitments we made last February. The first of these, culture change, and in particular the process of embedding our Purpose and Values throughout the organisation, is going well. Every colleague has completed a mandatory training programme, and we have integrated our Purpose and Values into the day to day management processes of the Bank. We have developed and published our new Code of Conduct which every colleague must abide by and attest to annually.

 

 

 

 

04 > Barclays PLC Annual Report 2013    barclays.com/annualreport


Table of Contents
          
    Group overview   02        The role of the Group Chief Executive includes implementing the Group’s strategy as agreed by the Board. Here Antony provides his view on the events of 2013, and a progress update on execution of the Transform plan.
    Chief Executive’s strategic review   04       
    Strategy and operating environment   06       
    Business model/Value creation   08       
    Balanced Scorecard   10       
    Group Finance Director’s review   12       
    Strategic Risk overview   14       
    Performance review by division   18       
    Chairman’s governance overview   46       
    Summary remuneration report   48       
          

 

 

 

 

The recent publication of our Balanced Scorecard for the Group addressed the second non-financial commitment we made, establishing the critical final component in our leadership framework. The Balanced Scorecard sets out a clear description of what we want Barclays to be, with eight clear targets out to 2018 against which our progress can be assessed by all of our stakeholders. The scorecard, alongside our Purpose and Values, is now embedded in how we measure and reward individual and business performance. This is a unique and powerful tool that aligns the organisation behind our Transform goals.

We begin 2014 in a better position than for several years. 2013 showed the tremendous value of the breadth and diversity of Barclays’ earnings profile, and we have seen continued evidence of the strong fundamentals which are essential for longer term growth. We have started to put our legacy issues behind us, and have greater clarity on what the future holds, particularly in terms of regulation. With my leadership team in place and building on the progress we have made on our Transform programme in 2013, we will continue to adapt and optimise our business, reaping the substantive benefits of our work in 2014, 2015 and beyond.

While we have much more to do and we expect the operating environment to remain challenging, we have every reason to feel positive about our prospects and confident that we will become the ‘Go-To’ bank for all our stakeholders.

 

LOGO

Antony Jenkins

Group Chief Executive

 

 

 

LOGO

 

LOGO
 

 

barclays.com/annualreport    Barclays PLC Annual Report 2013 > 05


Table of Contents
Strategy and operating environment   

 

 

 

 

 

LOGO   

‘We will not be able to generate sustainable returns over the long term unless we act at all times with good values.’

  LOGO

The landscape for banks has fundamentally changed and will continue to evolve in the coming years. We believe these changes are not cyclical but represent a structural shift. Our Transform programme, launched in 2013, will reshape Barclays to generate sustainable returns and to meet the needs of all of our stakeholders.

Market and operating environment

Barclays is a global financial services provider with our home markets in UK, US, and South Africa, and distribution and operations in a further 47 countries.

Banks are invariably exposed to the economies and markets in which they operate. This exposure ranges from mortgage lending (dependent on the ability of borrowers to repay and house price valuations) to corporate advisory (which may reflect business confidence in the economy). Prior to the financial crisis, global growth was supportive with banks well-positioned to benefit from their exposure to the upward trajectory of the global economy.

Global economic growth has faltered in recent years. This has prompted unprecedented monetary policies across central banks, for example quantitative easing and near zero interest rates. This policy response has, in turn, posed new challenges for banks such as compressed interest margins.

While global economic growth remained below the long-term trend in 2013, we saw improved consumer confidence and business sentiment in both the UK and US. Even with these grass root recoveries emerging in two of our home markets, we remain cognisant that global economic growth is expected to be subdued for a prolonged period.

Financial regulatory frameworks are evolving, as global regulators continue to respond to the issues that emerged during the financial crisis. It is clear that intensive and intrusive regulation is here to stay. Prudential reforms ranging from the UK Banking Reform Act to the US Dodd Frank Act are fundamentally changing the way that banks manage their capital, liquidity and risk.

A further challenge to the banking industry, and indeed to Barclays, in recent years is one of poor conduct, damaging our reputation and causing a loss of trust amongst our customers, clients and stakeholders. We recognise the importance of rebuilding trust in Barclays as well as meeting, and bettering, the developing needs of our customers and clients.

 

 

LOGO

 

 

 

 

06 > Barclays PLC Annual Report 2013

   barclays.com/annualreport


Table of Contents
          
    Group overview   02       

It is important that we understand the conditions in which we operate in order to run the company effectively.

 

In this section we aim to highlight some of the major external factors affecting Barclays and how we aim to address these factors through our strategy.

    Chief Executive’s strategic review   04       
    Strategy and operating environment   06       
    Business model/Value creation   08       
    Balanced Scorecard   10       
    Group Finance Director’s review   12       
    Strategic Risk overview   14       
    Performance review by division   18       
    Chairman’s governance overview   46       
    Summary remuneration report   48       
          

 

 

 

Barclays’ sustainable success will be assured by becoming the ‘Go-To’ bank for all of our stakeholders. If we understand their needs and priorities and ensure that these are at the heart of our decision-making, we will be able to build a bank which is lower-risk, more predictable and higher-performing.

The strategic response

In 2013, we launched the Transform programme to deliver the recommendations of the Strategic Review. Transform is the plan that will help Barclays become the ‘Go-To’ bank. It has three overall goals: Turnaround, Return Acceptable Numbers, Sustain FORward Momentum.

Turnaround the business

Turnaround was the immediate task of stabilising the business and maintaining momentum. In the second half of 2012, we delivered our new goal, purpose, and values to unite Barclays with a shared sense of direction – how we will do business.

We have put in place a new Executive team which is focused on delivery. The vast majority of our 139,600 colleagues have participated in workshops and training in Barclays’ values. To cement our cultural change, a guide for behaviour – The Barclays Way – has been published internally and externally.

Return Acceptable Numbers

In 2013, we turned our attention towards the longer-term transformation of Barclays. For our Return Acceptable Numbers phase, we are de-risking and de-leveraging the business to make it more sustainable for the long term.

We committed to consolidate to core lines of business, to generate £1.7bn of cost savings by 2015, to lower our RWAs, funding and liquidity, and to reach a Core Tier 1 capital ratio of 10.5%. See page 238 for further details on the Transform financial commitments.

In 2013, we:

 

¡   Completed a £5.8bn rights issue in October

 

¡   Issued £2.1bn of CRDIV and PRA-qualifying Additional Tier 1 (AT1) capital

 

¡   Reduced CRDIV leverage exposure by £196bn in H2 2013 to £1,363bn, of which an estimated £55bn related to foreign exchange

 

¡   Drove improvements in our loan-to-deposit ratio (to 101% at December 2013)

Additionally, we reduced legacy assets in our Exit Quadrant portfolios by £40bn through Investment Bank legacy asset reductions of £17bn and derivative efficiencies of £23bn.

Sustain Forward Momentum

Our journey to ‘Go-To’ depends on continuing to adapt Barclays for the future and ensuring that we do not return to a short-term bias as we execute our plans. In order to Sustain FORward Momentum, we have also set in place longer-term markers in four critical areas: Culture, Rewards, Control and Cost.

The Board-commissioned Salz Review also prompted us to review our conduct. We are committed to being open and transparent and to regaining the trust of all of Barclays’ stakeholders. We have integrated our necessary behavioural transformation into our Transform programme. Full details on our response to the Salz Review can be found on pages 126 to 129.

A strong culture is the first line of defence against repeating the mistakes of the past. To unite around Barclays’ Values and Behaviours, we published ‘The Barclays Way’ to govern our way of working across our business globally. Colleagues are essential to embedding our Purpose and Values and, in 2013, all colleagues attended Values and Behaviours engagement sessions.

Reward and incentivisation is a critical enabler of behavioural change. As of 2014, colleague performance will be measured and rewarded not only on ‘what’ an employee delivers but also ‘how’ they achieve their objectives. As such, remuneration will align with Barclays’ Purpose, Values and Behaviours as well as the Group Balanced Scorecard.

As of February 2013 control functions now have solid reporting lines into the Group CEO rather than business heads to avoid conflict of interest.

The Remuneration Committee will embed aggregate and individual incentive risk adjustments with additional Compliance and Risk input. Furthermore, our principal risk framework has been enhanced with the inclusion of conduct risk and reputation risk and a revised Enterprise-Wide Risk Committee will ensure adequate Board oversight.

To address the cost challenge, we have focused on creating the right level of financial analytics and on improving operational efficiencies. The key elements of our cost programme are right-sizing our businesses, industrialising handling of customer transactions and queries, and adopting innovative technology and automated processing.

Focus of efforts in 2014

In 2014, we will continue to build on the progress made in 2013. We will focus on delivering on our financial commitments and expect to see the benefits of our 2013 work on cost begin to crystallise.

We aim to respond positively to the evolving regulatory landscape. We have sought to constructively engage our regulators and improve our regulatory and public disclosures in order to improve transparency and consistency with society’s expectations.

The new regulatory and emerging business environment will inevitably call for continued rigorous review and adaption of the mix and structure of the businesses of the Bank to ensure we generate sustainable returns.

However, care needs to be taken to ensure that regulation does not go too far. A healthy banking sector ensuring returns above the cost of equity is essential to economic growth. Vibrant economies need vibrant banks. It is therefore important to ensure that the rightly-increased focus by the regulator on conduct supervision does not inadvertently result in the withdrawal of services and the restriction of choice.

Another key focus over 2013 and the coming years is rebuilding the trust that customers, clients, and stakeholders have in our organisation. We have pledged to increase transparency and conduct our business in the right way, as set out in our values.

We need to better respond to the current needs and anticipate the future demands of our customers and clients. As they become increasingly technology savvy we have worked to embed technology across our product offering. This ranges from payment innovations such as PingIt to expanding our Investment Bank’s electronic trading platform BARX.

 

 

LOGO
 

 

barclays.com/annualreport   

Barclays PLC Annual Report 2013 > 07


Table of Contents
Business model/Value creation   

 

 

 

 

 

LOGO   

 

‘Our customers and clients are at the centre of our goal and purpose.’

  LOGO

Barclays is a globally diversified, universal bank – that is, we offer an integrated set of products and services across retail banking, wealth management, commercial and investment banking serving individuals, corporations, institutions, and governments.

 

 

LOGO

 

 

 

08 > Barclays PLC Annual Report 2013    barclays.com/annualreport


Table of Contents
           
     Group overview   02       

Our business model is the mechanism for delivering our social purpose. As such, in this section, we outline how the Group delivers services to our customers, how we make money on those services, and how our model and approach differs from our competitors.

     Chief Executive’s strategic review   04       
     Strategy and operating environment   06       
     Business model/Value creation   08       
     Balanced Scorecard   10       
     Group Finance Director’s review   12       
     Strategic Risk overview   14       
     Performance review by division   18       
     Chairman’s governance overview   46       
     Summary remuneration report   48       
           

 

 

 

Our business model

Barclays seeks to satisfy the needs of our customers and clients by offering a rounded value proposition – a full range of products and services – and thereby, we aim to achieve a smoother income stream and sustainable returns.

Barclays’ competitive advantage is created by the scale and diversity of our businesses and the quality, character and relationships of our people.

Our Retail and Business Banking businesses operate through a regional model, focusing on delivering targeted solutions to individuals and small businesses. We operate retail banks in UK (UK RBB), Africa (Africa RBB), and Europe (Europe RBB).

Barclaycard, Investment Bank, Corporate Banking and Wealth and Investment Management operate in global models, leveraging their offerings to provide comprehensive solutions across borders.

We are increasingly operating a shared service model for Central Functions. Improved ‘functionalisation’ has allowed us to take advantage of synergies through the sharing of ideas and collaboration from cross-functional working groups.

The sum of the parts

Our business model enables us to maintain relevance to our customers and clients, whatever stage of life they are in. For example, this means being ready to help business owners launch a business, fund its growth, expand internationally, and protect against currency risk. For individuals, our model can provide a safe place to store savings, help a first-time buyer make their first steps onto the property ladder, create an investment portfolio as wealth grows, or provide cross-border advice for the affluent.

We seek to add value to our clients through our end-to-end network, for example an individual retail customer in the UK is able to access current and savings account balances along with Barclaycard data all on the same mobile banking app. Pingit, our peer to peer payments service, is seamlessly integrated within our retail banking offering, a further example of this joined up approach to the way we do business.

Our international reach and scale means we have the responsibility, indeed obligation following our designation as a Global Systemically Important Financial Institution, to work together with our regulators to de-risk the industry and provide a more sustainable banking landscape over the long term. We are actively engaging with UK, EU, and US banking supervisors to develop a new model for the industry and to ensure our business is sustainable and flexible – ready for the future.

 

 

LOGO

 

LOGO
 

 

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Table of Contents
Balanced Scorecard      

 

 

 

 

 

LOGO  

 

‘The Balanced Scorecard is the final crucial piece of our plan – alongside our Purpose and Values – to embed the right culture in our business and become the ‘Go-To’ bank’

  LOGO

The Balanced Scorecard sets out eight specific commitments across our 5Cs (Customer & Client, Colleague, Citizenship, Conduct and Company) and defines what need to achieve over the next five years to be well on the way to becoming the ‘Go-To’ bank.

We are committed to monitoring and reporting on our progress annually so that stakeholders can hold us to account. The Balanced Scorecard is supported by strategic initiatives that will drive progress across the 5Cs.

The Balanced Scorecard gives clear strategic context for our colleagues around what becoming the ‘Go-To’ bank will look like and lays out Barclays’ priorities. The Barclays Balanced Scorecard is cascaded into business unit and function scorecards. Together, these provide line of sight to employees to our organisational goal. They also provide a framework and starting point for all employees when they set their individual performance objectives across the 5Cs.

 

 

   LOGO   

 

For more detailed information on the Balanced Scorecard, please see barclays.com/balanced scorecard and the key performance indicators section on pages 243 and 244

 

 

 

LOGO

 

 

 

10 > Barclays PLC Annual Report 2013    barclays.com/annualreport


Table of Contents

 

           
     Group overview   02       

The Balanced Scorecard defines what we need to achieve over the next five years to be well on the way to becoming the ‘Go-To’ bank. It clearly shows what success looks like across the 5Cs: Customer & Client, Colleague, Citizenship, Conduct, and Company.

     Chief Executive’s strategic review   04       
     Strategy and operating environment   06       
     Business model/Value creation   08       
     Balanced Scorecard   10       
     Group Finance Director’s review   12       
     Strategic Risk overview   14       
     Performance review by division   18       
     Chairman’s governance overview   46       
     Summary remuneration report   48       
           

 

 

 

 

   

Metrics and targets

 

   
 

We have agreed eight key measures against which we and our stakeholders can hold us to account. We are committed to monitoring and reporting on our progress annually.

 

 
 

 

 
            Metric   Actual 2013   Target 2018    
 

 

 
 

LOGO

  Customer & Client    

RBB, Barclaycard and W&IM: Weighted average ranking of Relationship Net Promoter Score®a vs. peer sets

  4th   1st  
     

 

 
      CIB Client Franchise Rank: Weighted average ranking of wallet share or customer satisfaction with priority clients   4th   Top 3  
 

 

 
 

LOGO

  Colleague   Sustained engagement of colleagues score   74%   87-91%  
     

 

 
      % women in senior leadershipb   21%   26%  
 

 

 
 

LOGO

    CItizenship Plan – initiatives on track or ahead   10/11   Plan Targets  
    Citizenship          
 

 

 
 

LOGO

    Conduct Reputation (YouGov survey)   5.2/10   6.5/10  
    Conduct          
 

 

 
 

 

LOGO

  Company   Return on Equity (Adjusted)   4.5%   > Cost of equity  
     

 

 
     

Fully Loaded CRD IV CET1 ratio

 

 

9.3%

 

 

>10.5%

 

 
 

 

 
  LOGO   For further information on Balanced Scorecard Methodology and Data Sources please visit barclays.com/balanced scorecard and see the ‘Metrics and targets’ page  
    A detailed view of performance against Citizenship Plan targets is available in the Citizenship Report 2013 at barclays.com/citizenshipreport  
 

Delivering our strategic targets: Example Strategic initiatives

 

 
 

Here are some examples of strategic initiatives that will drive progress across the 5Cs and support our goal to become the ‘Go-To’ bank.

 

 
 

 

 
  LOGO   Customer & Client    

 

n

 

 

We are using technology to improve our customers’ and clients’ experience and to be responsive to their changing needs, such as through Barclays Mobile Banking, BARX, PayTag and Barclays.Net

 
     

 

n

 

 

We are making our most important customer and client interactions as simple and instant as possible – putting power in their hands to transact when, where and how they want to

 
      n   We are simplifying our products and services and improving what we offer to match customer needs with the right service model  
 

 

 
  LOGO   Colleague   n   We have launched our Purpose and Values, and we are embedding them into all our HR processes including recruitment, promotion and performance management  
      n   We are developing and training leaders through the Barclays Leadership Academy and Barclays Global Curriculum  
      n   We are driving a consistent global diversity and inclusion plan resulting in a more visibly diverse talent pipeline  
 

 

 
  LOGO   Citizenship   n   We are ensuring the way we do business reflects broader societal and environmental considerations  
      n   We are contributing to growth through financing, supporting businesses and ensuring our products and services support sustainable progress  
      n   We are supporting the communities where we operate by helping five million young people to develop enterprise, employability and financial skills  
 

 

 
  LOGO   Conduct   n   We are following a rigorous and transparent framework on conduct risk reporting and management  
      n   We are using material conduct risk assessments to effectively identify, assess and manage conduct risk  
      n   We are exercising sound judgements to avoid detriment to customers, clients and counterparties or to market integrity  
 

 

 
  LOGO   Company   n   We are delivering the initiatives across the strategic quadrants: Invest and grow, Reposition, Transition, and Exit  
      n   We are managing costs (rightsizing, industrializing, innovating) and delivering our leverage and capital commitments  
      n   We are improving our controls through the roll-out of “The Barclays Guide”, which covers how we organise, manage and govern ourselves and includes a new risk management framework  
 

 

 
  Notes  
 

a   Net Promoter, Net Promoter Score, and NPS are trademarks of Satmetrix Systems, Inc., Bain & Company, Inc., and Fred Reichheld.

 

b   Senior leadership represents the Managing Director and Director corporate grades combined, a population of over 8,000 employees. Under the Companies Act 2006 we are also required to report on the gender breakdown of our ‘senior managers’. For this purpose, we have 988 senior managers (179 female and 809 male) who include Officers of the Group, certain direct reports of the Chief Executive, heads of major business units, senior Managing Directors, and directors on the boards of subsidiary undertakings of the Company.

 

 

LOGO
 

 

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Table of Contents
Group Finance Director’s review   

 

 

 

 

 

LOGO

 

LOGO  

‘We have made quick progress on leverage, but focusing on balance sheet optimisation for sustainable returns is now the priority going forward.’

  LOGO

Reflecting on the 2013 financial results for Barclays, I believe progress has been made and momentum is building around the Transform Programme. This was the first year of the Programme, which necessitated a substantial investment in future cost reduction and repositioning of our balance sheet and capital base.

Financial review

Overview

Within the results, there are two areas that I felt were particularly noteworthy. First, the breadth and diversity of income in the Group, underpinned by our traditional consumer and commercial banking franchises. Similarly, within the Investment Bank, growth in Equities and Investment Banking income provided an offset to the market-led weakness in certain FICC businesses. Second, demonstration of strong financial fundamentals across funding and liquidity, capital, credit risk management and margins should stand the bank in good stead for generating sustainable returns going forward.

Income statement review

2013 profits were impacted by £1.2bn of costs to achieve Transform which drove a 32% reduction in adjusted profit before tax to £5.2bn, while statutory profit before tax improved from £0.8bn to £2.9bn due to a significant reduction in the own credit charge.

Adjusted income was down 4% to £28.2bn reflecting reductions in Investment Bank FICC, partially offset by impressive performances in Investment Bank Equities and Investment Banking and growth in UK RBB, Barclaycard and Corporate.

Impairment charges improved 8% to £3.1bn reflecting lower impairments in the wholesale businesses, with increases in UK RBB and Barclaycard due to business growth and non-recurrence of prior year releases.

Adjusted operating expenses increased £1.3bn to £19.9bn reflecting £1.2bn of costs to achieve Transform, £220m provisions for litigation and regulatory penalties in Q413 in the Investment Bank, mainly relating to the US residential mortgage-related business and UK bank levy of £504m (2012: £345m). The Group’s cost target for 2015 remains at £16.8bn excluding costs to achieve Transform.

I am pleased by the strong results in UK RBB, Barclaycard and Corporate Banking, whilst noting 2013 was a tough year for Investment Bank income. Moreover, following restructuring and de-risking activity we completed during the year, Europe RBB, Africa RBB and Wealth and Investment Management now have clear paths to shareholder value creation in the medium term. Importantly, the resilience of the underlying customer and client franchises across the Group allowed us to maintain dividends of 6.5p per share for full year 2013 despite a 25% increase in the total number of shares following the rights issue.

Balance sheet review

In October, I began conducting a detailed balance sheet review, specifically focused on meeting leverage ratio requirements as a priority. We have made strong and quick progress on this. Our Prudential Regulation Authority (PRA) leverage exposure reduced by nearly £200bn from June 2013 which, combined with the £5.8bn rights issue and issuance of £2.1bn of AT1 securities, strengthened our PRA leverage ratio to just under 3%. Our focus on Risk Weighted Asset (RWA) management continued throughout the year, resulting in a 7%, or over £30bn, reduction in CRD IV RWAs. Looking ahead, the balance sheet review will continue but with increased focus on optimising the balance sheet, considering both risk weights and leverage, in order to generate improved returns.

Tushar Morzaria

Group Finance Director

 

 

 

 

12 > Barclays PLC Annual Report 2013    barclays.com/annualreport


Table of Contents
           
     Group overview   02       

The Group Finance Director is responsible for monitoring the Bank’s financial performance and position and communicating this to both internal and external stakeholders. Below he discusses the Bank’s performance during 2013 and its year end position as at 31 December 2013.

     Chief Executive’s strategic review   04       
     Strategy and operating environment   06       
     Business model/Value creation   08       
     Balanced Scorecard   10       
     Group Finance Director’s review   12       
     Strategic Risk overview   14       
     Performance review by division   18       
     Chairman’s governance overview   46       
     Summary remuneration report   48       
           

 

 

 

 

LOGO

 

What are the main financial issues in the year, and implications for the business?

 

What happened:

On 20 June 2013 the PRA announced the results of its review of capital adequacy of major UK banks and building societies. As part of its review, the PRA introduced a 3% Leverage Ratio target to be achieved by 30 June 2014. As at 30 June 2013, Barclays’ PRA Leverage Ratio was 2.2%, representing a capital gap of £12.8bn.

Actions taken:

In order to achieve the PRA’s 3% Leverage Ratio target by June 2014, we announced a series of actions including an underwritten rights issue, measures to reduce Barclays’ CRD IV leverage exposure, and the continued execution of Barclays’ capital plan with the issuance of CRD IV and PRA qualifying AT1 securities. In the second half of 2013, we increased our PRA Leverage Ratio from 2.2% to just shy of the 3.0% requirement through these actions.

A significant proportion of the capital gap was reduced through completion of a one for four rights issue which raised £5.8bn of capital for the Group. The rights issue completed on 4 October 2013 and, with a 94.63% acceptance rate of shareholder rights, we welcome the strong support shown by shareholders during what was a challenging period.

Through management actions we were also able to reduce the Group’s CRD IV leverage exposure by nearly £200bn to £1,363bn. This was achieved through de-risking the business via actions such as improving legal netting agreements on derivatives and reducing low returning Exit Quadrant assets.

A highlight of 2013 was Barclays’ issuance of £2.1bn equivalent of benchmark Euro and US Dollar AT1 securities. This represented the targeted issuance for the PRA leverage plan, and constitutes a key step in transitioning our capital base towards future regulatory capital requirements.

Outlook:

As a result of these actions, Barclays is now in a much stronger capital position and this has allowed us to increase the dividend payout ratio target from 30% to 40-50%, with a 40% payout ratio expected in 2014 to allow focus on capital accretion.

We remain committed to structurally reducing the cost base of the Group and we have reaffirmed our £16.8bn cost target with a mid-50s cost: income ratio for full year 2015. We will also continue to closely manage RWAs through rundown of the low returning Exit Quadrant and other balance sheet optimisation, and we target Group RWAs of £440bn by year-end 2015.

Regulation remains a key variable and, while we have gained clarity in certain areas, there remain a number of outstanding items which we will continue to anticipate as best we can. In particular, the Transform targets will allow us to achieve a fully loaded CRD IV Common Equity Tier (CET) 1 ratio of greater than 10.5% in 2015 with a fully loaded CRD IV leverage ratio of 3.5% by year-end 2015 with 3.5-4% targeted thereafter.

2014 will likely be another year of transition, with greater focus on balance sheet optimisation, particularly in the Investment Bank, combined with strict cost control in order to generate higher and more sustainable returns in the future. Ultimately, increasing the Group’s RoE will help to reduce the market valuation discount and increase total shareholder returns.

 

 

LOGO
 

 

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Table of Contents

Strategic Risk overview

     

 

 

 

 

 

LOGO

 

LOGO   

‘Although economic and market conditions remained challenging in 2013, our credit and market risk portfolios have continued to perform well’

   LOGO

Maintaining our risk profile at an acceptable and appropriate level is essential to ensure our continued performance. Barclays constantly reviews its exposures in a number of areas including asset quality, industry and geography.

2013 performance

While the economic environment in Barclays’ main areas of business was marked by generally weak growth in 2013, the loan impairment charges reduced by 7% with the loan loss rate finishing the year 6bp lower at 64bps. The loan impairment charge for wholesale decreased by 27% principally reflecting a reduction in Corporate Banking due to lower exposure to the Spanish property and construction sector and lower charges in the UK. Impairment increased by 4% in retail mainly in UK RBB and Barclaycard as the two businesses grew and expanded their business portfolios and from the non-recurrence of releases in 2012.

Market risk remains at moderate levels and the daily value at risk reduced in 2013 from a combination of risk reduction and improved market conditions, notably, tightening of credit spreads.

The operational risk profile remained broadly steady while conduct risk relating to legacy issues was evidenced by additional provisions for PPI and interest rate hedging product redress.

Our funding profile continued to strengthen during 2013 as reliance on wholesale funding reduced as the loan to deposit ratio decreased to 101%. The Group’s capital position was enhanced through the £5.8bn rights issue and £2.1bn AT1 securities as action was taken to move toward regulatory capital and leverage targets.

Risk was realigned in 2013 through two main programmes:

Transform Programme

Under Transform, the risk profiles of businesses were adjusted as they were aligned with their revised strategies to meet the goal of becoming the ‘Go-To’ bank. This included a lowering of risk in Corporate Banking as Exit Quadrant assets were reduced in 2013. In Europe RBB, the risk profile is in line with the change of focus to mortgage lending and small business customers through its Premier proposition. The risk profile in Barclaycard remained broadly stable with growth within appetite and in line with ongoing strategy of recruiting quality prime customers, combined with a controlled testing into other open market areas of business.

Revised Risk Management Structure

In 2013, the Group also introduced the Enterprise Risk Management Framework (ERMF), which sets out a framework and approach that is applicable to the whole bank, all colleagues and to all types of risk. To strengthen the governance relating to conduct and reputation matters Conduct risk and Reputation risk were re-categorised as Principal Risks in 2013 with Executive Committee sponsorship from the Principal Risk Owner, the Head of Compliance. The Board Enterprise Wide Risk Committee was also created in 2013. It recommends to the Board the Group’s overall risk appetite as well as evaluating and reporting details of the Group’s overall risk profile and risk monitoring.

 

 

 

 

14 > Barclays PLC Annual Report 2013    barclays.com/annualreport


Table of Contents
          
    Group overview   02        In this section the Group Chief Risk Office gives a summary of key changes in Principal Risks during 2013.
    Chief Executive’s strategic review   04       
    Strategy and operating environment   06       
    Business model/Value creation   08       
    Balanced Scorecard   10       
    Group Finance Director’s review   12       
    Strategic Risk overview   14       
    Performance review by division   18       
    Chairman’s governance overview   46       
    Summary remuneration report   48       
          

 

 

 

Key influences on risk in 2013

In 2013, a number of risks were considered and dealt with in order to minimise impact on the Group’s performance and ability to meet its goals and priorities. These included, but were not limited to:

 

¡   Uncertain economic environment, including GDP growth, inflation, property values and unemployment

 

¡   Political uncertainty in a number of countries which could have adversely impacted the Group’s retail and institutional customers

 

¡   The risk of a Eurozone crisis whereby a sovereign may default and exit from the Eurozone. While this receded somewhat during 2013 it could have resulted in losses to the Group through, for example, redomination risk

 

¡   Changes in both the level and volatility of prices, for example, interest rates, credit spreads, commodity prices, equity prices and foreign exchange rates, which could impact earnings or capital

 

¡   Potential operational risk of service disruption to customers as a result of failed systems or human errors, or increasing threat from cyber-attacks and breaches of security, with adverse effects on the Group’s reputation, operations and financial condition

 

¡   Increased levels of legal proceedings in jurisdictions where it operates, and changing legal and regulatory environments, which could lead to fines, public reprimands and damage to reputation

 

¡   Changing and uncertain regulatory environment

Risk and business strategy

The risk function plays a significant role in review and challenge of risks inherent within business plans and strategy by verifying that they fall within financial volatility risk appetite and incur a level of risk that is individually and in aggregate acceptable to the Board, or be modified accordingly. The Group-wide stress testing process is similarly linked to the medium term planning process and also supports strategic planning and capital adequacy. Barclays manages human rights risk via our environmental and social risk procedures and guidance and our reputational risk framework and continues to work collaboratively with others in our sector on integration of human rights issues into business decision making. Risk management responsibilities are laid out in the ERMF, which covers the categories of risk in which Barclays has its most significant actual or potential risk exposures, which are known as Principal Risks (see table on the following pages).

Robert Le Blanc

Chief Risk Officer

 

 

LOGO Future priorities

 

At a time of significant internal and external change and uncertainty in the business environment, it is important that we continue to keep our customers at the forefront of our activities while meeting new regulatory requirements and improving effectiveness in the risk management process. Our priorities for 2014 reflect these aims and include:

 

¡   Providing our customers with faster decisions and enhancing support for those experiencing difficulties

 

¡   Closely managing funding and liquidity risk including redenomination risk

 

¡   Meeting regulatory expectations in relation to the PRA Leverage Ratio during 2014

 

¡   Implementing and embedding the ERMF across Risk including further enhancement of reputation and conduct risk management

 

¡   Continuing to manage and control impairment across the firm

 

¡   Continuing to enhance and strengthen our operational risk management processes

 

¡   Further enhancing Recovery and Resolution Planning and responding to regulatory requirements for structural reform (e.g. UK Retail Ring Fence)

 

 
 

 

LOGO
 

 

barclays.com/annualreport    Barclays PLC Annual Report 2013 > 15


Table of Contents

Strategic Risk overview >

continued

     

 

 

 

 

LOGO  

Example of a related strategic

objective and associated risks

  LOGO     

 

 
       Principal Risk          Objective          Example of a significant risk taken in pursuit of the  objective     
 

Credit risk

 

                   
 

The suffering of financial loss should any of our customers not fulfil their contractual obligations to the Group.

     

We are committed to supporting all our customers, counterparties and clients in their day-to-day banking needs and to tailoring our products to meet their requirements.

 

 

 

     

The credit risk that the Group faces from providing services to customers mainly arises from the default of wholesale and retail loans and advances particularly in a deteriorating credit environment.

 

   
 

Market risk

 

                   
 

The reduction to earnings or capital due to volatility of trading book positions or an inability to hedge the banking book balance sheet.

 

     

To provide a range of execution and risk management services across all the major traded product classes.

     

Extreme market events have the potential to create large losses.

   
 

Funding risk

 

                   
 

Failure to maintain capital ratios and liquidity obligations could lead to an inability to support normal business activity and meet liquidity regulatory requirements.

     

To maintain high levels of quality capital to ensure we have the financial strength to continue supporting customers and clients, be it lending to creditworthy small businesses or arranging the financing of large cross-border projects.

 

     

If we cannot forecast our future capital needs accurately, for instance because of unforeseen regulatory actions or unexpected losses, a funding shortfall may occur.

   
 

Operational risk

 

                   
 

Losses or costs resulting from human factors, inadequate or failed internal processes and systems or external events.

     

To provide our personal customers with 24/7 access to the widest range of account facilities to enable them to pursue their financial goals, whenever they want and wherever.

 

     

Criminals are constantly searching for ways to perpetrate fraud against Barclays and its customers.

   
 

Conduct risk

 

                   
 

Detriment caused to our customers, clients, counterparties, or the Bank and its employees because of inappropriate judgement in the execution of our business activities.

 

     

We seek to provide customers with products that are tailored to their changing needs and the evolving financial landscape.

 

     

In pursuit of business, products may be sold to customers and clients that are unsuitable because of inadequate complexity, liquidity or other factors.

   
 

Reputation risk

 

                   
 

Damage to Barclays brand arising from any association, action or inaction which is perceived by stakeholders to be inappropriate or unethical.

     

We aim to become the ‘Go-To’ bank for customers and all stakeholders.

     

The negative events that have beset Barclays and the banking industry in past years could recur if we failed to identify and pro-actively mitigate the risk of failure to act in accordance with our purpose and values.

 

 

 

   
 

 

 

 

16 > Barclays PLC Annual Report 2013    barclays.com/annualreport


Table of Contents
  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

     
    

 Examples of how Barclays mitigates the risk...

    ...and how this primarily contributes to our scorecard         
       
   

 

The Group sets out the level of risk it is prepared to accept through the risk appetite agreed by the Board and closely monitors and manages the risk during the year through, for example, the application of mandate and scale limits. When a customer does experience financial difficulties the Group may assist by offering a forbearance programme which is structured to be appropriate to the nature and expected duration of the their distress. It aims to provide the customer with a sustainable programme to help return them to good financial health.

 

 

 

 

LOGO   Customers & Clients

 

LOGO   Citizenship

 

LOGO   Company

 
           
   

 

We have built a business centred on client needs as opposed to the pursuit of profits from price changes and our well embedded stress testing framework helps ensure our portfolio is not overly exposed to extreme market events.

 

 

 

LOGO   Customers & Clients

 

LOGO   Company

 
           
   

 

Capital planning is a significant component of our stress testing framework. The adequacy of all categories of capital are tested under severe economic and market scenarios, including consideration of business losses, and the availability of funds in the market according to different scenarios. Mitigation plans are developed based on this analysis.

 

 

 

LOGO   Customers & Clients

 

LOGO   Citizenship

 

LOGO   Company

 
           
   

 

Our Fraud Risk management team works to ensure we keep ahead of fraudsters by investing in technology, and ensuring we support clients where incidents may occur.

 

 

 

 

 

LOGO   Customers & Clients

 

LOGO   Citizenship

 

 
           
   

 

We have developed a suitability framework that clarifies the criteria that must be followed before a product is considered suitable for a customer or client. It ensures that management and their teams consider how customers’ needs may change in the future under various scenarios.

 

 

 

LOGO   Customers & Clients

 

LOGO   Colleague

 

LOGO   Conduct

 
           
   

 

As part of our plan to become the ‘Go-To’ bank, the Transform Programme places significant emphasis on values. All members of staff have received extensive training and senior management aim to embody our new values in everything they do. These values are being embedded in all of the bank’s activities.

 

 

 

LOGO   Customers & Clients

 

LOGO   Citizenship

 

LOGO   Conduct

 

 

 
     

 

LOGO
 

 

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Table of Contents

UK Retail and Business Banking (UK RBB)

  

 

 

 

 

 

LOGO   

 

‘We are determined to go out of our way to make our customer’s lives much easier, which is how we will continue to achieve sustainable long-term results.’

   LOGO     

LOGO

 

Ashok Vaswani

CEO, Retail and Business Banking

 

 

 

The UK Retail and Business Banking business model

 

LOGO

 

 

 

18 > Barclays PLC Annual Report 2013    barclays.com/annualreport


Table of Contents
           
     Group overview   02        This section provides a summary of the business models, strategies and risks in each of the Barclays businesses, as well as a discussion on the 2013 financial performance.
     Chief Executive’s strategic review   04       
     Strategy and operating environment   06       
     Business model/Value creation   08       
     Balanced Scorecard   10       
     Group Finance Director’s review   12       
     Strategic Risk overview   14       
     Performance review by division   18       
     Chairman’s governance overview   46       
     Summary remuneration report   48       
           

 

    
 

 

 

Our overriding goal is to provide our customers with simple products and to invest heavily in the customer experience, through both technology and people. This should result in customers consolidating their relationships with us and provide us with balance sheet and income growth.

Market and operating environment

UK RBB is performing well and continues to support the UK economy.

There is an opportunity to embrace the technological innovation and changing competitive landscape to enable our existing customers to do more with us, while protecting our market share and particularly driving income growth in Business Banking and mortgages.

We are reshaping the way we interact with our customers in a way that will drive customer satisfaction and deepen customer engagement, whilst simultaneously reducing the costs that customers do not value and growing our franchise.

Business model risks

While executing our strategy with speed and without compromising quality, we need to be cognisant of the emerging regulatory changes and adapt accordingly. As we continue to focus on rebuilding trust and reputation through improving customer experience, we also need to ensure operational risks are appropriately addressed in the business.

Any deterioration in the economic environment in the UK could adversely impact customers ability to keep up repayments and consequently, we will continue to manage risk appropriately. The UK remains a competitive environment with specialised providers offering web-based services, however our continued investment in technology and processing will help significantly improve and differentiate our customer experience.

Balanced Scorecard

 

 

 

LOGO

 

 

Customer and client

Our aim is to become the ‘Go-To’ bank for all of our customers. That means we want all of our customers to be advocates of Barclays. We have a lot of work to do.

We will achieve this by significantly improving and differentiating customers’ experience of banking with Barclays – through routine transactions and at the vital moments in their life.

We will measure progress through our Net Promoter Score® – a widely used measure of customer advocacy.

Our external complaints reporting has also been enhanced in the UK with reporting beyond the FCA requirements and the launch of externally published ‘Spotlight’ reports that focus on the key areas of customer complaints and how we are tackling them.

Through regular and rigorous review of our customers’ feedback we will identify where and how we will invest to make customer’s interactions with us simpler, more intuitive and more personalised.

 

 

 

 

LOGO

 

LOGO
 

 

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Table of Contents

UK Retail and Business Banking (UK RBB) >

continued

 

 

This will ensure we will deliver the right outcomes for customers, quickly and transparently and keep them informed along the way.

It will also help our colleagues better understand what we need do differently to become ‘Go-To’ for our customers across Barclays’ retail operations.

In 2013 we implemented a number of initiatives to affect this ambition:

 

¡   We made significant progress in our core processes satisfaction scores

 

¡   We asked customers how we can make banking better through the Your Bank campaign and we’re using their ideas to make some real improvements

 

¡   We are also evolving the way we operate to meet customers’ changing needs. The pilot we’ve recently announced with Asda, bringing us closer to offering services where and when our customers want them, and SkyBranch, which transforms how our telephony business connects with customers, are great examples of this

Colleague

We will continue to invest in our colleagues and create a diverse and inclusive environment allowing colleagues to fulfil their potential. This will ensure that our colleagues are fully engaged allowing them to provide excellent end-to-end customer service.

We also have an ambition to create the most digitally savvy workforce to help our customers become confident with digital banking.

During 2013 we started our search for ‘Digital Eagles’ – colleagues across the business to support digital awareness and understanding in the UK. With over 5,000 Digital Eagle colleagues across the UK we are well placed to achieve this ambition.

Citizenship

UK RBB continued to embed and contribute to the Barclays’ 2015 Citizenship Plan. We have been focusing on the way we do business, listening more to our customers and showing them we’ve acted. We launched the Your Bank site where everyone (not just Barclays customers) can tell us what products and services will make their lives easier.

UK RBB continued to support the UK economy; advancing £1.8bn of gross new term lending to small businesses and helping over 120,000 start-ups. We also organise small business seminars, tools and trainings, which were attended by over 20,000 people in 2013.

We are supporting our community through activities such as LifeSkills, our free, curriculum-linked programme designed to give young people in the UK access to the skills, information and opportunities they need to help them towards getting the jobs they want. The programme has so far reached out to 276,000 young people.

Conduct

We continue to de-risk our portfolio ensuring everything that we do is open and transparent, this includes the way we’re managing the PPI complaints process.

We are committed to building a culture based on Barclays’ Values. We will continue to focus on the right outcomes for our customers delivered by empowered colleagues who act with integrity at all times. We have conducted business-wide risk assessments to identify conduct risk issues. We will use this process to measure and control these risks and in so doing eliminate the gaps between what our customers expect from us and what we deliver to them. We intend to lead the way in restoring trust and pride in our industry and becoming the ‘Go-To’ Bank

Company        

 

 

Contribution to total income

£4,523m

 

 

 

LOGO  

 

 

 

     2013      2012      2011  

Income (£m)

    4,523         4,384         4,621   

Adjusted profit before tax (£m)

    1,195         1,225         1,222   

Adjusted ROE (%)

    11.5         12.3         12   

Loan loss rate (bps)

    25         21         44   
Loans and advances to customers (£bn)     136.5         128.1         121.2   

Customer deposits (£bn)

    135.5         116.0         111.8   

Distribution points

      1,560         1,593         1,625   

UK RBB performed well in 2013, growing at a faster rate than the market in key products, including increasing its stock share of mortgages. Income increased 3% to £4,523m driven by strong mortgage growth and contribution from Barclays Direct (previously ING Direct UK, acquired during Q113).

UK RBB continued to restructure and invest in the business as part of the Transform strategy. Adjusted operating expenses increased 4% to £3,008m due to costs to achieve Transform of £175m.

Adjusted profit before tax decreased 2% to £1,195m.

Loans and advances to customers increased 7% to £136.5bn due to Barclays Direct, which added £4.4bn, and other mortgage growth.

 

 

 

LOGO

 

 

  For more information on performance, please see

  pages 237 to 268

 

 

  LOGO Future priorities
 

¡

  Revolutionising our product set; offering simple products which are supported by industrial strength engines
 

¡

  Investing in the customer experience; instant, transparent services with seamless multichannel access
 

¡

  Selective balance sheet growth; opportunity with ‘customers we know’ in consumer lending and mortgages
 

¡

 

Cost reduction; delivery of straight through processing, reduction in paper and infrastructure

 

 

 

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Table of Contents

‘Your Bank’ –

learning from our customers

 

 

 

LOGO

 

We are determined to rebuild trust in Barclays and demonstrate day-in day-out that we are changing, and doing the right thing for customers. In September, we launched Your Bank – the online platform that allows us to continually listen, respond, anticipate and learn from our customers.

As well as getting feedback and sense-checking our ideas, we have created a place where customers can share their ideas and suggestions for how Barclays can be better shaped around their needs and individual life stages, putting them at the heart of everything we do.

In the first week we received over 370,000 interactions on the Your Bank site and 2,226 ideas.

With all of the ideas that we receive, we are taking a ‘you said, we did’ approach and have made 8 commitments to making real change for our customers.

1. We are undertaking a formal review of our overdraft charges in 2014, with a view to making them simpler and more transparent. We have already started pilots with the launch of text alerts in June to customers who had gone over their overdraft limit and into their personal reserve, which would mean they would traditionally incur a £22 charge. The alerts tell them they have a day’s grace to add cleared funds and avoid the charge. In the first three months, over 65,000 customers avoided charges totalling over £1.4m, a response rate of 27 per cent. We are

now looking at where else we can roll out text alerts as a next step. Yes it’s a cost to us, but it’s the right thing to do.

2. We have launched CloudIt through online and mobile banking as a result of customer feedback. Being able to access your secure documents whilst on the move will really make our customer’s lives much easier.

3. Contactless payments have been very well received by customers, so we’re now looking at alternative contactless methods of payments which we’ll be testing with customers.

4. We’re looking to pilot paying in coin machines in our branches. Our customers told us they’d welcome something that can automatically count coins and credit their account.

5. We will extend our free Barclays Pingit app to the under 16’s, subject to developing proper parental controls. Younger customers, being tech savvy, will benefit from the app allowing them to send and receive money simply using their mobile phone number.

6. We are going to allow our mobile banking customers to set up new payees on their mobiles. This will extend the app meaning that customers can really do much more on the move.

7. To further extend our services to a wider range of customers we’ve made our mobile banking app available on Windows platform and are planning to do the same for Pingit.

8. We have expanded our mobile banking services to include mortgage accounts, so customers can view their mortgage arrangements wherever they are.

 

 

LOGO
 

 

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Table of Contents

Europe Retail and Business Banking (Europe RBB)

 

 

 

LOGO   

 

‘In 2013 we restructured our business and are now on track to deliver the ‘Go-To’ Premier bank in Europe.’

  LOGO    

LOGO

 

Curt Hess

Chief Executive Officer, Europe RBB

 

 

The Europe Retail and Business Banking business model

LOGO

 

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Table of Contents

  

 

 

 

 

 

In 2013 we made significant progress in transforming ourselves to become the ‘Go-To’ bank for mass affluent customers in Spain, Portugal, Italy and France

Market and operating environment

In 2013 the macroeconomic environment remained challenging – economic contraction, unemployment and political and regulatory uncertainty impacted both us and our competitors. Against these uncertainties we successfully reduced headcount and branch operations while taking steps to de-risk the business.

Going forward we will grow mass affluent customers, leveraging strong relationship management capabilities and a comprehensive product range, while capitalising on our global brand and investment services expertise. This focused strategy will enable us to compete successfully with local and international competitors. At the same time we will continue to support our existing mass market customers through a lower cost platform.

Business Model risks

Further deterioration in macroeconomic conditions in Europe could adversely impact credit risk through the deterioration in asset prices or a customer’s ability to service repayment obligations.

The business continues to proactively work to identify and mitigate any operational risk of pending regulatory change without compromising customer service and minimise disruption to the progress of our business.

In executing our strategy, we need to ensure we can manage operational risk and grow the business without compromising on quality or control.

 

Balanced Scorecard

 

 

 

LOGO

 

 

Customer and client

Our aim is to become the ‘Go-To’ bank for mass affluent customers. We will do this by providing customers with top quality service and a differentiated proposition based on relationship management and investment services.

We will measure our progress through our Net Promoter Score®. By reviewing our customers’ feedback we will know whether we are achieving the positive customer experiences critical to our goal of growing mass affluent relationships.

In 2013 we launched initiatives to improve customer experience, including:

 

¡   A new Premier value proposition which provides customers with an experience tailored to their needs and ambitions

 

¡   Issuing iPads to our colleagues to speed up customer service and allow us to serve them where they are

 

¡   Faster credit approvals – in Spain 98% of customers get a decision within 2 hours

 

¡   Enhanced online capabilities which allow customers to customise the banking alerts and updates they receive from us

 

 

 

 

LOGO

 

 

LOGO

 

 

 

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Table of Contents

Europe Retail and Business Banking (Europe RBB) >

continued

 

 

 

 

These contributed to strong customer satisfaction and high customer advocacy scores – in Portugal we ranked #1 for service quality in a recent mystery shopping survey and in Spain we ranked the #2 ‘most loved’ bank in a recent survey, well ahead of our mass affluent segment competitors.

Colleague

We are committed to investing in our colleagues and encouraging the right values and behaviours from them.

In 2013 we launched the ‘Premier Way’, a training program that enables relationship managers to have confident, professional discussions with clients about their holistic financial needs.

In 2014 this programme will expand to include financial planning as well as giving colleagues access to externally recognised professional qualifications.

Citizenship

We are implementing mechanisms to make citizenship part of what we do every day, as well as inspiring our colleagues, clients and other stakeholders to do the same.

In 2013 we implemented the Citizenship Lens into our processes for approving new products.

We continued our commitment to local communities by investing in employability programs for young people – Europe RBB colleagues have contributed over 11,000 hours to help their local communities.

Conduct

We are dedicated to delivering the right outcomes for our customers.

In 2013 we raised awareness of conduct as a principal risk across the business and launched a Code of Conduct to guide how we all should work each day. We also commenced a programme to review critical end-to-end processes and identify possible conduct issues – in doing so identify potential mitigants to eliminate the gap between what our customers expect from us and what we deliver to them.

Company    

 

Contribution to total income

£666m

 

 

LOGO  

 

 

 

      2013      2012     2011  
Income (£m)      666         708        1,004   
Loss before tax (£m)      (996      (343     (767
Adjusted ROE (%)      (45.2      (12.9     (9.7
Loan loss rate (bps)      75         64        43   
Loans and advances to customers (£bn)      37.0         39.2        42.7   
Customer deposits (£bn)      45.0         46.1        50.2   
Distribution points      633         1,142        1,228   

Europe RBB continued to focus on restructuring the cost base of its business in 2013, as part of the Transform strategy. Income declined 6% to £666m, reflecting actions taken to reduce assets, particularly in Spain and Italy, to address the continuing economic challenges across Europe.

During the year the business reduced full time equivalent employees by 1,600 and closed over 500 distribution points. Operating expenses increased by £435m to £1,242m, almost entirely reflecting costs to achieve Transform of £403m.

Loss before tax increased £653m to £996m, including costs to achieve Transform of £403m and an increase in other net expenses.

Europe RBB also rolled out a new Premier customer proposition, targeting profitable growth from the mass affluent segment, in a drive to increase margins.

Loans and advances to customers fell by 6% to £37.0bn, driven by asset reduction activity as part of the Transform strategy.

 

   LOGO      For more information on performance, please see
  pages 237 to 268

 

LOGO   Future priorities

In 2014 we will:

 

  ¡   Grow Premier customers

¨ Acquire new mass affluent customers

¨ Deepen relationships with existing customers

 

  ¡   Continue to control costs by transitioning mass market customers to lower cost channels over time

 

  ¡   Optimise the performance and accelerate the run-off of our less attractive Exit Quadrant assets
 

 

 

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Table of Contents

Happy customers and

healthy relationships

 

 

 

 

LOGO

 

For one Italian customer Barclays has provided investment management and advice for three years and over that period developed a healthy and profitable relationship.

During this time we have worked to provide the customer with bank-assurance products, mutual funds, structured products, asset under custody and liquidity products. In doing so we have successfully deepened our relationship with the customer by more than doubling his assets under management over a two year period.

This customer is a strong advocate for Barclays and has been extremely satisfied with his Premier relationship manager – highlighting the professionalism, proactivity and transparency of the services his relationship manager provided as the reasons for the customer’s high satisfaction.

In addition to the high quality day-to-day relationship, we were also able to leverage some of the benefits we get from being part of a UK based global bank by giving this customer the opportunity to attend exclusive events that the customer greatly appreciated. These have helped us enhance our relationship.

Going forward we will continue to work closely with this customer to meet their personal banking and investment needs.

But we’re not stopping there! We know this customer owns a successful SME business and we want to further deepen our relationship by providing products and services to that business – in doing so help our client achieve his ambitions across both his professional and personal life.

 

 

LOGO

 

 

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Table of Contents
Africa

 

 

 

 

 

 

LOGO   

 

‘We offer our clients deep local knowledge and presence and the expertise and support of a global bank.’

  LOGO    LOGO
       

 

Maria Ramos

Chief Executive, Africa

 

 

Africa business model

 

LOGO

 

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Table of Contents
  

 

 

 

 

The African continent provides an excellent growth opportunity for the Group. With our strategy for Africa, we are well-positioned to benefit from this emerging market opportunity.

Market and operating environment

Emerging markets’ growth eased somewhat in 2013 whilst developed country central banks maintained their accommodative monetary policy stance, with some cutting interest rates and others injecting liquidity into the financial system. South Africa’s economic growth remained muted and we faced increasingly strong competition. In our rest of Africa markets, economic growth remained resilient. Our regulatory environment continues to evolve and rising customer and client expectations as well as new technologies are challenging how we do business.

Business Model risks

Current economic conditions in South Africa bring increased financial pressure on customers and clients, some of whom may already be struggling to fulfil their payment obligations when faced with subdued economic activity and potentially rising interest rates. Rest of Africa challenges such as infrastructure constraints, lower commodity prices, and fiscal and current account imbalances in some markets have led to modest declines in our economic growth forecasts for some of the economies.

Intensified regulatory and government intervention ensures a sound operating environment; however, it does lead to increased cost of compliance and complexity of doing business.

We continue to see a host of emerging and non-traditional competitors as well as increasing consumer expectations for traditional banks to meet new service standards.

Balanced Scorecard

 

 

LOGO

 

 

Customer and client

Barclays is a powerful local bank, a powerful regional bank and a powerful global player. We use this unique advantage to the benefit of our customers and clients.

In Retail and Business Banking (RBB), we have focused on enhancing the customer experience. In South Africa this began with simplifying transactional product offerings, expanding the digital experience through the launch of our banking app, and rolling out a fully integrated online insurance platform. In our rest of Africa markets, customers are benefiting from revised Premier and Prestige banking proposition, Barclays Direct, Worldmiles Platinum credit / debit card as well as CashSend money transfer. It is our goal to simplify processes and improve customer experience.

We will measure our progress in our RBB businesses through our Net Promoter Score® a widely used measure of customer advocacy. Through regular and rigorous review of our customers’ and clients’ feedback we will identify where and how we need to invest to make the customer journeys simpler, more intuitive and more personalised.

 

 

 

 

LOGO

 

LOGO

 

 

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Table of Contents

Africa >

continued

     

 

 

 

 

For our Corporate and Investment Banking clients we continue to bring African clients to the global financial markets and give our global clients access to Africa. For example, we are leveraging our leading foreign exchange platform BARX Africa to trade 40 currencies across our key African markets. We have completed a pilot for Barclays. Net – a streamlined and full-featured cash management platform for our corporate and commercial clients with full roll-out in South Africa in 2014.

In 2013, we were named Best Debt House in Africa for the fourth consecutive year by EuroMoney, Best Bond House and Best FX House at the Spire Awards and we were voted best Overall Bank by Risk South Africa.

We have a strong plan in place to continue capturing the opportunities before us by improving customer and client experience, driving process simplification as well as innovative products and systems.

Colleague

We have made notable progress in building a talent pipeline that supports our ambitions and our expanded African footprint provides a unique opportunity for talented people to advance their careers. We want to be known for our leadership bench strength and we have embarked on a number of transformational leadership and values based programmes which are designed to support our leaders in delivering on a demanding performance agenda.

Citizenship

Our ambition is to help facilitate greater, more inclusive prosperity in Africa. In 2013, we consolidated our citizenship structures thus strengthening our ability to deliver our African plan. Over the year our activities ranged from funding renewable energy projects to increasing access to financial services for individuals and small businesses. We continued to invest our community investment spend in targeted skills development programmes with proven job creation capabilities. Our colleagues continued to participate in a range of volunteering events such as the Nelson Mandela Day in South Africa and Barclays global Make a Difference Day campaign.

Conduct

Our values underpin the way we behave and form the backbone of our reputation as a trusted financial services provider. Our ongoing programme to bring our revised values alive culminated with the launch of the Barclays Way – a global Code of Conduct – to embed clear and consistent expectations of behaviours across the Group.

In addition to our underlying values, we believe that laws, regulations and codes are an enabler to our business – ensuring that we make informed decisions in how we manage our business and sustain ourselves into the future.

As with many other jurisdictions, we are managing regulatory change as well as increasing expectations from stakeholders, and our response supports our commitment to treat our customers fairly and operate with integrity.

Basis of Company reporting

Barclays Group reports Africa RBB separately and the following information relates specifically to the Africa RBB reporting segment. Results from other global businesses operating in Africa are integrated within each respective business’ results.

Company

 

Contribution to total income

 

£2,617m

 

 

LOGO

 

 

 

Africa RBB    2013      2012     2011  
Income (£m)      2,617         2,928        3,364   
Profit before tax (£m)      404         322        730   
Adjusted ROE (%)      0.4         (0.1     7.4   
Loan loss rate (bps)      128         202        136   
Loans and advances to customers (£bn)      24.2         29.9        32.5   
Customer deposits (£bn)      16.9         19.5        20.3   
Distribution points      1,396         1,451        1,493   

2013 was affected by increased competition, a changing regulatory environment and foreign exchange movements, as average ZAR depreciated 16% against GBP. Income declined 11% to £2,617m driven by foreign currency movements, partially offset by the non-recurrence of fair value adjustments in the commercial property finance portfolio in the prior year. On a constant currency basis, income improved 5%, despite continued pressure on transaction volumes in a competitive environment.

The business incurred £26m of costs to achieve Transform which supported the re-shaping of the branch network and ongoing work on digitalisation of customer channels and products. Operating expenses decreased 4% to £1,896m. On a constant currency basis, costs increased 11% driven by a combination of increased investment spend on infrastructure and inflation increases in South Africa.

Profit before tax increased 25% to £404m. On a constant currency basis, profit before tax was up 57%, largely as a result of lower impairment provisions on the South African home loans recovery book.

Loans and advances to customers decreased 19% to £24.2bn as foreign currency movements offset growth of 2%, particularly in vehicle and asset finance.

 

   LOGO      For more information on performance, please see
  pages 237 to 268

 

LOGO Future priorities

We have articulated very clear priorities for 2014:

 

  ¡   Continuing the turnaround programme for our RBB franchise in South Africa, and the build out across the continent;

 

  ¡   Investing in Corporate Banking across the continent;

 

  ¡   Capturing the growth opportunity in our Wealth, Investment Management and Insurance franchise;

 

  ¡   Continuing to invest in and develop the talent we have across the business; and

 

  ¡   These priorities are underpinned by an investment programme of over ZAR 3bn that will be invested into several large projects such as transforming our branches, integrating and standardising IT, investing in our digital capabilities and creating efficient processing hubs in the right locations.
 

 

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Table of Contents

Working together to serve global and regional clients and local customers

 

 

 

LOGO

 

We are bringing together the best of our African businesses with the best of our global franchise to the benefit of our customers and clients.

During 2013, we worked closely between our operations across Africa and with our global colleagues to meet the needs of our customers and clients. We have been the bridge between local and global markets, we have helped our African clients achieve their regional growth ambitions and we have brought new products and solutions to our customers, clients and the communities in which we operate.

Local going global

Acting as a joint-lead arranger we have raised $1bn for South African state-owned power utility Eskom through a 10-year bond offering. The transaction achieved $4bn in investor demand and represented Eskom’s second US Dollar issuance. We are the only institution to have acted as joint-lead manager on both issuances.

Global going local

Acting as the sole sponsor and joint financial advisor, we helped Glencore Xtrata, a global diversified natural resource company to access Africa with a listing on the Johannesburg Stock Exchange. This listing makes investment in Glencore more accessible to South African investors through its classification as a ‘domestic’ equity.

Local going regional

South African companies are looking at the rest of the continent for growth and we continue to help the expansion of corporates on the continent. We are supporting a clothing retailer’s expansion into Ghana and won the tender to provide services to a major food retailer across six countries – Botswana, Ghana, Mauritius, Tanzania, Uganda and Zambia.

Access to global products and services

With Barclaycard, we have rolled out a Worldmiles Platinum credit card in Botswana, Egypt, Kenya and Mauritius and the debit card version in Egypt, Ghana, Tanzania, Uganda and Zambia providing local customers with access to a leading global product. We have also worked closely with Barclaycard to launch the Pebble – a mobile payment device – in South Africa.

Leveraging the Barclays Social Innovation Facility for product and services that drive social and commercial value

With GlaxoSmithKline, we are investing up to £7m over three years, to help remove financial barriers to healthcare access while supporting small business development and job creation in Zambia. By combining our skills, expertise and resources, we hope to tackle the challenges of last mile delivery and create a model that could be scaled across Africa to help more people gain access to affordable healthcare.

 

 

LOGO

 

 

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Barclaycard

 

     

 

 

 

 

 

LOGO   

‘Barclaycard is one of the few global leaders in payments that provides ‘Go-To’ solutions to both buyers and sellers, enabling us to deliver consistent growth and welcome close to 14m new customers in the past three years.’

  LOGO

LOGO

Valerie Soranno Keating

CEO, Barclaycard

 

 

 

 

 

The Barclaycard business model

 

LOGO

 

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Barclaycard operates in the fast-growing consumer payments space, supporting buyers and sellers by enabling consumers and businesses to make and take payments. We provide the ability for consumers and businesses to fund these payments with credit.

Market and Operating environment

The consumer payments sector is growing rapidly as a result of changing customer behaviour, based on the growth of electronic and mobile commerce and changing payment preferences as key factors. New technology, competition and regulations all present opportunities, but also the need to adjust our business model. Our customers and clients want us to do more for them, and to do it better, faster and cheaper, and digitally. This presents many opportunities for Barclaycard and also presents challenges.

Business Model risks

This changing marketplace could create risks to the Barclaycard business model. The emerging competitive landscape in consumer payments is seeing new players enter the payment value chain, and new use of technology generating the need for continuous innovation and technology investment. Our unique ability of supporting both buyers and sellers, diverse distribution channels, and the scale of our business in multiple countries helps to mitigate the impact of this risk.

Other potential risks come from macroeconomic headwinds creating further credit risk for our customers and reducing income though potential margin compression, impacts of further regulatory change or increased operational risk. Our diversified business model and commitment to leading standards for business practice should help limit the potential impact from these.

Balanced Scorecard

 

 

 

LOGO

 

 

Customer and client

Barclaycard serves 35.5m customers, an 8% increase on prior year and 350k business clients, an 11% increase. We have focused on offering customers simple, innovative products as part of our objective of moving from satisfied customers to customers who are strong advocates of our business. We have implemented Net Promoter Score® as our key customer metric to measure this.

We have continued to build on a heritage of innovation, supporting more than 1m payments enabled devices across three continents and working with Transport for London on acceptance of contactless cards for over 6.5m bus journeys in the UK. We have launched bFlex, a revolutionary, flexible finance product designed for online purchases. Our tailored offers engine for UK customers, ‘bespoke’, has reached over 800k registered users, of whom over half are new to Barclays.

We have also worked with other areas of Barclays to better serve our customers, such as through the ‘Better Together’ initiative, which combines current accounts and Barclaycard Freedom Rewards to provide customers with access to credit and the launch of Absa Pebble, Africa’s first mobile payment acceptance device.

 

 

 

LOGO

 

LOGO

 

 

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Barclaycard >

continued

     

 

 

 

 

Through our customer focus, we have seen a 39% reduction in complaints to a level of 3.12 per 1,000 accounts in 2013 and zero high-rated Regulatory Compliance monitoring reviews.

Our leading products have received numerous industry awards, including the Moneyfacts award for ‘Best Card Provider’ for both our Balance Transfer rate (3rd year in a row) and Standard rate products in the UK, being ranked 2nd among Visa/MasterCard issuers in the 2013 JD Power industry customer service rankings in the US and winning the ‘Best Corporate Card Provider’ at the Business Travel Awards.

Colleague

We are committed to attracting, developing and retaining colleagues of the highest calibre and integrity. We continue to bring in the best talent from diverse backgrounds, while developing our existing talent. We ensure progression and rotation at all levels of the organisation and follow a structured learning and leadership development programme to develop our colleagues.

In 2013, we continued to make progress with our diversity agenda, with 34% women in senior leadership. We have also sustained high levels of colleague engagement to ensure talent retention, with 95% of high performers retained.

We have moved our Absa Card office to a new, world-class site in Pretoria and won the Customer Service Training Network ‘Training Programme of the Year’ award for our UK contact centres.

Citizenship

Barclaycard has continued to embed and contribute to the Barclays’ 2015 Citizenship Plan.

We have continued to focus on ‘the way we do business’ to ensure we are fair and transparent. We have simplified the Terms & Conditions of many of our products.

We have ensured we are supporting the economy and contributing to growth, including offering £15.8bn in new lending to businesses and households in 2013, and adding a charity redemption category for Freedom Rewards customers in the UK who want to donate their collected points.

We are supporting our community through activities such as Royal British Legion London Poppy Day, supporting poppy sales with our colleagues and contactless terminals.

Conduct

We continue to rollout the Barclays Values and Behaviours, empowering our Values Leaders to embed them with their colleagues.

Barclaycard continues to review policies and practices to identify and proactively ensure that they continue to be simple, leading, innovative and transparent, including those associated with handling PPI complaints. We are committed to ensuring that we adhere to the highest standards of conduct, proactively driving cultural change through developing best-in-class conduct risk awareness training.

Company

 

 

Contribution to total income

 

£4,786m    LOGO

 

 

 

      2013      2012      2011  
Income (£m)      4,786         4,344         4,305   
Adjusted profit before tax (£m)      1,507         1,482         1,212   
Adjusted ROE (%)      18.4         19.8         16.1   
Loan loss rate (bps)      337         294         394   
Loans and advances to customers (£bn)      35.6         33.8         31.0   
Customer deposits (£bn)      38.9         38.2         34.8   

Barclaycard continued to grow in all markets, with a net increase of nearly three million new customers in 2013. Income improved 10% to £4,786m reflecting continued net lending growth and contributions from 2012 portfolio acquisitions.

The business incurred £49m of costs to achieve Transform, as it continued to seek to become the ‘Go-To’ bank for consumer payments. Adjusted operating expenses increased 11% to £2,048m reflecting increased costs from 2012 portfolio acquisitions, net lending growth, higher operating losses and costs to achieve Transform.

Barclaycard continued to deliver adjusted profit growth, improving 2% to £1,507m driven by the US and UK card portfolios.

Total assets increased 2% to £38.9bn primarily driven by the increase in loans and advances to customers across the UK and international businesses.

 

  LOGO  

 

For more information on performance, please see

   

pages 237 to 268

 

 

 

 

LOGO Future priorities

 

Barclaycard will become the ‘Go-To’ bank for consumer payments through:

 

¡   Delivering simple, leading and innovative products to our retail consumers and business clients that help them achieve their ambitions – in the right way.

 

¡  Maintaining our track record of delivering strong financial performance, and delivering against the Transform targets through continued efficiencies, realising economies of scale, diversifying our business model and using world class analytics.

 

¡   Attracting, developing and retaining colleagues of the highest calibre and integrity.

 

¡   Continuing to have a positive impact in local communities by creating sustainable relationships and using the skills of the business and our colleagues to support these communities.

 

¡  Focusing on ‘the way we do business’ to ensure that our products and services are industry-leading in transparency.

 

 

 

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Payment flexibility

 

 

 

 

 

 

LOGO

 

Marco Tripoli is a charismatic ladies’ fashion designer and boutique owner in South-West London. He uses a Barclaycard ePDQ terminal in his shop to take payment by credit or debit card.

Marco’s tiny shop in Barnes is bursting at the seams with unique handbags, jewellery and clothes – around half of which Marco designs himself, the rest arriving twice weekly from all over Europe. His brand is built on a few key selling points: commitment to quality, sustainability and affordability, and a unique approach to customer service.

When women fall in love with a bag or dress at Tripoli’s, they’re not constrained to a quick decision in a cramped fitting room. Thanks to his Barclaycard ePDQ terminal, Marco can give his customer the option to try before she buys, in the comfort of her own home.

“Many of my customers pop in on their way back from dropping the kids at school and if they like something, they’ll take it with them to try on at home,” says Marco. “That way, they can see how a dress looks with their own shoes and accessories – or how one of my handbags complements an outfit.”

After closing for the day, Marco calls personally at each of his prospective customers’ homes. If they’ve decided against an item, it goes back to the shop with him. And if they’ve decided to buy, Marco simply uses his ePDQ terminal to take payment by credit or debit card.

“This works really well for people who have children and can’t come back to the shop in the afternoon. It’s convenient for them and a much friendlier way to do business. In fact, technology, often considered to be faceless and impersonal, actually allows me to have a far more personal service with my customers.”

Marco also uses his flexible payment machine at events all over London. At a recent local fair, ePDQ helped him sell 45 tote bags - purely thanks to the convenience of paying by card.

Marco is proud of his service-led, community-centric approach. 5% of his net profits go to a local charity that helps the elderly and disabled - and many of the small businesses in Barnes promote each other’s services whenever they can.

These traditional, ethical business values are reflected in the high level of personalised support that Marco’s had from his dedicated Barclaycard account manager, Andy.

“He’s extremely proactive and offers advice whenever he can. He recently recommended that I use an accounting package to manage my daily expenditure and it’s saved me £200 a month in accountancy fees. He really does go over and above what you’d expect.”

When Marco’s machine broke down the night before a big event in Wimbledon, he simply called Andy and another one was flown immediately from Scotland to London. “It arrived 15 minutes before the event started,” says Marco, “You just can’t put a value on service like that.”

 

 

LOGO

 

 

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Investment Bank

 

     

 

 

 

 

 

LOGO   

‘From our unique position with dual home markets and truly global reach, we are transforming the Investment Bank so that we can continue to help our target clients achieve their ambitions.’

   LOGO
LOGO   LOGO
Eric Bommensath   Thomas King
Co-Chief Executive, Corporate and Investment Banking   Co-Chief Executive, Corporate and Investment Banking
 

 

 

 

The Investment Bank business model

 

LOGO

 

 

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The Investment Bank is a leading provider of advice, financing and risk management solutions to companies, governments and institutions around the world.

Market and operating environment

Market conditions and the wider operating environment have remained challenging in 2013. While equity markets, advisory and underwriting all saw gains, continued macroeconomic uncertainty over the future of central bank bond buying programmes led to reduced volumes in Fixed Income markets. At the same time, the implementation of Basel III and new leverage ratios is increasing the constraints on capital allocation across the industry, thereby limiting opportunities for business growth.

Business Model risks

A rapidly evolving regulatory environment combined with a subdued macroeconomic environment has impacted the profitability of capital intensive business lines.

To help mitigate this impact we have been actively rebalancing our business model through growth in Equities and Investment Banking and further intensifying focus on capital management, leverage and the reduction of our Exit Quadrant assets. We continue to keep our business model under review.

The Investment Bank still faces litigation risk and we continue to invest time and resources in strengthening our control environment, evolving our culture and simplifying and de-risking products.

Our business relies on the quality of our people, and so we also continue to reinforce our employee value proposition through a focus on learning and development and, in light of global compensation legislation, reiterating our commitment to pay for performance.

Balanced Scorecard

 

 

 

LOGO

 

 

Customer and client

Becoming the ‘Go To’ partner for our clients is about building strong and deep relationships which enable us to support them in achieving their ambitions. To attain this aim we are focused on:

 

¡   Building strategic relationships with our clients by providing long-term solutions

 

¡   Providing a world-class client experience through the calibre of our people

 

¡   Offering seamless and efficient execution of transactions

 

¡   Developing the highest standards of client conduct through an enhanced product suitability framework

In 2013, we were named the best Flow House in Western Europe, the Best Flow House in North America and the best UK investment Bank by Euromoney.

 

 

 

 

LOGO

 

LOGO
 

 

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Investment Bank >

continued

     

 

 

 

 

Colleague

Our people are fundamental to the performance of our business. We aim to support our colleagues to achieve their ambitions by:

 

¡   Providing world-class opportunities for career progression and global mobility

 

¡   Delivering industry leading solutions for clients

 

¡   Embracing diversity and inclusion

 

¡   Rewarding competitively for performance

2013 saw the launch of our Purpose and Values agenda, embedding them into all our HR processes including recruiting, promotion and performance management. Employee engagement was a key theme during the year with increased focus on Talent Management and Succession Planning; initiatives which saw a number of senior management moves across the Investment Bank. We continue to place Diversity & Inclusion to the forefront of our Talent agenda, because it is the right thing to do and because our clients are becoming increasingly diverse.

Citizenship

The Investment Bank contributes to the 2015 Citizenship Plan across our business.

In 2013 we supported a wide range of transactions that make a direct difference to our communities. We did this across our core competencies of capital raising, lending and distribution across various sectors including public finance (governments, supranationals, development banks and other public sector entities), alternative energy and life sciences sectors.

In addition, we provided employment and training opportunities for over 650 graduates, and our staff contributed over 48,000 volunteer hours in 2013 to worthwhile causes around the globe.

Conduct

Conduct is about ensuring that our products and services are designed and distributed to meet the needs of our clients and that we act with integrity in everything we do. In 2013 we have continued to invest heavily in this area through focus on the following:

 

¡   Culture and Organisation: Embedding our culture by completing values and behaviour training for all our staff and re-balancing how we assess and reward our people to place increased focus on conduct, risk and control

 

¡   Frameworks: Developing a comprehensive conduct risk framework and developing tools that support the consistent delivery of controls

 

¡   Governance: Putting in place an enhanced governance model including the introduction of a Chief Controls Officer, Reputation Risk Committee and Conduct Risk Steering Committee

 

¡   Control Initiatives: Strengthening control design around the trade lifecycle including with relation to unauthorised trading and key benchmark submissions

Company

 

 

 

Contribution to total income

 

£10,733m

  

 

LOGO

 

 

 

 

     2013       2012      2011  
Income (£m)      10,733          11,775         10,222   
Profit before tax (£m)      2,523          3,990         2,415   
ROE (%)      8.2          12.7         7.7   
Cost: income ratio (%)      75.0          65.0         76.0   
Compensation: income ratio (%)      43.2          39.6         48.4   

While industry FICC revenues reduced in 2013, strong growth was seen in the Equities franchise, which continued to outperform the market. Total income decreased 9% to £10,733m, including a reduction of £309m relating to the Exit Quadrant. FICC income decreased 17% to £5,537m. Equities and Prime Services income increased 22% to £2,672m reflecting higher commission income and increased client volumes. Investment Banking income increased 3% to £2,200m driven by increased equity underwriting fees, partly offset by declines in financial advisory activity.

The Investment Bank continued to make progress in delivering part of the Transform strategy in 2013. The business incurred costs to achieve Transform of £262m, primarily related to restructuring across Europe, Asia and America. Operating expenses increased 5% to £8,012m, driven by costs to achieve Transform, UK bank levy which increased 62% to £333m, cost increases related to infrastructure improvement, and provisions for litigation and regulatory penalties of £220m in Q413, mainly related to US residential mortgage-related business.

Profit before tax decreased 37% to £2,523m.

Total assets decreased £209.9bn to £863.8bn, primarily reflecting decreases in derivative financial instruments, cash and balances at central banks, and trading portfolio assets.

CRD IV RWAs reduced to £221.6bn (30 June 2013: £254.1bn) through accelerated sell down of the Exit Quadrant assets and continued focus on driving efficiency in the ongoing business.

 

 

   LOGO   

 

 

For more information on performance, please see

pages 237 to 268

 

 

  LOGO Future priorities

Our priorities to become the ‘Go-To’ Investment Bank are to:

 

  ¡   Focus our people and resources on building the deepest relationships possible with our target clients so we become a first call  

 

  ¡   Invest in market-leading talent and technology to deliver the best client experience and remain responsive to clients’ changing needs  

 

  ¡   Make efficiency and control a competitive advantage by increasing standardisation and automation across the platform to reduce cost to serve and strengthen controls  

 

 

 

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Advising on one of the largest mergers & acquisition deals in history

 

 

 

LOGO

 

Verizon is one of the world’s largest telecommunications companies, and its mobile subsidiary, Verizon Wireless, is the number one and most profitable wireless business in the United States.

Barclays has had a longstanding inner-circle strategic and financing relationship with Verizon, dating back to 2003. When Verizon decided to acquire Vodafone’s 45% stake in Verizon Wireless for $130bn, in the third largest M&A deal ever, Verizon turned to Barclays to act as a financial advisor and joint lead arranger for the largest acquisition finance bridge facility in history. Barclays also served as a main underwriter and lead manager on Verizon’s subsequent record breaking $49bn bond offering.

This landmark transaction will help Verizon achieve its long-term ambition of owning 100% of Verizon Wireless, and it will position Verizon to provide more efficient, industry leading products and solutions to its customers.

It also serves as a clear demonstration of what we mean by ‘Go-To’: building long term client relationships and combining strategic advice and deep financing expertise to help our clients achieve their business goals.

 

 

LOGO
 

 

 

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Corporate Banking

 

     

 

 

 

 

 

LOGO   

‘Corporate Banking continues to support businesses both in the UK and internationally, and in 2013 delivered the best results since its creation in 2010.’

   LOGO

LOGO

John Winter

Chief Executive Officer

 

 

 

 

The Corporate Banking business model

 

LOGO

 

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Corporate Banking remains an attractive business, with companies searching for strong banking partners. However, the economic and regulatory environment continues to be challenging.

The global corporate banking market is still growing and profitable although with significant differences across geographies, customer segments and sectors.

 

¡   UK economic recovery is gathering pace

 

¡   Signs of improvement in the European economy

 

¡   The multinational corporates segment will grow faster than large/mid-Corporates segment. However, top clients in this segment are targeted by both global and specialised local competitors

Risks to our business model

The corporate banking industry is facing a number of risks that we have anticipated and are planning to mitigate:

 

¡   Some sectors and geographies will likely remain challenging particularly if interest rates rise. This could trigger increases in loan loss rates particularly in the UK where loan loss rates are at a Corporate Banking historical low. We proactively review and manage our exposure to all clients. We have a proven record of supporting businesses through their difficulties and minimising credit losses.

 

¡   In contrast, low interest rates may cause margins to compress. We continue to strengthen our market position by expanding our cash management product offering.

 

¡   Cybercrime and technology disruptions remain a risk. Barclays actively works to increase the resilience and enhance the security of its banking systems by fully supporting UK government and other banks’ initiatives to increase system availability and reduce industry risks.
¡   Corporates increasingly use debt markets and other alternative sources of finance and non-UK banks have increased competition. To strengthen our market position we continue to expand our financing product capabilities, as well as to deepen existing, and acquiring new, client relationships.

Balanced Scorecard

 

 

 

LOGO

 

 

Customer and client

Corporate Banking is focused on becoming the ‘Go-To’ bank for business, corporate and institutional clients.

We work closely with clients to fully understand their business and continuously strive for better client service. As a result, no other bank achieved a higher rating from their Corporate Banking clients in the UK for overall satisfaction in 2013.a

Note

a Source: Charterhouse Research based on 2,200 interviews with companies turning over between £5m and £1bn carried out in YE Q4 2013. Survey data is weighted by turnover and region to be representative of the total market in Great Britain. Sum of top two box responses – Excellent and Very Good.

 

 

 

 

LOGO

 

LOGO

 

 

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Corporate Banking >

continued

     

 

 

 

 

We are committed to helping businesses succeed and achieve their ambitions, no matter how complex or challenging. Our clients benefit from in-depth sector expertise – over 45 sector teams, and tailored industry research.

Our products and services are regularly recognised through industry awards, e.g. in 2013:

 

¡   Best Trade Bank in the UK – Global Trade Review

 

¡   Best Domestic Cash Manager in the UK – Euromoney

 

¡   Best Trade Bank in Africa – Treasury Management International

 

¡   UK Education Lender of The Year – for the fourth year running

We are constantly looking for ways to make our client interactions as simple and instant as possible – whether that is reducing time to set-up new client accounts or providing our front-line teams with iPads to deliver more insight directly to clients.

We see technology as a key means of responding proactively to clients’ changing needs. We continue to roll-out Barclays.net (our internet-based cash management service) and Pingit for Corporates, which now allows clients to complete a full spectrum of payment options via their smartphone.

Colleague

Corporate Banking continues to invest in our colleagues to ensure they are fully engaged, motivated and supported to provide excellent client service.

We continue to promote a globally diverse and inclusive environment where all colleagues can fulfil their potential.

Priorities include driving sustainable engagement, gender diversity and developing the potential of our workforce.

Citizenship

Every day Corporate Banking employees make a real difference; helping individuals, communities and businesses grow.

Primarily, we support businesses by lending money prudently. In 2013, we provided loans and advances of £61.1bn. Over 1,600 SME clients benefitted from the Cashback for Business scheme.a We paid £24m in cashback and have committed a further £6m. We have also continued to support the Business Growth Fundb – with a commitment of £500m in equity.

In addition, our colleagues contributed almost 30,000 hours volunteering in their local communities.

Conduct

We are focused on delivering the right outcomes for our clients.

Managing the conduct risks that arise in our business is fundamental to our success in becoming the ‘Go-To’ bank. This means proactively looking out for our client’s best interests and acting with integrity at all times.

In advancing our Interest Rate Hedging Products redress, 32% of the in-scope population now have review outcomes. We are progressing well and are on track to meet our commitments to the FCA. We expect to have a substantial majority of all customers at the redress offer stage by mid-year.

In line with other Barclays divisions, we are in the process of formalising our Conduct Risk reporting and management framework. This framework will ensure that client interests are being taken into account appropriately in all our business decisions. It includes everything from our business model and strategy through to ensuring our products are designed and sold in the right way.

Notes

a Cashback for Business offers 2% cashback to SMEs who take out a loan under the scheme.

b Business Growth Fund provides equity to businesses with a turnover of £5-100m

Company

 

 

Contribution to total income

£3,115m

  

LOGO

 

 

 

     2013      2012     2011   

 

 
Income (£m)      3,115         3,046        3,315    

 

 
Profit/(loss) before tax (£m)      151         (390     (5)   

 

 
Adjusted ROE (%)      3.1         2.9        0.4    

 

 
Loan loss rate (bps)      77         127        153    

 

 
Loans and advances to customers (£bn)      61.1         64.3        68.3    

 

 
Customer deposits (£bn)      108.7         99.6        87.5    

 

 

Corporate Banking continued to make good progress in pursuing its turnaround strategy, which increased momentum in 2013. Total income increased 2% to £3,115m reflecting an increase in UK income, partially offset by non-recurring income from a reduction from Exit Quadrant assets in Europe and previously exited businesses.

Credit impairment charges declined 42% to £510m largely driven by Europe, which saw charges reduce by £224m to £318m following ongoing action to reduce exposure to the property and construction sector in Spain. Charges were also lower against large corporate clients in the UK.

Costs to achieve Transform were incurred to further invest in the ongoing client business, as well as rationalise the offering within Europe and Rest of World. Adjusted operating expenses increased 6% to £1,806m including costs to achieve Transform of £114m.

Performance improved across all regions in 2013, with the UK franchise continuing to deliver strong results. Adjusted profit before tax improved 74% to £801m. UK adjusted profit before tax improved 14% to £948m.

Loans and advances to customers decreased 5% to £61.1bn driven by the rundown of Exit Quadrant portfolios in Europe and a reduction in client demand as working capital deposits increased in the UK.

 

 

 

LOGO

 

  

 

For more information on performance, please see
pages 237 to 268

 

 

 

 

 

LOGO

  

 

Future priorities

   
 

 

Become the ‘Go-To’ bank for domestic corporations in the UK and South Africa and multinational corporations and financial institutions globally by satisfying their financing and servicing needs.

 

¡   Maintain market-leading rating for client satisfaction in the UK

 

¡   Continue to provide responsible lending to support growth for viable businesses

 

¡   Continue to strengthen our cross-border product offerings in Cash Management and Trade Finance

 

¡   Continue to improve profitability, supported by helping clients to access banking solutions from the Investment Bank, Barclaycard and Wealth

 

¡   Drive cost efficiencies and actively managing our balance sheet

 

¡   Further strengthen our strong culture standards and controls to help clients achieve their commercial ambitions in the right way

 

   
 

 

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Helping UK businesses with

global growth ambitions

 

 

 

LOGO

 

“We are currently a mattress manufacturer that makes spring components. With Barclays’ continuing support, we can evolve confidently to become a global components manufacturer that makes mattresses.’’

Simon Spinks, Managing Director, Harrison Spinks

 

New Market Expansion

Harrison Spinks is a luxury bed and mattress manufacturer based in Leeds, with ambitious plans for growth. They wanted to take their spring technology to new products and markets. Barclays was their partner of choice to help them achieve their ambition.

With turnover increasing year-on-year, Harrison Spinks is thriving despite the challenging economy by innovating and seeking out new markets. They are expanding into North America by applying their innovative spring technology to new products such as baby mattresses, footwear and automotive seating.

Having supported them for eight years, Barclays is helping them to expand by meeting their corporate banking needs and foreign exchange requirements. Harrison Spinks is benefiting from our international scale and is tapping into our knowledge of the manufacturing industry.

As Simon Spinks, MD, says, “It’s good to have someone who knows your business and where you’re trying to go… Barclays actually allows you to move forward.”

 

 

LOGO
 

 

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Wealth and Investment Management

  

  

 

 

 

 

 

 

LOGO   

 

‘We are raising industry standards through our investment philosophy encompassing client profiling, investment strategies and portfolio construction.’

  LOGO    

LOGO

 

Peter Horrell

Chief Executive Officer, Wealth and Investment Management

 

 

 

 

The Wealth and Investment Management business model

 

LOGO

 

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We are one of the world’s leading wealth managers and we offer clients a gateway to the full range of Barclays’ capabilities. Wealth and Investment Management continues to focus on and invest in delivering an excellent client experience, while helping clients protect, grow and pass on wealth.

 

Market and operating environment

We serve clients around the world: in the UK, where we are headquartered; in the US, which is the world’s largest wealth market; in major hubs in Europe and in the fast growing markets of Asia, the Middle East and Africa.

 

We have a clear segmentation strategy across high net worth, affluent, retail and corporate clients which defines our services based on client need and value.

 

Risks to our business model

Major changes in the wealth management industry in recent years have been driven by regulation, changing demographics, new sources of wealth, and evolving client needs, particularly around digitalisation.

 

We are making good progress in implementing our strategy, which builds on our strengths, focuses on competing where we can win and simplifies how we operate.

 

Our investment in the business means that we meet or exceed regulatory standards in all the markets in which we operate. We have limited the number of markets we operate in specifically to reduce business risk and position ourselves to capture emerging wealth.

 

Balanced Scorecard

  

 

LOGO

 

 

Customer and client

We are building centres of excellence within Barclays for investment management and managing offshore banking relationships, as well as an online investment proposition for self-directed clients, which will significantly enhance our capabilities in this space.

 

We are making great strides in digital innovation, as evidenced by our voice biometrics programme, launched in 2013, and the continuing success of the online marketing service (Little Book of Wonders) for our high net worth clients.

 

We will measure success in serving clients through our Net Promoter Score®.

 

 

 

LOGO

 

LOGO
 

 

 

barclays.com/annualreport    Barclays PLC Annual Report 2013 > 43


Table of Contents

Wealth and Investment Management >

continued

  

 

 

 

 

Colleague

We are committed to engaging our colleagues and creating a diverse and inclusive environment where they can fulfil their potential. Following the launch of the Barclays Values and Behaviours, 96% of Wealth and Investment Management employees had attended a Values Workshop by June 2013, and we are making great progress in embedding the Values and Behaviours into our business and decision making. In September 2013, colleagues had the opportunity to reflect on and absorb the strategy for Wealth and Investment Management: 2,200 colleagues in 26 locations around the world attended town halls and strategy conversations. The Wealth and Investment Management Global Diversity & Inclusion Council was established in 2013 with the purpose of attracting and developing the most talented people from all backgrounds.

Citizenship

Wealth and Investment Management contributes to the Barclays 2015 Citizenship Plan by embedding a citizenship ethos into the way we do business, through our strategy, decision-making and investment management approach. We will also contribute to growth by supporting the development of social impact investing and managing charity investments and support our communities through community investment and client philanthropy.

Our colleagues contributed over 9,000 hours to support our communities around the world in 2013.

Conduct

Effectively managing Conduct Risk is essential in building a sustainable wealth management business. We are introducing a rigorous and transparent Conduct Risk reporting and management framework which ensures that the interests of clients and other stakeholders are appropriately considered in all business decisions. In 2013 we developed specific internal communications programmes to drive awareness of this important risk and help employees understand how their behaviours and decision making can specifically contribute to or mitigate client harm. We are also embedding conduct risk discipline into our business through a series of Material Risk Assessments intended to prevent potential client issues before they occur.

Company

 

 

Contribution to total income

 

£1,839m

  

LOGO

 

  

 

 

     2013     2012     2011  
Income (£m)     1,839         1,820         1,770   
Adjusted (loss)/profit before tax (£m)     (19     274        188   
Adjusted ROE (%)     (1.0     11.2        9.5   
Loan loss rate (bps)     51        17        21   
Loans and advances to customers (£bn)     23.1        21.3        18.8   
Customer deposits (£bn)     63.4        53.8        46.5   

Total income of £1,839m remained broadly in line with the prior year, as growth in deposit and lending balances, primarily in the High Net Worth business, offset a lower net interest margin reflecting a change in product mix and reduced contributions from structural hedges.

Credit impairment charges increased £83m to £121m, largely reflecting the impact of deterioration in recovery values from property held as security, primarily in Europe.

The business continued to implement its strategic programme to build on its strengths, focus on target markets and simplify how it operates. Adjusted operating expenses increased £241m to £1,750m largely reflecting costs to achieve Transform of £158m.

Business growth remained robust with strong growth in client assets, customer deposits and loans and advances to customers, which increased 8% to £23.1bn primarily driven by growth in the High Net Worth business.

 

  LOGO  

For more information on performance, please see

pages 237 to 268

 

 

 

LOGO Future priorities

 

Wealth and Investment Management continues to be a key area of growth within Barclays. Examples of how we will achieve our strategy:

 

¡  Building on our strengths : a new direct to consumer offering for ‘DIY’ Buy and Hold investors – a growing and significant part of the investor market. We are on track to develop this direct to consumer offering, to be rolled out initially in the UK in 2015.

 

¡ Focus on competing where we can win: the strategic focus areas for our business continue to be the UK, US and global high-net worth hubs. In order to ensure that we are building a sustainable business and managing risks effectively, we are reducing the number of countries which we serve, taking into account the impact on clients, colleagues and local markets.

 

¡ Simplifying how we operate: we are making changes to the way we service our affluent clients in the UK with existing clients with assets of less than £500,000 managed by a new team called Private Clients.

 

 

 

 

 

 

44 > Barclays PLC Annual Report 2013    barclays.com/annualreport


Table of Contents
Innovating security and simplicity with voice biometrics

 

 

 

LOGO

 

Barclays Wealth and Investment Management is the first wealth manager to introduce a pioneering ‘voice security’ service which stores the unique biometric (with more characteristics than a fingerprint) of an individual’s voice print to securely and quickly confirm a client’s identity.

Last year, Barclays Wealth and Investment Management successfully rolled out a cutting-edge service enhancement which is used to identify customers by the sound of their voice, greatly improving the client experience.

When a customer calls Barclays Wealth and Investment Management to access their account and completes the traditional knowledge based identification process their voice print is captured and they are asked if they would like to enrol in the service.

The next time they call Barclays, the customer engages in a few seconds of natural conversation with a customer service agent. During that time, the voice biometrics technology is used to compare the customer’s voice to their unique voiceprint on file, and silently signals to the Barclays representative when the customer’s identity has been verified.

This approach has been welcomed by customers who have seen the time taken to verify their identity fall from 1.5 minutes to less than 10 seconds.

94% of clients scored at least nine out of 10 for the speed, ease of use and security of voice authentication.

 

 

LOGO
 

 

barclays.com/annualreport    Barclays PLC Annual Report 2013 > 45


Table of Contents

Chairman’s governance overview

  

  

 

 

 

 

 

LOGO

 

LOGO   

 

‘Key for the Board is ensuring that we have in place the right strategy, a robust and appropriate risk management and control framework and the right people to create long-term value for shareholders.’

  LOGO

The UK Corporate Governance Code makes clear the principle that the Board should set the company’s strategic aims, ensure that the necessary financial and human resources are in place for the company to meet its objectives and review management performance.

The right strategy

As a Board, we set direction and risk appetite and provide oversight and control of management in the day-to-day running of the business. As Chairman, I seek to ensure that adequate time is set aside at Board meetings for the open and collective discussion and debate of significant issues, most importantly, strategy. Once a well-informed decision is reached, we empower management to then execute that decision, with our ongoing oversight and support. This established process underpinned our endorsement of the Transform programme in early 2013 and the decision we made in July 2013 to undertake a rights issue.

The right risks and controls

It is essential that our risk culture supports our risk profile and that we have visible and dedicated risk management leadership, both in the Boardroom and in executive management. In 2013 we enhanced our internal control and risk management framework by creating a new Board-level committee charged with specific oversight of operational and conduct risks, reputational matters and our citizenship strategy. We also created a Board Enterprise Wide Risk Committee, whose role is to focus on a holistic view of our risk appetite and risk profile and to seek to identify potential future risk.

The right people

Talent development and succession planning are critical components of sustainable success and this starts at the very top, in the Boardroom. It is vital that we have on the Board the right balance and diversity of expertise, skills, experience, perspectives and, most crucially, independence of thought and action.

All Board appointments are made on merit, in the context of the diversity required for an effective Board, including diversity of skills, experience, background and gender. The aims set out in our Board Diversity Policy, published in April 2012, were to have 20% of the Board made up of women by the end of 2013, and for that position to have exceeded 25% by the end of 2015. There were three women on the Barclays Board at the end of 2013 (20%), compared to one woman at the end of 2012 (8%). Our Board Diversity Policy can be found on our website, Barclays.com

 

LOGO

Sir David Walker

Chairman

Board Gender Balance

 

 

 

LOGO

 

 

 

1 Directors – Men

2 Directors – Women

 

 

 

 

 

 

31.12.13

12

3

 

  

  

  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

31.12.12

11

1

 

 

  

  

  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

46 > Barclays PLC Annual Report 2013    barclays.com/annualreport


Table of Contents
                
    

Group overview

Chief Executive’s strategic review

Strategy and operating environment  

Business model/Value creation

Balanced Scorecard

Group Finance Director’s review

Strategic Risk overview

Performance review by division

Chairman’s governance overview

Summary remuneration report

 

02  

04

06

08

10

12

14

18

46

48

 

Good governance is vital in supporting the delivery of our strategic priorities. More information on the role of the Board and its Committees can be found in ‘Corporate Governance in Barclays’ which is available online at Barclays.com

                

 

 

 

Our Board

Sir David Walker (74) Group Chairman

Antony Jenkins (52) Group Chief Executive; Executive Director

Mike Ashley (59) Non-executive Director

Tim Breedon (56) Non-executive Director

Fulvio Conti (66) Non-executive Director

Simon Fraser (54) Non-executive Director

Reuben Jeffery (61) Non-executive Director

Wendy Lucas-Bull (60) Non-executive Director

Tushar Morzaria (45) Group Finance Director; Executive Director

Dambisa Moyo (45) Non-executive Director

Frits van Paasschen (52) Non-executive Director

Sir Michael Rake (66) Deputy Chairman and Senior Independent Director

Diane de Saint Victor (59) Non-executive Director

Sir John Sunderland (68) Non-executive Director

Steve Thieke (68) Non-executive Director

 

  LOGO  

Detailed biographies can be found on pages 83 to 85

 

 

 

Board Governance Framework

LOGO

 

Our Board Committees

 

 

Board Committee   Role

 

Board Enterprise Wide Risk Committee  

Chaired by Sir David Walker

It takes an enterprise-wide view of risks and controls and brings together the overall risk appetite and risk profile of the business

 

 

Board Audit Committee  

Chaired by Mike Ashley

It takes a largely backward-looking view, focused on financial reporting and control issues, including overseeing any control issue remediation plans

 

 

Board Conduct, Reputation and Operational Risk Committee  

Chaired by Sir David Walker

It takes a largely forward-looking view of conduct risk, operational risk and reputation risk, including recommending the level of risk Barclays is prepared to take

 

 

Board Financial Risk Committee  

Chaired by Tim Breedon

It takes a largely forward-looking view of financial risk appetite and financial risk profile (credit, market, liquidity and funding risk) across Barclays

 

 

Board Remuneration     Committee  

Chaired by Sir John Sunderland

It sets the overarching principles and parameters of remuneration policy across Barclays and approves remuneration arrangements for executive directors, senior executives and individual remuneration awards

 

 

Board Corporate Governance and Nominations Committee  

Chaired by Sir David Walker

It makes recommendations on Board and Board Committee composition and effectiveness, Board and executive succession plans, talent management strategy and corporate governance

 

 

Governance in action

Our Board Committees continued to support the delivery of our strategic priorities during 2013:

 

¡   Board Audit Committee: estimating customer redress provisions, in particular PPI redress provisions, was an area of focus for the Board Audit Committee in 2013. The Committee played a key role in evaluating and challenging the assumptions underlying the provisions made.

 

¡   Board Conduct, Reputation and Operational Risk Committee: during 2013 the Board Conduct, Reputation and Operational Risk Committee spent time on developing Barclays’ approach to Conduct Risk, establishing what it means for Barclays and how we will manage it in a way that ensures positive outcomes for our customers and clients.

 

¡   Board Financial Risk Committee: the possibility of a Eurozone crisis remained during 2013, as the weak growth outlook continued to raise concerns about sovereign creditworthiness in some countries. The Board Financial Risk Committee’s focus was on continuing to reduce Barclays’ exposure to redenomination risk.

 

¡   Board Corporate Governance and Nominations Committee: executive succession and talent management are a critical component of long-term success. 2013 saw the Board Corporate Governance and Nominations Committee increase its focus on talent management.

 

  LOGO   You can read more about Governance in Action in the Corporate governance report, which is available on pages 52 to 77
 

 

The activity of the Board Remuneration Committee during 2013 is described in the Remuneration report.

 

 

 

LOGO
 

 

barclays.com/annualreport    Barclays PLC Annual Report 2013 > 47


Table of Contents

Summary remuneration report

  

  

 

 

 

 

 

LOGO

‘Our aim is to deliver a greater share of the income we generate to shareholders while remaining competitive on pay. Although profits for 2013 were down, the 38% reduction in incentives in the previous two years had begun to cause demonstrable damage to our business. The difficult decision to address this by increasing incentives in certain key areas is in the long term interest of shareholders. We remain fully committed to reducing the ratio of compensation to adjusted net operating income over time.’

Dear Shareholders

The Committee’s objective is to maximise long term value for shareholders by ensuring that we do not pay more than is necessary while remaining competitive.

Remuneration Committee work in 2013

Determining the 2013 incentive pool was an extremely difficult decision for the Committee. We were acutely aware of public sentiment and of the challenge of presenting shareholders with an increased pool in a year where profits have fallen. The Committee concluded that a 2013 incentive pool of £2,378m was warranted. This was up 10% on the final 2012 incentive pool but it remains 32% below pool levels in 2010 when we started to reposition Barclays’ remuneration. Before adjustment for risk and conduct events the incentive pool was down 18% on 2012.

Significant progress has been made since 2010 in addressing imbalances in remuneration. The Barclays’ incentive pool reduced by 38% between 2010 and 2012 (48% for the Investment Bank) and bonuses for Managing Directors in the Investment Bank are fully deferred. The dilemma faced by the Committee in 2013 was that these actions were not matched by our peers, most notably the major US banks who are among our primary competitors. As a result, our lack of pay competitiveness was beginning to cause demonstrable damage to our business, especially outside the UK. The global resignation rate for senior staff in 2013 was significantly above that in 2012. This was particularly marked in the Investment Bank with a near doubling of resignations of senior staff in the US. In making our 2013 decisions on incentives, the Committee sought to ensure the health of the franchise in the long term interest of shareholders.

As in 2012, consideration of risk and conduct events was an important aspect of the Committee’s work during 2013. We made total reductions of £290m to incentives for PPI, Interest Rate Hedging Products and other events. Of this, £176m of adjustments were made through reductions in LTIP awards that were granted in previous years and £114m of reductions were made to the 2013 incentive pool. This contrasts with risk and conduct adjustments to the incentive pool of £860m in 2012 for events including the investigation into the setting of inter-bank offered rates.

 

 

2013 compensation and incentive headlines

 

¡ Total compensation costs decreased 1% to £9,616m. Total compensation costs in the Investment Bank were slightly down at £4,634m (2012: £4,667m)

 

¡ This reduction in compensation costs in part offset the reduction in adjusted net operating income and meant that the Group compensation to adjusted net operating income ratio increased slightly to 38.3% (2012: 37.5%)

 

¡  There has been strong differentiation on the basis of individual performance to allow the Group to more effectively manage compensation costs

 

¡  While the final incentive pool is up on 2012, it is £1,106m or 32% below the 2010 outcome from when the Committee started its repositioning journey to reduce compensation. In the Investment Bank, incentive awards granted were 41% (£1,086m) below 2010 levels

 

¡ Before making adjustments for risk and conduct events, the 2013 incentive awards of £2,492m had been reduced 18% from 2012. After adjustments for risk and conduct, total incentive awards granted were £2,378m, up 10% on 2012

 

¡  Levels of deferral continue to significantly exceed the PRA Remuneration Code’s minimum requirements and are expected to remain among the highest deferral levels globally. 2013 bonuses awarded to Managing Directors in the Investment Bank were 100% deferred.

 

When determining the incentive pool we looked at it on a pre- and post-adjustment basis for risk and conduct events. The Committee concluded that an incentive pool for 2013 of £2,492m on a pre-adjustment basis was appropriate. This is 18% down on the equivalent pre-adjustment pool in 2012. After applying an adjustment for risk and conduct events of £114m, the final 2013 incentive pool is £2,378m, up 10% on 2012, reflecting the lower level of risk and conduct adjustment for 2013.

A significant part of the Committee’s work in 2013 was reviewing how to restructure executive Director and senior executive remuneration for compliance with new EU regulation, the Capital Requirements Directive IV and, in particular, the capped ratio of variable to fixed pay. Our approach is based on a new class of fixed pay called Role Based Pay. We are seeking shareholder approval at the 2014 AGM for a maximum ratio of variable to fixed pay of 2:1. For executive Directors, the level of Role Based Pay will be capped for the term of the policy and will be delivered in shares which will be subject to a holding period of up to five years to ensure alignment with shareholders. The Committee has recognised that in return for greater certainty there should be a reduced total remuneration opportunity.

Focus in 2014

The Committee will continue to focus on the need to pay at levels required to attract, retain and motivate our people. While not paying more than we judge to be necessary, we will ensure that we can continue to pay our people competitively and simultaneously seek to deliver a greater share of the income we generate to shareholders. We will be informed in this work by a continuing constructive engagement and dialogue with our shareholders and our other stakeholders.

I encourage you to read our full Remuneration report on pages 89 to 125 of the 2013 Annual Report or at www.barclays.com/annualreport.

On behalf of the Board

 

LOGO

Sir John Sunderland

Chairman, Board Remuneration Committee

3 March 2014

 

 

48 > Barclays PLC Annual Report 2013    barclays.com/annualreport


Table of Contents

 

                 
 

  Group overview

  Chief Executive’s strategic review

  Strategy and operating environment  

  Business model/Value creation

  Balanced Scorecard

  Group Finance Director’s review

  Strategic Risk overview

  Performance review by division

  Chairman’s governance overview

  Summary remuneration report

 

02  

04

06

08

10

12

14

18

46

48

 

The next two pages provide the 2013

single total figure of remuneration for

each Director, which form part of the

Annual Report on Directors’

remuneration.

 
                 

 

 

 

Single total figure for 2013 remuneration

The following table shows a single total figure of remuneration in respect of qualifying service for each executive Director together with comparative figures for 2012.

Executive Directors: Single total figure for 2013 remuneration (audited)

 

 
    

Salary

£000

    

Taxable benefits

£000

    

Bonus

£000

    

LTIP

£000

    

Pension

£000

    

Total

£000

 

 

 
     2013      2012      2013      2012      2013      2012      2013      2012      2013      2012      2013      2012  

 

 

Antony Jenkinsa

     1,100         373         138         19         0         0         0         0         364         137         1,602         529   

Tushar Morzariab

     171                 14                   1,200                 0                 43                 1,428           

Chris Lucasc

        501            800              47            34         500            0            985            643            125            200           2,158           1,677   

 

 

 

a Antony Jenkins joined the Board with effect from 30 August 2012.
b Tushar Morzaria joined the Board with effect from 15 October 2013.
c Chris Lucas stepped down from the Board with effect from 16 August 2013 due to ill health.

Additional information in respect of each element of pay for the executive Directors (audited):

Base salary

Antony Jenkins has been paid a salary of £1,100,000 per annum as Group Chief Executive since his appointment to the role. Tushar Morzaria commenced employment on 15 October 2013 on a salary of £800,000 per annum. Chris Lucas was paid a salary of £800,000 per annum.

Taxable benefits

Taxable benefits include private medical cover, life and ill health income protection, tax advice, home leave related costs, car allowance and the use of a company vehicle and driver when required for business purposes. The figure in the above table for Tushar Morzaria includes £4,576 of non-taxable relocation expenses. Further relocation expenses will be incurred for Tushar Morzaria.

Pension

Executive directors are contractually entitled to cash in lieu of pension contributions which reflects market practice for senior executives in comparable roles.

Annual bonus

Bonuses are earned by reference to the financial year and awarded in the following February. The Committee considered the performance of each of the executive Directors during their respective periods of office during the year. Their performance was assessed against their objectives agreed at the start of the year and comprised both Group and personal, financial and non-financial measures. Information on the Group measures is set out in the table below.

The executive Directors share collective responsibility for progress, as at the year end, against the Transform commitments set out at the start of 2013 and in the Rights Issue prospectus.

 

 

 

Objective

 

 

  

 

Targets / measures for 2013

 

 

 

 

  Progress in 2013

 

 

 

 

Strategic progress:

the Transform programme

  

 

Performance is assessed

against the Transform commitments of 2013

 

Financial measures in the Transform commitments included return on equity, cost to income ratio, core capital ratio, dividend payouts and risk weighted assets.

 

Non-financial measures include progress on cultural change, the development of the Balanced Scorecard and the reputation of and trust in Barclays.

 

 

 

  Financial

    

¡

 

Underlying performance has been resilient and momentum is building

    

¡

 

CRD IV Risk Weighted Assets within the £440bn target for 2015

    

¡

 

Fully loaded Common Equity Tier 1 capital ratio at 9.3% is on track to meet the target of 10.5% during 2015

    

¡

 

Cost reduction plans on target for expenses of £16.8bn in 2015 excluding costs to achieve Transform

    

¡

 

Adverse movement in cost to income ratio in 2013 mainly as a consequence of reduced income

    

¡

 

Work done in 2013 to target a 40% dividend payout ratio from 2014, achieving a payout ratio of 40-50% over time

      
       Non-financial
    

¡

 

Barclays Purpose, Values and Behaviours published and cascaded throughout organisation, now integrated into day to day management processes. Data shows that the culture is changing at Barclays.

    

¡

 

Balanced Scorecard published shortly after the year end. Data shows reputation of and trust in Barclays is improving.

 

 

 

2013 Financial and risk measures

  

 

The executive Directors lead delivery of overall performance measured by reference to income, profitability, risk weighted assets and return on equity

 

 

¡

 

 

Strength in the diversity of the Group’s income, underpinned by our traditional consumer and commercial banking franchises, and growth in Equities and Investment Banking in the Investment Bank

    

¡

 

But income in the Investment Bank overall was down 9% driven by a decrease in FICC

    

¡

 

Adjusted profit before tax was down 32% year on year due to reduced income and costs to achieve Transform

    

¡

 

Successful execution of Rights Issue

    

¡

 

Strong financial fundamentals across funding and liquidity, capital, credit risk management and margins

    

¡

 

Adjusted return on average shareholders’ equity decreased to 4.5% principally reflecting the decrease in profit before tax.

 

 

 

LOGO
 

 

barclays.com/annualreport    Barclays PLC Annual Report 2013 > 49


Table of Contents

Summary remuneration report >

continued

  

 

 

 

 

The Committee and Board agreed that Antony Jenkins had performed strongly in his first full year as Chief Executive. However, on 3 February 2014 Antony Jenkins announced that he would decline any 2013 bonus offered to him by the Committee, citing the Rights Issue, restructuring costs and costs associated with legacy issues as his reasons.

60% of Tushar Morzaria’s 2013 bonus of £1.2m will be deferred through a Share Value Plan award vesting over three years. 20% will be paid in cash and 20% in shares. All shares are subject to a six month holding period from the point of release. The bonus reflects both Tushar’s performance at Barclays and his forfeited bonus opportunity when he left his previous employer to join Barclays.

The Committee decided to award Chris Lucas a 2013 bonus at a level of 40% of the maximum (the maximum being 250% of salary), pro-rating the resulting amount to reflect his service during 2013. The resulting award of £500,000 will be 100% deferred through a Share Value Plan award vesting over three years, each annual release of shares being subject to an additional six month holding period.

LTIP

The LTIP amount included in the 2013 single total figure of remuneration is the value of vesting amounts in 2013 in relation to the LTIP award granted in 2011. Chris Lucas was the only executive Director participant in this cycle. Accordingly, as Antony Jenkins and Tushar Morzaria were not participants in this cycle, the LTIP figure in the single figure table is shown as zero for both of them. Vesting was dependent on the performance period ending in 2013. The performance achieved against the performance targets is shown below.

 

 

Performance measure

 

  

Weighting

 

  

Threshold

 

  

Maximum 100% vesting

 

 

Actual

 

 

% of maximum achieved

 

 

 

Return on Risk Weighted Assets (‘RoRWA’)

 

  

 

60%

  

 

23% of award vests for average annual RoRWA of 1%

 

  

 

Average annual RoRWA of 1.5%

 

 

 

0.4%

 

 

0%

 

 

Loan loss rate

  

 

30%

  

 

10% of award vests for average annual loan loss rate of 95 bps

 

  

 

Average annual loan loss rate of 81 bps or below

 

 

71 bps

 

 

30%

 

 

Sustainability metrics

  

 

10%

  

 

Performance against the sustainability metrics is assessed by the Committee to determine the % of the award that may vest between 0% and 10%

 

 

 

0%

 

 

0%

 

The award was also subject to a discretionary underpin by which the Committee must be satisfied with the underlying financial health of the Group. The Committee was satisfied that this underpin was met, and accordingly determined that the award should vest to the extent of 30% of the maximum number of shares under the total award. The shares are scheduled to be released in March 2014.

Chairman and non-executive Directors

Remuneration for non-executive Directors reflects their responsibility and time commitment and the level of fees paid to non-executive directors of comparable major UK companies.

Chairman and non-executive Directors: Single total figure for 2013 fees (audited)

 

 
    

            Fees

 

    

            Benefits

 

    

            Total

 

 

 

 
    

2013

£000

    

2012

£000

    

2013

£000

    

2012

£000

    

2013

£000

    

2012

£000

 

 

 

Chairman

                 

Sir David Walkera

     750         167         17         6         767         173   

 

 

Non-executive Directors

                 

Michael Ashleyb

     39                                 39           

David Boothc

     185         170                         185         170   

Tim Breedond

     183         18                         183         18   

Fulvio Conti

     110         110                         110         110   

Simon Fraser

     140         140                         140         140   

Reuben Jeffery III

     124         105                         124         105   

Sir Andrew Likiermane

     45         135                         45         135   

Wendy Lucas-Bullf

     25                                 25           

Dambisa Moyo

     129         120                         129         120   

Frits van Paasscheng

     33                                 33           

Sir Michael Rake

     220         220                         220         220   

Diane de Saint Victorh

     90                                 90           

Sir John Sunderland

     189         161                         189         161   

Alison Carnwathi

             114                                 114   

Marcus Agiusj

             750                 1                 751   

 

 

Total

             2,262                 2,210                      17                        7                 2,279                 2,217   

 

 

Notes

a Sir David Walker joined the Board as a non-executive Director with effect from 1 September 2012 and as Chairman from 1 November 2012.
b Michael Ashley joined the Board as a non-executive Director with effect from 18 September 2013.
c David Booth retired from the Board as a non-executive Director with effect from 31 December 2013.
d Tim Breedon joined the Board as a non-executive Director with effect from 1 November 2012.
e Sir Andrew Likierman retired from the Board as a non-executive Director with effect from 25 April 2013.
f Wendy Lucas-Bull joined the Board as a non-executive Director with effect from 19 September 2013.
g Frits van Paasschen joined the Board as a non-executive Director with effect from 1 August 2013.
h Diane de Saint Victor joined the Board as a non-executive Director with effect from 1 March 2013.
i Alison Carnwath resigned from the Board as a non-executive Director with effect from 24 July 2012.
j Marcus Agius stepped down as Chairman and as a non-executive Director on 2 July 2012.

 

 

 

50 > Barclays PLC Annual Report 2013    barclays.com/annualreport


Table of Contents

Governance

 

  

 

 

 

 

The governance process of Barclays and reports from each of the Board Committees presenting how the Board support the delivery of the strategy.

 

Corporate governance report

     52   
Board Governance Framework      54   
Board Audit Committee      62   
Board Enterprise Wide Risk Committee      68   
Board Financial Risk Committee      70   
Board Conduct, Reputation and Operational Risk Committee      73   
Board Corporate Governance and Nominations Committee      75   

Compliance Statements

 

    

 

77

 

  

 

 

 

Directors’ report

 

    

 

78

 

  

 

 

 

Board of Directors

 

    

 

83

 

  

 

 

 

Executive Committee

 

    

 

85

 

  

 

 

 

People

 

    

 

86

 

  

 

 

 

Remuneration report

     89   
Annual statement from the Chairman of the Board Remuneration Committee      89   
Remuneration questions and answers      91   
Remuneration policy for all employees      93   
Remuneration and CRD IV      95   
2013 incentives      96   
Directors’ remuneration policy      100   
Annual report on Directors’ remuneration      111   
Additional remuneration disclosures      122   
 

 

LOGO
 

 

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Corporate governance report

 

  

 

 

LOGO

 

LOGO   

 

‘Key for the Board is ensuring that we have the right strategy, a robust and appropriate risk management and control framework and the right people in place to create long-term value for shareholders.’

  LOGO

Dear Shareholders

Last year, in my first report as Chairman, I outlined the important ways in which Barclays was changing, in terms of its culture and values, its leadership and its risk management and control framework. I look back on my first full year as Chairman and can say with some confidence that substantial progress has been made in implementing these necessary changes.

Doing business in the right way

We recognised that to embed cultural change we had to change how our people behave, including challenging established mindsets and attitudes. As part of our Transform programme, we have set a simple goal – to make Barclays the ‘Go-To’ bank for all our stakeholders. We have defined a common purpose to assist us in reaching that goal, which is to help people achieve their ambitions in the right way. And we have clearly set out the values – respect, integrity, service, excellence and stewardship – that we expect everyone in Barclays to demonstrate in achieving that purpose. To reinforce these values and drive good behaviours, 2013 saw the launch of The Barclays Way, a single code of conduct, which is fully endorsed by the Board and applies across Barclays. It sets out how the values should be put into practice by each of us in our interactions with Barclays’ colleagues, customers and clients, governments and regulators, business partners, suppliers, competitors and the wider community in which we operate. You can read The Barclays Way on our website at Barclays.com.

To support the achievement of sustainable business performance, which is vital for the long-term success of Barclays, we have also introduced a Balanced Scorecard to measure Barclays’ performance. This sets out a series of measurable financial and non-financial commitments, covering our 5Cs – Customer & Client, Colleague, Citizenship, Conduct and Company – so that we, and our stakeholders, have a clear idea of what success looks like on our journey to becoming the ‘Go-To’ bank. You can read more about the 5Cs and the Balanced Scorecard in the Strategic Review.

The right strategy

Key for the Board is ensuring that we have the right strategy, a robust and appropriate risk management and control framework and the right people in place to create long-term value for shareholders. Our role as the Board is to set direction and risk appetite and to provide oversight and control of management in running the business on a day-to-day basis. We rely on management for timely and relevant information, to distil complex and technical material into matters requiring often finely balanced business judgments and to identify the significant issues and present them to the Board for discussion and decision. One of my roles as Chairman is to ensure that the Board receives the information it needs when it needs it, to ensure that there is adequate time set aside at Board meetings for the open and collective discussion and debate of significant issues and, once a well-informed decision is reached, to empower management to then execute that decision with the ongoing oversight and support of the Board.

I can think of no better examples of this process in action than the Board’s endorsement of the Transform programme in early 2013 and the decision we made in July 2013 to undertake a rights issue. Below you can read about the Board’s role and the intensive oversight to which both were subject.

 

The right risks and controls

As a financial institution, it is our business to understand, measure, manage, price and mitigate risk. Putting it simply, taking risk is what we do. In doing so, we recognise that we have a responsibility towards ensuring the safety, soundness and ethical operation of the financial system and are cognisant of the social impact should we fail in that regard. It is essential, therefore, that our risk culture supports our risk profile and that we have visible and dedicated risk management leadership, both in the Boardroom and in executive management.

 

 

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I described to you in my report last year how we had enhanced our internal control and risk management framework by creating a new Board-level committee, the Board Conduct, Reputation and Operational Risk Committee, charged with specific oversight of operational and conduct risks, reputational matters and our citizenship strategy. As a result, 2013 saw a significant change in the nature and extent of the Board’s scrutiny of these increasingly important areas. Financial risks – credit, market and funding – continued to be examined by the Board Financial Risk Committee and the Board Audit Committee continued to discharge its responsibilities for oversight of financial reporting, internal control and internal and external audit matters. It is inevitable that there is the potential for overlap across these Board Committees and we have sought to ensure that their respective responsibilities and accountabilities are very clear.

We need also to ensure that rewards for our people are consistent with our values and do not incentivise inappropriate risk-taking or reward focus on short-term returns: the Board Remuneration Committee developed and implemented changes to our remuneration structure in 2013 to ensure that remuneration is closely linked to the achievement of sustainable performance and long-term value creation. This is reflected in high levels of deferral for senior management, tougher performance conditions attached to awards and adjustments for current and historic risk, including the operation of malus. To bring the entire risk profile of Barclays together at Board level, we also created a Board Enterprise Wide Risk Committee, whose role is to focus on a holistic view of Barclays’ risk appetite and risk profile and to seek to identify potential future risk, or the ‘unknown unknowns’ that may emerge.

Each of these Board Committees reports below on the material issues they examined during 2013.

The right people

It is vital to Barclays’ long-term success that we have the right people, leadership skills and values in place. Talent development and succession planning are critical components of sustainable success and this starts at the very top, in the Boardroom.

It is an essential part of my role, as Chairman, to ensure that the Board has the right balance and diversity of expertise, skills, experience, perspectives and, most crucially, independence of thought and action. There were a number of changes to the Board in 2013: Diane de Saint Victor, Frits van Paasschen, Mike Ashley and Wendy Lucas-Bull joined the Board as non-executive Directors and Tushar Morzaria joined us as Group Finance Director. In early 2014, Steve Thieke joined the Board as a non-executive Director. We said farewell to Sir Andrew Likierman, who retired at the 2013 Annual General Meeting after nine years’ service; to Chris Lucas, who retired as Group Finance Director in August; and to David Booth, who retired at the end of 2013. Fulvio Conti and Simon Fraser will retire from the Board at the 2014 Annual General Meeting, having served for eight and four years respectively and I would like to thank them on behalf of the Board for their commitment and contribution. We have also seen changes in the chairmanship of two of the principal Board Committees with effect from 1 January 2014, with Mike Ashley succeeding Sir Michael Rake as Chairman of the Board Audit Committee and Tim Breedon succeeding David Booth as Chairman of the Board Financial Risk Committee. I can also report that, as at the end of 2013, there were three women on the Barclays Board (20%), compared to one woman at the end of 2012 (8%) and this progress is in line with the commitments we made in our Board Diversity Policy. You can find our Board Diversity Policy in the corporate governance section of Barclays’ website, Barclays.com.

I should take the opportunity here to advise that the Board has asked Sir John Sunderland, who will have served on the Board for nine years in June 2014, to remain on the Board until the 2015 Annual General Meeting. This is for two very important reasons. First, we would like to ensure continuity for the Board Remuneration Committee, which Sir John so ably chairs, although we hope to be able to appoint a successor to Sir John in the near future. Secondly, the Board Corporate Governance and Nominations Committee has started to plan for succession to me as Chairman in due course and has asked Sir John, with his substantial experience of business leadership more widely as well as that on the Board of Barclays, to lead that process. The Board considers that Sir John continues to demonstrate the essential characteristics of independence and that his independence will not be impaired by his serving for over nine years.

My report below on the activities of the Board Corporate Governance and Nominations Committee during 2013 describes in more detail our work on talent management and succession planning, both at Board level and more widely in Barclays.

The right priorities

As Chairman, I am primarily concerned with ensuring that the Board is operating effectively and focusing its time, energy and attention on the right areas. Each year, the Board undertakes a formal evaluation of its own effectiveness and, since 2004, these evaluations have been externally facilitated. From the 2013 Board Effectiveness Review, the Board will agree a set of priorities, against which we will report progress in future years. Our aim will be to ensure that we, as a Board, are doing the right things, in the right way and, in doing so, are setting the right example for Barclays and our industry as a whole.

 

LOGO

Sir David Walker

Chairman

3 March 2014

 

 

LOGO
 

 

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Corporate governance report >

Board Governance Framework

  

 

 

Board Governance Framework

 

LOGO

The Board has delegated certain responsibilities to Board Committees to assist it in carrying out its functions and to ensure independent oversight of internal control and risk management.

 

 

 Committee

 

  

Role

 

 

 

Board Enterprise Wide Risk Committee

 

  

 

Takes an enterprise-wide view of risks and controls and brings together the overall risk appetite and risk profile of the business

 

 

 

Board Audit Committee

  

 

Takes a largely backward-looking view, focused on financial reporting and control issues, including overseeing any control issue remediation plans

 

 

 

Board Conduct, Reputation and Operational Risk Committee

 

  

 

Takes a largely forward-looking view of conduct risk, operational risk and reputation risk, including recommending the level of risk Barclays is prepared to take

 

 

 

Board Financial Risk Committee

  

 

Takes a largely forward-looking view of financial risk appetite and financial risk profile (credit, market, liquidity and funding risk) across Barclays

 

 

 

Board Remuneration Committee

  

 

Sets the overarching principles and parameters of remuneration policy across Barclays and approves remuneration arrangements for executive directors and senior executives and individual remuneration awards

 

 

 

Board Corporate Governance and Nominations Committee

 

  

 

Makes recommendations on Board and Board Committee composition and effectiveness, Board and executive succession plans, talent management strategy and corporate governance

 

 

Regulatory Investigations Committee

In addition to the principal Board committees, the Regulatory Investigations Committee, which was formed in late 2012, met nine times in 2013. The primary purpose of this Committee is to oversee certain regulatory investigations, to consider the findings of those investigations and to direct the scope and conduct of those investigations as appropriate, including directing and overseeing any remediation activities and considering whether any disciplinary action is required in respect of any Barclays employee. Sir David Walker assumed chairmanship of the Committee in early 2013, succeeding Sir Michael Rake, who remains a member of the Committee. The other Committee members are Mike Ashley, Diane de Saint Victor, Antony Jenkins and Sir John Sunderland.

 

Board activity – what is the role of the Board?

The Board is responsible to shareholders for creating and delivering sustainable shareholder value through the management of the Group’s businesses. We determine the strategic objectives and policies of the Group to deliver such long-term value, providing overall strategic direction within a framework of risk appetite and controls. Our aim is to ensure that management strikes an appropriate balance between promoting long-term growth and delivering short-term objectives. We endeavour to demonstrate ethical leadership and promote the Company’s collective vision of the Company’s purpose, values, culture and behaviours. Each of the Directors must act in a way we consider, in good faith, would promote the success of the company for the benefit of the shareholders as a whole.

The Board is also responsible for ensuring that management maintain a system of internal control which provides assurance of effective and efficient operations, internal financial controls and compliance with law and regulation. In addition, the Board is responsible for ensuring that management maintain an effective risk management and oversight process at the highest level across the Group. In carrying out these responsibilities, the Board must have regard to what is appropriate for

the Group’s business and reputation, the materiality of the financial and other risks inherent in the business and the relative costs and benefits of implementing specific controls.

The Board is also the decision-making body for all other matters of such importance as to be of significance to the Group as a whole because of their strategic, financial or reputational implications or consequences.

Specific key decisions and matters have been reserved for approval by the Board. These include decisions on the Group’s strategy, approval of risk appetite, capital and liquidity matters, major acquisitions, mergers or disposals, Board membership, financial results and governance issues, including the approval of the corporate governance framework. A schedule of matters specifically reserved to the Board can be found on Barclays’ website, Barclays.com.

We have set out the names of the Directors and their full biographical details, including the skills and experience they each bring to the Board, on pages 83 to 85. An explanation of the main roles on the Board is set out on page 55.

 

 

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Board Allocation of Time (%)

 

 

 
         2013      2012  

LOGO

 

 

1  Strategy Formulation and Implementation Monitoring

     41         39   
 

2  Finance (incl. capital and liquidity)

     22         12   
 

3  Governance & Risk (incl. regulatory issues)

     35         40   
 

4  Other (incl. compensation)

     3         9   
       

 

 
 

 

LOGO

  

 

All of our corporate governance practices have been bought together in one document, ‘Corporate Governance in Barclays’, which is available online at barclays.com/corporategovernance

 

 
 

 

Board attendance

 

 

Independent

 

 

 

Scheduled meetings
eligible to attend

 

 

 

Scheduled meetings
attended

 

 

 

Additional meetings
eligible to attend

 

 

 

Additional meetings  
attended

 

 

Sir David Walker, Group Chairman

  On appointment   LOGO     LOGO     LOGO     LOGO  

 

Executive Directors

         

 

Antony Jenkins

  Executive Director   LOGO     LOGO     LOGO     LOGO  

 

Chris Lucas (to 16 August 2013)*

  Executive Director   LOGO     LOGO     LOGO     LOGO  

 

Tushar Morzaria (from 15 October 2013)

  Executive Director   LOGO     LOGO      

 

Non-executive Directors

         

 

Mike Ashley (from 18 September 2013)

  Independent   LOGO     LOGO      

 

David Booth

  Independent   LOGO     LOGO     LOGO     LOGO  

 

Tim Breedon*

  Independent   LOGO     LOGO     LOGO     LOGO  

 

Fulvio Conti

  Independent   LOGO     LOGO     LOGO     LOGO  

 

Simon Fraser

  Independent   LOGO     LOGO     LOGO     LOGO  

 

Reuben Jeffery

  Independent   LOGO     LOGO     LOGO     LOGO  

 

Sir Andrew Likierman (to 25 April 2013)*

  Independent   LOGO     LOGO     LOGO     LOGO  

 

Wendy Lucas-Bull (from 19 September 2013)

  Non-Independent   LOGO     LOGO      

 

Dambisa Moyo *†

  Independent   LOGO     LOGO     LOGO     LOGO  

 

Frits van Paasschen (from 1 August 2013)

  Independent   LOGO     LOGO     LOGO     LOGO  

 

Sir Michael Rake*

  Independent   LOGO     LOGO     LOGO     LOGO  

 

Diane de Saint Victor (from 1 March 2013)

  Independent   LOGO     LOGO     LOGO     LOGO  

 

Sir John Sunderland*

  Independent   LOGO     LOGO     LOGO     LOGO  

 

Lawrence Dickinson, Secretary

       

 

LOGO Scheduled meetings     LOGO Additional Meetings

* unable to attend certain additional meetings held at short notice owing to prior business commitments

† unable to attend two scheduled meetings held owing to prior business commitments

Roles on the Board

 

Role

 

 

Responsibilities

 

 

 

Chairman of the Board

 

 

¡

 

 

Leads the Board including its operation and governance

  ¡   Builds an effective Board
  ¡   Sets the Board agenda in consultation with Chief Executive and Company Secretary
  ¡   Facilitates and encourages active engagement and appropriate challenge by Directors
  ¡   Ensures effective communication with shareholders and other stakeholders and ensures members of the Board develop and maintain an understanding of the views of major investors
  ¡  

Acts as Chairman of Board Corporate Governance and Nominations, Board Conduct, Reputation and Operational Risk and Board Enterprise Wide Risk Committees. Member of Board Remuneration Committee

 

 

 

Group Chief Executive

 

 

¡

 

 

Recommends the Group’s strategy to the Board

  ¡   Implements the Group’s strategy
  ¡  

Makes and implements operational decisions and manages the business day-to-day

 

 

 

Non-executive Director

 

 

¡

 

 

Effectively and constructively challenges management and helps develop proposals on strategy

  ¡   Monitors the success of management in delivering the agreed strategy within the risk appetite and control framework set by the Board
  ¡  

Exercises appropriate oversight through scrutinising the performance of management in meeting agreed goals and objectives

 

 

 

Deputy Chairman and

 

 

¡

 

 

Provides a sounding board for the Chairman

Senior Independent

  ¡   Provides support for the Chairman in the delivery of his objectives

Director

  ¡   Serves as a trusted intermediary for the Directors, when necessary
  ¡  

Available to shareholders should the occasion arise where there is a need to convey concerns to the Board other than through the Chairman or Group Chief Executive

 

 

 

Company Secretary

 

 

¡

 

 

Works closely with the Chairman, Group Chief Executive and Board Committee Chairmen in setting the annual forward calendar of agenda items for the meetings of the Board and its Committees

  ¡  

Ensures timely and appropriate information flows within the Board, the Board Committees and between the Directors and senior management

 

 

 

LOGO
 

 

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Corporate governance report >

Board Governance Framework continued

  

 

 

 

 

How has the Board changed?

The Board went through a period of planned refreshment during 2013, with five new Directors joining and three retiring.

We announced in early 2013 that Chris Lucas, our Group Finance Director, planned to retire for health reasons and had agreed to remain in position until we found a suitable successor. Being a key executive Board position, it was vital that the search was thorough and we subsequently announced in July 2013 that Tushar Morzaria would join the Board as Group Finance Director. An interim Group Finance Director was appointed in August 2013 to cover the period after Chris Lucas’s retirement was brought forward on health grounds and prior to Tushar Morzaria’s arrival in October 2013.

The Board is made up of a majority of independent non-executive Directors and we recognise the importance of ensuring that we have an appropriate balance of skills, experience and diversity, as well as independence. The Board Corporate Governance and Nominations Committee has identified the key skills and experience required for the Board to function effectively, which are recorded on a skills matrix. This sets out the core competencies, skills and diversity that are desired for the Board, including financial services, experienced chief executives from other industries and experience of the main geographical markets in which Barclays operates, together with target weightings for each. The extent to which each of these is represented on the Board is monitored by the Board Corporate Governance and Nominations Committee on an on-going basis using the agreed skills matrix.

Using the skills matrix, and having considered likely future Board and Board Committee requirements, the Board Corporate Governance and Nominations Committee identified specific areas in which the Board would benefit from additional experience. All appointments to the Board are made on merit, taking into account skills, experience, independence and diversity, including gender. The following appointments were agreed by the Board in 2013:

 

¡   Diane de Saint Victor joined the Board as a non-executive Director with effect from 1 March 2013, bringing with her a wealth of regulatory and legal experience, particularly in the US, and geographic experience from Europe;

 

¡   Mike Ashley’s appointment to the Board as a non-executive Director was announced in April 2013. This followed a search for a financial expert to strengthen the membership of the Board Audit Committee following Sir Andrew Likierman’s retirement at the AGM in April 2013 and to provide succession for Sir Michael Rake as Chairman of that Committee. Mike Ashley is a highly experienced former auditor, with a valuable breadth of experience, including risk management and investment banking. He joined the Board on 18 September 2013 and succeeded Sir Michael Rake as Board Audit Committee Chairman with effect from 1 January 2014;

 

¡   Frits van Paasschen, who joined the Board as a non-executive Director on 1 August 2013, has extensive knowledge of the retail sector and brings a global outlook with specific geographic experience from the US, Europe and Africa. He is a serving Chief Executive Officer, contributing a valuable strategic and commercial perspective; and
¡   Wendy Lucas-Bull joined the Board as a non-executive Director on 19 September 2013, bringing valuable direct banking experience, in depth knowledge of banking in Africa and a good understanding of Conduct risk. Wendy is chairman of Barclays Africa Group, which is majority owned by Barclays. The UK Corporate Governance Code (the Code) suggests that such a business relationship should be considered when determining a non-executive Director’s independence. The Board considers that Wendy demonstrates the essential characteristics of independence expected by the Board and set out in Barclays’ Charter of Expectations, but has decided not to designate her as an independent Director for the purposes of the Code. The Board continues to be made up of a majority of independent non-executive Directors.

In early 2014, we announced the appointment of Steve Thieke as a non-executive Director. His appointment brings to the Board significant experience in financial services, across regulation, investment banking and risk management, as well as substantial board level experience in both executive and non-executive roles.

Given the number of new Directors that have joined our Board, it is vital that they are provided with an effective, tailored induction aimed at providing each of them with the information they need to know in order to become as effective as possible in the shortest time possible. Our induction programmes are therefore designed to allow the new Director to build quickly:

 

¡   An understanding of the nature of Barclays, its business and the markets in which it operates and the opportunities and challenges for each Business Division

 

¡   A link with Barclays’ people

 

¡   An understanding of the relationships with Barclays’ main stakeholders, such as customers and clients, shareholders and regulators

Our induction programmes typically comprise a series of meetings with the head of each of Barclays’ major business divisions and Group functions. This allows the new Director to meet the business and function heads with responsibility for implementing the Board’s strategy and to discuss specific matters affecting that business or function. On completion of the induction programme, the new Director should have sufficient knowledge of the opportunities and challenges facing Barclays to enable them to fully contribute to the Board’s strategic discussions and oversight of the business. The following is an example of a typical induction programme; where a Director is joining a Board Committee, either as a member or as Committee Chairman, this programme is supplemented by a specific, tailored Committee induction programme:

 

 

 

 

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Executive

 

Subject Matter

 

 

Group Chief Executive

 

 

 

 

CEO’s introduction

(strategy and key priorities)

 

 

 

 

Business Division Chief Executives

 

 

Review of:

 

 

¡

 

 

UK Retail and Business Banking businesses

  ¡   Corporate and Investment Banking businesses
  ¡   Corporate Banking business
  ¡   Barclaycard business
  ¡   Wealth and Investment Management businesses
 

¡

 

 

Europe, Middle East Retail and Business Bank business

 

 

 

 

Group Function Heads (e.g., Group General Counsel, Chief Risk Officer)

 

 

Briefings on:

 

 

¡

 

 

Legal function

  ¡   Risk function
  ¡   Operations and Technology
  ¡   Compliance and relationship with regulators
  ¡   Finance Group overview
  ¡   Internal Audit function
  ¡   Tax function
  ¡   Treasury function
  ¡   Investor Relations
  ¡   HR function
 

¡

 

 

 

Strategy and Corporate development

 

 

 

 

Senior Statutory Auditor

 

 

 

Areas of audit focus

 

 

Group Corporate Relations Director

 

 

Briefing on Citizenship and Brand and Marketing

 

 

 

Company Secretary

 

 

 

Role and responsibilities as a Director

 

 

In addition to induction on joining the Board or a Board Committee, a programme of briefings for all non-executive Directors is arranged each year in order to deepen their understanding of specific business or technical issues. During 2013, briefings were held on Barclays’ Equities, Fixed Income, Currencies and Commodities and Africa businesses, and the Board Financial Risk Committee and Board Audit Committee held a joint briefing session on Pillar 3 Reporting.

What has been the Board’s role in Transform?

The Code makes clear the principle that the Board should set the company’s strategic aims, ensure that the necessary financial and human resources are in place for the company to meet its objectives and review management performance. Our approach as a Board in support of this principle is to challenge and test proposals on strategy put forward by the Chief Executive and, following a decision by the Board on the policy or strategy to be adopted, offer full empowerment to the executive Directors to then implement that strategy, subject to continuing oversight from the Board.

Transform is our strategy for both improved financial performance and cultural change. In the fourth quarter of 2012, Barclays embarked on a strategic review, covering business performance, costs, funding and liquidity and purpose, values and behaviours, the outcomes of which were debated and endorsed by the Board in early 2013. In approving the strategy, the Board examined the results of the business portfolio review, which analysed each business both from a financial and reputational perspective, and evaluated proposals for reducing costs and risk weighted assets and for maintaining our capital, funding and liquidity positions. We also assessed proposed strategies for embedding cultural change, for changing the reward structure and for strengthening the control environment. The proposed strategy translated into a series of non-financial and financial commitments, which were announced in February 2013.

Board diversity

 

All Board appointments are made on merit, in the context of the diversity required for an effective Board, including diversity of skills, experience, background and gender. The aims set out in our Board Diversity Policy, published in April 2012, were to have 20% of the Board made up of women by the end of 2013, and for that position to have exceeded 25% by the end of 2015. Our Board Diversity Policy can be found on our website, Barclays.com.

 

The independence of non-executive Directors is reviewed on an annual basis as part of the Directors’ evaluation process, taking into account length of tenure, ability to provide objective challenge to management and any relationships that might be considered as factors when determining independence.

 

Balance of non-executive and executive Directors

 
1     2     12  

Chairman

    Executive Directors     Non-executive Directors  

 

LOGO

 

Industry/background experiencea

 

Number of directors

 

Experience

 

8

   

Financial services

 

7

   

Political/regulatory contacts

 

8

   

Current or recent Chairman/CEO

 

3

   

Accountancy/financial expert

 

3

   

International (US)

 

5

   

International (Europe)

 

3

   

International (RoW)

 

2

   

Retail/marketing

 

a Individual Directors may fall into one or more categories

 

 
 

 

LOGO
 

 

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Board Governance Framework continued

  

 

 

 

 

In terms of implementation, each element of the Transform programme is supported by specific project workstreams, led by individual senior executives. For example, the Controls workstream is headed by the Head of Compliance and the Business Portfolio Review workstream is headed by the Financial Controller. Over the course of 2013, the Board regularly scrutinised the progress being made by each workstream and tracked performance against the commitments made, to satisfy itself that implementation remained on track and that the commitments will be met.

You can read more about the progress of the Transform programme in the Strategic Report.

What has the Board done to improve governance in light of the Salz Review recommendations?

In early April 2013, the report of the Salz Review into business practices at Barclays was published. This review was commissioned by the Board in July 2012 in the immediate aftermath of the publication of the LIBOR settlements.

The Salz Review was commissioned to examine Barclays’ values, principles and standards of operation – the historical culture – and to make recommendations for change. In April 2013, the Board examined each of the 34 recommendations made by the Salz Review and committed to implementing them. We published our initial response in late April 2013. The majority of the recommendations have been aligned to the Transform programme workstreams being implemented by management, with the recommendations on Board governance forming a distinct workstream that is being implemented by the Board. In terms of Board governance, some of the main actions we have taken are:

 

¡   Implemented a new framework for the Board-level governance of risk, with the creation of the Board Enterprise Wide Risk Committee and Board Conduct, Reputation and Operational Risk Committee;

 

¡   Increased the minimum time commitment expected of Board Committee Chairmen to 25-30 days per annum on top of their minimum Director commitment of 30-36 days. The expected time commitments for Board committee members are set out in Barclays’ Charter of Expectations, which is available at Barclays.com. In practice, Directors typically commit in excess of the minimum requirements;

 

¡   Developed a programme for non-executive Directors to engage with each business; and

 

¡   Focused on improving the quality and timeliness of information presented to the Board and its Committees.

You can read more about the progress that has been made in implementing the Salz Review recommendations on pages 126 to 129.

What was the outcome of the 2013 Board Effectiveness Review and what are the Board’s priorities for 2014?

The Board Corporate Governance and Nominations Committee engaged a new external facilitator, Bvalco, for the 2013 Board Effectiveness Review. Bvalco provide independent, formal and rigorous Board review services. I explain our reasons for appointing a new facilitator in my Board Corporate Governance and Nominations Committee Chairman’s report on pages 75 and 76.

The review took the form of a short questionnaire followed by interviews with each of the Directors, members of our Executive Committee and a number of our major shareholders. The evaluation covered the effectiveness of the Board as a whole, in particular its contribution to business strategy and culture, the effectiveness of Board Committees and Board composition. Peer to peer feedback was also sought for each of the Directors. A representative from Bvalco attended our December 2013 Board and Board Financial Risk Committee meetings as an observer, in order to see first-hand the dynamics in the Boardroom and the effectiveness of the meetings. In addition, Bvalco had access to Board and Board Committee papers for 2013.

Representatives from Bvalco presented to the Board in early 2014 on the findings of the Board Effectiveness Review and the recommendations arising. From the Board’s discussion of the review’s findings, the following areas for action were agreed:

 

¡   Board priorities: we agreed that we would better articulate the Board’s 2014 priorities, as opposed to the business priorities, and reflect these in Board and Committee agendas;

 

¡   The Board’s role in culture and cultural change: we agreed that attending a Barclays Values workshop would form part of the induction programme for new non-executive Directors and that arrangements would be made for existing non-executive Directors to attend a workshop. We also agreed that we would ensure that, in addition to the regular reports to the Board Conduct, Reputation and Operational Risk Committee, the Board as a whole would be kept directly informed on the progress of implementing cultural change;

 

¡   Leveraging the Board’s experience to support the Executive Committee: we agreed we would create extra time for more wide-ranging strategic discussions between the Board and Executive Committee members;

 

¡   Greater awareness of the work of Board Committees: we agreed to give more time, on a rolling basis, to Board Committee reporting to the Board, to allow all Directors to gain a deeper understanding of the workings of each Board Committee and their forward agendas;

 

¡   Improvements to the Board appointments process: given the number of recent changes to the Board, we agreed to ensure that all Board members are kept fully informed of prospective candidates and potential appointments; and

 

¡   Director induction: we agreed to improve the on-boarding process for new Directors, including partnering new Directors, if appropriate, with longer-serving Board members.

The Chairman has discussed with individual Directors any specific training or development needs arising from the review.

A report on the actions taken in response to the findings of our 2012 Board Effectiveness Review can be found on page 60.

 

 

 

 

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Governance in action

 

Deciding to raise equity capital via a fully underwritten rights issue

A significant event for the Board in 2013 was the decision to raise equity capital via a rights issue. Once the PRA had introduced a 3% leverage ratio expectation and had requested that Barclays meet that expectation by 30 June 2014, a number of Board meetings were held over a short space of time in order to discuss a range of potential options presented by management that aimed to reduce leverage. The Board examined these options and considered their potential impact on Barclays’ business model, customers and clients, shareholders and the wider UK economy, as well as the likely views of the PRA, before deciding on a course of action.

 

The timeline below illustrates how the Board committed the time to discuss collectively this significant development; when information flowed up to the Board to enable it to evaluate the potential options for achieving the leverage ratio; how the Board came to agreement on the plan and supported management in its execution; and how the Board satisfied itself, to the best of its members’ knowledge and belief, as to the adequacy of the disclosures made by Barclays. In addition to the formal Board meetings, as Chairman I kept in close contact with Board members to ensure that they were kept informed of progress.

 

The Board was acutely aware of the importance of taking all reasonable care to ensure that the rights issue prospectus disclosed all matters that a potential purchaser of Barclays’ shares might be reasonably expected to find relevant. To support the Board, Christopher Saul of solicitors Slaughter and May, was appointed as an additional independent adviser to provide guidance on matters relating to Barclays, its business or the business environment more generally that, in his experience and having regard to capital markets practice, the Board should particularly take into account in approving the prospectus and any areas or matters in the prospectus on which the Board should particularly focus to satisfy itself as to the adequacy of disclosure. Christopher Saul held a number of meetings with various individual Directors and senior executives in advance of presenting to the Board on his assessment of the processes followed to prepare the prospectus, the issues likely to be of key interest to investors in choosing to take up their rights and how those issues were covered in the prospectus, in particular the disclosure of risk factors and dividend policy. This was in addition to the usual diligence and verification processes and advice received from the Group’s existing legal and other advisers and internal teams.

 

The rights issue was launched in mid-September 2013 and closed in early October 2013, with acceptances representing 94.63% of the new shares offered to shareholders.

 
            
 

 

 
   

June

 

  

July

 

  

August

 

  

September

 

   
 

 

 
 

 

Mid June: Board debated indications from the PRA of the capital, liquidity and leverage expectations it had of Barclays, following its assessment of major UK banks and building societies, and the initial potential options and timetable for meeting those expectations.

 

  

 

Mid July: Given subsequent discussions with the PRA, the Board examined a range of options presented by the Group Executive Committee for achieving the leverage ratio by 30 June 2014.

 

  

 

Throughout: discussions between various individual Board Directors and senior executives and Christopher Saul; opportunity for Board Directors to review iterations of the draft rights issue prospectus.

 

  

 

Early Sept: Board examined the disclosures in the draft rights issue prospectus, with the benefit of advice from Christopher Saul.

 

 
 

 

 
 

 

Mid June: Board undertook a preliminary evaluation of the range of initial potential options for achieving the expected leverage ratio, including assessing the likely impact on Barclays’ business model, customers and clients and the wider economy and possible shareholder reaction to the PRA’s expected announcement.

 

  

 

Late July: Board evaluated the components of a plan (the Leverage Plan), which included a potential rights issue. The Board approved a rights issue in principle and established and delegated authority to a Rights Issue Committee, comprising five Directors, including the Chairman, Deputy Chairman and Group Chief Executive, to give final approval and finalise the terms.

 

     

 

Mid Sept: Rights Issue Committee approved the rights issue documents.

 

 
 

 

 
 

 

20 June: PRA announcement regarding UK banks’ capital and Barclays’ initial public response to the new 3% leverage ratio expectation.

 

  

 

Late July: Rights Issue Committee approved the decision to launch a rights issue.

 

     

 

16 Sept: Rights issue launched.

 

 
 

 

 
    

 

30 July: Barclays announced its intention to raise approximately £5.8bn via a fully underwritten rights issue, as part of the Leverage Plan. The PRA announced that, based on Barclays’ projections, the Leverage Plan was a credible plan to meet the target.

 

       
 

 

 
            

 

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Board Governance Framework continued

  

 

 

 

 

A summary of the Board’s progress against the actions arising from the 2012 Board Effectiveness Review is set out below:

 

 

 

Theme

 

    

 

Action Taken

 

 

 

Enhancing the relationship between the Board and the Executive Committee following changes in both Board and Executive Committee composition in 2012

 

    

 

Given the changes in Board and Executive Committee composition, a programme has been developed for 2014 that will allow the non-executive Directors to spend more time with business CEOs and their management teams. In addition, Board meetings were held in New York and Johannesburg during 2013, which allowed the Board greater opportunity to see operations at first-hand and to meet and interact with the respective management teams.

 

 

 

Ensuring that the working relationship between the Chairman and CEO is strong in recognition of the critical importance of this relationship to the effectiveness of the Board as a whole

 

    

 

The working relationship was assessed by the Board Corporate Governance and Nominations Committee during 2013. The Deputy Chairman and Senior Independent Director, Sir Michael Rake, also monitored the relationship and sought feedback from non-executive Directors ahead of his annual review of the Chairman’s performance.

 

 

 

Ensuring that the Board has greater line of sight into the views of key stakeholders

 

    

 

Non-executive Directors, in particular, Committee Chairmen, have held meetings with representatives from our main regulators in the UK, US and South Africa. Presentations from our regulators in the UK and US were also made to Board meetings. The Chairman and Group Chief Executive regularly updated the Board on any discussions held with regulators and other key stakeholders. In particular, the Board was kept updated on stakeholder views with regard to the Leverage Plan and associated rights issue.

 

 

 

Rebuilding trust with stakeholders with regard to Barclays’ remuneration policy, particularly in light of voting at the 2012 AGM

 

    

 

An extensive programme of stakeholder engagement on remuneration matters took place in 2013 and has continued into early 2014, including on the Group’s response to the remuneration aspects of CRD IV.

 

 

 

Ensuring that an appropriate balance of skills, experience and diversity on the Board is maintained

 

    

 

A number of changes were made to the Board during 2013, with the appointment of new non-executive Directors. These are described fully elsewhere in this report.

 

 

 

Further improving the quality of information flows to the Board to achieve an appropriate balance between data and analysis

 

    

 

Changes have been made to the form and content of material presented to the Board and Board Committees to ensure that the material focuses on key issues. Greater use has been made of the Board’s electronic portal to provide any detailed supporting data. Feedback has been sought from Board members on the form and content of specific papers so that any further improvements could be made.

 

 

 

Enhancing succession planning for key Board positions, in particular, continuing to ensure that the Board builds its knowledge and understanding of the depth of talent in the business

 

    

 

Succession planning for the Chairmen of the principal Board Committees has been an area of focus in 2013, with new Chairmen appointed to the Board Audit Committee and Board Financial Risk Committee. The Board Corporate Governance and Nominations Committee has focused on talent management, as described later in this report. To help the Board build its awareness of the depth of talent in the business a series of talent receptions were also held in London, New York and Johannesburg.

 

 

 

How does the Board satisfy itself that it understands the views of stakeholders?

The Board recognises that what Barclays achieves is only made possible by effective relationships with investors, customers and clients, employees and regulators. We are eager to ensure that we understand their views and concerns and also that we are able to effectively communicate our strategy, enabling us to come to a mutual understanding of respective objectives. Below are some examples of how we have sought to do that with our key stakeholder groups during 2013.

In order to promote effective and open communication with shareholders, we have published shareholder communication guidelines on our website, which can be accessed at Barclays.com/investorrelations.

Our Investors (both private and institutional)

Private Shareholders

We have a large number of private shareholders and are constantly striving to improve the service we provide. During 2013 we worked to deliver our 2013 Private Shareholder Relations strategy, with the objective of making shareholders’ lives easier where possible. All our shareholder documents are in Plain English and we aim to ensure that they are easy to understand and engaging. There is also a wide range of information for shareholders available on our website, Barclays.com.

We maintain a dedicated Barclays Shareholder Helpline so that shareholders can easily contact our Registrar if they have a question about their shareholding. In order to ensure that our Registrar provides the highest quality of service to our shareholders, we monitor their performance at a monthly review meeting using service reports.

 

 

 

 

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Throughout 2013, we continued to actively encourage shareholders to sign up to Barclays e-view, which is an online portal that allows shareholders to manage their shareholding. We believe that communicating electronically with our shareholders ensures that they receive regular, up to date information directly to their inbox. We send emails to all Barclays e-view members each time we publish our results and provide details about the dividend, including links to Barclays.com where they can find more information. Barclays e-view members can instantly update their personal and bank details online. They can also view their share sales or purchases, vote online and download their electronic dividend tax voucher(s).

Ahead of the 2013 AGM we updated and amended our Shareholder Voting Instruction Card, which is sent to shareholders who request notification that our Annual Report and Notice of Meeting is available online, to include an attendance card. This enabled those shareholders who received the card and who also wished to attend the AGM to quickly and efficiently register on the day itself. This improved our shareholder registration process and was positively received by shareholders.

We are aware that some shareholders do not keep their personal details on the Barclays share register up-to-date. Starting in 2012, we conducted a tracing exercise to reunite over 24,000 Barclays Sharestore members, identified by our Registrar as having lost contact with us, with their shares and unclaimed dividends. I am pleased to confirm that at the end of March 2013, we had returned over £2m in dividends to shareholders. We plan to run an exercise on the ordinary share register during 2014 where we hope to trace 10,000 shareholders with over £5m in unclaimed dividends.

I would also like to take this opportunity to thank our shareholders for helping us to make two donations to charity in 2013. We donated over £40,000 to ABF The Soldiers’ Charity and over £89,000 to UNICEF. We ensured that we notified shareholders about these successes in our September and December 2013 dividend mailings. You can find out more about these donations in the Shareholder Information section in the Annual Report.

AGM

The AGM is a unique opportunity to engage with our shareholder population as a whole, particularly our private shareholders, and we are committed to making constructive use of it to meet with you, hear your views and answer your questions. I was available at the AGM, held on Thursday 25 April 2013, to answer your questions, as were the Chairmen of our Board Committees. I very much enjoy speaking to you more informally before and after the meeting, and I hope that those of you I was able to speak with at our 2013 AGM also found it interesting and informative.

In accordance with best practice, all resolutions at the 2013 AGM were considered on a poll, which was conducted by the Registrar and monitored by an independent scrutineer. The results, along with proxy votes lodged prior to the meeting, were made available on our website on the same day. The votes cast at the meeting represented 61-68% of all the shares in issue and all resolutions were approved.

The 2014 AGM will be held on Thursday 24 April 2014 at the Royal Festival Hall in London. The Notice of AGM can be found in a separate document, which is sent out at least 20 working days before the meeting. The Notice of AGM and the accompanying circular, which sets out a clear explanation of each resolution to be proposed at the meeting, can also be found at Barclays.com/agm. The resolutions will again be considered on a poll and the results will be announced via the Regulatory News Service and made available on our website on the same day. Shareholders unable to attend are encouraged to vote in advance of the meeting via Barclays.com/investorrelations/vote. They may also submit questions to the Board by writing to Shareholder Relations at 1 Churchill Place, London E14 5HP.

Institutional Investors

I met regularly in 2013 with our larger shareholders to hear their views on corporate governance matters, including remuneration, Board composition and specific AGM resolutions. Sir John Sunderland, Chairman of the Board Remuneration Committee, and Lawrence Dickinson, Company Secretary, also met regularly with larger shareholders and investor bodies to discuss remuneration matters. Feedback from these meetings was provided to the Board and appropriate Board Committees.

The Board was kept regularly updated on investors’ views. Copies of analyst reports on Barclays were made available to the Board on a regular basis and Directors were invited to attend results conference calls and investor presentations. A weekly communication from the Group Chief Executive to the Board included an update on investor sentiment and share price performance. In addition, as part of strategy discussions during 2013, the Board was briefed by an external adviser on how Barclays is viewed by institutional shareholders as an investment proposition.

Barclays Investor Relations is dedicated to managing relationships with institutional equity and debt investors. During 2013 approximately half of our shareholder engagement involved executive management including the Group Chief Executive, Group Finance Director or other senior divisional management from across the Group. We also enhanced the way in which we engaged with these stakeholders in the following ways:

 

¡   Established a New York based Investor Relations team to promote more regular communication with North American investors;

 

¡   Expanded our programme of debt investor meetings and established a fixed income results conference call for debt investors and analysts at our full year and interim results; and

 

¡   Increased the frequency of our dialogue with our shareholders through a global engagement programme of over 800 meetings across equity and debt investors.

Other stakeholders

Our main regulators in the UK and US interact on a regular basis with me and with the Group Chief Executive, Group Finance Director and the Chairmen of the principal Board Committees. This provides us with a first-hand view of regulatory matters. During 2013, more than 30 meetings involving me and individual non-executive Directors were held with representatives of our UK and US regulators, including 13 meetings that I attended. Any significant matters discussed in those meetings were reported to the Board or Board Committees as appropriate.

During 2013, the Board was updated on customer and client metrics, including Net Promoter Scores®, customer satisfaction rankings and complaint levels. The Group Chief Executive also reported regularly to the Board on meetings held with customers and clients.

Ensuring employees are well-informed, feel connected and understand our culture and objectives is vital if we are to deliver long-term value for our customers and clients. We build trust and seek feedback through regular two-way communications, both informally, through events such as internal forums and jams and formally, through our Employee Opinion Surveys. The outputs from these events and the results of Employee Opinion Surveys are reported to the Board by the Chief Executive. This helps us understand our colleagues’ views and concerns when shaping future organisational direction.

 

 

 

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Board Audit Committee

  

 

 

   

 

LOGO

 

The Committee’s terms of reference are available at

Barclays.com/corporategovernance

 

 

 

 

 

            

Board Audit Committee Report

 

‘Ultimately, our activity is designed to support our over-riding purpose, which is to protect the interests of you, our shareholders.’

 

Mike Ashley

Chairman, Board Audit Committee

 

 

 

Dear Shareholders

 

I became Chairman of the Board Audit Committee with effect from 1 January 2014, having been a member since joining the Barclays Board last September. I would like to thank my predecessor, Sir Michael Rake, for his assured leadership of the Committee since becoming Chairman in 2009.

 

The report below describes how the Committee discharged its responsibilities during the last year, setting out the significant issues examined by the Committee in terms of assessing the integrity of the Group’s financial reporting, the effectiveness of internal controls and the performance of the auditors, both internal and external. Ultimately, our activity is designed to support our over-riding purpose, which is to protect the interests of you, our shareholders. Our aim is to act with the right levels of diligence to assure ourselves that appropriate and prudent judgments have been made with regard to financial reporting, that the financial statements provide a true and fair view of the company’s financial position and that the independent scrutiny by the auditors on behalf of our owners is both objective and effective.

 

Barclays is a large and complex business that is undergoing a period of substantial change, driven internally by the Transform programme and externally by continuing developments in the regulatory environment. In 2014 our focus will be on ensuring that the effectiveness of our control environment keeps pace with this level of change; that we continue to exercise appropriate judgment on significant financial reporting matters and report in a fair, balanced and transparent way; and that our independent assurance mechanisms – internal and external audit – continue to perform effectively and efficiently to protect shareholders’ interests.

 

Mike Ashley

Chairman, Board Audit Committee

3 March 2014

   

Committee composition

Membership of the Committee and attendance at meetings in 2013 is set out below:

 

          
    

Member

 

 

 

Meetings attended/eligible

to attend

 

             
   

Sir Michael Rake (Chairman) (to 31 December 2013)

 

LOGO

          
   

Mike Ashley (from 18 September 2013) (Chairman from 1 January 2014)

 

LOGO

 

 

          
   

Tim Breedon (from 1 March 2013)*

 

LOGO

          
    Fulvio Conti   LOGO           
    Simon Fraser*   LOGO           
    Sir Andrew Likierman (to 25 April 2013)   LOGO           
    Diane de Saint Victor (from 1 December 2013)               
   

 

LOGO  Attended     LOGO  Did not attend

          
    * Unable to attend meetings owing to prior business commitments       
   

 

Board Audit Committee Allocation of Time (%)

 

    
    

 

LOGO

 

 

 

 

    1 Control Issues

    2 Financial Results

    3 Internal Audit Matters

    4 External Audit Matters

    5 Business Control Environment

    6 Other (including Governance

       and Compliance)

 

 

            2013    2012

16        13

40        31

8        14

11          6

16        14

 

8        22

          
            
            
            
            
                
     

 

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Role and responsibilities

The Committee is responsible for:

 

¡    assessing the integrity of the Group’s financial reporting and satisfying itself that any significant financial judgments made by management are sound;

 

¡     evaluating the effectiveness of the Group’s internal controls, including internal financial controls; and

 

¡     scrutinising the activities and performance of the internal and external auditors, including monitoring their independence and objectivity.

 

Committee composition

There were a number of changes to Committee composition in 2013. Tim Breedon, Mike Ashley and Diane de Saint Victor joined the Committee and Sir Andrew Likierman left the Committee on retiring from the Board. Sir Michael Rake retired from the Committee on 31 December 2013 and was succeeded as Chairman by Mike Ashley with effect from 1 January 2014. Fulvio Conti and Simon Fraser will retire from the Committee on 24 April 2014, when they retire from the Board. During 2013, Sir Michael Rake and, until his retirement, Sir Andrew Likierman, were the designated financial experts on the Committee for the purposes of the US Sarbanes-Oxley Act and have been succeeded in this by Mike Ashley, although each member of the Committee has financial and/or financial services experience. You can find more details of the experience of Committee members in their biographies on pages 83 to 85.

 

The Committee’s work

The Committee met 13 times in 2013, including a separate meeting specifically in February 2013 on PPI provisions and two additional meetings to consider restated financial statements, reflecting the introduction of new accounting standards, prior to their publication. The chart opposite shows how the Committee allocated its time during 2013. Committee meetings were attended by management, including the Group Chief Executive, Group Finance Director, Chief Internal Auditor, Chief Risk Officer and General Counsel, as well as representatives from the businesses and other functions. The lead audit partner of the external auditor attended each meeting and the Committee held regular private sessions with the Chief Internal Auditor and the lead auditor partner, which were not attended by management.

 

Significant financial statement reporting issues

With support and input from the external auditor, the Committee assessed the financial reporting processes, whether suitable accounting policies had been adopted, whether management had made appropriate estimates and judgments and whether disclosures in published financial reports were balanced and fair.

 

The integrity of the financial statements is underpinned by the control environment pertaining to the production of the financial reports. In this regard, the Committee considered the results of the Group’s Turnbull assessments, its Sarbanes-Oxley s404 internal control process and the absence of any indications of fraud relating to financial reporting matters. The Committee also satisfied itself that there were appropriate verification standards and processes by which senior management attested to the accuracy of the factual content and a process to support the representations made by the Board to the external auditors. It did this by debating the outputs from the Disclosure Committee’s review of the financial statements, including an assessment of disclosure controls and procedures, and by asking management to explain and evidence the basis on which the representations to the auditors were made. The Disclosure Committee is a management committee, chaired by the Group Finance Director, which considers the content, accuracy and tone of the disclosures, reporting its conclusions to the Group Executive Committee and the Board Audit Committee. The Committee also considered reports from the internal and external auditor relating to these aspects. In addition, the Committee discussed control issues in the IT environment, which are subject to remediation plans. Additional measures have been taken, including compensating controls, to ensure that the controls over the

  

 

systems supporting the financial reporting processes can be relied upon. The Committee was satisfied, given the results of the testing of the compensating controls, that the integrity of the financial control environment was appropriate.

 

Another major component of the financial reporting process concerns the key assumptions and estimates or judgments that inevitably have to be made. Ahead of publication of the half-year and full-year results, the Committee examined in detail the main judgments and assumptions made by management. It also considered whether, in those areas where accounting policy choices might be made, appropriate policies had been selected. The Committee focused on the following areas at the full-year, having covered similar matters at the half-year, including seeking the views of the external auditor on the judgments made:

 

¡    Customer redress provisions, in particular PPI and interest rate hedging products redress provisions, were an area of focus for the Committee in 2013 and you can read more below about the Committee’s role in evaluating and challenging the assumptions underlying the provisions for PPI redress. Full details of the provisions taken in 2013 can be found on page 332;

 

¡    Another significant area of judgment for the financial statements arises in the valuation and disclosure of financial instruments held by the Corporate and Investment Bank, in particular, derivative assets and certain Exit Quadrant portfolios. The Committee was especially interested in assets where there is a lack of an active secondary market and limited trade activity, as the lack of observability results in valuation uncertainty. Consequently, the Committee examined the internal price verification processes, whereby methodologies are benchmarked against any observable traded prices, practices adopted by peers and other relevant pricing information. In particular, owing to the lack of any secondary market and limited, if any, recent origination experience, the Committee scrutinised the valuation of the Education, Social Housing and Local Authority (ESHLA) loan portfolio, which is held at fair value based on internal assessments of credit spreads. After due challenge and debate, the Committee satisfied itself as to the governance underpinning the valuation process and that the assumptions made were appropriate. In view of the absence of recent trading and the sensitivity of the valuation to alternative plausible assumptions, the Committee fully supported the transfer of this portfolio to level 3 categorisation and the associated disclosures. Full details of financial instruments held can be found on page 304;

 

¡     The Committee scrutinised credit impairment charges on loans and advances. The main judgments arose around the timing of the recognition of any impairment and estimating the size, particularly where forbearance has been granted. The Committee examined the underlying drivers of impairment in each

     business and any post-model adjustments, including the process by which the Risk function had identified areas where adjustments needed to be made in order to satisfy itself that the credit impairment provisions were appropriate. As part of its assessment, the Committee was also briefed on impairment methodologies. Full details of credit impairment charges for 2013 can be found on page 291;

 

¡     The Committee examined the significant judgmental items in the calculation of the tax rate. The judgments covered the adequacy of tax provisions for matters that remain outstanding with the relevant tax authorities with regard to transactions from prior periods and deferred tax assets (DTA) in Spain and the US. In relation to the former, the Committee had regard to the status of negotiations with key tax authorities and assessed the drivers underlying the tax risk and the associated provisions, to satisfy itself that the coverage levels of the provisions were appropriate given the range of possible outcomes. In relation to DTA, the Committee noted that management’s business forecasts supported the recovery other than in relation to Spain. The Committee therefore agreed with management’s recommendation to write down the DTA in Spain. Full details of the tax rate and tax provision for 2013 can be found on page 294;

 

 

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Board Audit Committee continued

  

 

 

 

 

 

         

 

¡     Revisions to IAS 19 became effective from 1 January 2013, which require actuarial gains and losses arising from defined benefit pension schemes to be recognised in full. Consequently, the Committee examined the impact of IAS 19R on the Group’s balance sheet and the revised presentation in the financial statements. The Committee agreed that management’s assumptions underlying the pension valuation were appropriate;

 

¡    The Committee assessed the impact of new accounting standards on Barclays’ published financial statements. It agreed and approved restated financial statements for 2011 and 2012 reflecting the implementation of IAS19R and IFRS10 in April 2013. Prior to and in connection with the rights issue, the Committee also agreed and approved in late August 2013 the restatement of the financial statements included in Barclays’ 20F filing for 2012 to reflect the implementation, as appropriate, of IAS19 and IFRS10 and also IFRS8 and IFRS7 for 2010 in addition to 2011 and 2012. The external auditor re-signed the audit report in respect of the September 2013 restatement;

 

¡     In considering any potential impairment of goodwill, the Committee focused on management’s track record in forecasting cashflows and the appropriateness of the discount rates used. Having assessed a report on the results of impairment testing and the key assumptions adopted in the calculation of the recoverable amounts, the Committee agreed that goodwill arising from the businesses acquired in a previous period by Wealth and Investment Management should be written off; and

 

¡    The Committee debated material judgments relating to litigation provisions, reviewing the status of current cases and taking into account recent developments, including any settlements by peers of similar cases, in order to arrive at an appropriate level of provisioning, which it recommended to the Board.

 

In relation to the financial reports overall:

 

¡    The Committee evaluated whether the going concern basis of accounting was appropriate by assessing the Working Capital Report prepared by management. This report covered the liquidity position and forecast capital ratios, balance sheet and leverage position. The report incorporated known or expected regulatory changes, the impact of possible stress scenarios and details of the performance of early warning indicators. After examining the forecast, the Committee concluded that the liquidity and capital position of the Group remained appropriate and that there were no material uncertainties;

   

 

Governance in action

 

Customer redress provisions: PPI

A significant area of judgment remains the estimation of provisions to be made for Payment Protection Insurance (PPI) and Interest Rate Hedging Products (IRHP) customer redress.

 

Throughout 2013, the Committee continued to exercise scrutiny over the level of customer redress provisioning, in particular the provisions for PPI redress. Ahead of approving the half-year results, with regard to PPI redress the Committee examined a report setting out the provisions booked and utilised and the balance remaining. It assessed range-based estimates for future provision utilisation, likely future costs and potential provision increases, based on projected volumes of claims, recent trends in claims experience, uphold rates (i.e., valid claims found in favour of the customer) and the average amount of redress paid, per policy. The assessment also factored in the possible impact of proactive mailing campaigns, the expected costs of referrals to the Financial Ombudsman Service (FOS) and potential remediation costs associated with issues arising from historical redress decisions. The impact on assumptions resulted in a recommendation by management to increase the level of provisions held by £1.35bn to £3.95bn, which, having examined the underlying data and discussed the appropriateness of the increased provision with the external auditor, the Committee endorsed. The Committee also considered whether the trends in data supported the assumptions in its review of the interim management statement for the third quarter of 2013.

 

In connection with the 2013 full-year results the Committee assessed the amount of unutilised provisions against key assumptions for potential future claims experience, FOS referrals and remediation costs. It also considered the mix of claims originating directly from customers and from Claims Management Companies. Although the flow of claim volumes continues to be unpredictable, the Committee concluded, based on its examination of the available information, that no additional provision was required at the 2013 full-year. As part of its review, the Committee also considered the proposed disclosure of the forecast assumptions used in the provision calculation and details of the sensitivity analysis performed on future expected claims, in order to satisfy itself that the disclosures were open and transparent. Further reviews of PPI claims experience will be undertaken during 2014 to monitor trends and ensure that the provision remains appropriate.

 

 

¡     The Committee examined the 2013 Annual Report and Financial Statements and was specifically tasked by the Board to advise it on whether the 2013 Annual Report and Financial Statements are fair, balanced and understandable. The Committee did this by satisfying itself that there was a robust process of review and challenge at different levels within the Group to ensure balance and consistency. In doing so, the Committee examined the outputs of these processes, which included reports from the Disclosure Committee on its assessment of the content, accuracy and balance of the disclosures and of the outputs from the Group’s Legal & Technical Committee, and also had the opportunity to directly question the Chief Executive on the overall messages and tone of his review and the Annual Report. The Committee also considered other information regarding the Group’s performance presented to the Board during the period. After challenge and debate and consideration of all relevant information, the Committee concluded that it could recommend to the Board that the 2013 Annual Report and Financial Statements are fair, balanced and understandable; and

 

¡    The Committee evaluated the judgments made regarding adjusting items as presented in the performance highlights section of the interim and full-year results announcements and in the Annual Report. These were items that were significant or one-off in nature and included the own credit gain and provisions for customer redress. The Committee also considered the impact of the costs to achieve Transform.

   
         

 

 

 

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Internal control

The Committee is responsible for examining the effectiveness of the Group’s internal controls. In 2013, the Committee’s main activities in discharging that responsibility were as follows:

 

¡     Discussed, on a regular basis, any control issues of Group-level significance and the progress of the remediation plans in place to address them. A particular area of focus for the Committee in 2013 was the pace of delivery of remediation plans and how realistic and achievable the timetables and milestones are given the number of change programmes in place across the Group under the Transform programme. The Committee was particularly concerned where remediation plans are dependent on technology enhancements, as the complexity of the IT infrastructure and demands on technology resources can lead to delays in implementation. The Committee emphasised to management the need for remediation programmes to be adequately resourced, with consistent leadership, and to be focused on implementing robust, automated solutions to strengthen preventative controls, rather than just short-term manual tactical fixes. The Committee has urged management to ensure that scarce resources are prioritised appropriately and will be monitoring this aspect closely going forward;

 

¡     Assessed reports on the control environment in Europe Retail and Business Banking, UK Retail and Business Banking, Investment Bank, Africa, Operations & Technology and Wealth, hearing directly from the heads of those businesses and functions. The Committee’s aim is to review each business area over an 18 month to 2 year cycle. In addition to understanding management’s view of any control issues, the Committee was keen to understand the pace and progress of cultural change in each business and the tone being set from the top;

 

¡     Examined a report from the Chief Internal Auditor on the Internal Audit function’s assessment of Barclays’ business continuity plans. The Committee was satisfied with the progress made to achieve a minimum capability and reviewed management’s plans to reduce further the risk exposure. It encouraged management to ensure that these plans were delivered in a timely fashion;

 

¡    Evaluated the progress being made on remediation activity relating to LIBOR, which included an external review as required by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission’s Order. The Committee also examined the progress of work to improve the controls around other benchmarks and market information provided to third parties, including the introduction of independent reviews of submissions. 11 non-interest rate benchmarking processes were exited in 2013;

 

¡     Examined, on a regular basis, the progress being made to implement specific action plans first introduced in 2011 to enhance the control environment in Barclays’ US businesses. The Committee noted that progress was being made but pressed management to ensure that milestones are achieved and that the demand for IT and Finance resource is appropriately met;

 

¡     Was updated on the number and nature of any whistleblowing incidents. The intense focus on culture and values has generated an increase in the number of whistleblowing reports, all of which were investigated. The Committee noted that there was scope for improving the

     whistleblowing process; and

 

¡    Continued to assess on a regular basis the progress being made to address key regulatory compliance control issues, including client assets, know your customer and customer due diligence, anti money laundering, financial crime and fraud. The Committee’s focus was on ensuring that the governance and controls are appropriate and challenging the pace of the remediation programmes to ensure that all key milestones are met.

  

 

Further details of the Group’s system of internal control and risk management, including the main features of the internal control and risk management systems in relation to the financial reporting process, are included in the Directors’ Report on pages 80 and 81 and in the Risk Management Report on pages 377 to 422.

 

Internal audit

The Committee is responsible for monitoring the performance and effectiveness of the internal audit function. In 2013 the Committee discharged that responsibility as follows:

 

¡    Approved the Internal Audit Charter, which is attached to the Committee’s terms of reference;

 

¡    Discussed and approved changes to the Internal Audit methodology;

 

¡    Agreed the internal audit plan for 2013, including budget and resources, and assessed the plan on a regular basis, including any changes proposed to the scope of work and the level of resourcing available, satisfying itself that these remained appropriate;

 

¡     Discussed regular reports from the Chief Internal Auditor, which set out the Internal Audit function’s view of the control environment and performance against any key indicators. In particular, where the Chief Internal Auditor’s view of the control environment differed from management’s self assessment, the Committee probed for more detail in order to understand the underlying reasons for the difference and whether management’s risk and control assessments were robust. In future, in addition to an assessment of the control environment, Internal Audit’s assessment of each business will also include an assessment of management’s own identification of control issues;

 

¡    Tracked the progress of the Transform workstream on governance and controls, which was led by the Chief Internal Auditor and which aims to introduce a clearer risk management framework with greater clarity of management responsibility;

 

¡     Debated the findings of an external evaluation of the performance of the Internal Audit function, which confirmed that the Internal Audit function is effective and respected by senior management. The Chief Internal Auditor was not present for this discussion; and

 

¡    Held private sessions with the Chief Internal Auditor and the lead audit partner and latterly solely with the Chief Internal Auditor, in the absence of management, to enable the Chief Internal Auditor to raise any issues directly.

 

Assessing external audit effectiveness, appointing the auditor and safeguarding auditor objectivity and independence

The Committee is responsible for monitoring the performance, objectivity and independence of the external auditor, PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC). In 2013 the Committee’s main activities in discharging that responsibility were as follows:

 

¡     Agreed the audit plan with PwC, ensuring materiality and scope were appropriate and agreeing the particular areas of audit focus. This included ensuring that there were appropriate levels of synergy with the Internal Audit plan;

 

¡    Discussed PwC’s approach to materiality following publication of the FRC’s report in December 2013 on the guidelines used by the major audit firms and, in particular, considered the criteria which had led them to conclude on their overall materiality;

 

¡     Settled the terms of the engagement letter and approved, on behalf of the Board, the fees payable for the audit;

 

 

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¡    Held private sessions with the lead audit partner and the Chief Internal Auditor and latterly solely with the lead audit partner, in order to discuss any matters directly with the lead audit partner in the absence of management;

 

¡     Considered the Audit Quality Inspection Report on PwC for 2012/2013, issued by the FRC in May 2013 in order to be satisfied that the general quality of the audit work conducted by PwC is of a high standard and that any prior year findings have been acted upon;

 

¡    Questioned PwC on the actions it has continued to take to address matters raised in recent regulatory reviews. The Committee was reassured that appropriate steps have been taken; and

 

¡     Considered a report from PwC on the arrangements it has in place to maintain its independence and objectivity.

 

The Committee also re-evaluated the performance and effectiveness of the auditor and the external audit process. A survey of key management across the Group was conducted following the conclusion of the 2012 year-end audit. A further survey was carried out in late 2013/early 2014 and will be supplemented by a further test of stakeholder opinion (including non-executive Directors) following the conclusion of the 2013 year-end audit. These surveys are designed to establish internal perceptions of PwC’s objectivity and independence; PwC’s knowledge of the business, its risks and culture; the effectiveness of working relationships, particularly with Internal Audit; the level of insight and value added; and the levels of challenge and professional scepticism demonstrated. The results were presented to the Committee and debated without the lead audit partner present. From this and the Committee’s direct experience from its interactions with PwC, the Committee concluded that it continued to be satisfied with the performance of PwC and that PwC continues to display the necessary attributes of objectivity and independence. The results of the survey, which included feedback on individual members of the audit team, were subsequently shared with the lead audit partner so that any areas for improvement could be followed up.

   

 

External audit tender

The Committee is very mindful of investor sentiment regarding external audit firm tendering and rotation and of course the changes to the Code in 2012 recommending that the external audit is tendered at least every ten years. In addition, 2014 is likely to see new regulation in this area both from the UK Competition Commission (implementing its decision to mandate tendering at least every ten years) and the European Union (requiring audit firm rotation at least every 20 years). The Committee has therefore spent time in 2013 and the early part of 2014 discussing a potential tender for the external audit. The lead audit partner was not present during the Committee’s discussion of the options for a tender of the external audit.

 

PwC, and its predecessor firms, has been Barclays’ auditor since 1896, and it is more than ten years since the external audit was last tendered. The lead audit partner rotates every five years and Andrew Ratcliffe, the current lead audit partner, has been in post since 2010 and will rotate at the conclusion of the audit for 2014. Transitional guidance issued by the FRC, if applied to Barclays, would suggest a tender for the 2015 audit. The Competition Commission’s transitional guidance is not yet available, but is likely to mandate a tender slightly later than this. In addition the European Union’s proposed transitional rules would require Barclays to replace PwC within 6 years of the Regulation coming into force.

 

The Committee has also had regard to the complexity and scale of the Barclays external audit and is particularly conscious of the degree of change impacting the business, including the Finance function, as a result of the Transform programme and the additional strain that both an audit tender and a change of audit firm would involve. In addition, the Committee noted that both the Group Finance Director and the Committee Chairman are new in role, the latter having previously been a senior partner in one of the audit firms likely to tender.

 

Weighing up all these factors, and with the Committee Chairman having recently spoken to a number of key investors, the Committee has recommended to the Board that, depending on the final rules from the Competition Commission and the European Union, a tender of the external audit should start in 2015 or 2016 with respect to the 2017 or 2018 audit and that PwC should not be invited to tender.

 

     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
         

 

 

 

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Following all the above, and in particular the process of re-evaluation, the Committee recommended to the Board and to shareholders that PwC should be re-appointed as the Group’s auditors at the AGM on 24 April 2014.

 

To help assure the objectivity and independence of the external auditor, the Committee has in place a policy that sets out the circumstances in which the external auditor may be permitted to undertake non audit services. Allowable services are pre-approved up to £100,000, or £25,000 in the case of certain taxation services. Any proposed non-audit service that exceeds these thresholds requires specific approval from the Chairman of the Committee before the auditor can be engaged. Such proposals must be robustly justified and, if appropriate, tendered, before they are approved. During 2013, the Chairman of the Committee scrutinised all such requests for approval, particularly those that concerned taxation-related services, and two requests for approval were declined. In particular, for tax advisory services the Committee’s instruction to management is not to use the external auditor unless an exceptional case can be made for not engaging an alternative supplier.

 

The Committee assessed quarterly reports on non-audit services undertaken by the auditor in order to satisfy itself as to the types of services being provided and to which businesses and the fees incurred. While the level of non-audit services provided by PwC has fallen in recent years, the Committee made clear to management that it wished to see a further reduction in the level of non-audit fees payable to PwC and that the default position should be to use another firm. Subsequently, a communication was issued to all business Chief Financial Officers across the Group emphasising the Committee’s instructions.

 

A breakdown of the fees paid to the auditor for non-audit work during 2013 may be found in note 44 on page 368, with non-audit fees representing 28.5% of the audit fee (2012: 25.7%). Assurance activity conducted by the external auditor in connection with the rights issue in 2013 resulted in a slight increase in the level of non-audit fees year on year. Significant categories of engagement undertaken in 2013 included: attest and assurance services associated with the production of reports and comfort letters in connection with Barclays’ rights issue; quality assurance services relating to Barclays new performance management system; and tax compliance services for ongoing assignments initiated pre-January 2011 in connection with our expatriate and international assignees. In each case, the request to use the auditor for these services was sponsored by a senior executive, who was required to demonstrate to the Committee a robust and thorough value case for using the auditor, including an explanation of any tender process conducted, any alternative providers considered and the criteria on which the decision to award the service to the auditor was made, including the specific skills and experience to be provided by the auditor. In addition, in each case the relevant audit partner was required to attest that provision of the services had been approved in accordance with the auditors’ own internal ethical standards and that the auditors’ objectivity and independence would not be compromised.

 

Further details of the non-audit services that are prohibited and allowed under the policy can be found in the corporate governance section of Barclays’ website, Barclays.com. 2014 is likely to see new regulation on non-audit services from the European Union, introducing certain restrictions around the provision of non-audit services by the auditor and a 70% non-audit services fee cap. The Committee will review the policy to take into account any new requirements that are introduced and will implement a limit for non-audit services of £250,000 over and above which the Committee will be required to approve such requests.

 

        

 

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Board Enterprise Wide Risk Committee

  

 

 

 

 

   

 

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The Committee’s terms of reference are available at

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Board Enterprise Wide Risk Committee Report

 

‘We established the Committee at the end of January 2013 as part of an enhanced Board-level framework for the governance of risk.’

 

Sir David Walker

Chairman, Board Enterprise Wide Risk Committee

 

 

 

This is the first report of the new Board Enterprise Wide Risk Committee, which we established at the end of January 2013 as part of an enhanced Board-level framework for the governance of risk. I describe below the Committee’s role and responsibilities, its composition and how we discharged our responsibilities in 2013.

 

Role and responsibilities

The Committee is responsible for:

 

¡   Recommending to the Board the Group’s overall risk appetite;

 

¡   Reviewing the aggregated risk profile for the Group and performance against risk appetite;

 

¡   Identifying the potential impact of key issues and themes that may impact the enterprise wide risk profile of the Group and ensuring that the Group’s overall risk profile and risk appetite remain appropriate; and

 

¡  Seeking to identify and assess future potential risks which, by virtue of their unfamiliarity, uncertainty and deemed low probability, may not have been factored adequately into review by other Board Committees.

 

The Committee was established on 31 January 2013 and membership comprises the Chairman, Deputy Chairman and the Chairmen of each of the principal Board Committees. David Booth retired from the Committee on 31 December 2013 on retiring from the Board. Mike Ashley (Chairman, Board Audit Committee) and Tim Breedon (Chairman, Board Financial Risk Committee) joined the Committee with effect from 1 January 2014.

   

Committee composition

Membership of the Committee and attendance at meetings in 2013 is set out below:

 

      
    

Member

 

 

Meetings attended/eligible
to attend

 

           
   

Sir David Walker

  LOGO             
   

David Booth (to 31 December 2013)

  LOGO             
   

Sir Michael Rake*

  LOGO             
   

Sir John Sunderland

  LOGO             
   

LOGO Attended      LOGO Did not attend

* unable to attend 1 meeting owing to a prior business commitment

 

Board Enterprise Wide Risk Commitee Allocation of Time (%)

 

  
    

 

LOGO     

 

 

 

 

1 Risk Profile/Risk Appetite

2 Key Risk Issues

3 Internal Control/Risk Policies

4 Other

 

 

 

2013

61

16

10

13

            
            
            
            
                  
        

 

 

 

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The Committee’s work

The Committee met twice in 2013, as planned, with meetings timed to take place around the half and full-year periods. The chart opposite shows how the Committee allocated its time during 2013. Committee meetings were attended by management, including the Group Chief Executive, Group Finance Director, Chief Internal Auditor, Chief Risk Officer, General Counsel and the then Head of Compliance, Government and Regulatory Relations.

 

In 2013 the Committee’s main activities in discharging its responsibilities were as follows:

 

¡   Identified and prioritised key enterprise-wide risk themes, which resonate across the business and may impact Barclays’ overall risk profile. They can be seen across the activities of the principal Board Committees, described in their reports. They are:

 

     

 

¡   Debated the risks and opportunities arising from the changing external environment, particularly the political environment, how this might impact the business in future and how Barclays might position itself;

 

¡  Debated ways in which risks that might lie ahead can be identified, by implementing a radar system to scan the horizon for issues, estimate the impact and probability and discuss possible mitigation. The Committee’s discussion focused on establishing ways of achieving line of sight into ‘unknown unknowns’ and ensuring that alternative perspectives are taken into account when assessing potential future risks;

 

¡   Assessed and recommended to the Board the Group’s overall risk appetite for 2014, encompassing financial risk (credit, market and funding), operational risk and conduct and reputation risk, taking a holistic view of the Group’s risk profile and how the different risk types interact;

 

¡   Evaluated and approved Barclays’ Enterprise Risk Management Framework, which replaced the Principal Risks Policy and is one of the key outputs from the Transform programme workstream examining the risk and control framework; and

 

¡  Examined the split of responsibilities across each of the principal Board Committees to satisfy itself that there is no underlap and that any overlap is being managed effectively. This included agreeing high-level principles for the allocation of responsibilities across the Board Audit Committee, Board Conduct, Reputation and Operational Risk Committee and Board Financial Risk Committee, which will inform each Committee’s agenda for 2014.

 

Sir David Walker

Chairman, Board Enterprise Wide Risk Committee

3 March 2014

 

   

  Theme

 

 

Significance

 

     

 

   

 

  Europe

 

 

The possibility of a Eurozone crisis remained during 2013, as the weak growth outlook continued to raise concerns about sovereign creditworthiness in some countries.

 

   
     
     
     
     

 

   

 

  Political Instability

 

 

The possibility that Barclays’ risk profile could be adversely impacted by deterioration of political stability in one or a number of countries in any of its main business geographies.

 

   
     
     
     
     

 

   

 

  Quantitative Easing

 

 

The possibility of a slowing of monetary stimulus by one or more governments has increased the uncertainty of near term economic performance across our main business areas.

 

   
     
     
     
     

 

   

 

  Leverage/Regulatory

  Rules

 

 

Risk of failing to meet the PRA’s expectations in relation to the Leverage Ratio by June 2014. While CRD IV has been issued, risks remain in respect of both its implementation and the additional requirements applied to each country.

 

   
     
     
     
     
     
     

 

   

 

  Internal Controls

 

 

The Transform programme is driving a period of significant strategic and organisational change, which in the short term, during implementation, may heighten operational risk exposure.

 

   
 
 

 

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Board Financial Risk Committee

  

 

 

 

 

   

 

LOGO

 

 

 

 

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Board Financial Risk Committee Report

 

‘Changes to regulatory requirements for capital and liquidity, in order to ensure the safety and soundness of financial institutions and their ability to withstand systemic shocks, continue apace.’

 

Tim Breedon

Chairman, Board Financial Risk Committee

 

 

 

Dear Shareholders

 

I succeeded David Booth as Chairman of the Committee on 1 January 2014, having been a member of the Committee since late 2012. I would like to thank David on behalf of the Committee for his significant contribution, both as a member of the Committee and latterly as Chairman.

 

The report that follows describes how the Committee discharged its responsibilities during 2013 and provides an insight into the material issues it considered. 2013 saw the Committee refocus on financial risk – credit, market and funding risk – as scrutiny of operational risk moved within the remit of the Board Conduct, Reputation and Operational Risk Committee. This has enabled the Committee to dig deeper into some of the key financial risk issues facing Barclays, for example, redenomination risk, tax risk and pension risk, and to provide additional scrutiny around risk governance and limit frameworks. You can read more about the Committee’s role in the management of redenomination risk below, in the ‘Governance in Action’ section. The Committee also continued to play a part in examining Barclays’ financial risk profile and in determining the scenarios to be used in Barclays’ stress testing exercises and evaluating the outcomes and the potential impact.

 

Changes to regulatory requirements for capital and liquidity, in order to ensure the safety and soundness of financial institutions and their ability to withstand systemic shocks, continue apace. 2014 will see implementation of CRD IV, the text of which was finalised in 2013, although the precise details of its implementation in the UK are still to be agreed. We also expect to see a continuation of weak economic conditions in some of our main markets and our focus will be on ensuring that we continue to identify potential financial risks and have in place a range of appropriate mitigating actions.

 

Tim Breedon

Chairman, Board Financial Risk Committee

3 March 2014

   

Committee composition

Membership of the Committee and attendance at meetings in 2013 is set out below:

 

      
    

Member

 

 

Meetings attended/eligible
to attend

 

           
    David Booth (Chairman) (to 31 December 2013)   LOGO             
    Mike Ashley (from 18 September 2013)   LOGO             
    Tim Breedon (Chairman from 1 January 2014)   LOGO             
    Reuben Jeffery   LOGO             
    Sir Andrew Likierman (to 25 April 2013)   LOGO             
    Dambisa Moyo*  

LOGO

            
    Sir Michael Rake  

LOGO

            
   

LOGO Attended      LOGO Did not attend

* unable to attend 1 meeting owing to a prior business commitment

 

Board Financial Risk Committee Allocation of Time (%)

 

    

 

 

LOGO     

 

      

 

2013

 

   

 

2012

 

        
   

1 Risk Profile/Risk Appetite (including capital and liquidity management)

    48        61        
    2 Key Risk Issues     22        18        
   

3 Internal Control/Risk Policies

    12        6        
    4 Regulatory Frameworks     4        5        
   

 

5 Other (including remuneration and governance issues)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

15

 

 

 

  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

10

 

 

 

  

 

    
     

 

 

 

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Role and responsibilities

The Committee’s responsibilities include:

 

¡  Recommending to the Board Enterprise Wide Risk Committee and the Board the total level of financial risk the Group is prepared to take (risk appetite) to achieve the creation of long-term shareholder value;

 

¡   Monitoring financial risk appetite, including setting limits for individual types of financial risk, e.g. credit, market and funding risk;

 

¡   Monitoring the Group’s financial risk profile;

 

¡   Ensuring that financial risk is taken into account during the due diligence phase of any strategic transaction; and

 

¡   Providing input from a financial risk perspective into the deliberations of the Board Remuneration Committee.

 

Committee composition

Mike Ashley joined the Committee in September 2013 and Sir Andrew Likierman left the Committee in April 2013 on retiring from the Board. David Booth retired from the Committee on 31 December 2013 on retiring from the Board, and was succeeded as Chairman by Tim Breedon with effect from 1 January 2014. Steve Thieke joined the Committee in early 2014 on his appointment to the Board. Details of the skills and experience of the Committee members can be found in their biographies on pages 83 to 85.

 

The Committee’s work

The Committee met six times in 2013. The chart on the previous page shows how the Committee allocated its time during 2013. Committee meetings were attended by management, including the Group Chief Executive, Group Finance Director, Chief Internal Auditor, Chief Risk Officer, Barclays Treasurer and General Counsel, as well as representatives from the businesses. The lead audit partner from the external auditor also attended each meeting. During the year the Committee held one of its meetings in New York and another in Johannesburg. In addition to the formal Committee meetings, the Committee held a briefing session on Pillar 3 reporting.

 

In discharging its responsibilities during 2013, the Committee:

 

Risk Appetite

¡   Examined the proposed financial risk appetite for 2014 before recommending it to the Board Enterprise Wide Risk Committee for approval. Taking a 1 in 7 scenario and a 1 in 25 scenario, the Committee assessed the performance of agreed financial volatility parameters in those scenarios to establish any potential constraints. The financial volatility parameters are largely unchanged from 2013, although they have been updated to include the Common Equity Tier 1 ratio and leverage ratio in light of regulatory requirements. The Committee concluded that the proposed financial risk appetite affords some headroom should any additional conduct risk issues crystallise in 2014;

 

 

 

 

 

  

 

Risk Profile

¡   Debated the quarterly Financial Risk Profile Report, which provided an update on credit, market, funding and liquidity risk in each of Barclays’ main businesses, in order to satisfy itself that the financial risk profile of the Group remained appropriate. The Committee was especially concerned to understand the potential impact of continuing weak economic conditions in each of Barclays’ main markets, in particular, the continuing possibility of a Eurozone crisis and the potential impact of a slowdown in monetary stimulus by one or more governments on economic performance. Redenomination risk in the Eurozone was scrutinised regularly by the Committee and further details of the Committee’s activity in this area are given below;

 

¡  Approved scenarios for Barclays’ internal stress testing exercise and later evaluated the outputs. The scenario of a severe global recession was in line with the scenario operated by the PRA in its stress testing exercise. The Committee also endorsed a recommendation by management to run a sensitivity analysis on the potential impact of a disorderly cessation of quantitative easing. The stress testing exercises demonstrated that Barclays maintains acceptable leverage and capital ratios at the low points of the stress and the Committee was content with the results of the exercise;

 

¡  Regularly examined actual and forecast performance against the capital plan and capital targets, actual and forecast performance against liquidity risk appetite and the leverage ratio, via discussion of regular reports from Barclays Treasurer. In view of evolving regulatory requirements, the Committee encouraged management to develop a range of contingency options in order to ensure that the targets can continue to be met. Further details of Barclays’ capital and liquidity risk management framework can be found in the Risk Management section of the Annual Report;

 

¡  Requested a ‘deep dive’ into pension risk. The Committee evaluated the impact of volatility in the defined benefit pension scheme’s liabilities on Core Tier 1 capital, given the sensitivity to inflation and interest rates. The main potential risks arise from any increase in inflation and the Committee considered whether there were any opportunities to reduce inflation risk over the next few years and the potential cost of doing so; and

 

¡   Regularly debated tax risk during 2013, in particular, the status of discussions with key tax authorities relating to matters that remain outstanding with regard to transactions from prior periods and the implementation of new tax principles within the Group. The Committee was content with the new tax risk governance framework that has been implemented, which is aligned to Barclays’ Purpose and Values, and asked to be kept updated on the status of settlement discussions with key tax authorities on prior period transactions.

 

 

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Board Financial Risk Committee continued

 

 

 

 

Risk Management Governance and Framework

  ¡   Assessed and approved enhancements to the governance around the limits applied to Barclays’ Leveraged Finance and Capital Markets Underwriting businesses. The enhancements approved by the Committee are designed to improve controls given the scale of the business.

 

  ¡   Requested a review of models and model governance and assessed the work that has been done to meet supervisory guidance on Model Risk Management issued by the US Federal Reserve and the Office of the Comptroller of Currency. This guidance sets out expectations for achieving effective challenge, including independent validation of models, by way of critical analysis by objective, informed parties. Having assessed progress made to date, the Committee was content with the changes made to the governance and framework and the introduction of policies and standards. In 2013, 78 of the 83 most significant risk models were reviewed and validated and the Committee encouraged management to achieve full review and validation of all of the most significant risk models on an annual basis by the end of 2014.

 

  ¡   Debated the actions that are under way to implement a target operating model for the Risk function in view of greater functionalisation across the Group, in particular, the plans to implement a global shared services model, which should deliver more consistent processes and standards, improve efficiency and effectiveness, reduce costs and reinforce the independence of the risk function. The Committee endorsed the plans and requested further progress reports as implementation progresses.

Risk in Remuneration

  ¡   Assessed the input provided to the Board Remuneration Committee on the risk metrics to be used to determine financial performance and evaluated the Risk function’s view of performance, which informed remuneration decisions for 2013. Matters to be taken into consideration included performance against risk profile, impairment performance against budget and control processes and the Committee requested that certain regulatory issues and risk control issues were reflected. The Remuneration Report on pages 89 to 125 includes more detail on how risk is taken into account in remuneration decisions.

Risk Due Diligence

  ¡   Asked management to undertake a post-acquisition review of the acquisition of certain portfolios from Edcon Proprietary Limited. The portfolio, acquired in 2012, had not performed as well as the acquisition business case had forecast, although its returns at that time still exceeded the Group’s target. The Committee was keen to learn any lessons for future risk due diligence exercises, which were identified as greater consideration of execution risks and further financial analysis of potential economic and regulatory scenarios. At the Committee’s request, the outputs of the review were shared more widely with senior management across the Group.

Further details of the Group’s system of internal control and risk management are included in the Directors’ Report on pages 80 and 81 and in the Risk Management Report on pages 377 to 422.

 

 

Governance in action

 

Redenomination Risk

A significant area of focus for the Committee during 2013 was redenomination risk, in view of Barclays’ exposures in peripheral Eurozone countries. The focus of the Committee’s attention was Spain, Portugal and Italy, as Barclays’ exposures in Greece and Ireland are not considered to be material.

 

Redenomination risk in this instance arises when local assets are greater than local funding – there is a risk from the potential depreciation of locally held assets against international liabilities in the event of any disorderly exits from the Eurozone. In view of continuing concerns arising from economic and political conditions in the Eurozone, the Committee challenged management to eliminate redenomination risk as far as possible over the course of the year and requested regular updates on the actions taken and their impact.

 

Management had established a Euro Crisis Committee, chaired by the Chief Risk Officer and reporting up to the Committee, specifically tasked with managing redenomination risk. Actions taken in 2013 to close the funding gap have included seeking local Euro funding to replace Sterling denominated funding provided by the Group, via a combination of the European Central Bank’s Long-Term Refinancing Operation, funding from local central banks and raising local deposits. Further actions have included reducing available for sale sovereign bond portfolios, particularly in Spain and Portugal. Action has also been taken to dispose of local assets, with positions in Spain, Portugal and Italy reduced across all asset classes. In addition, a reverse stress testing exercise involving Eurozone break-up scenarios has been run and detailed contingency planning for any Eurozone exit has been developed and tested. The Committee supported and encouraged these actions.

 

The Committee regularly assessed the progress being made during 2013 and continues to press management to explore further options to reduce redenomination risk, in particular with respect to Italy. During 2013, the net funding mismatch continued to decrease from 11.8bn to 11.6bn in Italy and from 4.1bn to 3.0bn in Portugal. The excess of local liabilities over local assets in Spain increased from 2.3bn to 3.1bn.

 

 
 

 


 

 

 

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Corporate governance report >

Board Conduct, Reputation and Operational Risk Committee

 

 

 

 

 

LOGO

 

 

Board Conduct, Reputation and Operational Risk Committee Report

 

‘I am greatly encouraged by the additional time, focus and rigour the new Committee is bringing to these important areas of non-financial risk.’

 

Sir David Walker

Chairman, Board Conduct, Reputation and Operational Risk Committee

 

 

 

The Committee’s terms of reference are available at

Barclays.com/corporategovernance

 

 

 

 

Committee composition

Membership of the Committee and attendance at meetings in 2013 is set out below:

 

Member

 

Meetings attended/eligible        

to attend

Sir David Walker (Chairman)  

LOGO

 

Tim Breedon (from 1 February 2013)  

LOGO

 

Reuben Jeffery (from 1 April 2013)  

LOGO

 

Wendy Lucas-Bull (from 1 December 2013)  

LOGO

 

Dambisa Moyo*  

LOGO

 

Diane de Saint Victor (from 1 March 2013)  

LOGO

 

Sir John Sunderland  

LOGO

 

LOGO Attend     LOGO Did not attend

* unable to attend 1 meeting owing to a prior business commitment

Board Conduct, Reputation and Operational Risk Committee Allocation of Time (%)

 

 

 

LOGO

 

 

 

 

 

1 Citizenship

2 Reputational Issues

3 Culture

4 Conduct and Compliance

5 Operational Risk

6 Other

  

 

2013 10

10

9

39

28

5

In early 2013, the Board decided to create a new Board Conduct, Reputation and Operational Risk Committee, with a remit to cover Conduct, Reputation and Operational risk. 2013 was therefore the first full year of operation for the Committee and the report that follows describes its role and how it discharged its responsibilities over the past 12 months.

Our primary focus during 2013 was on developing Barclays’ approach to Conduct risk, where we have spent time establishing what it means for Barclays and how we will manage it in a way that ensures positive outcomes for our customers and clients. The ‘Governance in Action’ section below provides more detail on the Committee’s role in developing Barclays’ approach to Conduct risk. Another key area of focus for the Committee has been assessing the pace and strength of cultural change at Barclays and I report on this below.

I have chaired the Committee during its formative stages and am greatly encouraged by the additional time, focus and rigour the new Committee is bringing to these important areas of non-financial risk. Reuben Jeffery will take over from me as Committee Chairman with effect from 1 April 2014.

Role and responsibilities

The Committee is responsible for ensuring, on behalf of the Board, the efficiency of the processes for identification and management of Conduct risk, Reputation risk and Operational risk. It also has responsibility for oversight of the Barclays’ Citizenship Strategy, including the management of Barclays’ economic, social and environmental contribution.

The Committee reports to the Board both directly and through the Board Enterprise Wide Risk Committee.

Committee composition

I have chaired the Board Conduct, Reputation and Operational Risk Committee from the outset and I am joined by seven non-executive Directors, all of whom are considered independent for the purposes of the Code, with the exception of Wendy Lucas-Bull. Our names and attendance at meetings during 2013 are set out in the table opposite.

Given its expanded remit, it was agreed that the Committee would benefit from the additional experience provided by Tim Breedon, Reuben Jeffery, Wendy Lucas-Bull and Diane de Saint Victor, who each joined the Committee during 2013. In addition, Mike Ashley joined the Committee in early 2014.

Our Chief Risk Officer, Head of Compliance and Chief Internal Auditor are expected to attend each meeting. Our Group Chief Executive, Antony Jenkins, attended all four meetings in 2013.

The Committee’s work

The Committee met four times in 2013. The chart opposite shows how the Committee allocated its time during 2013.

 

 


 

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Corporate governance report >

Board Conduct, Reputation and Operational Risk Committee continued

 

 

 

 

 

Operational risk

¡   At each meeting we examined the Operational Risk Profile Report, which provides us with an overview of Operational risk across the Group. Barclays has for the first time put in place a statement of operational risk appetite, together with quantitative and qualitative measures for assessment. The draft statement and assessment approach were scrutinised by the Committee in June and we recommended them to the Board for approval. In December we examined and recommended the proposed 2014 Operational Risk Appetite to the Board Enterprise Wide Risk Committee and the Board.

 

¡   During 2012 the Board Risk Committee (now the Board Financial Risk Committee) had identified that Technology Risk is a key area of risk for Barclays, as it is likely to be for other banks. In March, we held our first operational risk ‘deep dive’ focused on Technology Risk. We challenged management to further reduce the number of technology risk incidents and increase the pace of remediation for control issues.

 

¡  Our scrutiny of the operational risk profile also highlighted the need for a deep dive into Cyber Risk which is the risk of attacks on Barclays, attacks on Barclays’ customers and attacks on service availability. We debated the issue at length, probing management for details of the resources and investment we are devoting to cyber risk, and what contingency we have in place should a cyber attack be successful. We asked to be kept regularly updated.

 

Implementing and monitoring cultural change

¡   Barclays is changing and a significant part of that is cultural change; our people need to live and breathe our new purpose and values in order to ensure that we achieve our ambition of becoming the ‘Go-To’ bank. The Committee has therefore assumed Board oversight responsibility for implementing and monitoring cultural change. The approach to cultural and behavioural change focuses strongly on leadership behaviour and during 2013 has been measured using a proprietary tool - ‘Transforming Barclays’, which has gained insights into the conditions for success from colleague surveys, senior leadership forums and a pan-Barclays communication event, the Barclays Jam.

 

¡  Over the year we have seen evidence of strong belief in our Purpose and Values and the results from internal surveys have been positive. For example, 97% of the senior leadership group believe that they can make decisions aligned to the Barclays Purpose and, in a Group-wide colleague survey, the score for sustainable engagement was 74%. We challenged management to ensure that an external perspective was obtained in order to ensure that customers and stakeholders agree that we are changing. We expect to see evidence of this in 2014.

 

Citizenship

¡   Our focus on Citizenship in 2013 was on the annual Citizenship Day and developing a long-term ‘2020 Citizenship Vision’. We agreed with management that we needed to emphasise our commitments to society, focusing on execution and equipping leaders across the Group to take societal impacts into account in their decision making. We pressed management to strengthen communication of strategy and what we are doing to deliver it.

 

Reputation

¡   Throughout 2013 the Committee monitored Reputational risk at Barclays, asking management to provide a more thematic view of risks to Barclays and to carry out ‘horizon scanning’ in order to identify approaching risks early, before they crystallise, giving us the opportunity to mitigate them.

   

 

Governance in action

 

Conduct risk

We spent time at the outset in defining what Conduct risk means for Barclays, how much Conduct risk we are prepared to accept and how we measure and manage it.

 

Our first step was to scrutinise management’s proposed definition of Conduct risk. We agreed that, for Barclays, Conduct risk is ‘the risk that detriment is caused to our customers, clients or counterparties or Barclays and its employees because of inappropriate judgment in the execution of our business activities’. We established our proposed tolerance, or appetite, for Conduct risk, agreeing that Barclays has no tolerance for such risk.

 

We scrutinised the proposed accountability framework, outcome statements and management information for Conduct risk and emphasised that, in addition to putting in place a sound framework, there must be focus on ensuring the right people are in place to run the businesses and that providing the right training was crucial.

 

We requested that Conduct risk reports give more consideration to forward-looking aspects and how they are shaping the thinking on the management of Conduct risk. Management will report quarterly, including key observations drawn from the management information reported by each business, and commentary from the ‘second line of defence’ on risks and actions to be taken. The reports will also draw out themes across the businesses, and any issues escalated to the management committee responsible for Conduct and Reputational risk, plus any developments in the external environment. For example, where a business has decided to exit or cease to offer a product, the focus will be on ensuring that appropriate processes are in place to identify and manage any potential Conduct risk arising from that decision. These reports will allow us to monitor Conduct risk effectively going forward and allow the Group to manage it proactively, rather than reactively.

 

The Committee examined the governance arrangements designed to bring Conduct and Reputational risk issues together, and pressed management for assurance that the structure ensured sufficient executive level accountability. After some discussion we were content to support the structure as proposed but emphasised the need for regular review to ensure it remains effective. We also emphasised that there could be greater focus on the duty of care owed to our customers and their need to understand our products.

 

We scrutinised the Group’s approach to product development in light of Conduct risk. We were assured that the new product approval process in our UK Retail Bank had been revised and, although now a good process, would be refined further.

 

Going into 2014 we are confident that we have an effectively designed Conduct risk management framework in place. From 1 January 2014 our businesses have taken responsibility for the management of Conduct risk and will report against the thresholds set out in the framework. 2014 will be a transition year as the businesses embed the new approach in decisions and processes. We will be monitoring this transition closely and will report back to you on progress in our 2014 Annual Report.

 

The Committee also assessed the process in place for authorising Directors’ conflicts of interest and concluded that they have been effective. The processes are described in ‘Corporate Governance in Barclays’ available on our website Barclays.com.

 

¡  We also examined and recommended to the Board for approval our new Group-wide Code of Conduct, ‘The Barclays Way’ which was developed following extensive stakeholder engagement.

   

 

 

Sir David Walker

Chairman, Board Conduct, Reputation and Operational Risk Committee

3 March 2014

 

   

 


 

 

 

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Corporate governance report >

Board Corporate Governance and Nominations Committee

 

 

 

 

 

LOGO

 

 

Board Corporate Governance and Nominations Committee Report

 

‘We seek to ensure that Barclays has the right people in place to achieve its goal of becoming the ‘Go-To’ bank.’

 

Sir David Walker

Chairman, Board Corporate Governance and Nominations Committee

 

 

 

The Committee’s terms of reference are available at

Barclays.com/corporategovernance

 

 

 

 

Committee composition

Membership of the Committee and attendance at meetings in 2013 is set out below:

 

Member

 

Meetings attended/eligible        

to attend

Sir David Walker (Chairman)

  LOGO

David Booth (to 31 December 2013)

  LOGO

Sir Michael Rake

  LOGO

Sir John Sunderland

  LOGO

LOGO Attended     LOGO Did not attend

Note

Mike Ashley and Tim Breedon joined the Committee with effect from 1 January 2014. Our Group Chief Executive Officer, Antony Jenkins, also attends each meeting, although he will excuse himself if the matter of succession to his role is discussed. The Chairman will excuse himself if the matter of succession to his role is discussed.

Board Corporate Governance and Nominations Committee Allocation of Time (%)

 

 

LOGO

 

 

 

1 Corporate Governance Matters

2 Board & Committee Composition

3 Succession planning and Talent

4 Board Effectiveness

5 Other

  

 

2013 22 19 43 13

4

  

 

2012 21 32 29 14

4

2013 saw the Committee focus on Board and Board Committee composition and succession planning, resulting in a number of new appointments to the Board and changes to Board Committee membership, including the appointment of new chairmen for the Board Audit Committee and Board Financial Risk Committee. We also saw significant progress towards our Board Diversity targets, achieving our 2013 target of having 20% of the Board comprised of women by 2013. More information about Board Diversity can be found on page 57 and our Board Diversity Policy is available on our website, Barclays.com.

Executive succession and talent management occupied a substantial amount of time at each of the Committee’s meetings in 2013, as we seek to ensure that Barclays has the right people in place to achieve its goal of becoming the ‘Go-To’ bank. You will learn more about the Committee’s activities in respect of talent management in the ‘Governance in Action’ section, opposite.

Role and responsibilities

The Committee is responsible for ensuring that the composition of the Board and its Committees is appropriate and enables them to function effectively. This requires us to regularly examine the skills, experience and diversity on the Board and each Committee and look ahead at any upcoming retirements. Where we identify gaps, either in the short, medium or longer term, it is our role to find a way to fill those gaps by, for example, identifying and recommending new Directors, or recommending changes in Committee membership. Succession planning for key Board positions, such as the Group Chief Executive, Senior Independent Director and Committee Chairmen, forms a part of our wider remit.

In addition to our responsibility for talent at Board level, we are responsible for the oversight of the Group’s Talent Management Programme.

We are responsible for agreeing the annual Board effectiveness review process and monitoring any actions arising. We also keep abreast of corporate governance issues and developments to ensure that Barclays’ practices remain in line with best practice.

Committee composition

As Chairman of the Board, I also Chair the Board Corporate Governance and Nominations Committee. Joining me on the Committee are the Chairmen of each of our other Board Committees and the Deputy Chairman. During 2013 there were four members in total and our names and attendance at meetings during 2013 are set out in the table opposite.

 

 


 

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Corporate governance report >

Board Corporate Governance and Nominations Committee continued

 

 

The Committee’s work

The Committee held four meetings in 2013, one of which was an additional meeting to consider Executive Committee changes. The chart opposite shows how the Committee allocated its time during 2013.

Board and Committee Composition and Succession Planning

As described on page 56, the Board went through a period of significant refreshment in 2013, with five new Directors having joined, and three having retired. This refreshment arose from a concerted focus by the Committee on Board and Committee composition, anticipating how it is likely to change, confirming its ideal size and the appropriate mix of skills, experience and diversity and concluding what changes were needed for the future. These issues were debated at each of our scheduled meetings and our conclusions reported to the next Board meeting. Actions agreed were implemented and followed up at the next meeting. For example, we agreed that a search should commence for a new non-executive Director with specific accounting expertise to provide succession options for chairing the Board Audit Committee. I ensured that the Committee was kept updated on progress and sought their views, both in formal meetings and informally. Mike Ashley was identified as a suitable candidate and was interviewed separately by me, Antony Jenkins, Chris Lucas, our then Group Finance Director, and other members of the Committee. The Committee recommended Mike Ashley’s appointment to the Board on the basis of positive feedback from all Board members who interviewed him. Mike Ashley succeeded Sir Michael Rake as Chairman of Board Audit Committee with effect from 1 January 2014.

The Committee had specific regard to the independence criteria set out in the Charter of Expectations when considering the proposal that Sir John Sunderland should remain on the Board until the 2015 AGM in order to effect an orderly handover to a new Board Remuneration Committee Chairman.

Executive search firms, MWM Consulting and Egon Zehnder International, were instructed to assist with our Director searches in 2013. Neither external agency has any other connection with Barclays other than to provide executive recruitment services. Open advertising was not used in 2013 for Barclays non-executive Board positions, as we believe that targeted recruitment, based on the agreed role and person specification, is the optimal way of recruiting for these positions.

Board effectiveness

The Committee considered the process for the 2013 Board Effectiveness Review early in the year. We have had our Board Effectiveness Review externally facilitated each year since 2004 and we debated whether we should continue with external facilitation, or arrange an internally facilitated evaluation. We decided that we would like to remain at the forefront of best practice and agreed to continue with external facilitation. We also agreed to choose a new facilitator in order to refresh the process and to allay any residual concerns there may be around potential conflicts given our previous facilitator’s executive recruitment business. After discussions with a number of external service providers it was agreed to appoint Bvalco as the external facilitator. Bvalco has no other connection with Barclays other than to provide Board evaluation services.

We also monitored progress against the actions arising from the 2012 Board Effectiveness Review. I provide an update on this, and the outcomes of the 2013 Board Effectiveness Review on page 58.

Corporate governance

We examined our proposed corporate governance disclosures in the 2012 Annual Report and debated whether it appropriately addressed the issues given the LIBOR settlement in 2012 and subsequent events. Our focus was on ensuring that our reporting was as transparent as possible.

We also discussed feedback that had been received from various institutional investors and investor bodies on remuneration issues and matters to be voted on at the 2013 Annual General Meeting.

The Committee also assessed the processes in place for authorising Directors’ conflicts of interest and concluded that they had been effective. The processes are described in ‘Corporate Governance in Barclays’ available on our website, Barclays.com.

Sir David Walker

Chairman, Board Corporate Governance and Nominations Committee

3 March 2014

 

 

 Governance in action

 

Talent management

We recognise that our people are our biggest asset and that we have a responsibility to our stakeholders, including our shareholders, customers and our people themselves, to ensure that we recruit the best, effectively manage their potential and that there are succession plans in place for key leadership positions. It is therefore crucial that there is Board level oversight of talent management.

 

We requested updates on talent management at each of our scheduled meetings in 2013 so that we could scrutinise the new multi-year talent strategy, which forms part of the Transform programme, and satisfy ourselves that it was fit for purpose.

 

We confirmed that the strategy, which is aimed at ensuring that Barclays has the right leadership now and for the future, is appropriate and challenged management to make significant progress on each of the identified initiatives.

 

Our discussions covered recruitment and talent management at all levels including our ‘early career’ recruitment programmes (our graduate recruitment and our apprenticeships programme), ensuring the mobility and diversity of high potential employees, including high potential women, and developing senior leaders.

 

Having challenged management to achieve a 50% female graduate intake in the Investment Bank, a traditionally male-dominated business area, management provided an update on the actions being taken to widen the pool from which graduates are recruited and to address perceptions of careers in financial services. These include sponsorship of female university sports teams and societies, partnerships with organisations involved in creating opportunities for graduates and introducing a diversity objective to senior leaders’ objectives.

 

The Committee supported proposals to include a diversity metric in our new Balanced Scorecard and to encourage cross-business and cross-function moves. Internal mobility is being encouraged across the Group for all high potential employees, particularly for high-potential women, in order to ensure that career options are not confined to a particular business or function.

 

Both management and the Committee recognise that increasing diversity and developing talent are long-term objectives and we will continue to scrutinise progress closely in 2014.

 

 

 

 

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Compliance Statements

 

 

 

 

Compliance Statements

UK Corporate Governance Code

As Barclays is listed on the London Stock Exchange, we comply with the Code, which is publicly available at www.frc.org.uk. For the year ended 31 December 2013, we complied with the relevant provisions set out in the Code and applied the principles of the Code as described in this report, except as disclosed below:

 

¡   Provision C.3.7 of the Code requires that the external audit contract is put out to tender at least every ten years. This is a new provision of the Code that applies for financial years beginning on or after 1 October 2012 and one which the Chairman of the Board Audit Committee discussed with some of our major shareholders in early 2014. Barclays’ external audit contract has not been re-tendered at any time in the past ten years. In view of potential new regulation that is likely from both the Competition Commission and European Union, Barclays is currently planning to tender its external audit in 2015 or 2016. The Board Audit Committee Report on page 62 provides further details.

 

¡   Provision E.2.3 of the Code requires that the Chairman should arrange for all Directors to attend the AGM. While such arrangements were made, Reuben Jeffery and Diane de Saint Victor were unable to attend the 2013 AGM owing to prior commitments. The Chairman and all Board Committee Chairmen attended and were available to answer questions.

Disclosure and Transparency Rules

Certain additional information that is required to be disclosed pursuant to DTR7.2.5 and DTR7.2.6 may be found in the Directors’ Report on pages 78 to 82.

New York Stock Exchange (NYSE)

NYSE rules permit Barclays to follow UK corporate governance practices instead of those applied in the US, provided that any significant variations are explained. This explanation is contained in Barclays’ 20-F filing, which can be accessed from the Securities and Exchange Commission’s (SEC) EDGAR database or via our website, Barclays.com.

Sir David Walker

Chairman

3 March 2014

 

 

 

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Directors’ report

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The Directors present their report together with the audited accounts for the year ended 31 December 2013.

 

Other information that is relevant to the Directors’ Report, and which is incorporated by reference into this report, can be located as follows:

     Page  

Corporate governance report

   52-77  

Employee involvement

   86-88  

Policy concerning the employment of disabled persons

   87  

Remuneration policy, including details of the remuneration of each Director and Directors’ interests in shares or in derivatives or other financial instruments relating to such shares

   89-125  

Risk review

   131-236  

Financial instruments

   298-322  

The subsidiary and associated undertakings which principally affect the profits or net assets of the Group in the year

   356-357  

Rights and obligations attaching to shares

   424-427  

Restrictions on the transfer of securities

   424-427  

Restrictions on voting rights

 

 

   424-427  

Section 414A of the Companies Act 2006 requires the Directors to present a Strategic Report in the Annual Report and Accounts. The information can be found on pages 02 to 50.

The Company has chosen, in accordance with section 414 C(ii) of the Companies Act 2006, and as noted in this Directors’ report, to include certain matters in its Strategic Report that would otherwise be required to be disclosed in this Directors’ report.

An indication of likely future developments is given in the Strategic Report.

Profit and dividends

The adjusted profit for the financial year, after taxation, was £3,152m (2012: £5,440m). Statutory profit after tax for 2013 was £1,297m (2012: £181m). The final dividend for 2013 of 3.5p per share will be paid on 28 March 2014 to shareholders whose names were on the Register of Members at the close of business on 21 February 2014. With the interim dividends totalling 3p per ordinary share, paid in June, September and December 2013, the total distribution for 2013 is 6.5p (2012: 6.5p) per ordinary share. The interim and final dividends for 2013 amounted to £859m (2012: £733m).

Shareholders may have their dividends reinvested in Barclays shares by joining the Barclays PLC Scrip Dividend Programme (the Programme). At the Barclays 2013 AGM, shareholders approved the introduction of the Programme to replace the Barclays Dividend Reinvestment Plan. The Programme enables shareholders, if they wish, to receive new fully paid ordinary shares in Barclays PLC instead of a cash dividend, without incurring dealing costs or stamp duty. The Programme was initially offered for the second interim dividend, paid on 13 September 2013, and will also be offered for any future dividends (subject to the Directors making the Programme available for each dividend).

Board of Directors

The names of the current Directors of Barclays PLC, along with their biographical details, are set out on pages 83 to 85 and are incorporated into this report by reference. Sir Andrew Likierman, Chris Lucas and David Booth left the Board with effect from 25 April 2013, 16 August 2013 and 31 December 2013 respectively. Diane de Saint Victor, Frits van Paasschen, Mike Ashley, Wendy Lucas-Bull and Tushar Morzaria joined the Board on 1 March 2013, 1 August 2013, 18 September 2013, 19 September 2013 and 15 October 2013 respectively. There were no other changes to Directors in 2013. Stephen Thieke was appointed to the Board on 7 January 2014.

Appointment and retirement of Directors

The appointment and retirement of Directors is governed by the Company’s Articles of Association (the Articles), the UK Corporate Governance Code (the Code), the Companies Act 2006 and related legislation. The Articles may only be amended by a special resolution of the shareholders.

The Board has the power to appoint additional Directors or to fill a casual vacancy amongst the Directors. Any such Director holds office only until the next AGM and may offer himself/herself for re-election. The Articles also require that at each AGM at least one-third (rounded down) of the Directors retire by rotation. The retiring Directors are eligible to stand for re-election. The Code recommends that all directors of FTSE 350 companies should be subject to annual re-election and all Directors will stand for election or re-election at the 2014 AGM with the exception of Fulvio Conti and Simon Fraser, who are retiring from the Board.

 

 

 

 

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Directors’ indemnities

The Company maintains Directors’ and Officers’ liability insurance, which gives appropriate cover for any legal action brought against its Directors. In addition, qualifying third party indemnity provisions (as defined by section 234 of the Companies Act 2006) were in force during the course of the financial year ended 31 December 2013 for the benefit of the then Directors and, at the date of this report, are in force for the benefit of the Directors in relation to certain losses and liabilities which they may incur (or have incurred) in connection with their duties, powers or office.

Qualifying pension scheme indemnity provisions (as defined by section 235 of the Companies Act 2006) were in force during the course of the financial year ended 31 December 2013 for the benefit of the then directors, and at the date of this report are in force for the benefit of directors of Barclays Pension Funds Trustees Limited as Trustee of the Barclays Bank UK Retirement Fund. The directors of the Trustee are indemnified against liability incurred in connection with the company’s activities as Trustee of the retirement fund.

Similarly, qualifying pension scheme indemnities were in force during 2013 for the benefit of directors of Barclays Executive Schemes Trustees Limited as Trustee of Barclays Bank International Zambia Staff Pension Fund (1965), Barclays Capital International Pension Scheme (No.1), Barclays Capital Funded Unapproved Retirement Benefits Scheme, and Barclays PLC Funded Unapproved Retirement Benefits Scheme. The directors of the Trustee are indemnified against liability incurred in connection with the company’s activities as Trustee of the schemes above.

Political donations

The Group did not give any money for political purposes in the UK or the rest of the EU nor did it make any political donations to political parties or other political organisations, or to any independent election candidates, or incur any political expenditure during the year. Barclays Africa Group Limited (formerly Absa Group Limited), in which the Group has a majority stake, made donations totalling £170,800 in 2013 (2012: £185,666) in accordance with its policy of making political donations to the major South African political parties as part of their Democracy Support Programme. The Group made no other political donations in 2013.

In accordance with the Federal Election Campaign Act, Barclays provides administrative support to a federal Political Action Committee (PAC) in the USA funded by the voluntary political contributions of eligible Barclays employees. The PAC is not controlled by Barclays and all decisions regarding the amounts and recipients of contributions are directed by a steering committee comprised of eligible contributors. Contributions to political organisations reported by the PAC during calendar year 2013 totalled $16,000 (2012: $63,564).

Environment

Barclays Climate Action Programme focuses on addressing environmental issues where we believe we have the greatest potential to make a difference. The Programme focuses on managing our own carbon footprint and reducing our absolute carbon emissions, developing products and services to help enable the transition to a low-carbon economy, and managing the risks of climate change to our operations, clients, customers and society at large. We invest in improving the energy efficiency of our operations and offset the emissions remaining through the purchase of carbon credits. We also have a long-standing commitment to managing the environmental and social risks associated with our lending practices, which is embedded into our Credit Risk processes. A governance structure is in place to facilitate clear dialogue across the business and with suppliers around issues of potential environmental and social risk.

We have disclosed global greenhouse gas emissions that we are responsible for as set out by ‘The Companies Act 2006 (Strategic Report and Director’s Report) Regulations 2013’. We provide fuller disclosure across our carbon management and environmental programmes in the Barclays Citizenship report. More details may be found on our website at Barclays.com/citizenship.

 

      
 
 
Current
reporting
Year 2013
  
  
a 
   
 
Comparison
Year 2012
  
b 
Global GHG Emissionsc                 
Total CO2e (tonnes)      969,782        1,014,332   
Scope 1 CO2e emissions (tonnes)d      57,334        47,363   
Scope 2 CO2e emissions (tonnes)      732,096        779,844   
Scope 3 CO2e emissions (tonnes)e      180,352        187,126   
Intensity Ratio                 
Total Full Time Employees (FTE)      139,600        139,200   
Total CO2e per FTE (tonnes)      6.94        7.28   

Notes:

a 2013 reporting year covers Q4 2012 and Q1, 2, 3 of 2013. The carbon reporting year is not fully aligned to the financial reporting year covered by the Directors’ report. This report is produced earlier than previous carbon reporting to allow us to report within the year-end financial reporting timelines.
b 2012 reporting year is the full calendar year (Jan 2012 – Dec 2012).
c The methodology used to calculate our CO2e emissions is the GHG Protocol Corporate Accounting and Reporting Standard (revised edition), using the operational control approach on reporting boundaries. Where properties are covered by Barclays consolidated financial statements but are leased to tenants who are invoiced for utilities, these emissions are not included in the Group GHG calculations.
  ¡   Scope 1 covers direct combustion of fuels and company owned vehicles (from UK and South Africa only, which are the most material contributors).
  ¡   Scope 2 covers emissions from electricity and steam purchased for own use.
  ¡   Scope 3 covers indirect emissions from business travel (global flights and private cars, rail, taxis and car hire from UK and South Africa where this type of transport is material).
d Fugitive emissions from UK, Americas and Asia-Pacific are reported in Scope 1 for 2013. Fugitive emission data Europe and Africa was not available for this report but we are working to establish data for key operations in these regions for 2014. Fugitive emission data for 2012 is not available. Business travel reported in Scope 1 covers company cars in UK and South Africa. This covers the majority of our employees where we have retail operations with car fleets.
e Scope 3 is limited to emissions from business travel which covers global flights and UK and South Africa ground transportation. Ground transportation data (excluding Scope 1 company cars) covers UK and South Africa where this type of transport is material and data is available.

Research and development

In the ordinary course of business the Group develops new products and services in each of its business divisions.

Share capital

Share capital structure

The Company has ordinary shares in issue. The Company’s Articles also allow for the issuance of Sterling, US Dollar, Euro and Yen preference shares (preference shares). No preference shares have been issued as at 28 February 2014 (the latest practicable date for inclusion in this report). Ordinary shares therefore represent 100% of the total issued share capital as at 31 December 2013 and 28 February 2014. Details of the movement in ordinary share capital during the year can be found in Note 32 on pages 344 and 345.

On 31 October 2008, Barclays PLC issued, in conjunction with a simultaneous issue of Reserve Capital Instruments issued by Barclays Bank PLC, warrants (the Warrants) to subscribe for up to 1,516.9 million new Ordinary Shares at a price of £1.97775. On 13 February 2013 Barclays PLC and Barclays Bank PLC announced that they had entered into an agreement with Deutsche Bank AG and Goldman Sachs International (the Warrantholders) pursuant to which the Warrantholders had agreed to exercise in aggregate the 379.2m outstanding Warrants. As a consequence of this agreement no other Warrants remain outstanding.

 

 

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Directors’ report continued

  

 

 

 

 

Exercisability of rights under an employee share scheme

Employee Benefit Trusts (EBTs) operate in connection with certain of the Group’s Employee Share Plans (Plans). The trustees of the EBTs may exercise all rights attached to the shares in accordance with their fiduciary duties other than as specifically restricted in the relevant Plan governing documents. The trustees of the EBTs have informed the Company that their normal policy is to abstain from voting in respect of the Barclays shares held in trust. The trustees of the Global Sharepurchase EBT and UK Sharepurchase EBTs may vote in respect of Barclays shares held in the EBTs, but only as instructed by participants in those Plans in respect of their Partnership shares and (when vested) Matching and Dividend shares. The trustees will not otherwise vote in respect of shares held in the Sharepurchase EBTs.

Special rights

There are no persons holding securities that carry special rights with regard to the control of the company.

Major shareholders

Major shareholders do not have different voting rights from those of other shareholders. Information provided to the Company by major shareholders pursuant to the Financial Conduct Authority’s DTR is published via a Regulatory Information Service and is available on the Company’s website. As at 31 December 2013, the Company had been notified under Rule 5 of the DTR of the following holdings of voting rights in its shares.

 

 

 
Person interested    Number of
Barclays Shares
   

% of total voting 
rights attaching 
to issued 

share capitala

 

 

 
Qatar Holding LLCb      813,964,552        6.65    

 

 
BlackRock, Incc      805,969,166        7.06    

 

 
The Capital Group Companies Incd      809,174,196 e      5.03    

 

 

Notes:

a The percentage of voting rights and shares held are as calculated at the time of the relevant disclosures made in accordance with Rule 5 of the DTR and may not reflect the impact of the rights issue.
b Qatar Holding LLC is wholly-owned by Qatar Investment Authority.
c Total shown includes 8,003,236 contracts for difference to which voting rights are attached.
d The Capital Group Companies Inc (CG) holds its shares via CG Management companies and funds.
e This figure also includes the ordinary share equivalent of 361,579 ADRs.

The Company has not been notified of any changes to the holdings of major shareholders between 31 December 2013 and 28 February 2014.

Powers of Directors to issue or buy back the Company’s shares

The powers of the Directors are determined by the Companies Act 2006 and the Company’s Articles. The Directors are authorised to issue and allot shares, and to repurchase shares subject to annual shareholder approval at the AGM. Such authorities were granted by shareholders at the 2013 AGM. It will be proposed at the 2014 AGM that the Directors be granted new authorities to allot and buy-back shares.

Issue of shares pursuant to the Rights Issue

On 30 July 2013, Barclays announced an underwritten rights issue to raise approximately £5.8bn (net of expenses). Under the terms of the Rights Issue, Barclays offered 3,219,067,868 New Ordinary Shares by way of Rights to Qualifying Shareholders at 185 pence per New Ordinary Share. The Rights Issue was made on the basis of one New Ordinary Share for every four Existing Ordinary Shares held by shareholders at close of business on the record date, 13 September 2013. The latest date for acceptance of the Rights Issue was 2 October 2013, and by this date, Barclays received valid acceptances in respect of 3,046,197,378 New Ordinary Shares, representing 94.63% of the total number of New Ordinary Shares offered to shareholders. The remaining 172,870,490 New Ordinary Shares were purchased by subscribers through the Underwriters for the Rights Issue.

Repurchase of shares

The Company did not repurchase any of its Ordinary Shares during 2013 (2012: none). As at latest practicable date, the Company had an unexpired authority to repurchase Ordinary Shares up to a maximum of 1,286,066,272 Ordinary Shares.

Change of control

There are no significant agreements to which the Company is a party that are affected by a change of control of the Company following a takeover bid. There are no agreements between the Company and its Directors or employees providing for compensation for loss of office or employment that occurs because of a takeover bid.

Risk Management and Internal Control

The Directors have responsibility for ensuring that management maintain an effective system of risk management and internal control and for reviewing its effectiveness. Such a system is designed to manage rather than eliminate the risk of failure to achieve business objectives and can only provide reasonable and not absolute assurance against material misstatement or loss.

Barclays is committed to operating within a strong system of internal control that enables business to be transacted and risk taken without exposing itself to unacceptable potential losses or reputational damage. Barclays has an overarching framework that sets out Barclays approach to internal governance (the Barclays Guide). The Barclays Guide establishes the mechanisms and processes by which the Board directs the organisation, through setting the tone and expectations from the top, delegating its authority and monitoring compliance.

A key component of the Barclays Guide is the Enterprise Risk Management Framework (ERMF). The purpose of the ERMF is to identify and set minimum requirements in respect of the main risks to achieving the Group’s strategic objectives and to provide reasonable assurance that internal controls are effective. The key elements of the Group’s system of internal control, which is aligned to the recommendations of The Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission, Internal Control – Integrated Framework (COSO 2), are set out in the risk control frameworks relating to each of the Group’s Key Risks and in the Group operational risk framework. As well as incorporating our internal requirements, these reflect material Group-wide legal and regulatory requirements relating to internal control and assurance.

Effectiveness of internal controls

Key controls are assessed on a regular basis for both design and operating effectiveness. Issues arising out of business risk and control assessments and other internal and external sources are considered to identify pervasive themes. Where appropriate, individually significant issues or those affecting more than one business may be categorised as having Group level significance and are reported to the Board Audit Committee via the Operational Risk and Control Committee. The Board Audit Committee monitors resolution of any identified control issues of Group level significance through to a satisfactory conclusion. In addition, regular reports are made to the Board Audit Committee by management, internal audit and the finance, compliance and legal functions covering in particular financial controls, compliance and other operational controls.

Risk management and internal control framework

The Directors formally review the effectiveness of the system of internal control annually. Processes are in place for identifying, evaluating and managing the significant risks facing the Group in accordance with the guidance ‘Internal Control: Revised Guidance for Directors on the UK Corporate Governance Code’ published by the Financial Reporting Council (the Turnbull Guidance).

 

 

 

 

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These processes include an attestation procedure which requires all significant processes and identified material risks to be assessed and recorded, together with the related key controls by the Heads of Businesses and Functions. As part of this, specific consideration is given to relevant information, including as a minimum: legal entities; any open control issues; any outstanding internal and external audit findings; regulatory reviews and any outstanding regulatory compliance matters; compliance with Group level policies; records of operational incidents and loss/risk events; experience of all types of fraud; and any other material control-related matters that have been raised either by management or via independent/external review. The status of any remediation in connection with these matters is also considered. The results of this attestation procedure were reported to the Board Audit Committee in February 2014, when it was noted that, although several of the attestations received referred to outstanding control design/operating effectiveness issues, none of these had prevented the Heads of Businesses or Functions from providing a Turnbull statement. All issues had identified remediation tasks and attributed timescales for resolution (or timescales being determined).

The Board regularly reviews these processes through its principal Board Committees. Regular risk reports are made to the Board covering risks of Group level significance, including Credit risk, Market risk, Funding risk, Operational risk, Conduct risk and Reputation risk. The Board Financial Risk Committee and the Board Conduct, Reputation and Operational Risk Committee receive reports covering the Principal Risks as well as reports on risk measurement methodologies and risk appetite. Further details of risk management procedures and potential risk factors are given in the Risk Management section on pages 377 to 422.

As discussed in the Risk review section of the Annual Report a number of matters were made public during the course of 2013 which related to failings in the design and/or operation of certain controls other than those over financial reporting. Whilst the matters were disclosed in 2013, many of the failings giving rise to those issues occurred in prior periods. Management has reviewed the specific control processes impacted and concluded that these are now designed and operating effectively. Areas of ongoing control remediation are not considered to constitute material control failings. In addition to the above matters, a number of other issues are currently being analysed to assess their potential to impact on the control environment and the materiality of any such impact. Remediation plans will be defined and implemented, where necessary.

Controls over financial reporting

A framework of disclosure controls and procedures is in place to support the approval of the Group’s financial statements. The Legal and Technical Review Committee is responsible for reviewing the Group’s financial reports and disclosures to ensure that they have been subject to adequate verification and comply with legal and technical requirements. The Committee reports its conclusions to the Disclosure Committee. The Disclosure Committee considers the content, accuracy and tone of the disclosures and reports its conclusions to the Group Executive Committee and the Board Audit Committee, both of which review its conclusions and provide further challenge. Finally, the Board reviews and approves results announcements and the Annual Report and ensures that appropriate disclosures have been made. This governance process ensures both management and the Board are given sufficient opportunity to review and challenge the Group’s financial statements and other significant disclosures before they are made public.

Management’s report on internal control over financial reporting

Management is responsible for establishing and maintaining adequate internal control over financial reporting. Internal control over financial reporting is a process designed under the supervision of the principal executive and principal financial officers to provide reasonable assurance regarding the reliability of financial reporting and the preparation of financial statements for external reporting purposes in accordance with International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) as adopted by the European Union and the International Accounting Standards Board (IASB).

Internal control over financial reporting includes policies and procedures that pertain to the maintenance of records that, in reasonable detail, accurately and fairly reflect transactions and dispositions of assets; provide reasonable assurances that transactions are recorded as necessary to permit preparation of financial statements in accordance with IFRS and that receipts and expenditures are being made only in accordance with authorisations of management and the respective Directors; and provide reasonable assurance regarding prevention or timely detection of unauthorised acquisition, use or disposition of assets that could have a material effect on the financial statements.

Internal control systems, no matter how well designed, have inherent limitations and may not prevent or detect misstatements. Also, projections of any evaluation of effectiveness to future periods are subject to the risk that internal controls may become inadequate because of changes in conditions, or that the degree of compliance with the policies or procedures may deteriorate.

Management has assessed internal control over financial reporting as of 31 December 2013. In making its assessment, management has utilised the criteria set forth by COSO 2. Management concluded that, based on its assessment, the internal control over financial reporting was effective as of 31 December 2013. Our independent registered public accounting firm has issued a report on the Group’s internal control over financial reporting, which is set out on page 276.

The system of internal financial and operational controls is also subject to regulatory oversight in the UK and overseas. Further information on supervision by the financial services regulators is provided under Supervision and Regulation in the Risk review section on pages 230 to 235.

Changes in internal control over financial reporting

There have been no changes in the Group’s internal control over financial reporting that occurred during the period covered by this report which have materially affected or are reasonably likely to materially affect the Group’s internal control over financial reporting.

 

 

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Going concern

The Group’s business activities and financial position, the factors likely to affect its future development and performance, and its objectives and policies in managing the financial risk to which it is exposed and its capital are discussed in the Strategic Report and in the Risk Review and Management section.

The Directors have assessed, in the light of current and anticipated economic conditions, the Group’s ability to continue as a going concern. The Directors confirm they are satisfied that the Company and the Group have adequate resources to continue in business for the foreseeable future. For this reason, they continue to adopt the ‘going concern’ basis for preparing accounts.

Disclosure of information to auditor

Each Director confirms that, so far as he/she is aware, there is no relevant audit information of which the Company’s auditors are unaware and that each Director has taken all the steps that he/she ought to have taken as a Director to make himself/herself aware of any relevant audit information and to establish that the Company’s auditors are aware of that information. This confirmation is given pursuant to section 418 of the Companies Act 2006 and should be interpreted in accordance with and subject to these provisions.

Directors’ Responsibilities

The following statement, which should be read in conjunction with the Auditors’ report set out on pages 271 to 275, is made with a view to distinguishing for shareholders the respective responsibilities of the Directors and of the auditors in relation to the accounts.

The Directors are required by the Companies Act 2006 to prepare accounts for each financial year and, with regards to Group accounts, in accordance with Article 4 of the IAS Regulation. The Directors have prepared individual accounts in accordance with IFRS as adopted by the EU. The accounts are required by law and IFRS to present fairly the financial position of the Company and the Group and the performance for that period. The Companies Act 2006 provides, in relation to such accounts, that references to accounts giving a true and fair view are references to fair presentation.

The Directors consider that, in preparing the accounts on pages 277 to 376, and the additional information contained on pages 142 to 235, the Group has used appropriate accounting policies, supported by reasonable judgements and estimates, and that all accounting standards which they consider to be applicable have been followed.

Having taken all the matters considered by the Board and brought to the attention of the Board during the year into account, and having reviewed the annual report (including the strategic report), the Directors are satisfied that the annual report and accounts, taken as a whole, is fair, balanced and understandable, and provides the information necessary for shareholders to assess the Company’s performance, strategy and business model.

Directors’ responsibility statement

The Directors (as referenced on pages 83 to 85) have responsibility for ensuring that the Company and the Group keep accounting records which disclose with reasonable accuracy the financial position of the Company and the Group and which enable them to ensure that the accounts comply with the Companies Act 2006.

The Directors are responsible for the maintenance and integrity of the Company’s website. Legislation in the UK governing the preparation and dissemination of financial statements may differ from legislation in other jurisdictions.

The Directors have general responsibility for taking such steps as are reasonably open to them to safeguard the assets of the Group and to prevent and detect fraud and other irregularities.

The Directors confirm to the best of their knowledge that:

 

(a) The financial statements, prepared in accordance with the applicable set of accounting standards, give a true and fair view of the assets, liabilities, financial position and profit or loss of Barclays PLC and the undertakings included in the consolidation taken as a whole; and

 

(b) The management report, which is incorporated into the Directors’ Report on pages 78 to 82, includes a fair review of the development and performance of the business and the position of Barclays PLC and the undertakings included in the consolidation taken as a whole, together with a description of the principal risks and uncertainties that they face.

By order of the Board

Lawrence Dickinson

Company Secretary

3 March 2014

Barclays PLC

Registered in England, Company No. 48839

 

 

 

 

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Board of Directors

    

 

 

LOGO  Executive Director

LOGO  Non-executive Director

 

 

 

 

 

 

LOGO

Sir David Walker (74)

Chairman

Skills and experience

Sir David joined the Board as a non-executive Director in September 2012 and became Chairman in November 2012.

Sir David began his career with Her Majesty’s Treasury, where, with a period on secondment to the International Monetary Fund in Washington, he served until 1977. Sir David held several key positions at the Bank of England, where he became one of four Executive Directors. He was Chairman of the Securities & Investment Board and, ex officio, a nominated member of the Council of Lloyd’s. Sir David was a non-executive member of the Court of the Bank of England, a non-executive board member of the former CEGB and subsequently of National Power plc. He was formerly Chairman of Reuters Venture Capital, Vice-Chairman of the Legal and General Group plc and was Chairman of the London Investment Bankers’ Association for 4 years. Sir David was Chairman and CEO of Morgan Stanley International, and subsequently Chairman. He retired as Chairman of Morgan Stanley International in December 2005 but remained a Senior Advisor until the end of August 2012. Sir David is a member and a trustee of the Group of Thirty and previously served as Treasurer of the Group. He was Chairman of the Business Leaders’ Group of the East End charity Community Links.

Sir David has completed two reports and made recommendations in respect of the private equity industry and corporate governance at financial institutions. He also co-led the independent review of the report that the FSA produced into the failure of Royal Bank of Scotland and was a member of the four-person Committee chaired by Lord Woolf (former Lord Chief Justice) into ethical business conduct at BAE Systems plc.

Sir David has significant experience as a director and chairman, coupled with an extensive knowledge of the financial services industry. This, in addition to an excellent understanding and experience of boardroom and corporate governance issues, enables him to provide effective leadership to the Barclays Board.

Other principal external appointments

Trustee, Cicely Saunders Foundation

Committee membership

Board Conduct, Reputation and Operational Risk Committee (Chairman)

Board Corporate Governance and Nominations Committee (Chairman)

Board Enterprise Wide Risk Committee (Chairman)

Board Remuneration Committee

LOGO

Antony Jenkins LOGO (52)

Group Chief Executive; Executive Director

Skills and experience

Antony was appointed Group Chief Executive in August 2012. Previously Antony was Chief Executive of Barclays’ Retail and Business Banking business. He has been a member of the Group Executive Committee since 2009.

Antony started his career at Barclays, where he completed the Barclays’ Management Development Programme, before going on to hold various roles in retail and corporate banking. He then moved to Citigroup, working in both London and New York, before rejoining Barclays as Chief Executive of Barclaycard. Antony has represented Barclays as a non-executive Director on the Board of Absa (now Barclays Africa Group). He was also on the Board of Visa Europe Ltd and the Board of Motability Operations Group plc. Since becoming Group Chief Executive, Antony has taken the lead in the development of Barclays’ Transform programme, including the introduction of a new purpose and values, with the aim of making Barclays the ‘Go-To’ Bank for customers and clients.

Other principal external appointments

Member, Board of Directors of the Institute of International Finance

Member, International Advisory Panel of the Monetary Authority of Singapore

Committee membership

Group Executive Committee (Chairman)

 

 

LOGO

Mike Ashley LOGO (59)

Non-Executive Director

Skills and experience

Mike joined the Board as a non-executive Director in September 2013. He was formerly Head of Quality and Risk Management for KPMG Europe LLP (ELLP), which forms part of the KPMG global network, where his responsibilities included the management of professional risks and quality control. He was a member of the ELLP Board and was also KPMG UK’s designated Ethics Partner. Mike has over 20 years experience as an audit partner, during which he was the lead audit partner for several large financial services groups, most recently HSBC Holdings and Standard Chartered PLC, and also for the Bank of England. Mike has an in depth understanding of auditing and the associated regulatory issues, with specific experience of large, global banks.

Other principal external appointments

Member, Institute of Chartered Accountants in England and Wales’ Ethics Standards Committee

Member, HM Treasury’s Audit Committee

Vice Chair, European Financial Reporting Advisory Group’s Technical Expert Group

Committee membership

Board Audit Committee (Chairman)

Board Conduct, Reputation and Operational Risk Committee

Board Corporate Governance and Nominations Committee

Board Financial Risk Committee

Board Enterprise Wide Risk Committee

 

 

LOGO

Tim Breedon LOGO (56)

Non-executive Director

Skills and experience

Tim was appointed to the Board as a non-executive Director in November 2012. Tim held a number of roles at Legal & General Group plc (L&G) before joining its board as Group Director (Investments) and becoming Group Chief Executive. He was later an adviser to L&G, primarily with responsibilities in connection with Solvency II. Tim was a Director of the Association of British Insurers (ABI), and also served as its Chairman. He was also Chairman of the UK Government’s non-bank lending taskforce, an industry-led taskforce that looked at the structural and behavioural barriers to the development of alternative debt markets in the UK. Tim was a director of the Financial Reporting Council and was on the board of the Investment Management Association. Tim has over 25 years of experience in financial services and has extensive knowledge and experience of regulatory and government relationships. He brings to the Board the experience and knowledge of leading a financial services company, combined with an understanding of the UK and EU regulatory environment and risk management. His customer focus and understanding of investor issues, gained both at L&G and the ABI, is of particular relevance to Barclays.

Other principal external appointments

Non-executive Director, Ministry of Justice

Committee membership

Board Financial Risk Committee (Chairman)

Board Audit Committee

Board Conduct, Reputation and Operational Risk Committee

Board Corporate Governance and Nominations Committee

Board Remuneration Committee

Board Enterprise Wide Risk Committee

LOGO

Fulvio Conti LOGO (66)

Non-executive Director

Skills and experience

Fulvio joined the Board in April 2006 as a non-executive Director. Fulvio has significant financial and business experience from a career spanning over 35 years, and is currently CEO and General Manager of Enel SpA, the Italian energy company, where he was previously Chief Financial Officer. During his career Fulvio held the role of General Manager and CFO of Telecom Italia SpA and CFO for various private and government owned entities in Italy. He was also in charge of finance at Montedison–Compart, was CFO at Montecatini and Ferrovie dello Stato and has also held positions in finance and operations in various affiliates of Mobil Oil Corporation in Italy and Europe. Fulvio’s wide ranging business experience, particularly in continental Europe, provides a valuable contribution to the Board Audit Committee and the main Board, particularly with regard to economic and political developments in the Eurozone.

Other principal external appointments

President, Eurelectric

Director, AON PLC

Director, ENDESA SA

Director, Italian Institute of Technology

Independent Director, RCS MediaGroup S.p.A

Vice President, Confindustria

Committee membership

Board Audit Committee

 

 

LOGO

Simon Fraser LOGO (54)

Non-executive Director

Skills and experience

Simon joined the Board in March 2009 as a non-executive Director. He has extensive experience of the fund management industry, having started his career at Fidelity International, where he spent 27 years. During this time Simon was President of the Investment Solutions Group and President of the Retirement Institute. He held a number of other positions during his career at Fidelity International, including President, European & UK Institutional Business, Global Chief Investment Officer, Chief Investment Officer for Asia Pacific and Chief Investment Officer of the European Investment Group. With his extensive experience of the fund management industry, Simon provides a useful perspective on how Barclays is viewed by its institutional investors.

 

 

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Other principal external appointments

Director, Fidelity European Values PLC

Director, Fidelity Japanese Values PLC

Chairman, Foreign and Colonial Investment Trust PLC

Chairman, The Merchants Trust PLC

Non-executive Director, Ashmore Group PLC

Committee membership

Board Audit Committee

Board Remuneration Committee

 

LOGO

Reuben Jeffery III  LOGO  (61)

Non-executive Director

Skills and experience

Reuben joined the Board in July 2009 as a non-executive Director. He is currently CEO and a director of Rockefeller & Co Inc. and Rockefeller Financial Services Inc. Reuben served in the US government as Under Secretary of State for Economic, Energy and Agricultural Affairs, as Chairman of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission and as a special assistant to the President on the staff of the National Security

Council. Before his government service, Reuben spent eighteen years at Goldman, Sachs & Co where he was managing partner of Goldman Sachs in Paris and led the firm’s European Financial Institutions Group in London. Prior to joining Goldman Sachs, Reuben was a corporate attorney with Davis Polk & Wardwell. Reuben has a broad range of financial services experience, particularly investment banking, and in addition brings extensive insight into the US political and regulatory environment.

Other principal external appointments

Member, International Advisory Council of the China Securities Regulatory Commission

Member, Advisory Board of Towerbrook Capital Partners LP

Member, International Advisory Committee, RIT PLC

Director, Financial Services Volunteer Corps

Director, J Rothschild Capital Management Limited

Committee membership

Board Conduct, Reputation and Operational Risk Committee

Board Financial Risk Committee

 

 

LOGO

Wendy Lucas-Bull  LOGO  (60)

Non-Executive Director

Skills and experience

Wendy was appointed to the Board as a non-executive Director in September 2013. She is currently Chairman of

Barclays Africa Group Limited (formerly Absa Group Limited), one of the largest financial services groups in Africa and majority owned by Barclays. She previously served as an Executive Director of Rand Merchant Bank and became Chief Executive of FirstRand Ltd’s retail businesses following the merger of Rand Merchant Bank and First National Bank. She has held senior Board positions at the Development Bank of Southern Africa, the South African Financial Markets Advisory Board and Nedbank Group Limited. Wendy has also held positions on the boards of Telkom SA, Eskom, Aveng Ltd, Alexander Forbes Ltd, Dimension Data PLC and Anglo American Platinum Ltd. Her extensive experience from board level positions in South African banks, as well as her years of providing consultancy services to the largest banks in South Africa, provides the Board with valuable retail, commercial and investment banking expertise. Her in-depth knowledge of banking in Africa also provides an invaluable insight into banking in the region. Wendy has led or participated in a number of conduct related consultations throughout her career, and such knowledge and experience will contribute greatly towards the discussion of culture at Barclays.

Other principal external appointments

Director, Afrika Tikkun NPC

Director, Peotona Group Holdings

Committee membership

Board Conduct, Reputation and Operational Risk Committee

 

 

LOGO

Tushar Morzaria  LOGO  (45)

Group Finance Director

Skills and experience

Tushar joined the Board and Executive Committee of Barclays in October 2013 as Group Finance Director. Prior to this, he was CFO, Corporate and Investment Bank at JP Morgan Chase, a role he held on the merger of the investment bank and the wholesale treasury/security services business at JP Morgan. Prior to the merger, he was CFO of the investment bank and held other various roles during his career at JP Morgan.

Tushar qualified as an accountant at Coopers and Lybrand Deloitte and for most of his career he has worked in investment banking, having held various roles at SG Warburg, JP Morgan and Credit Suisse.

Tushar has over 20 years of strategic financial management experience, which will prove invaluable in his role as Group Finance Director.

Other principal external appointments

None

Committee membership

Group Executive Committee

 

LOGO

Dambisa Moyo  LOGO  (45)

Non-executive Director

Skills and experience

Dambisa joined the Board in May 2010 as a non-executive Director. She is an international economist and commentator on the global economy, with a background in financial services. After completing a PhD in Economics, she worked for Goldman Sachs in the debt capital markets, hedge funds coverage and global macroeconomics teams. Dambisa has also worked for the World Bank and formerly served as a non-executive Director of Lundin Petroleum AB (publ). Dambisa’s background as an economist, in particular her knowledge and understanding of global macroeconomic issues and African economic, political and social issues, provides an important contribution to the Board’s discussion of Barclays’ business and citizenship strategy.

Other principal external appointments

Non-executive Director, SABMiller PLC

Non-executive Director, Barrick Gold Corporation

Committee membership

Board Conduct, Reputation and Operational Risk Committee

Board Financial Risk Committee

 

 

LOGO

Frits van Paasschen  LOGO  (52)

Non-Executive Director

Skills and experience

Frits was appointed to the Board as a non-executive Director in August 2013. Frits is an experienced Director and Chief Executive Officer. He is currently CEO and President of Starwood Hotels and Resorts Worldwide Inc, one of the world’s largest hotel companies. He served as a non-executive Director for two NYSE listed companies, Jones Apparel Group and Oakley. He previously served as the CEO and President of Coors Brewing Company and has held various senior management positions with Nike, Inc. and Disney Consumer Products. Frits’ extensive global and commercial experience and role as a CEO of an international business provides valuable strategic insight. In particular, his experience in developing and marketing brands, and a broad knowledge of enhancing business performance and the customer experience in a retail environment, is highly beneficial to many aspects of Barclays’ business.

Other principal external appointments

None

Committee membership

None

LOGO

Sir Michael Rake  LOGO  (66)

Deputy Chairman and Senior Independent Director

Skills and experience

Sir Michael joined the Board in January 2008 as a non-executive Director. He was appointed Senior Independent Director in October 2011 and Deputy Chairman in July 2012. Sir Michael spent over 30 years with KPMG, where he was Senior Partner of the UK firm and Chairman of KPMG International. Sir Michael is Chairman of BT Group plc and was previously Chairman of the UK Commission for Employment and Skills, Chairman of Business in the Community, Chairman of easyJet plc and a director of the Financial Reporting Council. Sir Michael has substantial financial and commercial experience gained in the UK, Continental Europe and the Middle East. He also has significant experience, both as Chairman and a board member, of listed companies

Other principal external appointments

President, Confederation of British Industry

Director, McGraw-Hill Financial, Inc

Committee membership

Board Corporate Governance and Nominations Committee

Board Enterprise Wide Risk Committee

Board Financial Risk Committee

 

 

LOGO

Diane de Saint Victor  LOGO  (59)

Non-executive Director

Skills and experience

Diane was appointed as a non-executive Director in March 2013. She is currently General Counsel and Company Secretary and a member of the Group Executive Committee of ABB Limited, the publicly listed international power and automation technologies company based in Switzerland. Her responsibilities include Head of Legal and Integrity Group. She was formerly Senior Vice President and General Counsel of EADS, the European aerospace and defence company. Diane’s legal experience and her knowledge of regulatory and compliance matters allows her to provide a unique perspective to the Board and its Committees.

Other principal external appointments

Member, Advisory Board of The World Economic Forum’s Davos Open Forum

Committee Membership

Board Audit Committee

Board Conduct, Reputation and Operational Risk Committee

 

 

 

 

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Table of Contents
     

 

 

LOGO  Executive Director

LOGO  Non-executive Director

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

LOGO

Sir John Sunderland LOGO (68)

Non-executive Director

Skills and experience

Sir John joined the Board as a non-executive Director in June 2005. He has extensive business and board level experience, having spent forty years with Cadbury Schweppes PLC, where he became Chief Executive and subsequently Chairman. Sir John has significant experience as a director of UK listed companies, and has also held a number of similar positions in trade and professional bodies, including President of the Confederation of British Industry and President of the Chartered Management Institute. Sir John is Chairman of Merlin Entertainments Group PLC and was formerly a director of the Financial Reporting Council. In addition to his Board level experience Sir John brings extensive experience and knowledge of retailing and brand marketing.

Other principal external appointments

Non-executive Director, AFC Energy PLC

Governor, Reading University Council

Chancellor, Aston University

Committee membership

Board Remuneration Committee (Chairman)

Board Conduct, Reputation and Operational Risk Committee

Board Corporate Governance and Nominations Committee

Board Enterprise Wide Risk Committee

 

LOGO

Steve Thieke LOGO (68)

Non-executive Director

Skills and experience

Steve was appointed to the Board as a non-executive Director in January 2014. He has four decades of experience in financial services, both in regulation and investment banking. Steve worked for the Federal Reserve Bank of New York for twenty years, where he held several senior positions in credit and capital market operations and banking supervision and later he became a non-executive director at the FSA. He has also held senior roles in investment banking and risk management with JP Morgan, where he spent ten years. He was Head of the Fixed Income Division, co-Head of Global Markets, President and Chairman of JP Morgan Securities, Inc. and Head of the Corporate Risk Management Group, retiring from JP Morgan in 1999. He has significant board level experience, both in executive and non-executive roles, including spending seven years as a director of Risk Metrics Group, where latterly he served as Chairman of the

board, and nine years on the board of PNC Financial Services Corp.

Other principal external appointments

None

Committee membership

Board Financial Risk Committee

Board Remuneration Committee

 

 

Executive committee

 

 

LOGO

Antony Jenkins

Group Chief Executive

 

 

LOGO

Robert Le Blanc

Chief Risk Officer

 

 

LOGO

Eric Bommensath

Co-Chief Executive, Corporate and Investment Banking

 

 

LOGO

Irene McDermott Brown

Group Human Resources Director

LOGO

Bob Hoyt

Group General Counsel

 

 

LOGO

Valerie Soranno Keating

CEO, Barclaycard

 

 

LOGO

Thomas King

Co-Chief Executive, Corporate and Investment Banking

 

 

LOGO

Hugh (Skip) E. McGee III

Chief Executive, Americas

 

 

LOGO

Tushar Morzaria

Group Finance Director

LOGO

Maria Ramos

Chief Executive, Absa Group and Barclays Africa

 

 

LOGO

Mike Roemer

Group Head of Compliance

 

 

LOGO

 

Ashok Vaswani

CEO, Retail and Business Banking

 

 

LOGO

Darryl West

Interim Chief Operations and Technology Officer

 

 

 

LOGO
 

 

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Table of Contents
People      

 

 

 

 

 

In 2013, we covered a significant amount of ground on our journey to becoming the ‘Go-To’ bank and continuing to attract, develop and retain the best talent will be critical to our success. This year, we have made major changes to our internal policies and practices, particularly in the areas of leadership, talent, reward and performance, to support our commitment to making Barclays a values-driven business.

All colleagues are expected to align their objectives to the 5Cs of the Balanced Scorecard, with individual performance for 2014 measured both on what has been achieved (their personal contribution to ‘Go-To’) and how it has been achieved (their demonstration of our Values). Variable remuneration will be based on an individual’s performance rating, with the Balanced Scorecard playing a greater role in determining business performance and its impact on bonus pools.

Our new global recognition plan uses non-financial rewards to celebrate outstanding colleague achievements, in particular where they have role-modelled the Values. Colleagues are also encouraged to share in our success by participating in our all–employee share plans. The schemes have been running successfully since their inception over 10 years ago. Further details of our approach to remuneration are included in the Remuneration Report on pages 89 to 125.

It is our belief that leadership shapes culture, and that this drives business performance. Consequently, alongside these changes to Reward and Performance, we have focused on the processes that enable Barclays to acquire, assess and develop people through the lens of the Values and Behaviours to ensure that leaders have the personal insight, capability and mind-set to lead the organisation through Transform. All Barclays colleagues have participated in Values training delivered by internal ‘Values Leaders’, a community of 1,300 colleagues. This has also been aligned to the Global Induction programme to ensure all new joiners understand ‘who we are’ and ‘how we work together’.

We have made significant progress on our talent development approach by defining a globally consistent potential framework, and managing a group-wide approach for senior level talent reviews and Managing Director promotions. As we look ahead, we will continue to make stronger connections between past performance, future potential and career opportunities across Barclays. To engage and develop our leaders, we have built a tailored approach, underpinned by a set of clearly articulated leadership competencies and behavioural standards, levelled by role. The Barclays Leadership Academy was deployed to all Managing Directors in October and, over the course of 2014, we will be rolling out the Leadership Curriculum to provide a consistent, rigorous, global approach to developing leadership capability for all levels up to Director.

Our Early Careers and Graduate recruitment programmes are a crucial talent pipeline and the source of Barclays’ future leaders. These programmes aim to help Barclays grow a diverse, engaged and highly trained workforce and became increasingly integrated over the course of 2013. In line with the firm-wide strategy, we presented a more unified proposition to applicants and have offered students and graduates the opportunity to work across Barclays. Additionally, our new ‘Grow with Barclays’ framework presents clear pathways for progression from apprentice to graduate with recognised qualifications along the way. We met our commitment to recruit 1,000 apprentices by the middle of 2013 and set a new goal to recruit another 1,000 by the end of 2015.

The Group places considerable value on the involvement of its employees and has continued to keep them informed on matters affecting them as employees and on various factors affecting the performance of the Group. It is important that our colleagues are informed of key decisions which impact upon them, beyond just our business strategy, and have the opportunity to express their views. The focus in 2013 has been upon establishing a dialogue with our colleagues using a variety of formal and informal channels ranging from Executive presentations, news

magazines and intranet content to communicate the Company’s results and performance, along with channels such as regular town halls and the Barclays Jam, our first online global discussion which took place in July 2013 discussing our purpose and values. Both latter examples provided an opportunity for leaders to talk to colleagues directly and hear their views.

We advocate a ‘partnership’ approach to industrial relations and maintain regular and constructive dialogue with more than 30 national unions, works councils and staff associations across the globe. Employee representatives are consulted regularly on a wide range of matters affecting their interests. In Europe and Africa we have well established regional consultation forums to engage colleagues on transnational issues. Where business restructuring has been necessary and this has resulted in potential job losses, we have worked closely with colleague representatives to avoid compulsory redundancies where possible, ensuring colleagues leaving Barclays have been supported and treated with respect. Where there are no collective representative bodies in-country, we engage directly with colleagues.

We remain firmly committed to continuing to evolve our people policies and practices to ensure that our colleagues are supported on their journey to becoming the ‘Go-To’ bank. We recognise the important role our colleagues play as advocates of what we are trying to achieve and, as a result, are focused on sustaining and increasing employee engagement. Colleagues have demonstrated continued resilience and fortitude in 2013 and remain committed to the goal of becoming the ‘Go-To’ bank.

FTE by region

 

     2013      2012      2011   

 

 
UK      54,400         55,300         56,100    
Africa & Middle East      45,800         45,200         47,900    
Continental Europe      9,800         11,100         11,600    
Americas      11,100         11,100         10,900    
Asia Pacific      18,500         16,500         14,600    

 

 
Total      139,600         139,200         141,100    

 

 

Global employment statistics

 

 

LOGO

 

 

Diversity & Inclusion (D&I)

At Barclays, we have deployed a global D&I strategy to ensure that colleagues of all backgrounds are treated equitably and can contribute fully to the bank. This strategy is fully aligned to our business goals; it is embedded into our journey to becoming the ‘Go-To’ bank and integral to our Values. This approach and the tangible progress we are making has resulted in national and international recognition from prestigious organisations such as The Times Top Places for Women, Community Business in Asia, and the Human Rights Campaign.

The strategy reaches from our employee diversity networks, up through to a dedicated D&I team, business diversity councils, and ultimately leads to the Chairman’s office. Alongside the inclusion of diversity metrics within the company’s Balanced Scorecard, creating a diverse and inclusive environment is at the forefront of the bank’s vision.

 

 

 

 

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Our 2013 priorities established the D&I foundation. We have expanded our global agendas to include multigenerational and multicultural, and have successfully launched the first in a series of listening groups. We commenced our deployment of our Unconscious Bias Leadership programme for our global Managing Director and Director population of over 8,000 leaders. Most significantly, we have aligned strategic deliverables to our Values and to the Transform priorities, and are on course for reaching our 2018 gender target of 26% senior female leadership (Directors and Managing Directors).

Gender

Achieving a better balance between male and female employees, particularly at the senior leadership level, is a challenge that many financial services organisations face. Increasing female representation will continue to be a key priority for our diversity and inclusion strategy.

Female representation

 

 

 

 

LOGO

Above shows the positive change in female representation within Barclays from 2012 to 2013

 

 

We have achieved significant progress in the representation of females in senior leadership. Not only do we have three women sitting on our Group Executive Committee, but also female representation at Board level reached our target of 20% for 2013.

The turnover of all female employees across the bank was 14% in 2013, below the 15% average for all our employees. Going forward, we want more talented women to join Barclays and develop their careers with us. Our programme to provide high-potential female employees with targeted development and mentoring currently has more than 100 participants, while membership of our Women’s Initiative Network continues to grow globally. Not only are we looking at the senior leadership population, but our target of a 50/50 gender split for our graduate recruitment means that our efforts stretch across the bank’s entire talent pipeline.

We are consistently seen as leaders within the gender agenda by external benchmarks, best seen by our seventh consecutive year within The Times Top 10 Workplaces for Women. Both Maria Ramos and Val Soranno Keating have been listed within Fortune’s Most Powerful Women 2013, giving credit to the strong women we have in leadership positions within the organisation.

LGBT

Our support for our lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) colleagues continued to advance in 2013. Membership of our award-winning Spectrum network for LGBT employees stands at more than 3,000 globally. The network continued its previous success of launching the first ever LGBT employee network mobile app by hosting the UK finance industry’s first ever transgender awareness event at 1 Churchill Place.

We continue to support Pride events and awareness campaigns around the world, including World AIDS Day and other fundraising events which take place across Barclays.

Barclays were ranked second – our best ever result – by the charity Stonewall in its 2014 Global Workplace Equality Index, whilst also being awarded their ‘Star Performer’ award for the second year running. We remain the only financial services organisations to have been named in the top 25 LGB employers list every year since the launch of the Index, marking a decade of being named one of the top LGBT employers.

Disability

Last year saw significant milestones within the disability agenda. Sir David Walker sponsored the Barclays Accessibility statement, ensuring we not only comply with UK and international legislation, but we help to create an inclusive environment for all our disabled colleagues. The Reach employee network grew a further chapter in Tokyo, whilst Barclays became signatories to the Disability Confident Campaign.

Not only were we named winners of the BDF Disability Standard and Best Service Provider 2013, but our audio ATMs won both Best Innovation at UKUX and the RNIB Exemplars’ Award, recognising that we always have our diverse customer base in mind when designing new and innovative services.

Aligned to our equal opportunities approach, applications for employment by disabled persons are always fully considered, bearing in mind the aptitudes of the applicants concerned. In the event of members of staff becoming disabled, every effort is made to ensure that their employment with the Group continues. Furthermore, it is the policy of the Group that appropriate training, career development and the promotion of disabled people should, as far as possible, be identical to that of other employees. We also monitor a number of indicators relating to disability in order to address the underlying causes of workplace issues, for example the number of working days lost due to musculoskeletal problems. In 2013 3% of our global workforce declared themselves as having a disability.

Multigenerational

 

 

 

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LOGO
 

 

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People >

continued

     

 

 

 

 

The Barclays workforce is made up of all generations: from the Traditionalists (born between 1925-1945) to Generation Y (those born after 1988), we work hard to support all our colleagues at all stages of their career. The multigenerational agenda has come a long way in 2013 through the launch of the Springboard Mortgage in the UK, to employing our 1,000th apprentice, to ensuring we include all those on maternity leave within the Culture and Values training programme.

Our Barclays Elderly Simulation Kit, which allows colleagues to experience the challenges faced by senior citizens, has been recognised globally as a breakthrough in helping bridge the gap between younger and older generations. Our LifeSkills and Bridges into Work programmes continue to support those taking their first steps into the industry, whilst initiatives such as the UK RBB Jobshare programme help individuals with career changes whatever their stage in life.

We were named as the joint winners of Best of All Stages of Motherhood Award, winners for Talent Attraction by Working Mums, and named within the Top 10 Working Families Award, all of which is a testament to the traction Barclays has gained within the multigenerational pillar.

Multicultural

 

 

 

LOGO

Above shows the percentage of underrepresented populations that make up our global and regional populations. Note that underrepresented populations are defined regionally to ensure inclusion with all groups in the workplace

 

a UK includes Asian, Mixed, Black, Other and Non-disclosed
b US includes Hispanic/Latino, Asian, Mixed, Black, Other and Non-disclosed
c South Africa includes African, Indian, Coloured, Other, and Non-disclosed

 

 

We are committed to supporting all our employees, regardless of religion, ethnicity, nationality, or race. We respect important cultural and religious calendar dates and our UK canteens offer both halal and kosher food. There are also quiet rooms available for prayer in many of our larger sites.

This year, Barclays launched its first ever multicultural holiday e-card, which was available to send to all clients and customers, and donated £10m to UNICEF along with additional donations for every e-card sent. We also recognised our diverse customer base by having multicultural posters in many of our UK retail branches.

After being Highly Commended by Race for Opportunity, recognised as having the Best Diversity Initiative by CIPD Recruitment, and launching the African/Afro-Caribbean Society in the City of London, the multicultural agenda has seen some great advancements in 2013.

 

 

 

 

 

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Table of Contents

Remuneration report >

Annual statement from the Chairman of the Board  Remuneration Committee

 

 

 

 

 

LOGO

‘Our aim is to deliver a greater share of the income we generate to shareholders while remaining competitive on pay. Although profits for 2013 were down, the 38% reduction in incentives in the previous two years had begun to cause demonstrable damage to our business. The difficult decision to address this by increasing incentives in certain key areas is in the long term interest of shareholders. We remain fully committed to reducing the ratio of compensation to adjusted net operating income over time.’

 

 

  Remuneration Committee members

  
   Chairman    Members   
   Sir John Sunderland    Sir David Walker   
   Simon Fraser   
   David Booth   
   (until 31 December 2013)   
   Tim Breedon   
   Stephen Thieke   
  

(from 6 February 2014)

 

  

 

 

   Contents

   Page      

Annual statement

     89     

Remuneration questions and answers

     91     

Remuneration policy for all employees

     93     

Remuneration and CRD IV. This section sets out our plans for remuneration compliance with CRD IV in respect of the CRD IV pay ratio.

     95     

2013 incentives

     96     

Directors’ remuneration policy. This sets out the Company’s policy on Directors’ remuneration for three years from the 2014 AGM.

     100     

Annual report on Directors’ remuneration. This sets out payments and awards made to the Directors for 2013.

     111     

Additional remuneration disclosures

     122     

The tables marked ‘audited’ in the report have been audited by PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP.

 

   

 

Dear Shareholders

As Chairman of the Board Remuneration Committee, I am pleased to introduce the Directors’ Remuneration Report for 2013.

Building on the 2012 changes to our approach to remuneration, we continued throughout 2013 to ensure remuneration decisions support the delivery of our goal of achieving sustainable performance for all our stakeholders. Barclays is in the process of introducing the Balanced Scorecard (refer page 10). By the end of 2014, all employees’ performance assessments will be aligned to the Balanced Scorecard and will be measured against both ‘what’ they achieve and ‘how’ they achieve it.

By linking employee performance assessments and remuneration decisions to the Balanced Scorecard, we are promoting a clear and direct alignment between Barclays’ strategy, performance management and remuneration.

Business context in 2013

Adjusted profit before tax was down 32% to £5,167m due to costs to achieve Transform and a 4% reduction in income. In 2013, there was a good performance in the UK Retail and Corporate Banking businesses, along with continued strong growth in Barclaycard. The European, African and Wealth businesses performed less well, and are in a process of transition to improve returns. Within the Investment Bank, Equities saw very good growth which continued to outperform the market. This partially offset lower income in the Fixed Income, Currency and Commodities business.

Remuneration Committee work in 2013

The Committee’s objective is to maximise long term value for shareholders by ensuring that we do not pay more than is necessary while remaining competitive.

Determining the 2013 incentive pool was an extremely difficult decision for the Committee. We were acutely aware of public sentiment and of the challenge of presenting shareholders with an increased pool in a year where profits have fallen. The Committee concluded that a 2013 incentive pool of £2,378m was warranted. This was up 10% on the final 2012 incentive pool but it remains 32% below pool levels in 2010 when we started to reposition Barclays’ remuneration. Before adjustment for risk and conduct events the incentive pool was down 18% on 2012.

Significant progress has been made since 2010 in addressing imbalances in remuneration. The Barclays’ incentive pool reduced by 38% between 2010 and 2012 (48% for the Investment Bank) and bonuses for Managing Directors in the Investment Bank are fully deferred. The dilemma faced by the Committee in 2013 was that these actions were not matched by our peers, most notably the major US banks who are among our primary competitors. As a result, our lack of pay competitiveness was beginning to cause demonstrable damage to our business, especially outside the UK. The global resignation rate for senior staff in 2013 was significantly above that in 2012. This was particularly marked in the Investment Bank with a near doubling of resignations of senior staff in the US. In making our 2013 decisions on incentives, the Committee sought to ensure the health of the franchise in the long term interest of shareholders.

As in 2012, consideration of risk and conduct events was an important aspect of the Committee’s work during 2013. We made total reductions of £290m to incentives for PPI, Interest Rate Hedging Products and other events. Of this, £176m of adjustments were made through reductions in LTIP awards that were granted in previous years and £114m of reductions were made to the 2013 incentive pool. This contrasts with risk and conduct adjustments to the incentive pool of £860m in 2012 for events including the investigation into the setting of inter-bank offered rates.

 

 

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Remuneration report >

Annual statement from the Chairman of the Board Remuneration Committee continued

 

 

 

 

When determining the incentive pool we looked at it on a pre- and post-adjustment basis for risk and conduct events. The Committee concluded that an incentive pool for 2013 of £2,492m on a pre-adjustment basis was appropriate. This is 18% down on the equivalent pre-adjustment pool in 2012. After applying an adjustment for risk and conduct events of £114m, the final 2013 incentive pool is £2,378m, up 10% on 2012 reflecting the lower level of risk and conduct adjustment for 2013.

Overall compensation costs for 2013 are down on 2012. This in part offsets the reduction in income and means that the Group compensation to adjusted net operating income ratio increases only slightly from 37.5% in 2012 to 38.3% in 2013. The Committee remains strongly focused on its overall repositioning journey and is still committed to a compensation to adjusted net operating income ratio in the mid-30s in the medium term. However, the Committee believes that this can only be achieved once we have completed the changes that are under way as part of the strategic Transform programme. These changes will enable significant and sustainable cost reductions over the next few years including material reductions in headcount and compensation costs. These reductions are already underway and these changes will enable a sustainable repositioning of the compensation to adjusted net operating income ratio.

The Committee has also focused on remuneration compliance with new EU regulation, the Capital Requirements Directive IV (CRD IV) and, in particular, the capped ratio of variable to fixed pay (CRD IV pay ratio). The Committee considered this very carefully because it impacts Barclays’ competitiveness in the global market for talent. Further information on our intended approach to ensure compliance with the CRD IV pay ratio is provided on page 95.

The Committee continued to consider the recommendations of the Salz Review in respect of remuneration. Key actions taken included the adoption of a new remuneration policy, a new performance assessment process, the removal of sales incentives for UK retail colleagues and enhancing the risk adjustment processes. The process for reviewing risk and conduct adjustments to the incentive pool was strengthened in 2013 by the formation of the Remuneration Review Panel (Panel) which reports to the Committee. Further details on the Panel are provided on page 129.

Outside the Committee’s formal meetings, we continued to meet and engage with shareholders frequently. Matters discussed with shareholders include the aggregate spend on remuneration, senior executive remuneration levels, our new forward looking Directors’ remuneration policy and our plans for remuneration compliance with CRD IV. We have also continued to work with regulators on our remuneration arrangements during 2013, in particular in the UK and the US.

Key executive Directors’ remuneration decisions during 2013

The Committee has agreed that Antony Jenkins’ base salary will be unchanged for 2014 at £1,100,000. On 3 February 2014, Antony Jenkins announced that he would decline any 2013 bonus offered to him by the Board, citing the rights issue, restructuring costs and costs associated with legacy issues as the reasons for his decision.

Chris Lucas stepped down from the Board due to ill health with effect from 16 August 2013. Further details can be found on page 115. The Committee approved a pro-rated 2013 bonus award of £500,000 to Chris Lucas which will be fully deferred in shares.

Tushar Morzaria was appointed as Group Finance Director on a salary of £800,000 commensurate with market pay levels and being the same as his predecessor. The rest of his pay is in line with Barclays’ policy for executive Directors. The Committee also approved a 2013 bonus of £1,200,000 recognising that he forfeited any right to participate in the JP Morgan incentive arrangement for 2013 and his contribution to Barclays in 2013. The long-term/deferred awards which Tushar had held at JP Morgan were replaced with Barclays’ awards. The terms of these awards are no more generous than those that they replaced and the awards are in the form of Barclays’ shares to align with shareholders.

As our key measure of strategic delivery, the Balanced Scorecard has been introduced as one of the measures on the Long Term Incentive Plan (LTIP) with effect from the 2013 award. The Balanced Scorecard will also be used alongside other performance measures for annual bonus and LTIP awards over the term of the Directors’ remuneration policy. From 2014, for annual bonus the weightings will be 50% for financial measures, 35% for the Balanced Scorecard and 15% for personal objectives. For LTIP awards, financial measures will guide at least 50% of the maximum opportunity and the Balanced Scorecard measure will be no more than 30%. Risk measures will also be incorporated.

A significant part of the Committee’s work in 2013 was reviewing how to restructure executive Director and senior executive remuneration for compliance with the CRD IV pay ratio. Our approach is based on a new class of fixed pay called Role Based Pay (RBP). We are seeking shareholder approval for a maximum ratio of variable to fixed pay of 2:1 in order to limit the increase in fixed costs to a minimum. For executive Directors, the level of RBP will be capped for the term of the policy and will be delivered in shares which will be subject to a holding period of up to five years to ensure alignment with shareholders. The Committee has recognised that in return for greater certainty there should be a reduced total remuneration opportunity for the executive Directors.

Focus in 2014

The Committee will continue to focus on the need to pay at levels required to attract, retain and motivate our people. While not paying more than we judge to be necessary, we will ensure that we can continue to pay our people competitively and simultaneously seek to deliver a greater share of the income we generate to shareholders. We will be informed in this work by a continuing constructive engagement and dialogue with our shareholders and our other stakeholders.

Our remuneration report

We have adopted in this report the remuneration disclosures required by the Large and Medium-sized Companies and Groups (Accounts and Reports) (Amendment) Regulations 2013. We are seeking shareholder approval at the 2014 AGM for:

 

¡   our Directors’ remuneration policy;

 

¡   our 2013 annual report on Directors’ remuneration; and

 

¡   our approach to compliance on the CRD IV pay ratio.

On behalf of the Board

 

LOGO

Sir John Sunderland

Chairman, Board Remuneration Committee

3 March 2014

 

 

 

 

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Remuneration report >

Remuneration questions and answers

 

 

 

 

How do you justify a 2013 incentive pool of £2,378m when the bank’s financial performance has declined?

When considering the appropriate level of incentive awards for 2013, the Committee has had to establish the right balance between ensuring that the progress on repositioning remuneration, which began after 2010, was sustained, while also ensuring Barclays remains competitive and remuneration continues to reflect performance both before and after adjustment for risk and conduct events.

As set out in the 2012 Remuneration report, we took measured risks in 2012 by further driving down the total incentive pool. Barclays has been closely monitoring the effects of this decision and it has become clear that this repositioning has created a risk that in certain parts of our business we are not sufficiently competitive on pay in relation to the wider market. As a result, we have suffered from higher rates of resignation and found it harder to recruit. This issue needed to be addressed to ensure the health of our franchise and that we remain true to our policy of paying competitively.

In line with financial performance, the Committee has approved a total incentive pool on a before adjustment for risk and conduct events basis that is 18% down on the equivalent 2012 pool. However, as the level of adjustment required in 2013 is considerably less than that required in 2012, after adjustment for risk and conduct events, the final incentive pool is £210m up on 2012.

The final 2013 incentive pool of £2,378m and its increase from 2012 needs to be seen in the context of the multi-year reductions already achieved, the severe competitive pressures sustained within some parts of the business, the reduced risk and conduct adjustments required in 2013 and the overall repositioning journey that the Committee remains focused on achieving in a way that ensures that the long-term value of the Bank is maximised for shareholders.

You made an adjustment for risk and conduct events of £860m to your 2012 bonus pool and also reduced the value of unvested deferred and long-term awards by £300m. What have you done in terms of adjustments to the 2013 pool?

As in 2012, the total incentive awards in 2013 were determined after making appropriate adjustments to reflect risk and conduct events. Total risk and conduct adjustments of £290m were made in 2013. Of this, £176m of adjustments were made through reductions in long-term incentive awards that were granted in previous years and £114m of reductions were made from total incentive awards granted in 2013. The two main components of the 2013 adjustment reflect the further provisions in respect of the costs of redress for PPI and Interest Rate Hedging Products.

The process for reviewing risk and conduct adjustments to the incentive pool has also been strengthened in 2013 by the formation of the Remuneration Review Panel which provides recommendations to the Board Remuneration Committee. The Panel is independent of the business and it includes representatives from the key control functions of Risk, Compliance, Internal Audit and HR. The Panel’s other responsibilities include reviewing proposed malus adjustments to individual incentives in respect of risk and conduct events and ensuring that risk, compliance, behaviour and conduct are also appropriately considered in the determination of individual remuneration.

Why do you need to pay bonuses at all?

Barclays needs to pay competitively to ensure it has people with the skills and experience needed to deliver our strategy. In some parts of the banking sector, particularly investment banking, variable remuneration in the form of bonuses forms a high proportion of an employee’s total remuneration. This structure has the advantage of giving Barclays the ability to reduce total remuneration significantly in underperforming areas and manage and control the cost base. However, it also means that in business areas that perform to a satisfactory or good standard, higher variable remuneration is required to make employees’ total remuneration competitive.

How were the bonuses determined for the executive Directors?

The Committee decides executive Director bonuses, as it also does for members of the Group and business Executive Committees, and for other senior employees.

Executive Director bonuses are determined by reference to Group and individual performance in the year. Achievement of their objectives is assessed against both quantitative and qualitative measures, both financial and non-financial.

On 3 February 2014, Antony Jenkins announced that he would decline any 2013 bonus offered to him by the Board, citing the rights issue, restructuring costs and costs associated with legacy issues as his reasons.

Why is Tushar Morzaria receiving a bonus of £1.2m for 2013?

On joining Barclays, Tushar forefeited any right to participate in the JP Morgan incentive arrangements for 2013. His bonus for 2013 reflects his forfeited remuneration opportunity and also takes account of Tushar’s performance for Barclays in 2013.

The award will be delivered in accordance with Barclays’ regulatory requirements and remuneration policy. 40% of the total will be an upfront award (half in shares and half in cash) and 60% of the total will be made as a deferred share award releasing in three equal instalments over a period of three years. Any shares released will be subject to a further six month holding period from the date on which they are released.

 

 

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Remuneration questions and answers continued

 

 

 

 

How was profit distributed between shareholders and employee remuneration in 2013?

The charts opposite detail how the earnings generated by our businesses have been distributed to a number of key stakeholders including shareholders (in the form of dividends) and employees. Ensuring that Barclays has the right people in the right roles serving our customers and clients effectively in a highly competitive global banking environment is vital to our ability to generate sustainable shareholder returns.

Why is the compensation ratio 38% when your stated commitment is to a ratio in the mid-30s in the medium term?

The Committee remains committed to continuing its repositioning journey and in achieving a Group compensation to adjusted net operating income ratio in the mid-30s over the medium term. However, the Committee believes this can only be achieved once we have completed the changes that are under way as part of the strategic Transform programme. This includes material initial investments that will help transform the bank, providing an improved proposition for customers and clients and also enabling significant and sustainable cost reduction over the next few years. This includes material reductions in headcount and compensation costs but these will not be achieved just through cutting pay levels. These reductions are now underway and these changes will enable a sustainable repositioning of the compensation to net adjusted operating income ratio.

Barclays’ plans for remuneration compliance with CRD IV mean senior executives are just getting more fixed remuneration. Is this appropriate?

The CRD IV pay ratio impacts Barclays globally. This is not the case for Barclays’ non-EU headquartered competitors, for example, US financial services firms. For these firms, the CRD IV pay ratio only applies to their EU operations and not to their non-EU operations. 60% of Barclays’ 2014 Code Staff are expected to be based outside the EU. To remain globally competitive, Barclays has had to change its pay structure, increasing the level of fixed pay.

Our approach to the remuneration requirements of CRD IV is a new class of fixed pay called Role Based Pay (RBP). Before implementing we discussed our approach with the PRA and consulted with some of our major shareholders. RBP will enable Barclays to deliver competitive total remuneration to those staff impacted by CRD IV in a way that is more flexible than salary. Although it is similar to salary, the key differences are (save for where required under local law): (i) RBP will not add to our pensions and benefits expense; and (ii) it can, in certain circumstances, be adjusted down as well as up. Salary can typically only be increased. RBP will be paid in shares for executive Directors and members of the Group Executive Committee. Certain other senior employees will be paid RBP partly in shares and partly in cash.

 

   Distribution of earnings

 

We believe that the best way to support our stakeholders is by operating a strong, profitable and growing business, which creates jobs and contributes to the economic success of the communities in which we live and work. The charts below detail how the earnings generated by our businesses are distributed to a number of key stakeholders.

 

 

Shareholders

 

 

 

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Government

 

 

 

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Employees

 

 

 

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Notes

a Calculated as dividend per share divided by adjusted EPS.
b Taxes borne are the Company’s own tax contribution, representing taxes paid by the Company in the year.
c Taxes collected are those collected from employees and customers on behalf of governments.
 

 

 

 

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Remuneration policy for all employees

 

 

 

 

 

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This section sets out Barclays’ remuneration policy for all employees, explaining the purpose and principles underlying the structure of remuneration packages, and how the policy links remuneration to the achievement of sustained high performance and long-term value creation.

 

Remuneration policy

The Committee formally adopted a new remuneration policy for 2013 as part of the Transform programme. The principles set out in the policy are set out below and underpin 2013 remuneration decisions and the Committee’s objectives for 2014 and beyond.

Barclays’ remuneration decisions:

 

 

 

    1.

 

 

Support the goal of becoming the ‘Go-To’ bank by attracting, retaining and competitively rewarding colleagues with the ability, experience, skill, values and behaviours to deliver that goal.

 

 

 

    2.

 

 

Will only reward business results when these are achieved in a manner consistent with Barclays’ values and behaviours:

 

 

 

 

¡ Respect: We respect and value those we work with, and the contribution that they make

 

¡ Integrity: We act fairly, ethically and openly in all we do

 

¡ Service: We put our clients and customers at the centre of what we do

 

¡ Excellence: We use our energy, skills and resources to deliver the best, sustainable results

 

¡ Stewardship: We are passionate about leaving things better than we found them.

 

 

 

  3.

 

 

Protect and promote shareholder interests by incentivising colleagues to deliver sustained performance and create long-term value through the delivery of Barclays’ goal. Those decisions will reflect that performance for individuals and in aggregate. Barclays will pay competitively for high performance but will not pay more than the amount appropriate to maximise the long-term value of the bank for its shareholders.

 

 

 

  4.

 

 

Create a direct and recognisable alignment between remuneration and risk exposure, as well as adjusting current and deferred incentives for current and historic risk, including malus adjustments, as appropriate.

 

 

 

  5.

 

 

Should be as simple and clear for colleagues and stakeholders as possible – as is the process used to determine them.

 

 

 

  6.

 

 

Ensure that the balance between shareholder returns and remuneration is appropriate, clear and supports long-term shareholder interests.

 

 

Remuneration and performance

Adherence to the remuneration policy means that remuneration decisions for all employees across the whole of Barclays are aligned with and support the achievement of Barclays’ goal of becoming the ‘Go-To’ bank.

This is achieved by linking remuneration to a broad assessment of all aspects of performance. At an individual level, a new approach to performance assessment was implemented for senior management in 2013 and will be implemented for all employees in 2014. Under the new approach, individual performance is measured jointly against objectives (the ‘what’) and demonstration of Barclays Values and Behaviours (the ‘how’). This ensures that our Values and Behaviours are firmly embedded in the way we manage individual performance and remuneration.

Furthermore, to ensure clear and direct alignment between individual performance and Barclays’ strategy, all employees are required to align their 2014 objectives to the 5Cs of the Balanced Scorecard – Customers & Clients, Colleagues, Citizenship, Conduct and Company. This was implemented for senior management in 2013. This will help employees understand how their day to day activities contribute to the overall performance of the business or function in which they work and, ultimately, the overall performance of Barclays – as represented by the Balanced Scorecard.

Linking individual performance assessment and remuneration decisions to both our Values and Behaviours and the Balanced Scorecard in this way promotes the delivery of sustainable individual and business performance and establishes clear alignment between remuneration policy and Barclays’ strategy.

 

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Remuneration policy for all employees continued

 

 

 

 

Remuneration structure

Employees receive salary, pension and other benefits and are eligible to be considered for an annual bonus. Employees in some customer-facing businesses participate in incentive plans including plans based on customer feedback and other measures of the quality of service they provide to customers. This page provides further details of our employee remuneration structure. Some senior employees also receive Role Based Pay (RBP) from 2014. The remuneration structure for employees is aligned with the remuneration structure for executive Directors set out in more detail in the Directors’ remuneration policy section of this report.

 

Fixed remuneration

 

 

Salary

  

 

¡

 

 

 

Salaries reflect individuals’ skills and experience and are reviewed annually in the context of annual performance assessment. They are increased where justified by role change, increased responsibility or where justified by the latest available market data. Salaries may also be increased in line with local statutory requirements and in line with union and works council commitments.

 

 

 

Role Based Pay

  

 

¡

 

 

 

As a response to CRD IV and to ensure Barclays remains appropriately competitive for global talent from 2014, a small number of senior employees will receive a new class of fixed pay called RBP to recognise the breadth and depth of the role. Further information on RBP can be found on page 95.

 

 

 

Pension

and

benefits

  

 

¡

 

 

 

The provision of a market competitive package of benefits is important to attracting and retaining the talented staff Barclays needs to deliver Barclays’ strategy. A defined contribution pension scheme, the Barclays Pension Savings Plan, and a flexible benefits scheme, ‘My Rewards’, enable employees to choose from a range of benefits including the level of their pension contributions, life assurance and private health benefits, annual leave (with the ability to ‘buy’ and ‘sell’ subject to certain parameters), and participation in Barclays ‘all employee’ share plans (HMRC approved for UK participants). The cost of providing the benefits is defined and controlled. Following its launch in 2012 in the UK, ‘My Rewards’ will be rolled out globally over the next few years.

 

 

Variable remuneration

 

 

Annual bonus

  

 

¡

 

 

 

¡

 

 

Annual bonuses reward and incentivise the achievement of Group, business and individual objectives

 

The ability to recognise performance through variable remuneration enables the Group to control its cost base flexibly and to react to events and market circumstances. Bonuses remain a key feature of remuneration practice in the highly competitive and mobile market for talent in the financial services sector. The Committee is careful to control the proportion of variable to fixed remuneration paid to individuals

  

¡

  Bonus deferral levels are significantly in excess of PRA requirements
  

¡

  For PRA Remuneration Code Staff (Code Staff) the deferral rate is a minimum of 40% (for bonuses of no more than £500,000) or 60% (for bonuses of more than £500,000)
  

¡

  For non-Code Staff, bonuses over £65,000 are subject to a graduated level of deferral
  

¡

  2013 bonuses awarded to Managing Directors in the Investment Bank are 100% deferred
  

¡

  Deferred bonuses are generally split equally between deferred cash bonuses under the Cash Value Plan (CVP) and deferred share bonuses under the Share Value Plan (SVP), each typically vesting in equal annual tranches over three years subject to the rules of the plans and continued service
  

¡

 

 

Deferred bonuses are subject to malus provisions which enable the Committee to reduce the vesting level of deferred bonuses (including to nil) at its discretion. Events which may lead the Committee to do this include, but are not limited to, employee misconduct or a material failure of risk management.

 

 

 

 

 

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Remuneration report >

Remuneration and CRD IV

 

 

 

 

 

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This section sets out our plans for remuneration compliance with CRD IV in respect of the CRD IV pay ratio. The CRD IV pay ratio of 2:1 is subject to a binding shareholder vote at the 2014 AGM.

 

CRD IV is EU regulation that has been effective from 1 January 2014. CRD IV’s remuneration provisions include a maximum ratio between variable and fixed remuneration (CRD IV pay ratio) for Code Staff. Code Staff include senior management, risk takers, staff engaged in control functions and any other employees whose professional activities have a material impact on Barclays’ risk profile. The maximum CRD IV pay ratio is either 1:1 (without shareholder approval) or 2:1 (with shareholder approval). The maximum ratio will apply to variable remuneration awarded in respect of the 2014 performance year onwards.

Barclays had 530 Code Staff in 2013. While the number of impacted employees will still be a small proportion of total employees, we expect this figure to increase in 2014 under the European Banking Authority’s new definition of Code Staff. The current estimate for 2014 is between 1,100 and 1,400 Code Staff.

As an EU headquartered bank, the CRD IV pay ratio applies to Barclays Code Staff globally. This is not the case for Barclays’ non-EU headquartered competitors, for example US financial services firms. For these firms, the CRD IV pay ratio only applies to their EU operations. Accordingly, the CRD IV pay ratio creates a competitive disadvantage for Barclays in the global market for talent, particularly in the US, Asia and Africa. 60% of Barclays’ Code Staff in 2014 are expected to be based outside the EU.

Shareholder approval and remuneration compliance with the CRD IV pay ratio

We will comply with CRD IV’s remuneration provisions in a simple and transparent manner. We have discussed our approach with the PRA and with some of our major shareholders. Our approach is legally compliant and based on the following principles:

 

¡   We do not want to increase fixed cost more than required

 

¡   We need to retain flexibility in our remuneration structure

 

¡   We must have the ability to be competitive on remuneration in the global environment in which we operate.

Barclays is seeking shareholder approval at the April 2014 AGM for the maximum CRD IV pay ratio of 2:1. A 2:1 ratio will limit the transfer from variable to fixed pay required to continue to pay our employees competitively.

Role Based Pay (RBP)

Consistent with developing market practice, our approach to CRD IV remuneration compliance for the small number of impacted employees is a new class of fixed pay called RBP which has the flexibility to be decreased as well as increased. Salaries can typically only be adjusted upwards.

The key features of RBP are as follows:

 

¡   It reflects the breadth and depth of responsibility associated with senior positions at Barclays

 

¡   It is fixed but will be reviewed (typically annually)

 

¡   It is paid monthly in cash alongside salary with effect from 1 January 2014 (excluding executive Directors and Group Executive Committee members who will be paid quarterly in shares (or share equivalents where local law makes this necessary) and certain other senior employees who will be paid partly in shares and partly in cash). The decision to pay in cash reflects the current very high levels of deferral within Barclays which are significantly in excess of regulatory requirements and the market

 

¡   It can go down as well as up in certain circumstances, for example, following changes to role, responsibilities or accountabilities, or external factors, such as changes in business and economic environment, which may have a bearing on the role in terms of equivalent market opportunities or the particular skill set required for a role

 

¡   It is not adjusted for performance (individual, business or Group) and is not salary for pension and benefits purposes (except where required under local law).

As a result of implementing RBP with a ratio of 2:1 we expect a small increase in fixed costs (and decrease in variable costs) for 2014. RBP will represent a relatively small proportion of total compensation costs.

 

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2013 incentives

 

 

 

 

 

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This section provides details of how 2013 total incentive award decisions were made.

 

 

2013 performance headlines

The key considerations which the Committee took into account in making its remuneration decisions for 2013 are highlighted below:

 

¡   Adjusted income decreased 4% to £28,155m and adjusted profit before tax was down 32% to £5,167m

 

¡   The profits have been impacted by the reduction in income and the costs to achieve Transform including restructuring and de-risking activity completed during the year. Profits were also impacted by the withdrawal from certain lines of business which were incompatible with Barclays’ Purpose and Values, investing to transform our operations and resolving legacy conduct and litigation issues

 

¡   The UK Retail and Corporate Banking businesses delivered good results, alongside the continued strong growth of Barclaycard

 

¡   Within the Investment Bank, an impressive performance in Equities and in Investment Banking has helped to partially offset lower income from our Fixed Income, Currencies and Commodities business

 

¡   We have also started to make important progress in repositioning our African, European and Wealth businesses to improve returns

 

¡   CRD IV CET1 ratio fully loaded was 9.3% (30 September 2013: 8.4% or 9.6% on a pro forma post rights issue basis)

 

¡   The estimated PRA leverage ratio increased to just under 3.0% (30 June 2013: 2.2%), reflecting a reduction in the PRA leverage exposure of £196bn and an increase in eligible PRA adjusted Tier 1 Capital to £40.5bn (30 June 2013: £34.2bn)

 

¡   Adjusted return on average shareholders’ equity decreased to 4.5% (2012: 9.0%) principally reflecting the decrease in profit before tax, a £440m write-down of deferred tax assets relating to Spain and the £5.8bn of equity raised from the Rights Issue in Q413

 

¡   Cultural change, particularly embedding our Purpose and Values throughout the organisation, was a major Transform priority for 2013. As well as every colleague completing a mandatory training programme, Barclays’ Purpose and Values was integrated into the day to day management processes covering recruitment, talent management, performance assessment and reward

 

¡   In the case of our Managing Director population, their 2013 performance has been formally assessed against whether they have exhibited the right values and behaviours, as well as producing the desired business outcomes. This criteria will apply to all employees in 2014.

2013 incentives – repositioning journey and impact of 2012 decisions

2013 compensation and incentive headlines

¡   Total compensation costs decreased 1% to £9,616m. Total compensation costs in the Investment Bank were slightly down at £4,634m (2012: £4,667m)

 

¡   This reduction in compensation costs in part offset the reduction in adjusted net operating income and meant that the Group compensation to adjusted net operating income ratio increased slightly to 38.3% (2012: 37.5%)

 

¡   Before making adjustments for risk and conduct events, the 2013 incentive awards of £2,492m had been reduced 18% from 2012. After adjustments for risk and conduct, total incentive awards granted were £2,378m, up 10% on 2012

 

¡   While the final incentive pool is up on 2012, it is £1,106m or 32% below the 2010 outcome from when the Committee started its repositioning journey to reduce compensation. In the Investment Bank incentive awards granted were 41% (£1,086m) below 2010

 

¡   There has been strong differentiation on the basis of individual performance to allow the Group to more effectively manage compensation costs

 

¡   Average value of incentive awards granted per Group employee is £17,000 (2012: £15,600) with the average value of incentive awards granted per Investment Bank employee of £60,100 (2012: £54,500). Average value of incentive awards granted per Group employee excluding the Investment Bank is £7,100 (2012: £6,800)

 

¡   Levels of deferral continue to significantly exceed the PRA Remuneration Code’s minimum requirements and are expected to remain among the highest deferral levels globally. 2013 bonuses awarded to Managing Directors in the Investment Bank were 100% deferred.

We recognise the importance that our stakeholders attach to the judgements that we apply in managing remuneration. Remuneration must be managed in a way which incentivises employees, ensures pay is linked to performance and is appropriately aligned to risk and conduct.

Following 2010, material reductions were made to the incentive pool, particularly in the Investment Bank. In 2011 the Investment Bank pool was reduced by 35% from £2,660m to £1,737m and again in 2012 by a further 20% to £1,394m. Over this two-year period, incentives within the Investment Bank were almost halved (total incentive awards granted were down 48%). From a Group perspective, the pool was down by 38% over the same period. In making these reductions the Committee and management took measured risks with the aim of exerting further downward pressure on remuneration.

The Committee closely monitored the impact of these decisions. The evidence suggested that similar actions were not taken by our peers, most notably in the major US banks. This, together with uncertainty generated by CRD IV and high deferral levels (which significantly exceed regulatory requirements and the market) meant that Barclays, in certain areas of the business, was no longer appropriately competitive on remuneration, and this caused demonstrable damage to our business. While we remain committed to controlling pay levels, we also must seek to ensure that the health of the franchise is protected.

 

 

 

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In considering the appropriate level for the 2013 incentive pool, the Committee tried to find the right balance between ensuring the work on repositioning was not undone, reflecting performance (both financial and our long-term strategy), and keeping Barclays’ remuneration appropriately competitive.

The outcome of this balancing process is that before adjustment for risk and conduct events, the 2013 incentive pool was reduced by 18% on the equivalent 2012 pool. The total 2013 risk and conduct adjustment was £290m of which £176m was applied through reduced LTIP payouts, the balance of £114m was taken by reducing the 2013 incentive pool. The level of adjustment required in 2013 was considerably less than that required in 2012, in which £860m was deducted from the pool for risk and conduct events including the investigation into the setting of inter-bank offered rates in 2012.

The final 2013 incentive pool after adjustments for risk and conduct events was £2,378m, up 10% on 2012. The increase should be seen in the context of the multi-year reductions already achieved, the competitive pressures sustained in some parts of the business, the reduced adjustments for risk and conduct events required in 2013 and the overall repositioning journey that the Committee remains focused on achieving in a way that ensures that the long-term value of the Bank is maximised for shareholders.

Barclays incentive pools

 

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Barclays total incentive awards granted – current year and deferred (audited)

               

 

Barclays Group

                  

 

Investment Bank

           
     

Year ended
31.12.13

£m

      

Year ended
31.12.12

£m

     %
Change
   

Year ended
31.12.13

£m

   

Year ended
31.12.12

£m

       %
Change
 
Current year cash bonus      942           852         11        477        399           20   
Current year share bonus      15           15                5        6           (17

Total current year bonus

 

     957           867         10        482        405           19   
Deferred cash bonus      564           489         15        521        447           17   
Deferred share bonus      576           498         16        521        446           17   

Total deferred bonus

 

     1,140           987         16        1,042        893           17   

Commissions, commitments and other incentives

 

    

 

281

 

  

 

      

 

314

 

  

 

    

 

(11

 

 

   

 

50

 

  

 

   

 

96

 

  

 

      

 

(48

 

 

Total incentive awards granted      2,378           2,168         10        1,574        1,394           13   

 

Proportion of bonus that is deferreda

     54%           53%           68%        69%        
Total employees (full time equivalent)      139,600           139,200                26,200        25,600           2   
Average incentive award granted per employee          £17,000           £15,600         9        £60,100        £54,500           10   

Note

a Calculated as total deferred bonus divided by the sum of total current year bonus and total deferred bonus.

 

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2013 incentives continued

 

 

 

 

Deferred bonuses are payable only once an employee meets certain conditions, including a specified period of service. This creates a timing difference between the communication of the bonus pool and the charges that appear in the income statement which are reconciled in the table below.

Reconciliation of total incentive awards granted to income statement charge (audited)

             

 

Barclays Group

                  

 

Investment Bank

         
      Year ended
31.12.13
£m
    

Year ended
31.12.12

£m

     %
Change
    Year ended
31.12.13
£m
   

Year ended
31.12.12

£m

     %
Change
 

Total incentive awards for 2013

     2,378         2,168         10        1,574        1,394         13   

Less: deferred bonuses awarded in 2013

     (1,140      (987      16        (1,042     (893      17   

Add: current year charges for deferred bonuses from previous years

     1,147         1,223         (6     1,042        1,117         (7

Othera

     169         21                 144        75         92   

Income statement charge for performance costs

     2,554         2,425         5            1,718        1,693         1   

Note

a Difference between incentive awards granted and income statement charge for commissions, commitments and other long-term incentives.

 

¡   Employees only become eligible to receive payment from a deferred bonus once all the relevant conditions have been fulfilled, including the provision of services to the Group

 

¡   The income statement charge for performance costs reflects the charge for employees’ actual services provided to the Group during the relevant calendar year (including where those services fulfil conditions attached to previously deferred bonuses). It does not include charges for deferred bonuses where conditions have not been met

 

¡   As a consequence, while the 2013 incentive awards granted increased 10% compared to 2012, the income statement charge for performance costs increased 5%.

Income statement charge (audited)

             

 

Barclays Group

                   Investment Bank          
     

Year ended
31.12.13

£m

    

Year ended
31.12.12

£m

     %
Change
    Year ended
31.12.13
£m
   

Year ended
31.12.12

£m

     %
Change
 
Deferred bonus charge      1,147         1,223         (6     1,042        1,117         (7
Current year bonus charges      957         867         10        482        405         19   
Commissions, commitments and other incentives      450         335         34        194        171         13   
Performance costs      2,554         2,425         5        1,718        1,693         1   
Salaries      4,981         5,254         (5     2,092        2,203         (5
Social security costs      715         685         4        305        297         3   
Post retirement benefits      688         612         12        161        147         10   
Allowances and trading incentives      211         262         (19     88        123         (28
Other compensation costsa      467         521         (10     270        204         32   
Total compensation costsb      9,616         9,759         (1     4,634        4,667         (1
Other resourcing costs                                                    
Outsourcing      1,084         999         9        26        31         (16
Redundancy and restructuring      687         68           186        41      
Temporary staff costs      551         481         15        255        227         12   
Other      217         160         36        77        68         13   

Total other resourcing costs

 

     2,539         1,708         49        544        367         48   
Total staff costs          12,155         11,467         6        5,178        5,034         3   
                                                     
Compensation as % of adjusted net income      38.3%         37.5%           44.1%        40.3%      
Compensation as % of adjusted income      34.2%         33.2%                 43.2%        39.6%            

 

Notes
a Investment Bank other compensation costs include allocations from Head Office and net recharges relating to compensation costs incurred in the Investment Bank but charged to other businesses and charges from other businesses to the Investment Bank.
b In addition, £346m of Group compensation (2012: £44m) was capitalised as internally generated software.

 

¡   Total staff costs increased 6% to £12,155m, principally reflecting a £619m increase in redundancy and restructuring charges, a 5% increase in performance costs and a 9% increase in outsourcing

 

¡   Performance costs increased 5% to £2,554m, reflecting a 10% increase to £957m in charges for current year cash and share bonuses and a 34% increase in commissions, commitments and other incentives to £450m. This was offset by a 6% decrease in the charge for deferred bonuses to £1,147m

 

¡   Redundancy and restructuring charges increased £619m to £687m, due to a number of Transform initiatives.

 

 

 

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Deferred bonuses awarded are expected to be charged to the income statement in the years outlined in the table that follows:

Year in which income statement charge is expected to be taken for deferred bonuses awarded to datea

     

 

Actual

     Expectedb  
     

 

Year ended
31.12.12

£m

     Year ended
31.12.13
£m
     Year ended
31.12.14
£m
     2015 and
beyond
£m
 

Barclays Group

           

Deferred bonuses from 2010 and earlier bonus pools

     557         192         21           

Deferred bonuses from 2011 bonus pool

     666         429         157         25   

Deferred bonuses from 2012 bonus pool

             526         299         155   

Deferred bonuses from 2013 bonus pool

                     616         492   

Income statement charge for deferred bonuses

     1,223         1,147         1,093         672   

Investment Bank

                                   

Deferred bonuses from 2010 and earlier bonus pools

     517         178         19           

Deferred bonuses from 2011 bonus pool

     600         384         143         22   

Deferred bonuses from 2012 bonus pool

             480         272         143   

Deferred bonuses from 2013 bonus pool

                     570         452   

Income statement charge for deferred bonuses

     1,117         1,042         1,004         617   

 

 Bonus pool component

  Expected grant date   Expected payment date(s)c     

 

Year(s) in which income statement
charge arisesd

Current year cash bonus

  February 2014   February 2014      2013

Current year share bonus

  February/March 2014   February 2014 to September 2014      2013

Deferred cash bonus

  March 2014   March 2015 (33.3%)      2014 (48%)
    March 2016 (33.3%)      2015 (35%)
    March 2017 (33.3%)      2016 (15%)
               2017 (2%)

Deferred share bonus

  March 2014   March 2015 (33.3%)      2014 (48%)
    March 2016 (33.3%)      2015 (35%)
    March 2017 (33.3%)      2016 (15%)
               2017 (2%)

Notes

a The actual amount charged depends upon whether conditions have been met and will vary compared with the above expectation. Charges for deferred bonuses include amounts for other incentives, such as commitments, which are awarded on a deferred basis.
b Does not include the impact of grants which will be made in 2014 and 2015.
c Payments are subject to all conditions being met prior to the expected payment date. In addition, employees receiving a deferred cash bonus may be awarded a service credit of 10% of the initial value of the award at the time that the final instalment is made, subject to continued employment.
d The income statement charge is based on the period over which conditions are met.

 

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Remuneration report >

Directors’ remuneration policy

  

 

 

 

 

LOGO  

This section sets out Barclays’ forward looking remuneration policy for Directors, explaining each element of the Directors’ remuneration policy and how it operates. The policy described in this section is intended to apply for three years beginning on the date of the 2014 AGM, subject to shareholder approval.

 

This remuneration policy sets out the framework for how the Committee’s remuneration strategy will be executed for the Directors over the next three years. This is to be achieved by having a remuneration policy that seeks to:

 

¡   provide an appropriate and competitive mix of fixed and variable pay which, through its short and long-term components, incentivises management and is aligned to shareholders;

 

¡   provide direct line of sight with Barclays’ strategy through the incentive programmes; and

 

¡   comply with and adapt to the changing regulatory landscape.

Impact of CRD IV on Directors’ remuneration policy

Barclays is seeking shareholder approval for a maximum CRD IV pay ratio of 2:1 in accordance with CRD IV and has consulted with some of its major shareholders on this matter. Barclays’ response to CRD IV and to ensure that it remains appropriately competitive for global talent is to introduce a new class of fixed pay called Role Based Pay (RBP). For the Group Chief Executive, Antony Jenkins, the maximum value of RBP will be £950,000 and for the Group Finance Director, Tushar Morzaria, the maximum RBP will be £750,000. RBP will be delivered in shares which will be subject to a maximum holding period over five years (with restrictions lifting 20% per annum).

In line with the current approach, at the maximum level of variable pay 40% will be delivered as bonus and 60% as a Barclays Long Term Incentive Plan (LTIP) award. Barclays recognises that in return for greater certainty on fixed pay there should be a reduced total remuneration opportunity.

An illustration of the impact of CRD IV on the structure of the executive Directors’ remuneration together with the reduced maximum remuneration opportunity is set out below:

Group Chief Executive, Antony Jenkins – maximum remuneration opportunity

Current structure (£000)

 

LOGO

The maximum remuneration opportunity for the Group Chief Executive, Antony Jenkins, will reduce in 2014 by £1,374,000 as set out above. This comprises a reduction in maximum variable pay opportunity of £2,324,000, of which £950,000 transfers to fixed pay as RBP. The net resulting reduction of £1,374,000 is a 59% discount on the portion of variable pay which is being transferred into fixed pay. Overall there is a 16% discount in the maximum total (fixed and variable) remuneration opportunity.

Group Finance Director, Tushar Morzaria – maximum remuneration opportunity

Current structure (£000)

 

LOGO

The maximum remuneration opportunity for the Group Finance Director, Tushar Mozaria, will reduce in 2014 by £950,000 as set out above. This comprises a reduction in maximum variable pay opportunity of £1,700,000, of which £750,000 transfers to fixed pay as RBP. The net resulting reduction of £950,000 is a 56% discount on the portion of variable pay which is being transferred into fixed pay. Overall there is a 15% discount in the maximum total (fixed and variable) remuneration opportunity.

European Banking Authority consultation paper

Although the European Banking Authority has published a consultation paper on the draft guidelines for the notional discount rate for long-term remuneration, this is still at consultation stage and it is not expected to be significant. Therefore it has not been factored in to the above illustration. We will review market positioning once the regulation is finalised and will consult with major shareholders on whether it is appropriate to amend our policy in future to allow for the discount.

 

100 > Barclays PLC Annual Report 2013    barclays.com/annualreport

 

 

 

  


Table of Contents
  

 

 

 

 

Remuneration policy for executive Directors

The implementation of remuneration policy for 2014 is set out on pages 118 and 119.

 

    

 

   Element and purpose

 

  

   Operation

 

  

   Maximum value and performance measures

 

   

 

A.  Fixed pay

 

         
   

 

Salary

 

To reward skills and experience appropriate for the role and provide the basis for a competitive remuneration package

  

 

Salaries are determined with reference to market practice and market data (on which the Committee receives independent advice), and reflect individual experience and role.

 

Executive Directors’ salaries are benchmarked against comparable roles in the following banks: Bank of America, BBVA, BNP Paribas, Citigroup, Credit Suisse, Deutsche Bank, HSBC, JP Morgan, Lloyds, Morgan Stanley, RBS, Santander, Société Générale, Standard Chartered and UBS. The Committee may amend the list of comparator companies to ensure it remains relevant to Barclays or if circumstances make this necessary (for example, as a result of takeovers or mergers).

 

Salaries are reviewed annually and any changes are effective from 1 April in the financial year.

 

  

 

Salaries for executive Directors are set at a point within the benchmark range determined by the Committee taking into account their experience and performance. Increases for the current executive Directors over the policy period will be no more than local market employee increases other than in exceptional circumstances where the Committee judges that an increase is needed to bring an executive Director’s salary into line with that of our competitors. In such circumstances Barclays would consult with its major shareholders.

 

   

 

Role Based Pay

 

To enable competitive remuneration opportunity in recognition of the breadth and depth of the role

  

 

Paid quarterly in shares which are subject to a holding period with restrictions lifting over five years (20% each year). As the executive Directors beneficially own the shares, they will be entitled to any dividends paid on those shares.

 

RBP will be reviewed and fixed annually and may be reduced or increased in certain circumstances. Any changes are effective from 1 January in the relevant financial year.

  

 

The maximum RBP for executive Directors is set at £950,000 for the Group Chief Executive, Antony Jenkins, and £750,000 for the Group Finance Director, Tushar Morzaria. It is not pensionable (except where required under local law). These amounts may be reduced but are at the maxima and may not be increased above this level.

 

There are no performance measures.

 

   

 

Pension

 

To enable executive Directors to build long-term retirement savings

 

  

 

Executive Directors receive an annual cash allowance in lieu of participation in a pension arrangement.

  

 

The maximum annual cash allowance is 33% of salary for the Group Chief Executive and 25% of salary for the Group Finance Director and any other executive Director.

 

   

 

Benefits

 

To provide a competitive and cost effective benefits package appropriate to role and location

  

 

Executive Directors’ benefits provision includes private medical cover, annual health check, life and ill health income protection, tax advice, car cash allowance, and use of a company vehicle and driver when required for business purposes.

 

Additional benefits may be offered that are minor in nature or are normal market practice in a country to which an executive Director relocates or from which an executive Director is recruited.

 

In addition to the above, if an executive Director were to relocate, additional support would be provided for a defined and limited period of time in line with Barclays’ general employee mobility policy including provision of temporary accommodation, payment of removal costs and relocation flights. Barclays will pay the executive Director’s tax on the relocation costs but will not tax equalise and will also not pay the tax on his or her other employment income.

 

  

 

The maximum value of the benefit is determined by the nature of the benefit itself and costs of provision may depend on external factors, e.g. insurance costs.

 

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Remuneration report >

Directors’ remuneration policy continued

     

 

 

 

 

Remuneration policy for executive Directors continued

 

    

 

   Element and purpose

 

  

Operation

 

  

Maximum value and performance measures

 

   

 

B.  Variable Pay

 

         

    

 

 

Annual bonus

 

To reward delivery of short-term financial targets set each year, the individual performance of the executive Directors in achieving those targets, and their contribution to delivering Barclays’ strategic objectives

 

While financial objectives are important, the Balanced Scorecard (which also includes Group financial targets) plays a significant role in bonus determination, to ensure alignment with Barclays’ strategy

 

Deferred bonuses encourage long-term focus and retention. Delivery substantially or fully in shares with a holding period increases alignment with shareholders. Deferred bonuses are granted by the Committee (or an authorised sub-committee) at its discretion, subject to the relevant plan rules

  

 

Determination of annual bonus

Individual bonuses are discretionary and decisions are based on the Committee’s judgement of executive Directors’ performance in the year, measured against Group and personal objectives.

 

Delivery structure

Executive Directors are Code Staff and their bonuses are therefore subject to deferral of at least the level applicable to all Code Staff, currently 40% (for bonuses of no more than £500,000) or 60% (for bonuses of more than £500,000). The Committee may choose to defer a greater proportion of any bonus awarded to an executive Director than the minimum required by the PRA Remuneration Code. At least half the non-deferred bonus is delivered in shares or share-linked instruments.

 

Deferred bonuses for executive Directors may be delivered in a combination of shares or other deferral instruments.

 

Participants may, at the Committee’s discretion, also receive the benefit of any dividends paid between the award date and the relevant release date in the form of dividend shares.

 

Operation of risk and conduct adjustment and malus

Any bonus awarded will reflect appropriate reductions made to incentive pools in relation to risk events. Individual bonus decisions may also reflect appropriate reductions in relation to specific risk and conduct events.

 

All unvested deferred bonuses are subject to malus provisions which enable the Committee to reduce the vesting level of deferred bonuses (including to nil) for any reason. These include, but are not limited to:

 

¡  A participant deliberately misleading Barclays, the market and/or shareholders in relation to the financial performance of the Barclays Group

 

¡  A participant causing harm to Barclays’ reputation or where his/her actions have amounted to misconduct, incompetence or negligence

 

¡  A material restatement of the financial statements of the Barclays Group or the Group or any business unit suffering a material down turn in its financial performance

 

¡ A material failure of risk management in the Barclays Group

 

¡ A significant deterioration in the financial health of the Barclays Group.

 

Timing of receipt

Non-deferred cash components of any bonus are paid following the performance year to which they relate, normally in February. Non-deferred share bonuses are awarded normally in March and are subject to a six-month holding period.

 

Deferred share bonuses normally vest in three equal portions over a minimum three-year period, subject to the provisions of the plan rules including continued employment and the malus provisions (as explained above). Should the deferred awards vest, the shares are subject to an additional six-month holding period (after payment of tax).

 

  

 

The maximum annual bonus opportunity is 80% of fixed pay. For these purposes, fixed pay is as set out in the charts on page 100.

 

The performance measures by which any executive Director bonuses are assessed include Group, business and personal measures, both financial and non-financial. Financial measures may include, but are not restricted to such measures as net income, adjusted profit before tax, return on equity, CET 1 ratio and return on risk weighted assets. Non-financial measures are based on the Balanced Scorecard. Personal objectives may include key initiatives relating to the role of the Director or in support of Barclays’ strategic objectives. The Balanced Scorecard is set out on page 10 and may be updated from time to time in line with the Group’s strategy. In making its assessment of any bonus, the Committee will consider financial factors to guide 50% of the bonus opportunity, the Balanced Scorecard 35%, and personal objectives 15%. Any bonus is discretionary and any amount may be awarded from zero to the maximum value.

 

 

 

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Remuneration policy for executive Directors continued

 

    

 Element and purpose

 

  

 

   Operation

 

  

   Maximum value and performance measures

 

   

 

B.  Variable Pay continued

 

 

         

    

 

 

Long Term Incentive Plan (LTIP) award

 

To reward execution of Barclays’ strategy and growth in shareholder value over a multi-year period

 

Long-term performance measurement, holding periods and the malus provisions discourage excessive risk-taking and inappropriate behaviours, encourage a long-term view and align executive Directors’ interests with those of shareholders

 

Performance measures balance incentivising management to deliver strong risk-adjusted financial returns, and delivery of strategic progress as measured by the Balanced Scorecard. Delivery in shares with a further two-year holding period increases alignment with shareholders

  

 

Determination of LTIP award

LTIP awards are made by the Committee following discussion of recommendations made by the Chairman (for the Group Chief Executive’s LTIP award) and by the Group Chief Executive (for other executive Directors’ LTIP awards).

 

Delivery structure

LTIP awards are granted subject to the plan rules and are satisfied in Barclays’ shares (although they may be satisfied in other instruments as may be required by regulation).

 

For each award, performance measures are set at grant and there is no retesting allowed of those conditions. The Committee has, within the parameters set out opposite, the flexibility to vary the weighting of performance measures and calibration for each award prior to its grant.

 

The Committee has discretion, and in line with the plan rules approved by shareholders, in exceptional circumstances to amend targets, measures, or number of awards if an event happens (for example, a major transaction) that, in the opinion of the Committee, causes the original targets or measures to be no longer appropriate or such adjustment to be reasonable. The Committee also has the discretion to reduce the vesting of any award if it deems that the outcome is not consistent with performance delivered, including to zero.

 

Participants may, at the Committee’s discretion, also receive the benefit of any dividends paid between the award date and the relevant release date in the form of dividend equivalents (cash or securities).

 

Operation of risk adjustment and malus

The achievement of performance measures determines the extent to which LTIP awards will vest. Awards are also subject to malus provisions (as explained in the Annual bonus paragraphs above) which enable the Committee to reduce the vesting level of awards (including to nil).

 

Timing of receipt

Barclays LTIP awards have a five-year period in total from grant to when all restrictions are lifted. This will include a minimum three-year vesting period and an additional two-year holding period once vested (after payment of tax).

 

  

 

The maximum annual LTIP award is 120% of fixed pay. For these purposes, fixed pay is as set out in the charts on page 100.

 

Vesting is dependent on performance measures and service.

 

Following determination of the financial measures applicable to an LTIP cycle, if the Committee is satisfied with the underlying financial health of the Barclays Group (based on profit before tax) it may, at its discretion, adjust the percentage of shares considered for release up or down by up to 10% (subject to the maximum % for the award calibrated against financial performance measures).

 

Performance measures will be based on financial performance (e.g. measured on return on risk weighted assets), risk metrics (e.g. measured by loan loss rate) and the Balanced Scorecard which also includes financial measures. The Committee has discretion to change the weightings but financial measures will be at least 50% and the Balanced Scorecard will be a maximum of 30%. The threshold level of performance for each performance measure will be disclosed annually as part of the implementation of remuneration report. Straight line vesting applies between threshold and maximum for the financial and risk measures.

 

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Remuneration report >

Directors’ remuneration policy continued

 

 

 

 

Remuneration policy for executive Directors continued

 

    

 

   Element and purpose

 

  

Operation

 

  

Maximum value and performance measures

 

   

 

C.  Other

 

         
   

 

All employee share plans

 

To provide an opportunity for Directors to voluntarily invest in the Company

  

 

Executive Directors are entitled to participate in:

 

(i)  Barclays Sharesave under which they can make monthly savings over a period of three or five years linked to the grant of an option over Barclays’ shares which can be at a discount of up to 20% on the share price set at the start.

 

(ii) Barclays Sharepurchase under which they can make contributions (monthly or lump sum) out of pre-tax pay (if based in the United Kingdom) which are used to acquire Barclays’ shares.

  

 

(i)  Savings between £5 and the maximum set by Barclays (which will be no more than the HMRC maximum) per month. There are no performance measures.

 

(ii) Contributions of between £10 and the maximum set by Barclays (which will be no more than the HMRC maximum) per tax year which Barclays may match up to HMRC maximum (current match is £600). There are no performance measures.

 

   

 

Previous LTIP awards

  

 

Antony Jenkins currently holds unvested LTIP awards under the LTIP for the performance periods 2012-2014 and 2013-2015. The only differences between the operation of these awards and the future policy above are the performance measures and that the earlier 2012-2014 award only has a holding period of one year and this only applies to 50% of shares that are released (after payment of tax).

 

  

 

A summary of the performance measures that apply to the LTIP awards for 2012-2014 and 2013-2015 can be found on pages 114 and 115.

   

 

Previous buy out awards

  

 

Tushar Morzaria currently holds an unvested buy-out award under the Barclays Joiners Share Value Plan which was granted to him in respect of awards he forfeited as a result of accepting employment at Barclays. This award was made in line with the Barclays’ recruitment policy outlined in the table on page 106.

 

  

 

The award was no more generous than and mirrored as far as possible the expected value and timing of vesting of the forfeited awards granted by JP Morgan.

 

   

 

Shareholding requirement

 

To further enhance the alignment of shareholders’ and executive Directors’ interests in long-term value creation

  

 

Executive Directors must build up a shareholding of 400% of salary over five years from the later of: (i) the introduction of the new requirement in 2013; and (ii) the date of appointment as executive Director. They have a reasonable period to build up to this requirement again if it is not met because of a share price fall.

 

Shares that count towards the requirement are beneficially owned shares including any vested share awards subject only to holding periods (including vested LTIPs, vested deferred share bonuses and RBP shares). Shares from unvested deferred share bonuses and unvested LTIPs do not count towards the requirement.

 

  

 

Barclays’ shares worth a minimum of 400% of salary must be held within five years.

   

 

Outside appointments

 

To encourage self- development and allow for the introduction of external insight and practice

 

  

 

Executive Directors may accept one board appointment in another listed company.

 

Chairman’s approval must be sought before accepting appointment. Fees may be retained by the executive Director. None of the executive Directors currently hold an outside appointment.

 

  

 

Not applicable

 

 

 

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Notes to the table on pages 101 to 104:

Performance measures and targets

The Committee selected the relevant financial and risk based performance measures because they are key to the bank’s strategy and are important measures used by the executive Directors to oversee the direction of the business. The Balanced Scorecard has been selected as it demonstrates the performance and progress of Barclays in the journey of becoming the ‘Go-To’ bank as measured across the following dimensions (5Cs): Customers & Clients, Colleagues, Citizenship, Conduct and Company. Each of the 5Cs in the Balanced Scorecard will have equal weighting. All targets are set to be stretching but achievable and aligned to enhancing shareholder value.

The Committee is of the opinion that the performance targets for the annual bonus and Balanced Scorecard element of the LTIP are commercially sensitive in respect of the Company and that it would be detrimental to the interests of the Company to disclose them before the start of the relevant performance period. The performance against those measures will be disclosed after the end of the relevant financial year in that year’s remuneration report subject to the sensitivity no longer remaining.

Changes to the remuneration policy from that operating in 2013

 

    

 

Element

 

  

 

Change

 

   

 

Role Based Pay

  

 

Not applicable before 2014. Introduced following CRD IV regulatory change with a maximum value (amount can decrease but not increase above the quoted maxima).

 

   

 

Pension

  

 

Fixed maximum at percentages of salary (with no annual review) – 33% for Group Chief Executive and 25% for Group Finance Director.

 

   

 

Annual Bonus

  

 

Maximum of 80% of fixed pay (being the elements set out in the charts on page 100).

 

Financial performance measures will guide 50%, Balanced Scorecard 35% and personal objectives 15% of the bonus opportunity.

 

   

 

Long Term
Incentive Plan

  

 

Maximum of 120% of fixed pay (being the elements set out in the charts on page 100).

 

The financial performance measures will have a weighting of at least 50% and the Balanced Scorecard measure will have a weighting of no more than 30%.

 

Differences between the remuneration policy of the executive Directors and the policy for all employees of the Barclays Group

The structure of total remuneration packages for executive Directors and for the broader employee population is similar. Employees receive salary, pension and benefits and are eligible to be considered for a bonus and to participate in all employee share plans. The broader employee population typically does not have a contractual limit on the quantum of their remuneration and does not receive RBP which is paid only to some, but not all, Code Staff. Executive Director RBP is determined on a similar basis to other Code Staff.

The Committee approaches any salary increases for executive Directors by benchmarking against market data for named banks. Incremental annual salary increases remain more common among employees at less senior levels.

As with executive Directors, bonuses for the broader employee population are performance based. Bonuses for executive Directors and the broader employee population are subject to deferral requirements. Executive Directors and other Code Staff are subject to deferral at a minimum rate of 40% (for bonuses of no more than £500,000) or 60% (for bonuses of more than £500,000) but the Committee may choose to operate higher deferral rates. For non-Code Staff, bonuses in excess of £65,000 are subject to a graduated level of deferral. The terms of deferred bonus awards for executive Directors and the wider employee population are broadly the same, in particular the vesting of all deferred bonuses (subject to service and malus conditions).

The broader employee population is not eligible to participate in the Barclays LTIP.

How shareholder views and broader employee pay are taken into account by the Committee in setting policy and making remuneration decisions

We recognise that remuneration is an area of particular interest to shareholders and that in setting and considering changes to remuneration it is critical that we listen to and take into account their views. Accordingly, a series of meetings are held each year with major shareholders and shareholder representative groups (including the Association of British Insurers, National Association of Pension Funds and ISS). The Committee Chairman attends these meetings, accompanied by senior Barclays’ employees (including the Reward and Performance Director and the Company Secretary). Matters discussed for 2013 included our forward looking Directors’ remuneration policy, 2013 remuneration and remuneration aspects of CRD IV. The Committee notes that shareholder views on some matters are not always unanimous, but values the insight and engagement that these interactions and the expression of sometimes different views provide. This engagement is meaningful and helpful to the Committee in its work and contributes directly to the decisions made by the Committee. For example, the Committee’s proposals on which employees should receive RBP in shares and on certain individual RBP levels were amended following discussions with shareholders. Shareholders also contributed directly to the Committee’s approach to the level of discount in the total remuneration opportunities of the executive Directors to reflect the increased certainty of RBP. Shareholders provided feedback which was used to shape the Directors’ remuneration policy.

The Committee takes account of the pay and employment conditions of the broader employee base when it considers the remuneration of the executive Directors. The Committee receives and reviews analysis of remuneration proposals for employees across all of the Group’s businesses. This includes analysis by corporate grade and by performance rating and information on proposed bonuses and salary increases across the employee population and individual proposals for Code Staff and highly paid individuals. When the Committee considers executive Director remuneration, it therefore makes that consideration in the context of a detailed understanding of remuneration for the broader employee population and uses the all employee data to compare remuneration and ensure consistency throughout the Group. Employees are not consulted directly on the Directors’ remuneration policy.

 

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Remuneration report >

Directors’ remuneration policy continued

  

 

 

 

 

Executive Directors’ policy on recruitment

Barclays operates in a highly specialised sector and many of its competitors for talent are outside of the United Kingdom. The Committee’s approach to recruitment remuneration is to pay no more than is necessary to attract appropriate candidates to the role.

The remuneration packages offered on appointment to any new executive Director are a specific part of the Committee’s Terms of Reference. The terms of such packages must be approved by the Committee in consultation with the Chairman and (except for the terms of his own remuneration) the Group Chief Executive.

Any new executive Director’s package would include the same elements, and be subject to the same constraints, as those of the existing executive Directors, as shown below.

 

     

 

Element of remuneration

 

  

 

Commentary

 

  

 

Maximum value

 

    

 

Salary

  

 

Determined by market conditions, market practice and ability to recruit.

 

For a newly appointed executive Director, whether through external recruitment or internal promotion, if their salary is at a level below the desired market level, the Committee retains the discretion to realign their salary over a transitional period which may mean that annualised salary increases for the new appointee are higher than that set out in the salary section of the remuneration policy on page 101.

 

  

 

In line with policy.

    

 

Role Based Pay

  

 

Determined by role, market practice and ability to recruit. Percentage may decrease or increase in certain circumstances subject to maximum value.

 

  

 

100% of salary.

    

 

Benefits

 

  

 

In line with policy.

 

  

 

In line with policy.

 

    

 

Pension

  

 

In line with policy.

  

 

33% of salary (Group Chief Executive), 25% of salary (Group Finance Director) and 25% if another executive Director is appointed.

 

    

 

Annual Bonus

 

  

 

In line with policy.

 

  

 

80% of fixed pay.

 

    

 

Long Term
Incentive Plan

 

  

 

In line with policy.

 

  

 

120% of fixed pay.

 

    

 

Buy out

  

 

The Committee can consider buying out forfeited bonus opportunity or incentive awards that the new executive Director has forfeited as a result of accepting the appointment with Barclays, subject to proof of forfeiture where applicable.

 

As required by the PRA Remuneration Code, any award made to compensate for forfeited remuneration from the new executive Director’s previous employment may not be more generous than, and must mirror as far as possible the expected value, timing and form of delivery, the terms of the forfeited remuneration and must be in the best long-term interests of Barclays. Barclays deferral policy shall however apply as a minimum to any buy out of annual bonus opportunity.

 

  

 

The value of any buy out is not included within the maximum incentive levels above since it relates to a buy out of forfeited bonus opportunity or incentive awards from a previous employer.

Where a senior executive is promoted to the Board, his or her existing contractual commitments agreed prior to his or her appointment may still be honoured in accordance with the terms of the relevant commitment including vesting of any pre-existing deferred bonus or long-term incentive awards.

 

 

 

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Executive Directors’ policy on payment for loss of office (including a takeover)

The Committee’s approach to payments in the event of termination is to take account of the individual circumstances including the reason for termination, individual performance, contractual obligations and the terms of the deferred bonus plans and long-term incentive plans in which the executive Director participates.

Provisions relating to executive Directors’ termination

 

 

 

Standard provision

 

  

 

Policy

 

  

 

Details

 

 

 

Notice periods in
executive Directors’
service contracts

  

 

12 months’ notice from the Company.

 

6 months’ notice from the executive Director.

  

 

Executive Directors may be required to work during the notice period or may be placed on garden leave or if not required to work the full notice period may be provided with pay in lieu of notice (subject to mitigation where relevant).

 

 

 

Pay during notice
period or payment
in lieu of notice per
service contracts

  

 

12 months’ salary payable and continuation of pension and other contractual benefits while an employee.

  

 

Payable in phased instalments (or lump sum) and subject to mitigation if paid in instalments and executive Director obtains alternative employment during the notice period or while on garden leave.

 

In the event of termination for gross misconduct neither notice nor payment in lieu of notice is given.

 

 

 

Treatment of
Role Based Pay

  

 

Ceases to be payable from the executive Director’s termination date. Therefore, RBP will be paid during any notice period and/or garden leave, but not where Barclays elects to make a payment in lieu of notice (unless otherwise required by local law).

  

 

Shares to be delivered on the next quarterly delivery date shall be pro rated for the number of days from the start of the relevant quarter to the termination date. Where Barclays elects to terminate the employment with immediate effect by making a payment in lieu of notice, the executive Director will not receive any shares that would otherwise have accrued during the period for which the payment in lieu is made (unless required otherwise by local law).

 

 

 

Treatment of
annual bonus on
termination

  

 

No automatic entitlement to bonus on termination, but may be considered at the Committee’s discretion and subject to performance measures being met and pro rated for service. No bonus would be payable in the case of gross misconduct or resignation.

 

  

 

 

Treatment of
unvested deferred
bonus awards

  

 

Outstanding deferred bonus awards would lapse if the executive Director leaves by reason of resignation or termination for gross misconduct. However in the case of death or if the Director is an ‘eligible leaver’ defined as leaving due to injury, disability or ill health, retirement, redundancy, the business or company which employs the executive Director ceasing to be part of the Group or in circumstances where Barclays terminates the employment (other than in cases of cause or gross misconduct), he or she would continue to be eligible to be considered for unvested portions of deferred awards, subject to the rules of the relevant plan unless the Committee determines otherwise in exceptional circumstances. Deferred awards are subject to malus provisions which enable the Committee to reduce the vesting level of deferred bonuses (including to nil).

 

In the event of a takeover or other major corporate event, the Committee has absolute discretion to determine whether all outstanding awards would vest early or whether they should continue in the same or revised form following the change of control. The Committee may also determine that participants may exchange existing awards for awards over shares in an acquiring company with the agreement of that company.

 

  

 

In an eligible leaver situation, deferred bonus awards may be considered for release in full on the scheduled release date unless the Committee determines otherwise in exceptional circumstances. After release, the awards may be subject to an additional holding period of six months.

 

 

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Directors’ remuneration policy continued

  

 

 

 

 

Provisions relating to executive Directors’ termination continued

 

 

 

Standard provision

 

  

 

Policy

 

  

 

Details

 

 

 

Treatment of
unvested awards
under the LTIP

  

 

Outstanding unvested awards under the LTIP would lapse if the executive Director leaves by reason of resignation or termination for gross misconduct. However, in line with the plan rules approved by shareholders, in the case of death or if the Director is an ‘eligible leaver’ defined as leaving due to injury, disability or ill health, retirement, redundancy, the business or company which employs the executive Director ceasing to be part of the Group (or for any other reason if the Committee decides at its discretion), he or she would continue to be entitled to be considered for an award. Awards are also subject to malus provisions which enable the Committee to reduce the vesting level of awards (including to nil).

 

In the event of a takeover or other major corporate event (but excluding an internal reorganisation of the Group), the Committee has absolute discretion to determine whether all outstanding awards vest subject to the achievement of any performance conditions. The Committee has discretion to apply a pro rata reduction to reflect the unexpired part of the vesting period. The Committee may also determine that participants may exchange awards for awards over shares in an acquiring company with the agreement of that company. In the event of an internal reorganisation, the Committee may determine that outstanding awards will be exchanged for equivalent awards in another company.

 

  

 

In an eligible leaver situation, awards may be considered for release on the scheduled release date, pro rated for time and performance, subject to the Committee’s discretion to determine otherwise in exceptional circumstances. After release, the shares (net of deductions for tax) are subject to an additional holding period of two years.

 

 

Repatriation

  

 

Except in a case of gross misconduct or resignation, where a Director has been relocated at the commencement of employment, the Company may pay for the Director’s repatriation costs in line with Barclays’ general employee mobility policy including temporary accommodation, payment of removal costs and relocation flights. The company will pay the executive Director’s tax on the relocation costs but will not tax equalise and will also not pay tax on his or her other income relating to the termination of employment.

 

  

 

 

Other

  

 

Except in a case of gross misconduct or resignation, the Company may pay for the executive Director’s legal fees and tax advice relating to the termination of employment and provide outplacement services. The Company may pay the executive Director’s tax on these particular costs.

 

  

 

Illustrative scenarios for executive Directors’ remuneration

The charts below show the potential value of the current executive Directors’ 2014 remuneration in three scenarios: ‘Minimum’ (i.e. fixed pay), ‘Maximum’ (i.e. fixed pay and the maximum variable pay that may be awarded) and ‘Mid-point’ (i.e. fixed pay and 50% of the maximum variable pay that may be awarded). For the purposes of these charts, the value of benefits is based on an estimated annual value for 2014. The scenarios do not reflect share price movement between award and vesting.

A significant proportion of the potential remuneration of the executive Directors is variable and is therefore performance-related and at risk.

 

Total remuneration opportunity: Group Chief Executive (£000)

 

  

Total remuneration opportunity: Group Finance Director (£000)

 

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In the above illustrative scenarios, benefits include regular contractual benefits. Additional ad hoc benefits may arise, for example, overseas relocation of executive Directors, but will always be provided in line with policy.

 

 

 

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Remuneration policy for non-executive Directors

This section provides details of the remuneration policy for the Chairman and non-executive Directors.

 

Remuneration policy for non-executive Directors

 

 

 

Element and purpose

 

  

 

Operation

 

 

 

Fees

 

 

Reflect individual responsibilities and membership of Board Committees and are set to attract non-executive Directors who have relevant skills and experience to oversee the implementation of our strategy

 

  

 

The Chairman and Deputy Chairman are paid an all-inclusive fee for all Board responsibilities. The Chairman has a minimum time commitment equivalent to at least 80% of a full-time role. The other non-executive Directors receive a basic Board fee, with additional fees payable where individuals serve as a member or Chairman of a Committee of the Board. Fee levels for 2014 are disclosed in the table on page 119.

 

Fees are reviewed each year by the Board as a whole against those for non-executive Directors in companies of similar scale and complexity. Fees were last increased in May 2011.

 

The first £30,000 (Chairman: first £100,000) after tax and national insurance contributions of each non- executive Director’s basic fee is used to purchase Barclays’ shares which are retained on the non-executive Director’s behalf until they retire from the Board.

 

 

 

Benefits

 

For Chairman only

  

 

The Chairman is provided with private medical cover subject to the terms of the Barclays scheme rules from time to time, and is provided with the use of a Company vehicle and driver when required for business purposes.

 

No other non-executive Director receives any benefits from Barclays. Non-executive Directors are not eligible to join Barclays’ pension plans.

 

 

 

Bonus and share plans

 

  

 

Non-executive Directors are not eligible to participate in Barclays cash, share or long-term incentive plans.

 

 

 

Notice and termination
provisions

  

 

Each non-executive Director’s appointment is for an initial six year term, renewable for a single term of three years thereafter and subject to annual re-election by shareholders.

 

Notice period:

Chairman: 12 months from the Company (six months from the Chairman). Non-executive Directors: six months from the Company (six months from the Non-executive Director).

 

Termination payment policy

The Chairman’s appointment may be terminated by Barclays on 12 months’ notice or immediately in which case 12 months’ fees and contractual benefits are payable in instalments at the times they would have been received had the appointment continued, but subject to mitigation if they were to obtain alternative employment. There are similar termination provisions for non-executive Directors based on six months’ fees. No continuing payments of fees (or benefits) are due if a non-executive Director is not re-elected by shareholders at the Barclays Annual General Meeting.

 

 

In accordance with the policy table above, any new Chairman and Deputy Chairman would be paid an all-inclusive fee only and any new non-executive Director would be paid a basic fee for their appointment as a Director, plus fees for their participation on and/or chairing of any Board committees, time apportioned in the first year as necessary. No sign-on payments are offered to non-executive Directors.

 

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Directors’ remuneration policy continued

  

 

 

 

 

Service contracts and letters of appointment

All executive Directors have a service contract whereas all non-executive Directors have a letter of appointment. Copies of the service contracts and letters of appointment respectively are available for inspection at the Company’s registered office. The dates of the current Directors’ service contracts and letters of appointment are shown in the table below.

 

 

    

 

Effective date

 

 

Chairman

  

Sir David Walker

   1 September 2012 (non-executive Director), 1 November 2012 (Chairman)

 

Executive Directors

  

Antony Jenkins

   30 August 2012

Tushar Morzaria

   15 October 2013

 

Non-executive Directors

  

Michael Ashley

   18 September 2013

Tim Breedon

   1 November 2012

Fulvio Conti

   1 April 2006

Simon Fraser

   10 March 2009

Reuben Jeffery III

   16 July 2009

Wendy Lucas-Bull

   19 September 2013

Dambisa Moyo

   1 May 2010

Frits van Paasschen

   1 August 2013

Sir Michael Rake

   1 January 2008

Diane de Saint Victor

   1 March 2013

Sir John Sunderland

   1 June 2005

Stephen Thieke

   7 January 2014

 

All Directors are put forward for re-election at each AGM, unless they have indicated that they will not seek re-election at the AGM.

Discretion

In addition to the various operational discretions that the Committee can exercise in the performance of its duties (including those discretions set out in the Company’s share plans), the Committee reserves the right to make either minor or administrative amendments to the policy to benefit its operation or to make more material amendments in order to comply with new laws, regulations and/or regulatory guidance. The Committee would only exercise this right if it believed it was in the best interests of the Company to do so and where it is not possible, practicable or proportionate to seek or await shareholder approval in General Meeting.

 

 

 

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Remuneration report >

Annual report on Directors’ remuneration

  

 

 

 

 

 

 

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This section explains how our Directors’ remuneration policy was implemented during 2013.

Single total figure for 2013 remuneration

The following table shows a single total figure of remuneration in respect of qualifying service for each executive Director together with comparative figures for 2012.

Executive Directors: Single total figure for 2013 remuneration (audited)

 

 
    

Salary

£000

     Taxable benefits
£000
    

Bonus

£000

    

LTIP

£000

    

Pension

£000

    

Total

£000

 

 

 
     2013      2012      2013      2012      2013      2012      2013      2012      2013      2012      2013      2012    

 

 

Antony Jenkinsa

     1,100         373         138         19         0         0         0         0         364         137         1,602         529     

Tushar Morzariab

     171                 14                 1,200                 0                 43                 1,428         –     

Chris Lucasc

     501         800         47         34         500         0         985         643         125         200         2,158         1,677     

 

 

Notes

a   Antony Jenkins joined the Board with effect from 30 August 2012.
b   Tushar Morzaria joined the Board with effect from 15 October 2013.
c   Chris Lucas stepped down from the Board with effect from 16 August 2013 due to ill health. Further details are disclosed on page 115.

Additional information in respect of each element of pay for the executive Directors (audited):

Base salary

Antony Jenkins has been paid a salary of £1,100,000 per annum as Group Chief Executive since his appointment to the role. Tushar Morzaria commenced employment on 15 October 2013 on a salary of £800,000 per annum. Chris Lucas was paid a salary of £800,000 per annum.

Taxable benefits

Taxable benefits include private medical cover, life and ill health income protection, tax advice, home leave related costs, car allowance and the use of a company vehicle and driver when required for business purposes. The figure in the above table for Tushar Morzaria includes £4,576 of non-taxable relocation expenses. Further relocation expenses will be incurred for Tushar Morzaria.

Pension

Executive directors are contractually entitled to cash in lieu of pension contributions which reflects market practice for senior executives in comparable roles.

Annual bonus

Bonuses are earned by reference to the financial year and awarded in the following February. The Committee considered the performance of each of the executive Directors during their respective periods of office during the year. Their performance was assessed against their objectives agreed at the start of the year and comprised both Group and personal, financial and non-financial measures.

(i) Shared objectives

The executive Directors share collective responsibility for progress, as at the year end, against the Transform commitments set out at the start of 2013 and in the Rights Issue prospectus.

 

 

Objective

   Targets / measures for 2013    Progress in 2013

 

 

Strategic progress: the Transform programme

  

 

Performance is assessed against the Transform commitments of 2013

 

Financial measures in the Transform commitments included return on equity, cost to income ratio, core capital ratio, dividend payouts and risk weighted assets.

 

Non-financial measures include progress on cultural change, the development of the Balanced Scorecard and the reputation of and trust in Barclays.

  

 

Financial

¡   Underlying performance has been resilient and momentum is building

¡  CRD IV Risk Weighted Assets within the £440bn target for 2015

¡   Fully loaded Common Equity Tier 1 capital ratio at 9.3% is on track to meet the target of 10.5% during 2015

¡   Cost reduction plans on target for expenses of £16.8bn in 2015 excluding costs to achieve Transform

¡   Adverse movement in cost to income ratio in 2013 mainly as a consequence of reduced income

¡  Work done in 2013 to target a 40% dividend payout ratio from 2014, achieving a payout ratio of 40-50% over time.

 

Non-financial

¡   Barclays Purpose, Values and Behaviours published and cascaded throughout organisation, now integrated into day to day management processes. Data shows that the culture is changing at Barclays

¡   Balanced Scorecard published shortly after the year end. Data shows reputation of and trust in Barclays is improving.

 

 

 

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Objective

   Targets / measures for 2013    Progress in 2013

 

 

2013 Financial and risk measures

  

 

The executive Directors lead delivery of overall performance measured by reference to income, profitability, risk weighted assets and return on equity

  

 

¡  Strength in the diversity of the Group’s income, underpinned by our traditional consumer and commercial banking franchises, and growth in Equities and Investment Banking in the Investment Bank

¡  But income in the Investment Bank overall was down 9% driven by a decrease in FICC

¡   Adjusted profit before tax was down 32% year on year due to reduced income and costs to achieve Transform

¡   Successful execution of Rights Issue

¡  Strong financial fundamentals across funding and liquidity, capital, credit risk management and margins

¡   Adjusted return on average shareholders’ equity decreased to 4.5% principally reflecting the decrease in profit before tax.

 

 

(ii) Personal objectives/measures
Antony Jenkins   

 

Objective

   Targets / measures for 2013    Progress in 2013

 

 

Drive the strategic agenda

  

 

Deliver the Transform programme with the goal of making Barclays the ‘Go To’ bank

  

 

Defined the strategic vision and provided leadership driving the growing momentum in the delivery of Barclays’ Transform strategy. The launch of the Balanced Scorecard and embedding the Barclays Purpose, Values and Behaviours are significant achievements

 

Led the organisation in executing delivery of the six Transform commitments and PRA leverage expectation.

 

 

 

Impact and leadership

  

 

Building relationships with key stakeholders

  

 

Increased engagement and industry leadership with global regulators, industry leaders and thought leaders has led to an improved level of trust in Barclays.

 

 

Tushar Morzaria   

 

Objective

   Targets / measures for 2013    Progress in 2013

 

 

Drive the strategic agenda

  

 

Active contribution to Group Strategy discussions, lead cost management initiatives to meet target of £18.5bn in 2013 and leverage planning to achieve PRA target of 3% in June 2014

 

  

 

Since October 2013, driven the cost reduction agenda, contributed strongly to the Quarter 3 and full year results process, and has conducted a detailed balance sheet review, specifically focused on meeting leverage ratio requirements as a priority

 

Costs marginally over target and leverage target achieved six months early.

 

 

 

Impact and leadership

  

 

Lead finance, tax and treasury functions, build relationships with ExCo and Board colleagues

 

  

 

Has made immediate positive impact in both the Executive Committee and Board.

 

 

Chris Lucas   

 

Objective

   Targets / measures for 2013    Progress in 2013

 

 

Drive the strategic agenda

  

 

Lead Transform workstreams related to CFO function, deliver STP and cost management targets

  

 

Strong communication of Transform agenda to shareholders and other external stakeholders and strong progress in Transform workstreams related to CFO function

 

Strong financial fundamentals across funding and liquidity, capital, credit risk management and margins.

 

 

 

Impact and leadership

  

 

Lead finance, tax and treasury functions, maintain strong relationships internally and externally, manage change in the Finance function

 

  

 

The Committee recognised 2013 achievements in driving change and leading the function, noting he is a widely respected leader both internally and externally and was highly collaborative on hiring a successor.

 

 

(iii) Individual outcomes

The Committee and Board agreed that Antony Jenkins had performed strongly in his first full year as Chief Executive while recognising that pre-tax profits had fallen in the period. However, on 3 February 2014 Antony Jenkins announced that he would decline any 2013 bonus offered to him by the Committee, citing the Rights Issue, restructuring costs and costs associated with legacy issues as his reasons.

60% of Tushar Morzaria’s 2013 bonus of £1.2m will be deferred through a Share Value Plan award vesting over three years. 20% will be paid in cash and 20% in shares. All shares are subject to a six month holding period from the point of release. The bonus reflects both Tushar’s performance at Barclays and his forfeited bonus opportunity when he left his previous employer to join Barclays.

The Committee decided to award Chris Lucas a 2013 bonus at a level of 40% of the maximum (the maximum being 250% of salary), pro rating the resulting amount to reflect his service during 2013. The resulting award of £500,000 will be 100% deferred through a Share Value Plan award vesting over three years, each annual release of shares being subject to an additional six month holding period.

 

 

 

 

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LTIP

The LTIP amount included in the 2013 single total figure of remuneration is the value of vesting amounts in 2013 in relation to the LTIP award granted in 2011 in respect of the financial years 2011-2013. Chris Lucas was the only executive Director participant in this cycle. Accordingly, as Antony Jenkins and Tushar Morzaria were not participants in this cycle, the LTIP figure in the single figure table is shown as zero for both of them. Vesting was dependent on the performance period ending in 2013. The performance achieved against the performance targets is shown below.

 

 

 Performance measure

   Weighting        Threshold      Maximum 100% vesting    Actual         % of maximum achieved

 

 

Return on Risk Weighted Assets (RoRWA)

 

  

 

60%

    

 

23% of award vests for average annual RoRWA of 1.0%

 

  

 

Average annual RoRWA of 1.5%

 

  

 

0.4%

    

 

0%

 

 

Loan loss rate

  

 

30%

    

 

10% of award vests for average annual loan loss rate of 95 bps

 

  

 

Average annual loan loss rate of 81 bps or below

 

  

 

71 bps

    

 

30%

 

 

Sustainability metrics

  

 

10%

    

 

Performance against the sustainability metrics is assessed by the Committee to determine the % of the award that may vest between 0% and 10%

 

  

 

0%

    

 

0%

 

The award was also subject to a discretionary underpin by which the Committee must be satisfied with the underlying financial health of the Group. The Committee was satisfied that this underpin was met, and accordingly determined that the award should vest to the extent of 30% of the maximum number of shares under the total award. The shares are scheduled to be released in March 2014.

Chairman and non-executive Directors

Remuneration for non-executive Directors reflects their responsibility and time commitment and the level of fees paid to non-executive directors of comparable major UK companies.

Chairman and non-executive Directors: Single total figure for 2013 fees (audited)

 

 
           Fees          Benefits                Total      

 

 
       2013        2012        2013        2012        2013        2012   
       £000        £000        £000        £000        £000        £000   

 

 

Chairman

                             

Sir David Walkera

     750          167         17          6         767          173    

 

 

Non-executive Directors

                             

Michael Ashleyb

     39                  –                  39          –    

David Boothc

     185          170         –                  185          170    

Tim Breedond

     183          18         –                  183          18    

Fulvio Conti

     110          110         –                  110          110    

Simon Fraser

     140          140         –                  140          140    

Reuben Jeffery III

     124          105         –                  124          105    

Sir Andrew Likiermane

     45          135         –                  45          135    

Wendy Lucas-Bullf

     25                  –                  25          –    

Dambisa Moyo

     129          120         –                  129          120    

Frits van Paasscheng

     33                  –                  33          –    

Sir Michael Rake

     220          220         –                  220          220    

Diane de Saint Victorh

     90                  –                  90          –    

Sir John Sunderland

     189          161         –                  189          161    

Alison Carnwathi

     –          114         –                  –          114    

Marcus Agiusj

     –          750         –          1         –          751    

 

 

Total

     2,262          2,210         17          7         2,279          2,217    

 

 

Notes

a Sir David Walker joined the Board as a non-executive Director with effect from 1 September 2012 and as Chairman from 1 November 2012.
b Michael Ashley joined the Board as a non-executive Director with effect from 18 September 2013.
c David Booth retired from the Board as a non-executive Director with effect from 31 December 2013.
d Tim Breedon joined the Board as a non-executive Director with effect from 1 November 2012.
e Sir Andrew Likierman retired from the Board as a non-executive Director with effect from 25 April 2013.
f Wendy Lucas-Bull joined the Board as a non-executive Director with effect from 19 September 2013.
g Frits van Paasschen joined the Board as a non-executive Director with effect from 1 August 2013.
h Diane de Saint Victor joined the Board as a non-executive Director with effect from 1 March 2013.
i Alison Carnwath resigned from the Board as a non-executive Director with effect from 24 July 2012.
j Marcus Agius stepped down as Chairman and as a non-executive Director on 2 July 2012.

 

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Long Term Incentive Plan

The BIS Regulations only require inclusion in the ‘Single total figure of remuneration’ the value of the LTIP awards whose last year of performance ends in the relevant financial year and whose vesting outcome is known. This section sets out LTIP cycles in which the executive Directors participate, the outcome of which remains dependent on future performance and whose value could be between nil and the full amount.

LTIP awards for 2013 performance year

The Committee decided to make awards under the 2014-2016 LTIP cycle to both Antony Jenkins and Tushar Morzaria with a face value at grant of 400% of their respective salaries at 31 December 2013. The 2014-2016 LTIP awards will be subject to the following performance measures.

 

 

Performance measure

     Weighting      Threshold      Maximum vesting

 

 

Return on Risk Weighted Assets (RoRWA)

 

    

 

50%

    

 

23% of award vests for average annual RoRWA of 1.08%

 

    

 

Average annual RoRWA of 1.52%

 

 

Loan loss rate

    

 

20%

    

 

7% of award vests for average annual loan loss rate of 70 bps

 

    

 

Average annual loan loss rate of 55 bps

 

 

Balanced Scorecard

    

 

30%

    

 

Performance against the Balanced Scorecard is assessed by the Committee to determine the % of the award that may vest between 0% and 30%. Each of the 5Cs in the Balanced Scorecard will have equal weighting. The targets within each of the 5Cs are deemed to be commercially sensitive. However retrospective disclosure of the targets and performance against them will be disclosed in the 2016 Remuneration Report subject to commercial sensitivity no longer remaining.

 

 

Straight line vesting applies between the threshold and maximum points in respect of the RoRWA and Loan loss rate measures respectively. If the Committee is satisfied with the underlying financial health of the Group based on profit before tax, depending on the extent of its satisfaction, the percentage of shares that may be considered for release by the Committee under the RoRWA measure can be increased or decreased by 10% of the total award, subject always to a maximum of 50% for the award calibrated against RoRWA.

Outstanding LTIP awards

(i) LTIP awards granted during 2012

The performance measures for the awards made under the 2012-2014 LTIP cycle are shown below.

 

 

Performance measure

     Weighting      Threshold      Maximum vesting

 

 

Return on Risk Weighted Assets (‘RoRWA’)

    

 

60%

    

 

23% of award vests for average annual RoRWA of 1.1%

 

    

 

Average annual RoRWA of 1.6%

 

 

Loan loss rate

    

 

30%

    

 

10% of award vests for average annual loan loss rate of 93 bps

 

    

 

Average annual loan loss rate of 70 bps or below

 

 

Citizenship metrics

    

 

10%

    

 

Performance against the Barclays Citizenship strategy is assessed by the Committee to determine the percentage of the award that may vest between 0% and 10%

 

 

Straight line vesting applies between the threshold and maximum points in respect of the RoRWA and Loan loss rate measures respectively. Following the determination of the RoRWA vesting percentage, if the Committee is satisfied with the underlying financial health of the Group based on cumulative profit before tax excluding own credit, it may at its discretion, adjust the percentage of award by up to five vesting points (subject to the maximum of 60% for the award calibrated against RoRWA). Actual performance to be determined on the scheduled release date in May 2015.

(ii) LTIP awards granted during 2013

Awards were made in March 2013 under the 2013-2015 LTIP cycle in accordance with our remuneration policy to the executive Directors.

 

 

 
       % of salary           Number of shares           Face value at grant           Performance period    

 

 

Antony Jenkinsa

       400%           1,545,995           £4,400,000        

 

2013-2015 

  

Chris Lucasb

       400%           1,124,360           £3,200,000        

 

 

Notes

a The maximum number of shares awarded to Antony Jenkins includes 117,888 shares as a Rights Issue adjustment. The original number of shares granted on 18 March 2013 was 1,428,107 at £3.08 per share.
b The maximum number of shares awarded to Chirs Lucas includes 85,737 shares as a Rights Issue adjustment. The original number of shares granted on 18 March 2013 was 1,038,623 shares at £3.08 per share.

 

 

 

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The performance measures for the 2013-2015 LTIP awards are as follows:

 

 

Performance measure

     Weighting      Threshold   Maximum vesting

 

 

Return on Risk Weighted Assets (RoRWA)

 

    

 

50%

    

 

13% of award vests for average annual RoRWA of 1.1%

 

 

 

Average annual RoRWA of 1.6%

 

 

Loan loss rate

    

 

30%

    

 

10% of award vests for average annual loan loss rate of 75 bps

 

 

 

Average annual loan loss rate of 60 bps or below

 

 

Balanced Scorecard

    

 

20%

    

 

Performance against the Balanced Scorecard is assessed by the Committee to determine the percentage of the award that may vest between 0% and 20%. Each of the 5Cs in the Balanced Scorecard has equal weighting. The targets within each of the 5Cs are deemed to be commercially sensitive. However, retrospective disclosure of the targets and performance against them will be disclosed in the 2015 Remuneration Report subject to commercial sensitivity no longer remaining.

 

 

Straight line vesting applies between the threshold and maximum points in respect of the RoRWA and Loan loss rate measures respectively. If the Committee is satisfied with the underlying financial health of the Group based on profit before tax, depending on the extent of its satisfaction, the percentage of Barclays shares that may be considered for release by the Committee under the RoRWA measure can be increased or decreased by 10% of the total award, subject always to a maximum of 50% of the award. Actual performance to be determined on the scheduled release date in March 2016.

Total pension entitlements

Antony Jenkins left the UK pension scheme in April 2012, and started receiving cash in lieu of pension. He has benefits in both the final salary 1964 section and in the cash balance Afterwork section. The accrued pension shown below relates to his 1964 section pension only. The other pension entries relate to his benefits in both sections.

Chris Lucas ceased to be an executive Director on 16 August 2013. The 2013 cash in lieu of pension shown below is for the period from 1 January 2013 to 16 August 2013.

Tushar Morzaria was appointed as an executive Director on 15 October 2013. The cash in lieu of pension shown below is for the period 15 October 2013 to 31 December 2013.

Executive Directors – pension (audited)

 

 
    

Accrued
pension at
31 December
2013

£000

    Increase in
value of
accrued
pension over
year net of
inflation
£000
   

Increase in
transfer value
of accrued
pension

£000

   

Normal
retirement

date

    

Pension value
in 2013 from
DB Scheme

£000

      

2013
cash in lieu
of pension

£000

      

Total 

£000 

 

 

 

Antony Jenkins

     3        1        7        11 July 2021         1           363           364    

Tushar Morzaria

                                            43           43    

Chris Lucas

                                            125           125    

 

 

Payments to the former Group Chief Executive – Bob Diamond

During 2013, Bob Diamond drew a benefit under the Thrift Restoration Plan, a US retirement arrangement of which he ceased to be an active member as at 31 December 2010. The amount of the benefit that relates to Bob Diamond’s service as an executive Director of Barclays was $192,298.

Bob Diamond was tax equalised on tax above the UK tax rate where that could not be offset by a double tax treaty. On receipt of confirmation of the liability in 2013, an additional tax equalisation payment of £80,000 (above that amount disclosed in the 2012 Remuneration Report) was made in respect of accommodation for the period from 1 January 2012 to 3 July 2012. He is not entitled to tax equalisation for income in respect of any period after 3 July 2012.

Payments to the former Group Finance Director – Chris Lucas

Chris Lucas stepped down as Group Finance Director and from the Board on 16 August 2013 due to ill health.

In line with his contract of employment, Chris Lucas received contractual sick pay (100% of base salary), pension allowance and other benefits until 15 February 2014. The other benefits include private medical, life and ill health protection, Executive Income Protection Plan (EIPP), tax advice, car allowance and the use of a company vehicle and driver when required for business purposes. His contractual sick pay, pension allowance, car allowance and eligibility to payments under the Barclays Ill Health Income Plan ceased on 15 February 2014.

Under the terms of the EIPP, Chris Lucas became eligible to receive income protection payments because he was no longer able to carry out his role due to ill health.

From 16 February 2014, Chris Lucas is receiving payments under the EIPP. The EIPP payments will amount to 75% of his current base salary, being an annual payment of £600,000 per annum, and will be reviewed annually in line with inflation up to a maximum increase of 5% per annum. He will continue to be eligible for private medical insurance and life cover while he is receiving the EIPP payments. No salary, bonuses or other allowances are payable to him during this time. He will also have access to office space and use of a chauffeur, as required, for the purposes of the handover of his duties.

The income protection payments may be made to Chris Lucas for each year in which he is unable to undertake his role due to ill health or until he reaches 65 if earlier.

 

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Remuneration report >

Annual report on Directors’ remuneration continued

 

 

 

 

On cessation of EIPP payments, Chris Lucas is not entitled to notice or a payment in lieu of notice or any other compensation in respect of the termination of his employment.

Payments to the former Chairman – Marcus Agius

Marcus Agius was appointed as a senior adviser providing corporate advisory support to Barclays Corporate and Investment Banking with effect from 1 November 2012. He is entitled to a fee for this role at the rate of £175,000 per annum. This fee was not paid for the period of 1 November 2012 to 1 January 2013. He is also eligible for medical cover. The appointment was reviewed after 12 months to determine the value provided from the arrangement and as a result was extended until 31 March 2014 when the agreement will end.

Executive Directors’ shareholdings and share interests

The chart below shows the value of Barclays’ shares held beneficially by Antony Jenkins and Tushar Morzaria as at 28 February 2014 that count towards the minimum shareholding requirement of as a minimum Barclays’ shares worth four times salary. Executive Directors have five years from the later of (i) 2013 and (ii) date of appointment to meet this requirement. At close of business on 28 February 2014, the market value of Barclays ordinary shares was £2.52.

Antony Jenkins (£000)

 

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Tushar Morzaria (£000)

 

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Tushar Morzaria joined Barclays in October 2013. He will be building up to the shareholding requirement as early as possible as his share awards vest (net of shares sold to cover any income tax and social security). In addition, his 2014 LTIP and Share Value Plan (SVP) share awards ensure alignment with shareholders.

The table below shows shares owned beneficially by all the Directors and shares over which executive Directors hold awards which are subject to either deferral terms or performance conditions. The shares shown below that are subject to performance conditions are based on the maximum number of shares that may be released.

Interests in Barclays PLC shares (audited)

 

 
              Unvested     Total as at           
     Owned outright        Subject to
performance
measures
       Not subject to
performance
measures
   

31 December  
2013 (or date  

of retirement  
from the Board,  
if earlier)  

     Total as at   
28 February   
2014   
 

 

 

Executive Directors

                 

Antony Jenkins

     3,065,675           4,056,492           2,979,158        10,101,325           10,101,325      

Tushar Morzaria

     10,000                     1,089,495        1,099,495           1,099,495      

Chris Lucasa

     1,155,178           5,259,050           677,887        7,092,115           –      

Chairman

                 

Sir David Walker

     115,401                            115,401           124,992      

 

 

Non-Executive Directors

                 

Michael Ashley

     11,049                            11,049           13,986      

David Boothb

     122,310                            122,310           –      

Tim Breedon

     6,679                            6,679           9,737      

Fulvio Conti

     80,834                            80,834           84,586      

Simon Fraser

     116,744                            116,744           120,041      

Reuben Jeffery III

     165,822                            165,822           170,370      

Sir Andrew Likiermanc

     42,835                            42,835           –      

Wendy Lucas-Bull

     2,000                            2,000           4,793      

Dambisa Moyo

     27,814                            27,814           31,112      

Frits van Paasschen

     2,508                            2,508           6,355      

Sir Michael Rake

     60,556                            60,556           63,960      

Diane de Saint Victor

     4,947                            4,947           8,473      

Sir John Sunderland

     126,997                            126,997           130,435      

Stephen Thieked

                                –           12,000      

 

 

Notes

a Chris Lucas stepped down from the Board with effect from 16 August 2013.
b David Booth retired from the Board with effect from 31 December 2013.
c Sir Andrew Likierman retired from the Board with effect from 25 April 2013.
d Stephen Thieke joined the Board with effect from 7 January 2014.

 

 

 

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Performance graph and table

The performance graph below illustrates the performance of Barclays over the past five financial years from 2009 to 2013 in terms of total shareholder return compared with that of the companies comprising the FTSE 100 index. The index has been selected because it represents a cross-section of leading UK companies.

 

Total shareholder return £    Year ended 31 December

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In addition, the table below provides a five-year summary of the total remuneration of the Group Chief Executive over the same period. For the purpose of calculating the value of the remuneration of the Group Chief Executive, data has been collated on a basis consistent with the ‘single figure’ methodology.

 

 

 

Year

   2009      2010      2011     2012       2012       2013    

 

 

Group Chief Executive

   John Varley      John Varley      Bob Diamond     Bob Diamonda      Antony Jenkinsb      Antony Jenkins    

 

 

Group Chief Executive single figure

of total remuneration £000s

     2,050         4,567         11,070 c      1,892          529          1,602     

Annual bonus against maximum opportunity %

     0%         100%         80%        0%          0%          0%     

Long-term incentive vesting

against maximum opportunity %

     50%         16%         N/Ad        0%          N/Ad          N/Ad     

 

 

Notes

a Bob Diamond left the Board on 3 July 2012.
b Antony Jenkins became Group Chief Executive on 30 August 2012.
c Number in the single figure table above for 2011 is inclusive of £5,745k tax equalisation as set out in the 2011 Remuneration Report. He was tax equalised on tax above the UK rate where that could not be offset by a double tax treaty.
d Not a participant in a long-term incentive award which vested in the period.

Percentage change in Group Chief Executive’s remuneration

The table below shows how the percentage change in the Group Chief Executive’s salary, benefits and bonus between 2012 and 2013 compares with the percentage change in the average of each of those components of pay for United Kingdom based employees.

 

 

 
     Salary        Benefit        Annual bonus    

 

 

 

 Antony Jenkinsa

 

  

 

 

 

 

No Change

 

 

  

 

    

 

 

 

 

No Change

 

 

  

 

    

 

 

 

 

No Change  

 

 

  

 

 

 

 

 Average based on UK employees

 

  

 

 

 

 

3.6% up

 

 

  

 

    

 

 

 

 

No Change

 

 

  

 

    

 

 

 

 

7.3% up  

 

 

  

 

 

 

 

a Antony Jenkins joined the Board with effect from 30 August 2012. The year on year change has been calculated on an annualised basis.

We have chosen UK employees as the comparator group as it is the most representative group for pay structure comparisons.

Relative importance of spend on pay

A year on year comparison of the relative importance of pay and distributions to shareholders is shown below. 2013 Group compensation costs have reduced 1% and dividends to shareholders have increased 17% from 2012.

Group compensation costs (£m)

 

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Dividends to shareholders (£m)

 

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Remuneration report >

Annual report on Directors’ remuneration continued

 

 

 

 

Statement of implementation of remuneration policy in 2014

The executive Directors’ package for 2014, in line with the Directors’ remuneration policy, will be implemented with effect from the 2014 AGM as follows:

 

 

     Antony Jenkins      Tushar Morzaria      Comments

 

 

Base Salary

 

  

 

 

 

 

£1,100,000

 

 

  

 

  

 

£800,000

 

    

 

No change from 2013.

 

 

 

Role Based Pay

 

  

 

 

 

 

£950,000

 

 

  

 

  

 

£750,000

 

    

 

Paid quarterly in shares subject to a holding period with restrictions lifting over five years.

 

 

 

Pension

 

  

 

 

 

 

33% of salary

 

 

  

 

  

 

25% of salary

 

    

 

Fixed cash allowance in lieu of participation in pension plan

 

 

 

Maximum bonus

  

 

 

 

80% of fixed pay

 

  

  

 

80% of fixed pay

    

 

Award subject to performance over the year and delivered in cash and/or shares, a proportion of which are deferred (at least the amount required by the PRA Remuneration Code) over three years with one-third vesting each year

 

 

 

Maximum LTIP

  

 

 

 

120% of fixed pay

 

  

  

 

120% of fixed pay

    

 

Delivered in shares and vesting dependent on performance over a three year period and subject to a further two year holding period after vesting

 

 

Annual bonus

The annual bonus opportunity will be consistent with the policy detailed in the remuneration policy section of this report in terms of the maximum bonus opportunity, deferral and malus provisions. The measures have been selected to reflect a range of financial and non-financial goals that support the key strategic objectives of the Company. The performance measures and weightings are shown below.

 

 

 

Financial (50% weighting)

  

 

¡  Business performance and Income generation

 

¡   Cost management

 

¡  Balance sheet

 

¡   Leverage

 

¡   Capital management

 

¡  Progress on the Transform programme financial commitments will continue to be assessed in 2014.

 

 

 

Balanced Scorecard

(35% weighting)

  

 

¡  Progress towards the five year Balanced Scorecard targets will be assessed by the Committee at the year end. Each of the 5Cs in the Balanced Scorecard will have equal weighting. The Balanced Scorecard is set out on page 10.

 

 

 

Personal objectives (15% weighting)

 

Personal objectives for each executive Director will be aligned to Barclays’ Purpose, Values and Behaviours and to the 5Cs of the Balanced Scorecard – Customers & Clients, Colleagues, Citizenship, Conduct and Company.

  

 

Antony Jenkins’ 2014 personal objectives include:

 

¡  Delivery of the Transform commitments

 

¡   Further strengthening the control environment

 

¡   Continuing to embed our Purpose, Values and Behaviours and rebuilding Barclays’ reputation

 

¡   Continuing to strengthen the Executive Committee and Senior Leadership Group.

 

Tushar Morzaria’s 2014 personal objectives include:

 

¡   Effective management of the finance, tax and treasury functions including risk and control

 

¡   Management of external relationships and reputation

 

¡   Increased functionalisation and improved efficiency of functions.

 

 

Detailed calibration of the targets is commercially sensitive and it is not appropriate to disclose this information externally. Disclosure of achievement against the targets will be made in the 2014 annual report subject to the sensitivity no longer remaining.

 

 

 

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Non-executive Director fees

The fees for the Chairman and non-executive Directors are shown below.

 

 

 
    1 January 2014     1 January 2013             Percentage    
    £000     £000     increase    

 

 

 Chairman

    750        750        0     

 Deputy Chairman

    250               –     

 Board member

    80        80        0     

 Additional responsibilities

     

 Senior Independent Director

    30        30        0     

 Chairman of Board Audit or Board Remuneration Committee

    70        70        0     

 Chairman of Board Financial Risk Committee

    60        60        0     

 Membership of Board Audit or Board Remuneration Committee

    30        30        0     

 Membership of Board Conduct, Reputation and Operational Risk Committee

    25        25        0     

 Membership of Board Financial Risk Committee

    25        25        0     

 Membership of Board Corporate Governance and Nominations Committee

    15        15        0     

 

 

The Chairman does not receive any other fees in addition to the Chairman fee.

Upon his appointment as Deputy Chairman in 2012, Sir Michael Rake opted to take his non-executive basic fee, Senior Independent Director fee and individual Committee fees. However, with changes in his Committee responsibilities, it has been agreed that with effect from 1 January 2014, Sir Michael Rake will be paid the Deputy Chairman’s fee of £250,000. He does not receive any other fees.

 

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Remuneration report >

Annual report on Directors’ remuneration continued

 

 

 

 

Barclays Board Remuneration Committee

The Board Remuneration Committee is responsible for overseeing Barclays’ remuneration as described in more detail below.

Terms of Reference

The principal purposes of the Committee are to:

 

¡   Set the over-arching principles and parameters of Remuneration Policy across the Group

 

¡   Consider and approve the remuneration arrangements of the Chairman, executive Directors, other senior executives and those employees, including Code Staff, whose total remuneration exceeds an amount determined by the Committee from time to time (currently remuneration of £1m or more)

 

¡   Exercise oversight for remuneration issues.

The Committee considers and approves buy outs of forfeited rights for new hires of £1m or more, and packages on termination where the total value is £1m or more. It reviews the policy relating to all remuneration plans including pensions, and considers and approves policies to promote the alignment of the interests of shareholders and employees. It is also responsible for the selection and appointment of remuneration consultants.

The Terms of Reference are at www.group.barclays.com/about-barclays/about-us/the-board-committees or from the Company Secretary on request.

Chairman and members

The Chairman and members of the Committee are as follows:

 

¡   Sir John Sunderland, Committee member since 1 July 2005, Committee Chairman since 24 July 2012

 

¡   Sir David Walker, Committee member since 1 September 2012

 

¡   Simon Fraser, Committee member since 1 May 2009

 

¡   David Booth, Committee member from 1 July 2012 to 31 December 2013

 

¡   Tim Breedon, Committee member since 1 December 2012

 

¡   Stephen Thieke, Committee member since 6 February 2014

Sir David Walker was considered independent on appointment as Board Chairman. All other current members are considered independent by the Board.

Remuneration Committee attendance in 2013

 

 
     Number of meetings      Number of    
     eligible to attend      meetings attended    

 

 

Sir John Sunderland

     8         8     

Sir David Walker

     8         8     

Simon Fraser

     8         8     

David Booth

     8         8     

Tim Breedon

     8         8     

 

 

The performance of the Committee is reviewed each year as part of the Board Effectiveness Review. The 2013 review concluded that the Committee continues to operate effectively. There was a marginally higher overall score in 2013 than for 2012 and the report concluded that there is good evidence that the quality of constructive debate and challenge within the Committee has improved over the last twelve months.

Advisers to the Remuneration Committee

The Committee received advice during 2013 from Towers Watson. Towers Watson were appointed by the Committee following a market review. The advice provided by Towers Watson to the Committee is independent. Towers Watson is a signatory to, and its continuing appointment as adviser to the Committee is conditional on adherence to, the voluntary UK Code of Conduct for executive remuneration consultants.

Work undertaken by Towers Watson includes advising the Committee and providing the latest market data on compensation and trends when considering incentive levels and remuneration packages. A representative from Towers Watson attends Committee meetings, when requested by the Committee. Towers Watson is available to advise and meet with the Committee members separate from management. Towers Watson also provides remuneration data to the Group and pensions advice and administration services to the Barclays Bank UK Retirement Fund. Fees are charged on a time/cost basis and Towers Watson were paid a total of £255,000 (excluding VAT) in fees for work in 2013 relating to the executive Directors, either exclusively or along with other employees within the Committee’s Terms of Reference.

The Committee reviewed the objectivity and independence of the advice it receives from Towers Watson at a private meeting in July 2013. It is satisfied that Towers Watson is providing robust and professional advice.

In the course of its deliberations, the Committee considers the views of the Group Chief Executive, Group Human Resources Director and the Reward and Performance Director. The Group Finance Director and Chief Risk Officer provide regular updates on Group and business financial performance and the Group’s risk profile respectively.

No Barclays’ employee or Director participates in discussions or decisions of the Committee relating to his or her own remuneration. No other advisers provided significant services to the Committee in the year.

 

 

 

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Remuneration Committee activities in 2013

The following provides a summary of the Committee’s activities during 2013 and during the February 2014 meeting when 2013 remuneration decisions were finalised.

 

 

Meeting

  Fixed pay issues   Variable pay issues   Governance, risk and other matters

 

 

January 2013

 

 

¡ Approved executive Directors’ and senior executive 2013 salary

 

 

¡ Final 2012 incentive funding

¡  Approved proposals for executive Director and senior executive 2012 bonuses and 2013 LTIP awards

 

 

¡  Risk adjustment and malus review

¡   Review reward communications strategy

¡  Barclays Transform project and remuneration

¡   Finance and Risk update

 

 

 

February 2013

 

 

¡ Executive Director retirement arrangements

 

 

¡ 2013 LTIP

¡  Long-term compensation projections

 

 

¡  Risk adjustment and malus review

¡   Approved 2012 remuneration report

¡  Transform project – reward update

 

 

 

April 2013

     

 

¡  Consider and approve remuneration arrangements in respect of Group Executive Committee changes

 

 

 

May 2013

 

 

¡ Initial consideration of possible approaches to CRD IV compliance

 

 

 

¡ Remuneration trend analysis

¡  Review of incentives

 

 

¡  CRD IV regulation

¡   Control framework for hiring, exit and retention of employees

 

 

 

July 2013

 

 

¡ Approaches to CRD IV compliance

 

 

¡ 2013 incentive projections

¡  Barclays’ balanced scorecard

¡ Group Executive Committee remuneration

¡  Barclays LTIP review

¡ Review of regulation and formulaic incentives

 

 

¡  Review of Committee effectiveness and terms of reference

¡   Review Committee adviser independence

¡  CRD IV regulation

¡   Control framework for hiring, exit and retention of employees

¡  Finance and Risk update

 

 

 

September 2013

 

 

¡ Approach to CRD IV involving new fixed pay ‘Role Based Pay’

 

 

 

¡ Incentive funding and total compensation expenditure

 

 

 

¡  Malus review

¡   CRD IV regulation

 

 

 

October 2013

 

 

¡ Update on pension

¡  CRD IV update

 

 

¡ 2013 incentive funding projections

 

 

¡  Annual review of appointment of external Committee adviser

¡   Risk adjustment and malus review

¡  Control framework for hiring, exit and retention of employees

¡   Finance and Risk update

 

 

 

December 2013

 

 

¡ CRD IV update on implementation of Role Based Pay

¡  Initial considerations of executive Directors’ and senior executive 2014 fixed pay

 

 

¡ 2013 incentive funding proposals and initial senior executive individual proposals

¡  2014 LTIP design and performance measures

 

 

¡  Risk adjustment and malus review

¡   Review draft forward looking Directors’ remuneration policy and 2013 remuneration report

¡  Review implementation of Salz review remuneration recommendations

¡   Control framework for hiring, exit and retention of employees

¡  Finance and Risk update

 

 

 

February 2014

 

 

¡ Approved executive Directors’ and senior executive 2014 fixed pay

 

 

¡ Final 2013 incentive funding

¡  Approved proposals for executive Director and senior executive 2013 bonuses and 2014 LTIP awards

 

 

¡  Risk adjustment and malus review

¡   Approved 2013 remuneration report

¡  Review reward communications strategy

¡   Finance and Risk update

 

 

Regular items: market and stakeholder updates including PRA/FCA, US Federal Reserve and other regulatory matters; LTIP performance updates; hiring and leaver updates.

Statement of voting at Annual General Meeting

At the last Annual General Meeting the voting results on the remuneration resolution ‘To approve the Directors’ Remuneration Report for the year ended 31st December 2012’ were as follows:

 

(i) the total number of votes cast in relation to the resolution was 8,220,989,069 ‘for’ and 456,324,669 ‘against’;

 

(ii) the percentage ‘for’ was 94.74% and the percentage ‘against’ was 5.26%; and

 

(iii) the number of abstentions was 114,117,315.

The disclosure in the 2014 remuneration report will include details of the binding shareholder vote on Directors’ remuneration policy.

 

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Remuneration report >

Additional remuneration disclosures

  

 

 

 

 

 

 

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This section contains voluntary disclosures that the Company has agreed with the UK Government that it will make about levels of remuneration for our eight most highly paid senior executive officers. It also contains additional remuneration disclosures (including voluntary disclosures) about levels of remuneration of employees in the Barclays Group and Barclays Code Staff.

 

 

2013 total remuneration of the eight highest paid senior executive officers below Board level

The table below shows remuneration for the eight highest paid senior executive officers below Board level who were Key Management Personnel in 2013.

Eight highest paid senior executive officers below Board level

 

    

1

2013
£000

         

2

2013
£000

         

3

2013
£000

         

4

2013
£000

         

5

2013
£000

         

6

2013
£000

         

7

2013
£000

         

2013 
£000 

 

Salary

     600            513            513            125            446            450            445          384 

Current year cash bonus

     550            450            420            440            295            0            0          243 

Current year share bonus

     550            450            420            440            295            0            0          243 

Deferred cash bonus

     825            675            630            660            442            725            726          365 

Deferred share bonus

     825            675            630            660            442            725            726          365 

 

Total remuneration

     3,350            2,763            2,613            2,325            1,920            1,900            1,897          1,600 

 

Total remuneration of the employees in the Barclays Group

The table below shows the number of employees in the Barclays Group in 2012 and 2013 in bands by reference to total remuneration. Total remuneration comprises salary, bonus and the value at award of LTIP awards.

Total remuneration of the employees in the Barclays Group

 

    Number of employees
  Remuneration band   2013   2012 

 

£0 to £25,000

  74,600   71,581 

£25,001 to £50,000

  36,886   37,300 

£50,001 to £100,000

  23,381   22,766 

£100,001 to £250,000

  10,371   10,158 

£250,001 to £500,000

  2,507   2,440 

£500,001 to £1,000,000

  962   910 

£1,000,001 to £2,500,000

  419   373 

£2,500,001 to £5,000,000

  54   50 

Above £5m

  8  

 

Barclays is a global business. Of those employees earning above £1m detailed in the table above, 57% are based in the US, 27% in the UK, and 16% in the Rest of World.

 

 

 

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Code Staff remuneration

Code Staff are the members of the Barclays PLC Board and Barclays’ employees whose professional activities could have a material impact on the Group’s risk profile. A total of 530 individuals were Code Staff in 2013 (2012: 393).

 

Code Staff aggregate 2013 remuneration by business      £m   

 

 
    

Investment
Bank

 

    

        Corporate
Banking

 

    

Wealth and
Investment
    Management

 

    

Retail Banking
(UK and Europe)

 

    

      Barclaycard

 

    

        Barclays
Africa

 

    

Group 
        Functions 

 

 

 

 
     512         11         70         8         7         13         132    

 

 

 

Code Staff aggregate 2013 remuneration by remuneration type           £m   

 

 
     Senior management            Other Code Staff   

 

 

Salary

     13         142    

Current year cash bonus

     3         51    

Current year share bonus

     3         23    

Deferred cash bonus

     7         251    

Deferred share bonus

     8         247    

Total

     34         714    

Long-term incentive award (outcome contingent on future performance)

     3           

 

 

Value of long-term incentive awards is the value at award.

 

Code Staff deferred remuneration           £m   

 

 
     Senior management       Other Code Staff   

 

 

Deferred unvested remuneration outstanding at 31 December 2012

     100          1,146    

Impact of changes in Code Staff population including leavers during 2012 and joiners in 2013

     163          632    

Deferred unvested remuneration outstanding at 1 January 2013

     263          1,778    

Deferred remuneration awarded in 2013

     77          680    

Deferred remuneration reduced in 2013 through performance adjustments

     (23)         (119)   

Deferred remuneration vested in 2013

     (107)         (847)   

Deferred unvested remuneration outstanding at 31 December 2013

     210          1,492    

 

 

 

Code Staff joining and severance payments

          £m   

 

 
     Senior management       Other Code Staff   

 

 

Total sign-on awards

               

Total buy-out awards

               

Total severance awards (18 individuals; highest individual award £3m)

             11    

 

 

‘Senior management’ means members of the Barclays PLC Board and senior managers as defined in the PRA Remuneration Code. Code Staff are subject to a minimum shareholding guideline.

 

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Remuneration report >

Additional remuneration disclosures continued >

Schedules to the Annual Report

  

 

 

 

 

Outstanding share plan and long-term incentive plan awards (audited)

 

    

 

Number of shares
under award/option
at 1 January 2013
(maximum)

 

    

Number of shares
awarded in year
(maximum)

 

    

Rights Issue
Adjustment
(maximum)

 

    

Market price
on award date

 

    

Weighted average
exercise price

 

     

 

Antony Jenkins

                

Executive Share Award Scheme 2007

     7,052                         £4.14             

Barclays LTIP 2012-2014

     1,052,347                 86,870         £1.81             

Barclays LTIP 2012-2014

     1,266,715                 104,565         £1.86             

Barclays LTIP 2013-2015

             1,428,107         117,888         £3.06             

Share Value Plan 2010

     412,141                         £3.55             

Share Value Plan 2011

     285,370                 11,778         £2.88             

Share Value Plan 2012

     1,796,137                 50,690         £2.53             

Share Value Plan 2012

     1,995,237                 164,704         £1.86             

Tushar Morzaria

                

Share Value Plan 2013

             1,089,495                 £2.51             

 

Chris Lucas

                

PSP 2010-2012

     927,318                         £3.55             

Sharesave 2007

     3,735                 308                 £4.35     

Sharesave 2012

     6,250                 515                 £1.33     

Executive Share Award Scheme 2007

     44,006                         £4.14             

Executive Share Award Scheme 2009

     602,756                 50,071         £3.55             

Share Value Plan 2011

     130,293                 5,377         £2.76             

Share Value Plan 2012

     736,877                 50,690         £2.53             

Barclays LTIP 2011-2013

     1,447,701                 119,506         £2.76             

Barclays LTIP 2012-2014

     2,158,661                 178,195         £1.81             

Barclays LTIP 2013-2015

             1,038,623         85,737         £3.06             

 

The interests shown in the table above are the maximum number of Barclays’ shares that may be received under each plan. Executive Directors do not pay for any share plan or long-term incentive plan awards (other than Sharesave). Numbers shown for Executive Share Award Scheme (ESAS) represent provisional allocations that have been awarded and may also include shares under option as at 31 December 2013. Antony Jenkins received 834 dividend shares from ESAS awards released in 2013 and 68,896 dividend shares from SVP awards released in 2013 (market price on release date was £3.06).

Chris Lucas received 15,369 dividend shares from the PSP award released in 2013 (market price on release date was £3.06) and 6,492 dividend shares from the SVP award released in 2013 (market price on release date was £3.06 and £3.07). With the exception of Chris Lucas’ SVP 2012 award, SVP awards do not have performance conditions as the awards are deferred share bonuses. Vesting of SVP awards is dependent on future service and subject to malus conditions. The vesting of 50% of each tranche of Chris Lucas’ SVP 2012 award is subject to the condition that on vesting return on equity exceeds cost of equity. The vesting of the second and third tranches of Chris Lucas’ SVP 2012 award are also subject to the Committee being satisfied with progress against the PRA’s capital targets. The highest and lowest Barclays share prices during 2013 were £3.31 and £2.49 respectively; the share price on 31 December 2013 was £2.72. In relation to Chris Lucas’ PSP 2010-2012 award, the RoRWA performance measure was not met and the TSR performance measure was partially met. The Committee also considered the underpin and was satisfied with the underlying health of the Group. As a result, the award vested in March 2013 at 0.7 times the initial award (maximum was three times). SVP 2013 granted to Tushar Morzaria was granted in respect of awards he forfeited as a result of accepting employment at Barclays. This award was made in line with the Barclays’ recruitment policy.

Outstanding Contingent Capital Plan awards and Cash Value Plan awards (audited)

 

 
    

Value under
award at

1 January
2013
(maximum)
(£000)

 

    

Value
awarded

in year
(maximum)
(£000)

 

    

Value
paid
in year
(£000)

 

    

Value
lapsed
in year
(£000)

 

    

Value under
award at
31 December
2013
(maximum)
(£000)

 

    

First
scheduled
release date

 

    

Last 
scheduled 
release date 

 

 

 

 

Antony Jenkins

                    

Contingent Capital Plan 2011

     900                 450                 450         15/03/2012         15/03/2014    

Cash Value Plan 2012

     2,250                 750                 1,500         18/03/2013         16/03/2015    

Chris Lucas

                    

Contingent Capital Plan 2011

     360                 180                 180         23/05/2012         23/05/2014    

 

 

Deferred cash bonuses granted under CCP in 2011 and CVP in 2012 are dependent on future service and vest subject to malus conditions. The vesting of CCP awards is subject to the condition that the Core Tier 1 ratio is equal to or exceeds 7%. On the vesting of CCP awards, a ‘coupon’ may be added which for the awards shown is 7% on the award amount (on an annualised and non-compounded basis). In addition to the values paid in year shown in the table above, a coupon of 7% was paid on the CCP amounts paid in 2013. Executive Directors do not pay for CCP awards. On the vesting of CVP awards, a ‘service credit’ may be added on the third and final vesting amount which for the award shown is 10% on the award amount. Antony Jenkins received the CVP award as part of his 2011 bonus, which was awarded in respect of performance in his role as CEO of Retail and Business Banking. He did not pay for the award.

 

 

 

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Number of shares
released/exercised

 

   

Market price on
release/exercise

date

 

   

Number of

shares
lapsed in 2013

 

   

Number of

shares under

award/option at
31 December 2013
(maximum)

 

   

Vested number

of shares

under option

 

   

Value of
release/exercise
(£000)

 

   

End of three-year
performance
period, or first
exercise/scheduled
release date

 

   

Last exercise/
scheduled
release date

 

 

 

 
    7,052        £3.06                             22                 
                         1,139,217                      31/12/2014        25/05/2015   
                         1,371,280                      31/12/2014        25/05/2015   
                         1,545,995                      31/12/2015        07/03/2016   
    412,141        £3.06                             1,260                 
    142,685        £3.06               154,463               436        12/03/2012        15/03/2014   
    1,182,073        £3.06               664,754               3,614        18/03/2013        16/03/2015   
                         2,159,941                      17/03/2014        16/03/2015   
                         1,089,495                      17/03/2014        05/03/2018   

 

 
    209,298        £3.06        718,020                      640                 
                         4,043                      01/11/2014        30/04/2015   
                         6,765                      01/11/2015        30/04/2016   
    44,006        £3.06                             135                 
    602,634        £2.59               50,193               1,561        18/03/2013        16/03/2015   
    65,146        £3.07               70,524               200        08/05/2012        06/05/2014   
    122,813        £3.06               664,754               375        18/03/2013        16/03/2015   
                         1,567,207                      31/12/2013        06/05/2014   
                         2,336,856                      31/12/2014        25/05/2015   
                         1,124,360                      31/12/2015        07/03/2016   

 

 

 

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Table of Contents

Implementation of the Salz Review Recommendations

 

 

 

 

 

 

LOGO

Introduction

The Board commissioned a review of Barclays’ business practices in July 2012, led by Sir Anthony Salz, with a view to providing a comprehensive roadmap for cultural change. Sir Anthony Salz published his report in April 2013, and the Board intends to implement all 34 recommendations. To date we are pleased with progress made, although our work is ongoing.

The Salz recommendations have been fully integrated into the Transform programme, our long-term plan to transform the culture and performance of Barclays, with the goal of becoming the ‘Go-To’ bank. The primary tool against which we will report progress annually and measure success is our Balanced Scorecard, which sets out a clear description of what we want Barclays to be, out to 2018. The organisation is aligned to the Balanced Scorecard and to our Purpose, Values and Behaviours through the new performance management framework.

Below we have summarised progress against the Review’s 34 recommendations. This update is not intended to be exhaustive and the Salz Review Report which details all the recommendations in full can be found on our website. Core elements of our Transform Programme, which address many of the recommendations, are described in further detail elsewhere in this report.

We are confident that implementing the Review’s recommendations will help us become the ‘Go-To’ bank for all our stakeholders.

1  Regulatory and business standards

To ensure we work collaboratively and openly with regulators, we have been building the necessary culture, resources, capabilities and processes. We have developed a centralised database to facilitate internal and external coordination of regulatory interactions. Furthermore, all senior colleagues who work with regulators have undergone training to ensure communication with regulators is clear and transparent. Our performance and reward systems now assess colleagues on compliance with the spirit as well as the letter of the law and regulation. Since his appointment, Sir David Walker as Chairman has been obtaining feedback from regulators and other public authorities on an on-going basis.

2   Setting high standards

The Balanced Scorecard is the centrepiece of our plan – alongside our Purpose, Values and Behaviours – to embed the right culture in our business and become the ‘Go-To’ bank. Both are embedded in the new performance management framework and drive variable compensation. From mid-year 2013, Senior Leaders received separate performance ratings in relation to both their objectives (‘what’ they delivered) and our values (‘how’ they delivered). This now applied to Managing Directors (MDs) as of the 2013 year-end and will to all colleagues from January 2014.

3  Customers

The Balanced Scorecard (see page 10) is cascaded into business unit and function scorecards, which define targets for meeting the needs and expectations of customers and of our other stakeholders. We have also launched initiatives that capture and build on customer feedback such as ‘YourBank’– an online forum in the UK that allows people to submit, share and vote on ideas for improving Barclays’ everyday banking services. To date we have received more than 3,500 ideas. Internally, we have enriched our complaints reporting to management and will provide regular reports to the Board. Our external complaints reporting has been enhanced in the UK with reporting that goes beyond the FCA requirements as well as externally published ‘Spotlight’ reports that focus on our response to key customer complaints.

 

 

 

 

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4  Bringing the values to life

In 2013, more than 98% of colleagues attended Values and Behaviours engagement sessions. In parallel, we have established a comprehensive leadership development curriculum which integrates Values and Behaviours into our learning programmes for Managing Directors and all colleagues. For more detail see the People section on pages 86 to 88. Further, we have trained 1,500 Values Leaders to champion our Values and Behaviours across the bank. In July, we hosted an online values forum, providing a direct opportunity for colleagues to voice their opinion – over 29,000 posts were generated.

5  Monitoring progress

The Balanced Scorecard defines what we need to achieve over the next five years to be well on the way to becoming the ‘Go-To’ bank. This provides the framework and starting point for all colleagues when they set their individual performance objectives, and colleagues will also be assessed against how they live the values and behaviours. To inform our broader understanding of areas where we can make improvements we are using customer, colleague and other stakeholders surveys.

6  Code of conduct

We published our global Code of Conduct – ‘The Barclays Way’– in October 2013. It outlines our way of working across our business globally and will be refreshed annually. As of February 2014 more than 137,000 colleagues had attested to having read and understood the Code and colleagues will be required to re-attest annually.

7   Board experience

Our stated objective is that approximately 50% of Non-Executive Directors (NEDs) have financial services experience. Furthermore, we now require that 25-33% of that 50% have directly relevant banking experience and this has been a key factor for the appointment of new NEDs. Over the last year we have appointed Wendy Lucas Bull, Mike Ashley and Stephen Thieke, all of whom have significant directly relevant banking experience, from a variety of sources. For further detail see pages 83 to 85.

8  Non-Executive Directors

We updated the Charters of Expectations and NED appointment letters in October 2013 to reflect an additional time commitment of 25-30 days p.a. for Chairmen of Board Committees above the average 30-36 days p.a. commitment for all NEDs. In order to facilitate NED engagement with the business we have in place a programme to help NEDs build a detailed understanding of specialist topics as well as a NED Induction Programme, to allow new NEDs to meet business and functional heads. For further detail see the Corporate Governance section on page 52.

9  Board information

Revised Board paper guidelines were published in July 2013, and a revised executive summary template was introduced in late 2013. Together these require papers to be short, insightful and neutral, present essential themes and help inform a robust debate. To support this, Group functional teams have taken increased responsibility for providing balanced and timely oversight of papers that business units intend to present to the Board.

10  Cohesive executive team

We have established a Senior Leadership Group (top 150) to build confidence, unity and collective ownership of our change programme. To improve transparency of our most senior decision making, we tried new and different formats for the Group Executive Committee in 2013. For example, we opened up some sessions to include a broader group of Senior Leaders as observers and participants. The Board reviews the effectiveness of senior executives regularly on an informal basis and formally through the Board Effectiveness Review annually. For more information see page 58. Individual Group ExCo remuneration recommendations take into account the ExCo members’ effectiveness.

11  Group Chief Executive Succession

The Board Corporate Governance and Nominations Committee regularly reviews the Group CEO role profile and conducts an annual review of the Group CEO succession plan. This Committee has oversight for talent management and future leader succession planning. Several talent receptions were held in 2013, to increase the opportunity for meaningful interactions between NEDs and Senior Leaders. For further detail see the Corporate Governance section on page 75. All Group ExCo appointments in 2013 have considered both internal and external candidates and 12/41 (29%) of Senior Leader appointments were external.

12   Board coordination

We considered holding joint meetings of Board Committees to improve collaboration and coordination; however, we concluded the most efficient means of achieving this objective was cross participation. For example, Wendy Lucas Bull sits on both the Barclays Africa Group Limited Board and the Barclays Group Board. Excluding the Chairman, nine of our NEDs sit on more than one Board Committee, with four sitting on three or more Committees. Moreover, the Board Enterprise Wide Risk Committee (BEWRC) comprises the Chairmen of each of the other principal Board Committees, further enhancing coordination.

13  Board Committee for conduct, reputational and operational risk

The Board Conduct, Reputation and Operational Risk Committee (BCRORC) was established in January 2013 to oversee the governance of non-financial risk whilst the BEWRC takes a Group wide view of risks and controls, to bring together in one place the entire financial and non-financial risk profile of Barclays. For further detail on the mandate of both Committees see the Corporate Governance section on pages 73 to 77.

14   Board effectiveness

The methodology and results of our 2013 Board annual effectiveness review, facilitated by an independent third party are summarised on page 58. The activities being undertaken to address recommendations from prior years are presented on page 60 and progress against this year’s objectives will be outlined in the 2014 Annual Report.

15 Shareholder interaction

The Chairman’s Corporate Governance report on page 52 provides examples of how we have promoted open and effective communication with shareholders, including our shareholder communications guidelines which can be found on our website. We are committed to the constructive use of the AGM and proactively encourage shareholder participation, both through attendance and voting. The 2013 Annual Report incorporates new elements to help stakeholders navigate the regulatory and statutory disclosure requirements, whilst providing insight and context to the long term strategy and Purpose as defined by our Balanced Scorecard.

 

 

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Barclays’ implementation of the Salz Review recommendations >

continued

 

 

 

 

16  Strengthening Human Resources

The Group HR Director was appointed to the Group ExCo in 2009 and this remains an ExCo level role to contribute to strong and effective governance. Irene McDermott Brown was appointed as the Group HR Director in July 2013 following consultation with the Chairman, members of the Board Corporate Governance and Nominations Committee and Board Remuneration Committee. As a member of the Group ExCo and the leader of the HR function, Irene has championed a number of initiatives to embed our Purpose, Values and Behaviours and introduce a new performance management approach.

17  Employee engagement

We introduced a new policy in early 2014 outlining how we will help colleagues build their skillset and take ownership of their careers. For example, for new joiners we have developed a Global Induction Programme, ‘Being Barclays’ which combines face to face training supported by an online portal. We have also established leadership development programmes such as the Barclays Leadership Academy, further detail can be found on page 86. For top performers we will encourage mobility through secondments and placements and offer mentoring and NED exposure opportunities. Further, our global recognition plan to be rolled out in 2014 will allow us to recognise colleague contributions with a simple thank you or monthly awards.

18   Improving the performance management process

Our new performance management approach aligns to our Purpose, Values and Behaviours. It measures both ‘what’ a colleague delivers and also ‘how’ they achieve their objectives. This new approach reinforces the relationship between performance, pay and other key HR decisions. To support this guidance has been issued to managers on how to set objectives aligned to a Balanced Scorecard and deliver clear and honest feedback; this will be supplemented by further training in 2014. Performance audits will be undertaken in 2014 to ensure the effectiveness of performance management outcomes.

19   Recruiting and induction

Our recruitment process for Leaders now includes an assessment against Values; this will be rolled out to all colleagues. For a significant number of MD opportunities, we have supplemented the process with a Values assessment by an external partner specialising in business psychology. Our ‘Being Barclays’ induction programme is compulsory for new joiners, including MDs and Directors, and supports engagement with our Purpose, Values and Behaviours within the first 90 days of joining Barclays.

20   Developing Barclays’ future leaders

In 2013, we designed and implemented a global approach to talent identification and Group ExCo conducted a review of Senior Leaders across the organisation. During 2014, we will put in place mechanisms to improve transparency in identification of talent across all levels and opportunities for mobility and development to support our leadership and diversity initiatives. Promotion at all levels now includes assessment against the Values. For MD promotion, this is conducted by an external partner.

21  Pay principles

Our new Remuneration Policy on pages 100 to 110 reflects common pay principles across the bank and expressly links remuneration decisions to sustained performance, risk-alignment and our Purpose and Values. At a group and business level, the Remuneration Committee (RemCo) considers financial and non-financial measures including risk management and Balanced Scorecard outcomes in assessing performance. At an individual level, the performance-pay linkages have been further enhanced, incorporating the new performance approach which considers both ‘what’ and ‘how’ the colleague delivers. All colleagues are required to have risk and control objectives.

22  Retail incentives

We have removed retail sales incentives which may encourage behaviours that conflict with meeting customer needs in UK retail branches, with similar changes to be introduced in Africa. In 2014, all UK retail colleagues, across the customer network, working in the same customer-facing role will be rewarded with an equal share of the overall performance reward as measured through a Balanced Scorecard unless individual performance standards, based on appropriate behaviours, are not met.

23  Discretionary pay

When determining the discretionary incentive pool, financial and non-financial measures including risk management and Balanced Scorecard outcomes are key considerations for the Remuneration Committee in assessing performance. The Remuneration Review Panel has been established to focus on making recommendations to the RemCo on risk adjustment to incentive pools and individual malus outcomes. The Panel has also issued guidance to ensure consistency in getting risk based decisions right the first time. We made significant improvements in disclosure in the 2012 Remuneration report, and have adopted the same approach in the 2013 report.

24  Long-term awards

Our Long Term Incentive Plans (LTIPs) are now restricted to Group ExCo only and will be further limited to Executive Directors in 2014. The new LTIP is a Group-wide plan that is calibrated to financial performance adjusted for risk on a group wide basis. RemCo gives careful consideration to value at award to ensure that LTIPs are appropriately considered in the wider context of pay awards and disclosures. The annual Directors’ Remuneration Report on pages 111 to 121 sets out full details of the ‘value at award’, maximum potential face value and actual pay outs from LTIPs.

25   Control functions’ incentives

As of February 2013, control functions now have solid reporting lines into the Group CEO rather than business heads to avoid conflict of interest. Separate functional incentive pools are now in place, the size of each is influenced by performance against a function Balanced Scorecard. Individual performance objectives and reward are now aligned to the relevant function Balanced Scorecard and will be independent of the financial performance of businesses they support.

 

 

 

 

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26 Control functions’ review of compensation

The Remuneration Review Panel has been introduced to ensure appropriate and meaningful control function input into compensation decisions. The Remuneration Review Panel is independent of the business and its membership includes the control functions. As part of its remit the Panel makes recommendations to RemCo on risk adjustments to the incentive pools, and individual malus and suspensions. Control function input includes information relating to behaviour and conduct issues. Managers have also received guidance on incorporating risk and control behaviours when determining reward recommendations.

27 Board’s role in compensation oversight

The Board has established a new Remuneration Policy (see pages 100 to 110) which sets out clear principles and is aligned to our Purpose, Values and Behaviours. The Remuneration Committee Terms of Reference require consideration and approval of remuneration arrangements for high earners and colleagues who influence the risk profile of the organisation. The RemCo formally reports to the Board after each meeting. It works closely with the Board Risk Committees and receives risk input from the Chief Risk Officer at each meeting, an annual ‘Risk Perspective on Performance’ assessment as well as input from the Remuneration Review Panel. The Remuneration Committee annually reviews the appointment of its independent advisor which must adhere to the UK Code of Conduct for executive remuneration consultants.

28 Risk culture and control framework

The Barclays ERMF published in December 2013 sets risk appetite principles; defines risk appetite accountabilities for the CEO and CRO; and defines the roles and responsibilities across the three lines of defence. Risk appetite statements were set and approved by the BEWRC in December 2013. Colleagues are now assessed against mandatory risk and control objectives, in particular, front office Investment Bank colleagues’ objectives specifically refer to unauthorised trading.

29 Conduct, reputational and operational risk

The Barclays ERMF, together with the defined risk appetite statements and upcoming Key Risk Control Frameworks factor conduct, reputational and operational risks into business decisions and governance. Further, the Strategic Risk Assessment piloted in 2013 provides a top down view of business unit strategy integrating strategic planning activity, appetite setting and the assessment and management of material risks.

30 Issue escalation

In 2013 we ran an awareness raising whistleblowing campaign, including creation of an independent, external whistleblowing hotline run by Public Concern at Work. The Behaviours we expect, in line with our Values, mandate a colleague responsibility to have courage to speak up when they believe something is wrong. Senior Leaders are working to address perceived issues around raising concerns; feedback from colleagues suggests more work is required in this area.

31 Learning from mistakes

A Group-wide methodology for learning from mistakes relating specifically to Operational Risk was launched in January 2013. Over 2014 we will look to improve this process and investigate the potential to build out this methodology across all risk types so as to be able to apply lessons learnt more broadly.

32 Control functions’ independence and influence

We announced a new functional operating model in January 2013 which promotes the independence and authority of our control functions. Compliance, Risk, Legal, Finance and HR now have solid reporting lines into the Group Function Head. Appointment of Head of Compliance is subject to consultation with the Chairman and Chairman of the BCRORC. We are also reinforcing the compliance culture throughout the bank, ‘Building an Effective Control Environment’ is a core capability that underpins our development approach across all levels.

33 Internal Audit

In July 2012 we introduced a revised audit methodology to improve efficiency and effectiveness. We will continue to review the audit schedule and methodology to ensure both are fit for purpose. We conduct regular internal and external skills assessment reviews to ensure our audit teams have the appropriate skills and experience aligned to each business, with particular deep dives into the Investment Bank team. In 2013 our Internal Audit Charter was reviewed and updated to reflect the requirement to provide assurance on the risk culture of the firm – we will continue to refresh the Charter annually.

34 Implementation

This section of the Annual Report provides a summary of our progress on implementation. This and all previous editions can be found on our website.

 

 

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Risk review >   

 

 

 

 

 

 

Insight into the level of risk across Barclays’ businesses and portfolios, the material risks and uncertainties faced and the key areas of management focus. To find out more about the major risk policies which underlie our risk exposures, consolidated policy-based qualitative information is available under Risk management.

 

 

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Risk review >

Contents

     

 

 

 

 

The management of risk plays a central role in the execution of Barclays’ strategy.

For 2013, Barclays’ Risk Management disclosures are located across the Annual Report and Pillar 3 Report.

 

                    Annual Report      Pillar 3 Report  
           

Risk

review

    

Risk

management

         
Risk overview   

¡  Risk factors

     133-141         
These pages provide a comprehensive overview of Barclays’ risk factors and approach to risk management.   

¡  Barclays risk management strategy

        378      
  

¡  Barclays risk culture

        378-379      
  

¡  Risk governance and assigning responsibilities

        379-384      
  

¡  Principal risks

        384-385      
  

¡  Risk management in the setting of strategy

        385-391      
    

¡  Modelling of credit risk

 

                      

 

118-127

 

  

 

Credit risk   

¡  Credit risk overview and risk factors

     142         392      
Credit risk is the risk of suffering financial loss should the Group’s customers, clients or market counterparties fail to fulfil their contractual obligations.   

¡  Analysis of maximum exposure and collateral and other credit enhancement held

     142-144         398-400      
  

¡   Concentrations of credit risk

     145-148         393         36-47   
  

¡  Balance sheet credit quality

     149-150         404         52-57   
  

¡  Analysis of loans and advances and impairment

     151-157         393-398         58-63   
  

¡  Retail credit risk

     158-172         392-402      
  

¡  Wholesale credit risk

     173-180         392-402      
  

¡  Exit Quadrant assets

     181         
  

¡  Exposures to Eurozone countries

     182-189         
  

¡  Analysis of securitisations

           84-97   
  

¡  Maturity of credit exposures

           46-47   
  

¡  Capital requirements for credit risk

           33-34   
  

¡  Counterparty credit risk exposure and RWAs

           66-69   
    

¡  RWAs and credit risk exposure by business and Basel asset class

 

                      

 

36-41

 

  

 

Market risk   

¡  Market risk overview and risk factors

     190         405         74   
Market risk is the risk of the Group suffering financial loss due to the Group being unable to hedge its balance sheet at prevailing market levels.   

¡  Traded market risk

     191-194         407-412         75-78   
  

¡  Non-traded market risk

     195-196         413         80-81   
  

¡  Foreign exchange risk

     197            82   
  

¡  Analysis of pension risk

     197-198         414         82-83   
  

¡  Analysis of securitisations

           84-97   
  

¡  Capital requirements for market risk

 

                      

 

79

 

  

 

Funding risk – Capital

Capital risk is the risk that the Group is unable to maintain appropriate capital ratios.

  

¡  Funding risk – Capital overview and risk factors

     199         420      
  

¡  Capital composition

     200            18   
  

¡  Movement in total regulatory capital

     201            19   
  

¡  Risk Weighted Assets by risk type and business

     202            22   
  

¡  Movement in Risk Weighted Assets

     202            23-24   
  

¡  CRD IV as implemented by the Prudential Regulation Authority

     203-204            25-30   
  

¡  Leverage ratio requirements

     205-206            31   
    

¡  Economic capital

 

    

 

207

 

  

 

                 

Funding risk – Liquidity

Liquidity risk is the risk that the Group is unable to meet its obligations as they fall due as a result of a sudden, and potentially protracted, increase in net cash outflows.

  

¡  Funding risk – Liquidity overview and risk factors

     208         
  

¡  Liquidity stress testing

     208-210         419      
  

¡  Liquidity pool

     211-212         
  

¡  Funding structure

     212-215         
  

¡   Encumbrance

     215-218         
  

¡  Credit ratings

     219         
  

¡  Liquidity management at Absa Group

     220         
  

¡  Contractual maturity of financial assets and liabilities

 

     220-224                     
Operational risk   

¡  Operational risk overview and risk factors

     225         415         100   

Operational risk is the risk of direct or indirect impacts resulting from human factors, inadequate or failed internal processes and systems or external events.

 

  

¡  Operational risk profile

     225            100   
  

¡  Supervision and regulation

     230-235         
  

¡  Capital requirements for operational risk

           99   
                               
Reputation risk   

¡  Reputation risk

     226-227         

Reputation risk is the risk of damage to Barclays’ brand arising from any association, action, or inaction which is perceived by stakeholders to be inappropriate or unethical.

 

                               
Conduct risk   

¡  Conduct risk

     228-229         
Conduct risk is the risk that detriment is caused to our customers, clients, counterparties or Barclays and its employees because of inappropriate judgement in the execution of our business activities.            

 

 

 

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Risk review >

Risk factors

  

 

 

 

 

 

   LOGO   The following information describes the material risks which the Group believes could cause its future results of operations, financial condition and prospects to differ materially from current expectations. Certain of the risks described below also have the potential to adversely impact the Group’s reputation and brand which could have a material adverse effect on the Group’s results of operations, financial condition and prospects, including the ability to meet dividend expectations, ability to maintain appropriate levels of capital and meet capital and leverage ratio expectations, or achieve stated targets and other expected benefits.  
 

 

Additional risks relating to the Group that are not currently known, or that are currently deemed immaterial, may individually or cumulatively also have a material adverse effect on our business, operations, financial condition and/or prospects.

 

 

Business conditions and the general economy

Weak or deteriorating economic conditions or political instability in the Group’s main countries of operation could adversely affect the Group’s trading performance

The Group offers a broad range of services to retail and institutional customers, including governments, and it has significant activities in a large number of countries. Consequently, the operations, financial condition and prospects of the Group, its individual business units and/ or specific countries of operation could be materially adversely impacted by weak or deteriorating economic conditions or political instability in one or a number of countries in any of the Group’s main business areas (being the UK, the US, the Eurozone and South Africa) or any other globally significant economy through, for example: (i) deteriorating business, consumer or investor confidence leading to reduced levels of client activity and consequently a decline in revenues and/or higher costs; (ii) mark-to-market losses in trading portfolios resulting from changes in credit ratings, share prices and solvency of counterparties; and (iii) higher levels of impairment and default rates.

The global economy continues to face an environment characterised by low growth. However, governments and central banks in advanced economies have maintained highly accommodative policies that have helped to support demand at a time of very pronounced fiscal tightening and balance sheet repair. During the next few years, a combination of forecasts of and actual recovery in private sector demand and of a reduced pace of fiscal austerity in Europe and the United States is likely to result in a return by central banks towards more conventional monetary policies. While the pace of decreasing monetary support by central banks is expected to be calibrated to the anticipated recovery in demand, such actions could have a further adverse impact on volatility in the financial markets and on the performance of significant parts of the Group’s business, which could, in each case, have an adverse effect on the Group’s future results of operations, financial condition and prospects.

Credit risk

The financial condition of the Group’s customers, clients and counterparties, including governments and other financial institutions, could adversely affect the Group

The Group may suffer financial loss if any of its customers, clients or market counterparties fails to fulfil their contractual obligations to the Group. The Group may also suffer loss when the value of the Group’s investment in the financial instruments of an entity falls as a result of that entity’s credit rating being downgraded. In addition, the Group may incur significant unrealised gains or losses due solely to changes in the Group’s credit spreads or those of third parties, as these changes may affect the fair value of the Group’s derivative instruments, debt securities that the Group holds or issues, or any loans held at fair value.

Deteriorating economic conditions

The Group may continue to be adversely affected by the uncertainty around the global economy and the economies of certain areas where Barclays has operations, as well as areas which may have an impact on the global economy. The Group’s performance is at risk from any deterioration in the economic environment which may result from a number of uncertainties, including most significantly the following factors:

i) Interest rate rises, including as a result of slowing of monetary stimulus, could impact on consumer debt affordability and corporate profitability

The possibility of a slowing of monetary stimulus by one or more governments has increased the uncertainty of the near term economic performance across our major markets as it may lead to significant movements in market rates. Higher interest rates could adversely impact the credit quality of the Group’s customers and counterparties, which, coupled with a decline in collateral values, could lead to a reduction in recoverability and value of the Group’s assets resulting in a requirement to increase the Group’s level of impairment allowance. Any increase in impairment resulting from, for example, higher charge-offs to recovery in the retail book and write-offs could have a material adverse effect on the Group’s results of operations, financial condition and prospects.

ii) Decline in residential prices in the UK, Western Europe and South Africa

With UK home loans representing the most significant portion of the Group’s total loans and advances to the retail sector, Barclays has a large exposure to adverse developments in the UK property sector. Despite a downward correction of 20% in 2009, UK house prices (primarily in London) continue to be far higher than the longer term average and house prices have continued to rise at a faster rate than income. Reduced affordability as a result of, for example, higher interest rates or increased unemployment could lead to higher impairment in the near term, in particular in the UK interest only portfolio.

The Spanish and Portuguese economies, in particular their housing and property sectors, remain under significant stress with falling property prices having led to higher LTV ratios and contributing to higher impairment charges. If these trends continue or worsen and/or if these developments occur in other European countries such as Italy: the Group may incur significant impairment charges in the future, which may materially adversely affect the Group’s results of operations, financial condition and prospects.

The economy in South Africa remains challenging and the risk remains that any deterioration in the economic environment could adversely affect the Group’s performance in home loans.

 

   LOGO   For further information see pages 158 to 176
 

 

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Risk review >

Risk factors continued

     

 

 

 

 

iii) Political instability or economic uncertainty in markets in which Barclays operates

Political instability in less developed regions in which Barclays operates could weaken growth prospects that could lead to an adverse impact on customers’ ability to service debt. For example, economic and political uncertainty in South Africa continues to dampen down investment into the country with lending growth rates persisting, particularly in unsecured lending. Furthermore, debt serviceability may be adversely impacted by a further interest rate rise early in 2014 as a result of a downgrade to South Africa’s credit rating.

The referenda on Scottish independence in September 2014 and on UK membership of the European Union (expected before 2017) may affect the Group’s risk profile through introducing potentially significant new uncertainties and instability in financial markets, both ahead of the respective dates for these referenda and, depending on the outcomes, after the event.

There remain concerns in the market about credit risk (including that of sovereign states) and the Eurozone crisis. The large sovereign debts and/or fiscal deficits of a number of Eurozone countries and the sustainability of austerity programmes that such countries have introduced have raised concerns among market participants regarding the financial condition of these countries as well as financial institutions, insurers and other corporates that are located in, or have direct or indirect exposures to, such Eurozone countries.

 

   LOGO   For further information see pages 182 to 189

(iv) Exit of one or more countries from the Eurozone

The Group is exposed to an escalation of the Eurozone crisis whereby a sovereign defaults and exits the Eurozone, in the following ways:

 

¡   The direct risk arising from the sovereign default of an existing country in which the Group has significant operations and the adverse impact on the economy of that exiting country and the credit standing of the Group’s clients and counterparties in that country.

 

¡   The subsequent adverse impact on the economy of other Eurozone countries and the credit standing of the Group’s clients and counterparties in such other Eurozone countries.

 

¡   Indirect risk arising from credit derivatives that reference Eurozone sovereign debt.

 

¡   Direct redenomination risk on the balance sheets of the Group’s local operations in countries in the Eurozone should the value of the assets and liabilities be affected differently as a result of one or more countries reverting to a locally denominated currency.

 

¡   The introduction of capital controls or new currencies by any such existing countries.

 

¡   Significant effects on existing contractual relations and the fulfilment of obligations by the Group and/or its customers.

If some or all of these conditions arise, persist or worsen, as the case may be, they may have a material adverse effect on the Group’s operations, financial condition and prospects. The current absence of a predetermined mechanism for a member state to exit the Euro means that it is not possible to predict the outcome of such an event or to accurately quantify the impact of such an event on the Group’s operations, financial condition and prospects.

Specific sectors and geographies

The Group is subject to risks arising from changes in credit quality and recovery of loans and advances due from borrowers and counterparties in a specific portfolio or geography or from a large individual name. Any deterioration in credit quality could lead to lower recoverability and higher impairment in a specific sector, geography or in respect of specific large counterparties.

i) Exit Quadrant assets

The Investment Bank holds a large portfolio of Exit Quadrant assets, including commercial real estate and leveraged finance loans, which (i) remain illiquid; (ii) are valued based upon assumptions, judgements and estimates which may change over time; and (iii) which are subject to further deterioration and write downs.

 

   LOGO   For further information see page 181

ii) Corporate Banking assets held at fair value

Corporate Banking holds a portfolio of longer term loans to the Education, Social Housing and Local Authority (ESHLA) sectors which are marked on a fair value basis. The value of these loans is therefore subject to market movements and may give rise to losses.

iii) Large single name losses

In addition, the Group has large individual exposures to single name counterparties. The default of obligations by such counterparties could have a significant impact on the carrying value of these assets. In addition, where such counterparty risk has been mitigated by taking collateral, credit risk may remain high if the collateral held cannot be realised or has to be liquidated at prices which are insufficient to recover the full amount of the loan or derivative exposure. Any such defaults could have a material adverse effect on the Group’s results of operations, financial condition and prospects.

Market risk

The Group’s financial position may be adversely affected by changes in both the level and volatility of prices

Barclays is at risk from its earnings or capital being reduced due to: (i) changes in the level or volatility of positions in its trading books, primarily in the Investment Bank, including changes in interest rates, inflation rates, credit spreads, commodity prices, equity and bond prices and foreign exchange levels; (ii) the Group being unable to hedge its banking book balance sheet at prevailing market levels; and (iii) the risk of the Group’s defined benefit pensions obligations increasing or the value of the assets backing these defined benefit pensions obligations decreasing due to changes in either the level or volatility of prices. These market risks could lead to significantly lower revenues, which could have an adverse impact on the Group’s results of operations, financial condition and prospects.

Specific examples of scenarios where market risk could lead to significantly lower revenues and adversely affect the Group’s operating results include:

i) Reduced client activity and decreased market liquidity

The Investment Bank’s business model is focused on client intermediation. A significant reduction in client volumes or market liquidity could result in lower fees and commission income and a longer time period between executing a client trade, closing out a hedge, or exiting a position arising from that trade. Longer holding periods in times of higher volatility could lead to revenue volatility caused by price changes. Such conditions could have a material adverse effect on the Group’s results of operations, financial condition and prospects.

 

   LOGO   For further information see pages 190 to 198
 

 

 

 

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ii) Uncertain interest rate environment

Interest rate volatility can impact the Group’s net interest margin, which is the interest rate spread earned between lending and borrowing costs. The potential for future volatility and margin changes remains, and it is difficult to predict with any accuracy changes in absolute interest rate levels, yield curves and spreads. Rate changes, to the extent they are not neutralised by hedging programmes, may have a material adverse effect on the Group’s results of operations, financial condition and prospects.

 

   LOGO   For further information see pages 190 to 198

iii) Pension fund risk

Adverse movements between pension assets and liabilities for defined benefit pension schemes could contribute to a pension deficit. Inflation is a key risk to the pension fund and Barclays defined benefit pension net position has been adversely affected, and could be adversely affected again, by any increase in long term inflation assumptions. A decrease in the discount rate, which is derived from yields of corporate bonds with AA ratings and consequently includes exposure both to risk-free yields and credit spreads, may also impact pension valuations and may therefore have a material adverse effect on the Group’s results of operations, financial condition and prospects.

 

   LOGO   For further information see pages 197 and 198

Funding risk

The ability of the Group to achieve its business plans may be adversely impacted if it does not effectively manage its capital, liquidity and leverage ratios

Funding risk is the risk that the Group may not be able to achieve its business plans due to: being unable to maintain appropriate capital ratios (Capital risk); being unable to meet its obligations as they fall due (Liquidity risk); adverse changes in interest rate curves impacting structural hedges of non-interest bearing assets/liabilities or foreign exchange rates on capital ratios (Structural risk).

i) Maintaining capital strength in increasingly challenging environment

Should the Group be unable to maintain or achieve appropriate capital ratios this could lead to: an inability to support business activity; a failure to meet regulatory requirements; changes to credit ratings, which could also result in increased costs or reduced capacity to raise funding; and/or the need to take additional measures to strengthen the Group’s capital or leverage position. Basel III and CRD IV have increased the amount and quality of capital that Barclays is required to hold. CRD IV requirements adopted in the United Kingdom may change, whether as a result of further changes to CRD IV agreed by EU legislators, binding regulatory technical standards being developed by the European Banking Authority or changes to the way in which the PRA interprets and applies these requirements to UK banks (including as regards individual model approvals granted under CRD II and III). Such changes, either individually and/or in aggregate, may lead to further unexpected enhanced requirements in relation to the Group’s CRD IV capital.

Additional capital requirements will also arise from other proposals, including the recommendations of the UK Independent Commission on Banking, the Liikanen Review and section 165 of the Dodd-Frank Act. It is not currently possible to predict with accuracy the detail of secondary legislation or regulatory rulemaking expected under any of these proposals, and therefore the likely consequences to the Group. However, it is likely that these changes in law and regulation would require changes to the legal entity structure of the Group and how its businesses are capitalised and funded and/or are able to continue to operate and as such could have an adverse impact on the operations, financial condition and prospects of the Group. Any such increased capital requirements or changes to what is defined to constitute capital may also constrain the Group’s planned activities, lead to forced asset sales and/or balance sheet reductions and could increase costs, impact on the Group’s earnings and restrict Barclays’ ability to pay dividends. Moreover, during periods of market dislocation, or when there is significant competition for the type of funding that the Group needs, increasing the Group’s capital resources in order to meet targets may prove more difficult and/or costly.

ii) Changes in funding availability and costs

Should the Group fail to manage its liquidity and funding risk sufficiently, this may result in: an inability to support normal business activity; and/or a failure to meet liquidity regulatory requirements; and/ or changes to credit ratings. Any material adverse change in market liquidity (such as that experienced in 2008), or the availability and cost of customer deposits and/or wholesale funding, in each case whether due to factors specific to Barclays (such as due to a downgrade in Barclays’ credit rating) or to the market generally, could adversely impact the Group’s ability to maintain the levels of liquidity required to meet regulatory requirements and sustain normal business activity. In addition, there is a risk that the Group could face sudden, unexpected and large net cash outflows, for example from customer deposit withdrawals, or unanticipated levels of loan drawdowns under committed facilities, which could result in (i) forced reductions in Barclays’ balance sheet; (ii) Barclays being unable to fulfil its lending obligations; and (iii) a failure to meet the Group’s liquidity regulatory requirements. During periods of market dislocation, the Group’s ability to manage liquidity requirements may be impacted by a reduction in the availability of wholesale term funding as well as an increase in the cost of raising wholesale funds. Asset sales, balance sheet reductions and increased costs of raising funding could all adversely impact the results of operations, financial condition and prospects of the Group.

iii) Changes in foreign exchange and interest rates

The Group has capital resources and risk weighted assets denominated in foreign currencies; changes in foreign exchange rates result in changes in the Sterling equivalent value of foreign currency denominated capital resources and risk weighted assets. As a result, the Group’s regulatory capital ratios are sensitive to foreign currency movements. The Group also has exposure to non-traded interest rate risk, arising from the provision of retail and wholesale (non-traded) banking products and services. This includes current accounts and equity balances which do not have a defined maturity date and an interest rate that does not change in line with base rate changes. Failure to appropriately manage the Group’s balance sheet to take account of these risks could result in: (i) in the case of foreign exchange risk, an adverse impact on regulatory capital ratios; and (ii) in the case of non-traded interest rate risk, an adverse impact on income. Structural risk is difficult to predict with any accuracy and may have a material adverse effect on the Group’s results of operations, financial condition and prospects.

 

 

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Risk factors continued

     

 

 

 

 

Operational risk

The operational risk profile of the Group may change as a result of human factors, inadequate or failed internal processes and systems, and external events

Barclays is exposed to many types of operational risk, including fraudulent and other criminal activities (both internal and external), the risk of breakdowns in processes, controls or procedures (or their inadequacy relative to the size and scope of Barclays’ business) and systems failure or non-availability. Barclays is also subject to the risk of disruption of its business arising from events that are wholly or partially beyond its control (for example natural disasters, acts of terrorism, epidemics and transport or utility failures) which may give rise to losses or reductions in service to customers and/or economic loss to Barclays. The operational risks that the Group is exposed to could change rapidly and there is no guarantee that the Group’s processes, controls, procedures and systems are sufficient to address, or could adapt promptly to, such changing risks. All of these risks are also applicable where Barclays relies on outside suppliers or vendors to provide services to it and its customers.

i) Infrastructure and technology resilience

The Group’s technological infrastructure is critical to the operation of the Group’s businesses and delivery of products and services to customers and clients. Any disruption in a customer’s access to their account information or delays in making payments will have a significant impact on the Group’s reputation and may also lead to potentially large costs to both rectify the issue and reimburse losses incurred by customers. Technological efficiency and automation is also important to the control environment and improvement is an area of focus for Barclays (for example, via updating of legacy systems, and introducing additional security, access management and segregation of duty controls).

ii) Ability to hire and retain appropriately qualified employees

The Group is largely dependent on highly skilled and qualified individuals. Therefore, the Group’s continued ability to manage and grow its business, to compete effectively and to respond to an increasingly complex regulatory environment is dependent on attracting new talented and diverse employees and retaining appropriately qualified employees. In particular, as a result of the work repositioning compensation while ensuring Barclays remains competitive and as the global economic recovery continues, there is a risk that some employees may decide to leave Barclays. This may be particularly evident amongst those employees due to be impacted by the introduction of role based pay and bonus caps in response to new legislation and employees with skill sets that are currently in high demand.

Failure by Barclays to prevent the departure of appropriately qualified employees, to retain qualified staff who are dedicated to oversee and manage current and future regulatory standards and expectations, or to quickly and effectively replace such employees, could negatively impact the Group’s results of operations, financial condition, prospects and level of employee engagement.

iii) Cyber-security

The threat to the security of the Group’s information held on customers from cyber-attacks is pertinent and continues to grow at pace. Activists, rogue states and cyber criminals are among those targeting computer systems. Risks to technology and cyber-security change rapidly and require continued focus and investment. Given the increasing sophistication and scope of potential cyber-attack, it is possible that future attacks may lead to significant breaches of security. Failure to adequately manage cyber-security risk and continually review and update current processes in response to new threats could adversely affect the Group’s reputation, operations, financial condition and prospects.

iv) Critical accounting estimates and judgments

The preparation of financial statements in accordance with IFRS requires the use of estimates. It also requires management to exercise judgement in applying relevant accounting policies. The key areas involving a higher degree of judgement or complexity, or areas where assumptions are significant to the consolidated and individual financial statements, include credit impairment charges for amortised cost assets, impairment and valuation of available-for-sale investments, calculation of income and deferred tax, fair value of financial instruments, valuation of goodwill and intangible assets, valuation of provisions and accounting for pensions and post-retirement benefits. There is a risk that if the judgement exercised or the estimates or assumptions used subsequently turn out to be incorrect then this could result in significant loss to the Group, beyond that anticipated or provided for, which could have an adverse impact on the Group’s operations, financial results and condition.

In accordance with IAS 37 ‘Provisions, Contingent Liabilities and Contingent Assets, where provisions have already been taken in published financial statements or results announcements for on-going legal or regulatory matters, including in relation payment protection insurance (PPI), interest rate hedging products, and litigation relating to Devonshire Trust, these have been recognised as the best estimate of the expenditure required to settle the obligation as at the reporting date. Such estimates are inherently uncertain and it is possible that the eventual outcomes may differ materially from current estimates, resulting in future increases to the required provisions (as has, for example, been the case in relation to the provisions that the Group has made in relation to PPI redress payments), or actual losses that exceed the provisions taken.

In addition, provisions have not been taken where no obligation (as defined in IAS 37) has been established, whether associated with a known or potential future litigation or regulatory matter. Accordingly, an adverse decision in any such matters could result in significant losses to the Group which have not been provided for. Such losses would have an adverse impact on the Group’s operations, financial results and condition and prospects.

Observable market prices are not available for many of the financial assets and liabilities that the Group holds at fair value and a variety of techniques to estimate the fair value are used. Should the valuation of such financial assets or liabilities become observable, for example as a result of sales or trading in comparable assets or liabilities by third parties, this could result in a materially different valuation to the current carrying value in the Group’s financial statements.

The further development of standards and interpretations under IFRS could also significantly impact the financial results, condition and prospects of the Group. For example, the introduction of IFRS 9 Financial Instruments is likely to have a material impact on the measurement and impairment of financial instruments held.

v) Risks arising from legal, competition and regulatory matters

The Group operates in highly regulated industries, and the Group’s businesses and results may be significantly affected by the laws and regulations applicable to it and by proceedings involving the Group

As a global financial services firm, the Group is subject to extensive and comprehensive regulation under the laws of the various jurisdictions in which it does business. These laws and regulations significantly affect the way that the Group does business, can restrict the scope of its existing businesses and limit its ability to expand its product offerings or to pursue acquisitions, or can result in an increase in operating costs for the business and/or make its products and services more expensive for clients and customers. There has also been an increased focus on regulation and procedures for the protection of customers and clients of financial services firms. This has resulted, moreover, in increased willingness on the part of regulators to investigate past practices, vigorously pursue alleged violations and impose heavy penalties on financial services firms.

 

 

 

 

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The Group is exposed to many forms of risk relating to legal, competition and regulatory proceedings, including that: (i) business may not be, or may not have been, conducted in accordance with applicable laws and regulations in the relevant jurisdictions around the world and financial and other penalties may result; (ii) contractual obligations may either not be enforceable as intended or may be enforced in a way adverse to the Group; (iii) intellectual property may not be protected as intended and the Group may use intellectual property which infringes, or is alleged to infringe, the rights of third parties; and (iv) liability may be incurred to third parties harmed by the conduct of the Group’s business.

Risks arising from material legal, competition and regulatory matters

The Group, in common with other global financial services firms, has in recent years faced a risk of increased levels of legal proceedings in jurisdictions in which it does business. This is particularly true in the US where the Group is facing and may in the future face legal proceedings relating to its business activities, including in the form of class actions.

The Group also faces existing regulatory and other investigations in various jurisdictions as well as the risk of potential future regulatory and other investigations or proceedings and/or further private actions and/or class actions being brought by third parties.

Material legal, competition and regulatory matters to which the Group is currently exposed are detailed in Note 30 to the financial statements and include:

 

¡   Lehman Brothers civil action;

 

¡   Civil actions in respect of certain series of preference shares issued in the form of American Depositary Shares;

 

¡   Mortgage related activity and litigation;

 

¡   Devonshire Trust civil action;

 

¡   London Interbank Offered Rates (LIBOR) and other benchmarks civil actions; civil actions in respect of foreign exchange trading; and investigations into LIBOR, ISDAfix and other benchmarks and foreign exchange rates;

 

¡   Federal Energy Regulatory Commission – matters relating to the Group’s power trading in the western US;

 

¡   BDC Finance LLC civil action;

 

¡   Interchange investigations;

 

¡   Interest rate hedging products redress;

 

¡   Credit default swap antitrust investigations;

 

¡   Swiss/US tax programme; and

 

¡   Investigations into certain agreements, including two advisory services agreements entered into by BBPLC and Qatar Holding LLC in 2008.

The outcome of each of these legal, competition and regulatory matters (and any future matters) is difficult to predict. However, it is likely that the Group will incur significant expense in connection with some or all of these matters, regardless of the ultimate outcome, and one or more of them could expose the Group to any of the following: substantial monetary damages and/or fines; other penalties and injunctive relief; additional civil or private litigation; criminal prosecution in certain circumstances; the loss of any existing agreed protection from prosecution; regulatory restrictions on the Group’s business; increased regulatory compliance requirements; suspension of operations; public reprimands; loss of significant assets; and/or a negative effect on the Group’s reputation.

Potential financial and reputational impacts of other legal, competition and regulatory matters or other proceedings

The Group is engaged in various other legal, competition and regulatory matters both in the UK and a number of overseas jurisdictions. It is subject to legal proceedings by and against the Group which arise in the ordinary course of business from time to time, including (but not limited to) disputes in relation to contracts, securities, debt collection, consumer credit, fraud, trusts, client assets, competition, data protection, money laundering, employment, environmental and other statutory and common law issues. The Group is also subject to enquiries and examinations, requests for information, audits, investigations and legal and other proceedings by regulators, governmental and other public bodies in connection with (but not limited to) consumer protection measures, compliance with legislation and regulation, wholesale trading activity and other areas of banking and business activities in which the Group is or has been engaged.

In addition to the specific matters set out above, there may be other legal, competition and regulatory matters currently not known to the Group or in respect of which it is currently not possible to ascertain whether there could be a material adverse effect on the Group’s position. In light of the uncertainties involved in legal, competition and regulatory matters, there can be no assurance that the outcome of a particular matter or matters will not be material to the Group’s results of operations for a particular period, depending on, among other things, the amount of the loss resulting from the matter(s) and the amount of income otherwise reported for the reporting period. Non-compliance by the Group with applicable laws, regulations and codes of conduct relevant to its businesses in all jurisdictions in which it operates, whether due to inadequate controls or otherwise, could expose the Group, now or in the future, to any of the consequences set out above as well as withdrawal of authorisations to operate particular businesses.

Non-compliance may also lead to costs relating to investigations and remediation of affected customers. The latter may, in some circumstances, exceed the direct costs of regulatory enforcement actions. In addition, reputational damage may lead to a reduction in franchise value.

There is also a risk that the outcome of any legal, competition or regulatory matters, investigations or proceedings to which the Group is subject and/or a party could (whether current or future, specified in this risk factor or not) may give rise to changes in law or regulation as part of a wider response by relevant law makers and regulators. An adverse decision in any one matter, either against the Group or another financial institution facing similar claims, could lead to further claims against the Group.

Any of these risks, should they materialise, could have an adverse impact on the Group’s operations, financial results and condition and prospects.

vi) Regulatory risk

Regulatory risks: the financial services industry continues to be the focus of significant regulatory change and scrutiny which may adversely affect the Group’s business, financial performance capital and risk management strategies

Regulatory risk arises from a failure or inability to comply fully with the laws, regulations or codes applicable specifically to the financial services industry which are currently subject to significant changes. Non-compliance could lead to fines, public reprimands, damage to reputation, increased prudential requirements, changes to Group structure and/or strategy, enforced suspension of operations or, in extreme cases, withdrawal of authorisations to operate. Non-compliance may also lead to costs relating to investigations and remediation of affected customers. The latter may exceed the direct costs of regulatory enforcement actions. In addition, reputational damage may lead to a reduction in franchise value.

 

 

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Risk review >

Risk factors continued

     

 

 

 

 

Regulatory change

The Group, in common with much of the financial services industry, continues to be subject to significant levels of regulatory change and increasing scrutiny in many of the countries in which it operates (including, in particular, the UK and the US and in light of its significant investment banking operations). This has led to a more intensive approach to supervision and oversight, increased expectations and enhanced requirements, including with regard to: (i) capital, liquidity and leverage requirements (for example arising from Basel III and CRDIV): (ii) structural reform and recovery and resolution planning; and (iii) market infrastructure reforms such as the clearing of over-the-counter derivatives. As a result, regulatory risk will continue to be a focus of senior management attention and consume significant levels of business resources. Furthermore, this more intensive approach and the enhanced requirements, uncertainty and extent of international regulatory coordination as enhanced supervisory standards are developed and implemented may adversely affect the Group’s business, capital and risk management strategies and/or may result in the Group deciding to modify its legal entity structure, capital and funding structures and business mix or to exit certain business activities altogether or to determine not to expand in areas despite their otherwise attractive potential.

For further information see Regulatory Developments in the section on Supervision and Regulation.

Implementation of Basel III/CRD IV and additional PRA supervisory expectations

CRD IV introduces significant changes in the prudential regulatory regime applicable to banks including: increased minimum capital ratios; changes to the definition of capital and the calculation of risk weighted assets; and the introduction of new measures relating to leverage, liquidity and funding. CRD IV entered into force in the UK and other EU member states on 1 January 2014. CRD IV permits a transitional period for certain of the enhanced capital requirements and certain other measures, such as the CRD IV leverage ratio, which are not expected to be finally implemented until 2018. Notwithstanding this, the PRA’s supervisory expectation is for Barclays to meet certain capital and leverage ratio targets within certain prescribed timeframes. Barclays met the PRA’s expectation to have an adjusted fully loaded CET 1 ratio of 7% by 31 December 2013 and will be expected to meet a PRA Leverage Ratio of 3% by 30 June 2014.

There is a risk that CRD IV requirements adopted in the UK may change, whether as a result of further changes to global standards, EU legislation, including the CRDIV text and/or via binding regulatory technical standards being developed by the European Banking Authority or changes to the way in which the PRA interprets and applies these requirements to UK banks, including as regards individual models approvals granted under CRD II and III. For example, further guidelines published by the Basel Committee in January 2014 regarding the calculation of the leverage ratio are expected to be incorporated into EU and UK law during 2014.

In addition the Financial Policy Committee of the Bank of England has legal powers, where this is required to protect financial stability, to make recommendations about the application of prudential requirements, and has, or may be given, other powers including powers to direct the PRA and FCA to adjust capital requirements through sectoral capital requirements (SCR). Directions would apply to all UK banks and building societies, rather than to the Group specifically.

Such changes, either individually or in aggregate, may lead to unexpected enhanced requirements in relation to the Group’s capital, leverage, liquidity and funding ratios or alter the way such ratios are calculated. This may result in a need for further management actions to meet the changed requirements, such as: increasing capital, reducing leverage and risk weighted assets, modifying legal entity structure (including with regard to issuance and deployment of capital and funding for the Group) and changing Barclays’ business mix or exiting other businesses and/or undertaking other actions to strengthen Barclays position.

Structural reform

A number of jurisdictions have enacted or are considering legislation and rule making that could have a significant impact on the structure, business risk and management of the Group and of the financial services industry more generally. Key developments that are relevant to Barclays include:

 

¡   The UK Financial Services (Banking Reform) Act 2013, gives UK authorities the power to implement key recommendations of the Independent Commission on Banking, including: (i) the separation of the UK and EEA retail banking activities of the largest UK banks into a legally, operationally and economically separate and independent entity (so called ‘ring fencing’); (ii) statutory depositor preference in insolvency; (iii) a reserve power for the PRA to enforce full separation of the retail operations of UK banks to which the reforms apply under certain circumstances; and (iv) a ‘bail-in’ stabilisation option as part of the powers of the UK resolution authority;

 

¡   The European Commission proposals of January 2014 for a directive to implement recommendations of the EU High Level Expert Group Review (the Liikanen Review). The directive would apply to EU globally significant financial institutions and envisages, among other things: (i) a ban on engaging in proprietary trading in financial instruments and commodities; (ii) giving supervisors the power and, in certain instances, the obligation to require the transfer of other trading activities deemed to be ‘high risk’ to separate legal trading entities within a banking group; and (iii) rules governing the economic, legal, governance and operational links between the separated trading entity and the rest of the banking group;

 

¡   On 18 February 2014, the US Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System (FRB) issued final rules implementing various enhanced prudential standards under Section 165 of the DFA applicable to certain foreign banking organisations and their US operations, including Barclays. Because its total US and non-US assets exceed $50bn, Barclays would be subject to the most stringent requirements of the final rules, including the requirement to create a US intermediate holding company (IHC) structure to hold its US banking and non-banking subsidiaries, including Barclays Capital Inc. the Group’s US broker-dealer subsidiary. The IHC would generally be subject to supervision and regulation, including as to regulatory capital and stress testing, by the FRB as if it were a US bank holding company of comparable size. In particular, under the final rules, the consolidated IHC would be subject to a number of additional supervisory and prudential requirements, including: (i) subject to certain limited exceptions, FRB regulatory capital requirements and leverage limits that are the same as those applicable to US banking organisations of comparable size; (ii) mandatory company-run and supervisory stress testing of capital levels and submission of a capital plan to the FRB; (iii) supervisory approval of and limitations on capital distributions by the IHC to Barclays Bank PLC; (iv) additional substantive liquidity requirements (including monthly internal liquidity stress tests and maintenance of specified liquidity buffers) and other liquidity risk management requirements; and (v) overall risk management requirements, including a US risk committee and a US chief risk officer. The effective date of the final rule is 1 June 2014, although compliance with most of its requirements will be phased-in between 2015 and 2018. Barclays will not be required to form its IHC until 1 July 2016. The IHC will be subject to the US generally applicable minimum leverage capital requirement (which is different than the Basel III international leverage ratio, including to the extent that the generally applicable US leverage ratio does not include off-balance sheet exposures) starting 1 January 2018. In light of the recent release of the final rules, Barclays continues to evaluate their implications for Barclays. Nevertheless, the Group currently believes that, in the aggregate, the final rules (and, in particular, the leverage requirements in the final rules that will ultimately become applicable to the IHC) are likely to increase the operational costs and capital requirements and/or require changes to the business mix of Barclays’ US operations, which ultimately may have an adverse effect on the Group’s overall result of operations;
 

 

 

 

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¡   In the US, in December 2013, the relevant US regulatory agencies, finalised the rules implementing the requirements of Section 619 of the Dodd-Frank Act – the so-called ‘Volcker Rule’. The Volcker Rule, once fully effective, will prohibit banking entities, including Barclays PLC, Barclays Bank PLC and their various subsidiaries and affiliates from undertaking certain ‘proprietary trading’ activities and will limit the sponsorship of, and investment in, private equity funds and hedge funds, in each case broadly defined, by such entities. These restrictions are subject to certain important exceptions and exemptions, as well as exemptions applicable to transactions and investments occurring ‘solely outside of the United States’. The rules will also require the Group to develop an extensive compliance and monitoring programme (both inside and outside of the United States), subject to various executive officer attestation requirements, addressing proprietary trading and covered fund activities, and Barclays therefore expects compliance costs to increase. The final rules are highly complex and differ in certain significant respects from the rules as proposed in October 2011. As such, their full impact will not be known with certainty until market practices and structures develop under them. Subject entities are generally required to be in compliance by July 2015 (with certain provisions subject to possible extensions); and

 

¡   The European Commission’s proposal for a directive providing for a new framework for the recovery and resolution of credit institutions and investment firms (the Recovery and Resolution Directive or RRD), which is expected to be finalised in 2014.

These laws and regulations and the way in which they are interpreted and implemented by regulators may have a number of significant consequences, including changes to the legal entity structure of the Group, changes to how and where capital and funding is raised and deployed within the Group, increased requirements for loss-absorbing capacity within the Group and/or at the level of certain legal entities or sub-groups within the Group and potential modifications to the business mix and model (including potential exit of certain business activities). These and other regulatory changes and the resulting actions taken to address such regulatory changes, may have an adverse impact on the Group’s profitability, operating flexibility, flexibility of deployment of capital and funding, return on equity, ability to pay dividends and/or financial condition. It is not yet possible to predict the detail of such legislation or regulatory rulemaking or the ultimate consequences to the Group which could be material.

Recovery and resolution planning

There continues to be a strong regulatory focus on resolvability from international and UK regulators. The Group continues to work with all relevant authorities on recovery and resolution plans (RRP) and the detailed practicalities of the resolution process. This includes the provision of information that would be required in the event of a resolution, in order to enhance the Group’s resolvability. The Group made its first formal RRP submissions to the UK and US regulators in mid-2012 and has continued to work with the relevant authorities to identify and address any impediments to resolvability. The second US resolution plan was submitted in October 2013 and Barclays anticipates annual submissions hereafter.

The EU has agreed the text of the RRD and expects to finalise the legislation in 2014. The RRD establishes a framework for the recovery and resolution of credit institutions and investment firms. The aim of this regime is to provide authorities with the tools to intervene sufficiently early and quickly in a failing institution so as to ensure the continuity of the institution or firm’s critical financial and economic functions while minimising the impact of its failure on the financial system. The regime is also intended to ensure that shareholders bear losses first and that certain creditors bear losses after shareholders, provided that no creditor should incur greater losses than it would have incurred if the institution had been wound up under normal insolvency proceedings. The Directive provides resolution authorities with powers to require credit institutions to make significant changes in order to enhance recovery or resolvability. These include, amongst others, the powers to require the group to: make changes to its legal or operational

structures (including demanding that the Group be restructured into units which are more readily resolvable); limit or cease specific existing or proposed activities; hold a specified minimum amount of liabilities subject to write down or conversion powers under the so-called ‘bail-in’ tool. The proposal is to be implemented in all European Member States by 1 January 2015, with the exception of the bail-in powers which must be implemented by 1 January 2016.

In the UK, recovery and resolution planning is now considered part of continuing supervision. Removal of barriers to resolution will be considered as part of the PRA’s supervisory strategy for each firm, and the PRA can require firms to make significant changes in order to enhance resolvability. The UK will also need to consider how it will transpose the RRD into UK law.

Whilst Barclays believes that it is making good progress in reducing impediments to resolution, should the relevant authorities ultimately decide that the Group or any significant subsidiary is not resolvable, the impact of such structural changes (whether in connection with RRP or other structural reform initiatives) could impact capital, liquidity and leverage ratios, as well as the overall profitability of the Group, for example via duplicated infrastructure costs, lost cross-rate revenues and additional funding costs.

Regulatory action in the event of a bank failure

The UK Banking Act 2009, as amended (the Banking Act) provides for a regime to allow the Bank of England (or, in certain circumstances, HM Treasury) to resolve failing banks in the UK. Under the Banking Act, these authorities are given powers to make share transfer orders and property transfer orders. Following the Financial Services (Banking Reform) Act 2013 the authorities also have at their disposal a statutory bail-in power. This bail-in power is available to the UK resolution authority to enable it to recapitalize a failed institution by allocating losses to its shareholders and unsecured creditors. The bail-in power enables the UK resolution authority to cancel liabilities or modify the terms of contracts for the purposes of reducing or deferring the liabilities of the bank under resolution and the power to convert liabilities into another form (e.g. shares).

The draft RRD includes provisions similar to the Banking Act for the introduction of statutory bail-in powers, including the power to (i) cancel existing shares and/or dilute existing shareholders by converting relevant capital instruments or eligible liabilities into shares of the surviving entity and (ii) cancel all or a portion of the principal amount of, or interest on, certain unsecured liabilities (including certain debt securities) of a failing financial institution and/or to convert certain debt claims into another security, including ordinary shares of the surviving Group entity, if any. The Banking Act bail-in power is not expected to require significant amendments following finalisations of the RRD, but this cannot be guaranteed. Accordingly, if the Group were to be at or approaching the point of non-viability such as to require regulatory intervention, any exercise of any resolution regime powers by the relevant UK resolution authority may result in shareholders losing all or a part of their shareholdings and/or in the rights of shareholders being adversely affected, including by the dilution of their percentage ownership of the Barclays’ share capital, and may result in creditors, including debt holders, losing all or a part of their investment in the Group’s securities that could be subject to such powers.

In addition to bail-in power, the powers currently proposed to be granted to the relevant UK resolution authority under the Banking Act and draft RRD include the power to: (i) direct the sale of the relevant financial institution or the whole or part of its business on commercial terms without requiring the consent of the shareholders or complying with the procedural requirements that would otherwise apply; (ii) transfer all or part of the business of the relevant financial institution to a ‘bridge bank’ (a publicly controlled entity); and (iii) transfer the impaired or problem assets of the relevant financial institution to an asset management vehicle to allow them to be managed over time.

 

 

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Risk review >

Risk factors continued

     

 

 

 

 

If these powers were to be exercised (or there is an increased risk of exercise) in respect of the Group or any entity within the Group could result in a material adverse effect on the rights or interests of shareholders and creditors including holders of debt securities and/or could have a material adverse effect on the market price of Barclays shares and other securities.

Market infrastructure reforms

The European Market Infrastructure Regulation (EMIR) introduces requirements to improve transparency and reduce the risks associated with the derivatives market. Certain of these requirements came into force in 2013 and others will enter into force in 2014. EMIR requires entities that enter into any form of derivative contract to: report every derivative contract entered into to a trade repository; implement new risk management standards for all bi-lateral over-the-counter derivative trades that are not cleared by a central counterparty; and clear, through a central counterparty, over-the-counter derivatives that are subject to a mandatory clearing obligation. CRD IV aims to complement EMIR by applying higher capital requirements for bilateral, over-the-counter derivative trades. Lower capital requirements for cleared trades are only available if the central counterparty is recognised as a ‘qualifying central counterparty ‘, which has been authorised or recognised under EMIR (in accordance with related binding technical standards). Further significant market infrastructure reforms will be introduced by amendments to the EU Markets in Financial Instruments Directive that are being finalised by the EU legislative institutions and are expected to be implemented in 2016.

In the US, the Dodd-Frank Act also mandates that many types of derivatives now traded in the over-the- counter markets must be traded on an exchange or swap execution facility and must be centrally cleared through a regulated clearing house. In addition, participants in these markets are now made subject to CFTC and SEC regulation and oversight. Entities required to register with the CFTC as ‘swap dealers ‘ or ‘major swap participants ‘ and/or with the SEC as ‘security-based swap dealers ‘ or ‘major security- based swap dealers ‘ are or will be subject to business conduct, capital, margin, record keeping and reporting requirements. Barclays Bank PLC has registered with the CFTC as a swap dealer.

It is possible that other additional regulations, and the related expenses and requirements, will increase the cost of and restrict participation in the derivative markets, thereby increasing the costs of engaging in hedging or other transactions and reducing liquidity and the use of the derivative markets.

The new regulation of the derivative markets could adversely affect the business of Barclays Bank PLC and its affiliates in these markets and could make it more difficult and expensive to conduct hedging and trading activities, which could in turn reduce the demand for swap dealer and similar services of Barclays Bank PLC and its subsidiaries. In addition, as a result of these increased costs, the new regulation of the derivative markets may also result in the Group deciding to reduce its activity in these markets.

vii) Losses due to additional tax charges

The Group is subject to the tax laws in all countries in which it operates, including tax laws adopted at the EU level, and is impacted by a number of double taxation agreements between countries.

There is risk that the Group could suffer losses due to additional tax charges, other financial costs or reputational damage due to: failure to comply with, or correctly assess the application of, relevant tax law; failure to deal with tax authorities in a timely, transparent and effective manner (including in relation to historical transactions which might have been perceived as aggressive in tax terms); incorrect calculation of tax estimates for reported and forecast tax numbers; or provision of incorrect tax advice. Such charges, or conducting any challenge to a relevant tax authority, could lead to adverse publicity, reputational damage and potentially to costs materially exceeding current provisions, in each case to an extent which could have an adverse effect on the Group’s operations, financial conditions and prospects.

In addition, any changes to the tax regimes applicable to the Group could have a material adverse effect on it. For example, depending on the terms of the final form of legislation as implemented, the introduction of the proposed EU Financial Transaction Tax could adversely affect certain of the Group’s businesses and have a material adverse effect on the Group’s operations, financial conditions and prospects.

viii) Implementation of the Transform programme and other strategic plans

The ‘Transform programme’ represents the current strategy of the Group, both for improved financial performance and cultural change, and the Group expects to incur significant restructuring charges and costs associated with implementing this strategic plan. The successful development and implementation of such strategic plans requires difficult, subjective and complex judgements, including forecasts of economic conditions in various parts of the world, and is subject to significant execution risks. For example, the Group’s ability to implement successfully the Transform programme and other such strategic plans may be adversely impacted by a significant global macroeconomic downturn, legacy issues, limitations in the Group’s management or operational capacity or significant and unexpected regulatory change in countries in which the Group operates. Moreover, progress on the various components of Transform (including reduction in costs relative to net operating income) is unlikely to be uniform or linear, and certain targets may be achieved slower than others, if at all.

Failure to implement successfully the Transform programme could have a material adverse effect on the Group’s ability to achieve the stated targets, estimates (including with respect to future capital and leverage ratios and dividends payout ratios) and other expected benefits of the Transform programme and there is also a risk that the costs associated with implementing the scheme may be higher than the financial benefits expected to be achieved through the programme. In addition, the goals of embedding a culture and set of values across the Group and achieving lasting and meaningful change to the Group’s culture may not succeed, which could negatively impact the Group’s operations, financial condition and prospects.

Conduct risk

Conduct risk: detriment is caused to our customers, clients, counterparties or Barclays and its employees because of inappropriate judgement in the execution of our business activities

Ineffective management of conduct risk may lead to poor outcomes for our customers, clients and counterparties or damage to market integrity. It may also lead to detriment to Barclays and its employees. Such outcomes are inconsistent with Barclays’ purpose and values and may negatively impact the Group’s results of operations, financial condition and prospects. They may lead to negative publicity, loss of revenue, litigation, higher scrutiny and/or intervention from regulators, regulatory or legislative action, loss of existing or potential client business, reduced workforce morale, and difficulties in recruiting and retaining talent. This could reduce – directly or indirectly – the attractiveness of the Group to stakeholders, including customers.

There are a number of areas where Barclays’ conduct has not met the expectations of regulators and other stakeholders and where the Group has sustained financial and reputational damage in 2013, and where the consequences are likely to endure into 2014 and beyond. These include participation in London interbank offered rates (LIBOR) and interest rate hedging products, and Payment Protection Insurance (PPI). Provisions totalling £650m have been raised in respect of interest rate hedging products in 2013, bringing cumulative provisions to £1.5bn. Provisions of £1.35bn have been raised against PPI in 2013, bringing cumulative provisions to £3.95bn. To the extent that future experience is not in line with management’s current estimates, additional provisions may be required and further reputational damage may be incurred.

 

 

 

 

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Furthermore, the Group is from time to time subject to regulatory investigations which carry the risk of a finding that Barclays has been involved in some form of wrongdoing. It is not possible to foresee the outcome or impact of such findings other than fines or other forms of regulatory censure would be possible. There is a risk that there may be other conduct issues, including in business already written, of which Barclays is not presently aware.

Further details on PPI and interest rate hedging products, including a description of management judgements and estimates and sensitivity analysis on those estimates where available are provided in Note 28 (Provisions) to the financial statements. Further details on current regulatory investigations are provided in Note 30 (Legal, competition and regulatory matters).

Anti-money laundering, anti-bribery, sanctions and other compliance risks

A major focus of government policy relating to financial institutions in recent years (including, in particular, the UK and the US) has been combating money laundering, bribery and terrorist financing and enforcing compliance with economic sanctions. In particular, regulations applicable to the US operations of Barclays Bank and its subsidiaries impose obligations to maintain appropriate policies, procedures and internal controls to detect, prevent and report money laundering and terrorist financing. In addition, such regulations in the US require Barclays Bank and its subsidiaries to ensure compliance with US economic sanctions against designated foreign countries, organisations, entities and nationals among others.

The risk of non-compliance for large global banking groups, such as Barclays, is high given the nature, scale and complexity of the organisation and the challenges inherent in implementing robust controls. The Group also operates in some newer markets, such as Africa, Asia and the Middle East, where the risks of non-compliance are higher than in more established markets. Failure by Barclays to maintain and implement adequate programs to combat money laundering, bribery and terrorist financing or to ensure economic sanction compliance could have serious legal and reputational consequences for the organisation, including exposure to fines, criminal and civil penalties and other damages, as well as adverse impacts on the Group’s ability to do business in certain jurisdictions.

Failure to comply fully with the Consumer Credit Act (CCA3)

As an example of non-compliance leading to costs of remediation, UK RBB has identified certain issues with the information contained in historic statements and arrears notices relating to consumer loan accounts and has therefore implemented a plan to return interest incorrectly charged to customers. Barclays is also undertaking a review of all its businesses where similar issues could arise, including Business Banking, Barclaycard, Wealth and Investment Management and Corporate Bank, to assess any similar or related issues. There is currently no certainty as to the outcome of this review. The findings of such review could have an adverse impact on the Group’s operations, financial results and prospects.

Reputation risk

Reputation risk: Damage to Barclays’ brand arising from any association, action or inaction which is perceived by stakeholders to be inappropriate or unethical

Reputation risk is the risk of damage to the Barclays brand arising from any association, action or inaction which is perceived by stakeholders to be inappropriate or unethical and not in keeping with the bank’s stated purpose and values (for example, the industry wide investigation into the setting of LIBOR and other benchmarks and the mis-selling of PPI to customers). Reputation risk may also arise from past, present or potential failures in corporate governance or management (for example, if Barclays were to provide funding or services to clients without fully implementing anti-money laundering, anti-bribery and corruption or similar precautions). In addition, reputation risk may arise from the actual or perceived manner in which Barclays conducts its business activities or in which business activities are conducted in the banking and financial industry generally.

Failure to appropriately manage reputation risk may reduce – directly or indirectly – the attractiveness of the Group to stakeholders, including customers and clients, and may lead to negative publicity, loss of revenue, litigation, higher scrutiny and/or intervention from regulators, regulatory or legislative action, loss of existing or potential client business, reduced workforce morale, and difficulties in recruiting and retaining talent. Sustained damage arising from conduct and reputation risks could have a materially negative impact on the Group’s ability to operate fully and the value of the Group’s franchise, which in turn could negatively affect the Group’s operations, financial condition and prospects.

 

 

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Credit risk

     

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Credit risk is the risk of the Group suffering financial loss if any of its customers, clients or market counterparties fails to fulfil their contractual obligations to the Group.

 

All disclosures in this section (pages 142 to 189) are unaudited unless otherwise stated.

 

 

Introduction

Credit risk represents a significant risk to the Group and mainly arises from exposure to wholesale and retail loans and advances together with the counterparty credit risk arising from derivative contracts entered into with clients.

As a result, this section provides substantial information on the Group’s exposure to loans and advances to customer and banks, together with collateral held and net impairment charges raised in the year. In addition it provides information on balances that are categorised as Credit Risk Loans, balances in forbearance, as well as exposure to and performance metrics for specific portfolios and assets types, including, for example, residential home loans, interest-only home loans, cards and other unsecured lending UK commercial retail estate and exposure in Corporate Spain.

More details of the topics covered in the section may be found in the credit risk section of the contents on page 132. Please see risk management section on pages 392 to 404 for details of governance, policies and procedures.

Analysis of the Group’s maximum exposure and collateral and other credit enhancements held

Basis of preparation

The following tables present a reconciliation between the Group’s maximum exposure and its net exposure to credit risk; reflecting the financial effects of collateral, credit enhancements and other actions taken to mitigate the Group’s exposure.

For financial assets recognised on the balance sheet, maximum exposure to credit risk represents the balance sheet carrying value after allowance for impairment. For off-balance sheet guarantees, the maximum exposure is the maximum amount that Barclays would have to pay if the guarantees were to be called upon. For loan commitments and other credit related commitments that are irrevocable over the life of the respective facilities, the maximum exposure is the full amount of the committed facilities.

This and subsequent analyses of credit risk include only financial assets subject to credit risk. They exclude other financial assets not subject to credit risk, mainly equity securities held for trading, as available for sale or designated at fair value, and traded commodities. Assets designated at fair value in respect of linked liabilities to customers under investment contracts have also not been included as the Group is not exposed to credit risk on these assets. Credit losses in these portfolios, if any, would lead to a reduction in the linked liabilities and not result in a loss to the Group.

Of the remaining exposure left unmitigated, a significant portion relates to cash held at central banks, available for sale and trading portfolio debt securities issued by governments, cash collateral and settlement balances, all of which are considered lower risk. The credit quality of counterparties to derivative, available for sale, trading portfolio and wholesale loan assets are predominantly investment grade. Further analysis on the credit quality of assets is presented on pages 149 and 150.

 

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Further detail on the Group’s credit enhancement policies are presented on pages 398 to 400

 

Overview

As at 31 December 2013, the Group’s net exposure to credit risk after taking into account netting and set-off, collateral and risk transfer reduced 8% to £709.8bn, reflecting a reduction in maximum exposure of 11% and a reduction in the level of mitigation held by 14%. Overall, the extent to which the Group holds mitigation on its assets was stable at 54% (2012: 55%).

Where collateral has been obtained in the event of default, Barclays does not, as a rule, use such assets for its own operations and they are held for sale. The carrying value of assets held by the Group as at 31 December 2013 as a result of the enforcement of collateral was £234m (2012: £298ma).

 

Note

a 2012 amounts have been revised to more accurately reflect the population of assets held as a result of collateral enforcement.
 

 

 

 

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  Maximum exposure and effects of collateral and other credit enhancements (audited)

 

 
    

Maximum

exposure

£m

 

    

Netting

and set-off

£m

 

   

 

Collateral

   

Risk

transfer

£m

 

   

Net

exposure

£m

 

 

As at 31 December 2013

 

       

 

 

Cash

£m

 

   

Non-cash

£m

 

     

On-balance sheet:

                                                 

Cash and balances at central banks

     45,687                                     45,687   

Items in the course of collection from other banks

     1,282                                     1,282   

Trading portfolio assets:

                                 

Debt securities

     84,560                                     84,560   

Traded loans

     1,647                                     1,647   

Total trading portfolio assets

     86,207                                     86,207   

Financial assets designated at fair value:

             

Loans and advances

     18,695                       (6,840     (301     11,554   

Debt securities

     842                                     842   

Reverse repurchase agreements

     5,323                       (5,006            317   

Other financial assets

     678                                     678   

Total financial assets designated at fair value

     25,538                       (11,846     (301     13,391   

Derivative financial instruments

     324,335         (258,528     (33,511     (7,888     (8,830     15,578   

Loans and advances to banks

     37,853         (1,012            (3,798     (391     32,652   

Loans and advances to customers:

             

Home loans

     179,527                (239     (176,014     (941     2,333   

Credit cards, unsecured and other retail lending

     70,378         (8     (1,182     (18,566     (2,243     48,379   

Corporate loans

     180,506         (9,366     (775     (42,079     (7,572     120,714   

Total loans and advances to customers

     430,411         (9,374     (2,196     (236,659     (10,756     171,426   

Reverse repurchase agreements and other similar secured lending

     186,779                       (184,896            1,883   

Available for sale debt securities

     91,298                       (777            90,521   

Other assets

     1,998                                     1,998   

Total on-balance sheet

     1,231,388           (268,914         (35,707       (445,864         (20,278         460,625   

Off-balance sheet:

             

Contingent liabilities

     19,675                (1,081     (950     (556     17,088   

Documentary credits and other short-term trade related transactions

     780                (3     (35     (4     738   

Forward starting reverse repurchase agreements

     19,936                       (19,565            371   

Standby facilities, credit lines and other commitments

     254,855                (1,220     (20,159     (2,529     230,947   

Total off-balance sheet

     295,246                (2,304     (40,709     (3,089     249,144   
                                                   

Total

     1,526,634         (268,914     (38,011     (486,573     (23,367     709,769   

 

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Table of Contents

Risk review >

Credit risk continued

     

 

 

 

 

 

  Maximum exposure and effects of collateral and other credit enhancements (audited)

 

 
    

Maximum

exposure
£m

 

    

Netting

and set-off
£m

 

   

 

Collateral

   

Risk

transfer

£m

 

   

Net

exposure
£m

 

 

As at 31 December 2012

 

       

 

Cash

£m

 

   

Non-cash
£m

 

     

On-balance sheet:

                                                 

Cash and balances at central banks

     86,191                                     86,191   

Items in the course of collection from other banks

     1,473                                     1,473   

Trading portfolio assets:

                                 

Debt securities

     116,307                                     116,307   

Traded loans

     2,410                                     2,410   

Total trading portfolio assets

     118,717                                     118,717   

Financial assets designated at fair value:

             

Loans and advances

     21,996                (1     (7,499     (111     14,385   

Debt securities

     6,975                (23                   6,952   

Reverse repurchase agreements

     6,034                  (5,165       869   

Other financial assets

     1,229                                     1,229   

Total financial assets designated at fair value

     36,234                (24     (12,664     (111     23,435   

Derivative financial instruments

     469,156         (387,672     (46,855     (6,328     (8,132     20,169   

Loans and advances to banks

     40,462         (1,012            (5,071     (136     34,243   

Loans and advances to customers:

             

Home loans

     174,988                (179     (172,543     (53     2,213   

Credit cards, unsecured and other retail lending

     66,414         (10     (909     (17,703     (2,321     45,471   

Corporate loans

     182,504         (10,243     (1,055     (47,526     (8,489     115,191   

Total loans and advances to customers

     423,906         (10,253     (2,143     (237,772     (10,863     162,875   

Reverse repurchase agreements and other similar secured lending

     176,522                -        (174,918            1,604   

Available for sale debt securities

     74,671                (1     (233     (32     74,405   

Other assets

     2,001                                     2,001   

Total on-balance sheet

     1,429,333           (398,937         (49,023       (436,986         (19,274         525,113   

Off-balance sheet:

             

Contingent liabilities

     21,857                (919     (1,420     (555     18,963   

Documentary credits and other short-term trade related transactions

     1,027                (15     (33     (11     968   

Forward starting reverse repurchase agreements

     23,549                       (23,343            206   

Standby facilities, credit lines and other commitments

     247,816                (1,013     (16,960     (3,396     226,447   

Total off-balance sheeta

     294,249                (1,947     (41,756     (3,962     246,584   
                                                   

Total

     1,723,582         (398,937     (50,970     (478,742     (23,236     771,697   

 

 

 

Note

a Off-balance sheet commitments have been revised to reflect the inclusion of forward starting reverse repurchase agreements.

 

 

 

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Table of Contents
  

 

 

 

 

Concentrations of credit risk

A concentration of credit risk exists when a number of counterparties are located in a geographical region or are engaged in similar activities and have similar economic characteristics that would cause their ability to meet contractual obligations to be similarly affected by changes in economic or other conditions. The Group implements certain limits on concentrations in order to mitigate the risk. The analyses of credit risk concentrations presented below are based on the location of the counterparty or customer or the industry in which they are engaged. Further detail on the Group’s policies with regard to managing concentration risk is presented on page 393.

Geographic concentrations

As at 31 December 2013, the geographic concentration of the Group’s assets remained broadly consistent with 2012. 37% (2012: 35%) of the exposure is concentrated in the UK, 24% (2012: 26%) in Europe and 29% (2012: 28%) in the Americas.

The most significant change in concentrations was for cash held at central banks. A significant reduction in Europe was noted, primarily with the European Central Bank, following the change in composition of the liquidity pool from cash and balances at central banks to government bonds; as a result UK cash contributed a higher proportion of the total. This also increased holdings in UK, Europe and Americas available for sale debt securities.

An analysis of geographical and industry concentration of Group loans and advances held at amortised cost and at fair value is presented on pages 152 and 153. Information on exposures to Eurozone countries is presented on pages 182 to 189.

 

 

Credit risk concentrations by geography (audited)

 

 

As at 31 December 2013

 

  

United
Kingdom
£m

 

    

Europe

£m

 

    

Americas

£m

 

    

 

Africa and
Middle East

£m

 

    

Asia

£m

 

    

Total

£m

 

 

On-balance sheet:

                 

Cash and balances at central banks

     7,307         29,983         4,320         2,111         1,966         45,687   

Items in the course of collection from other banks

     756         242                 284                 1,282   

Trading portfolio assets

     15,936         21,040         37,113         2,165         9,953         86,207   

Financial assets designated at fair value

     17,487         2,632         3,399         1,372         648         25,538   

Derivative financial instruments

     98,787         112,254         85,580         2,901         24,813         324,335   

Loans and advances to banks

     6,379         11,483         10,455         2,554         6,982         37,853   

Loans and advances to customers

     235,770         74,657         67,467         39,582         12,935         430,411   

Reverse repurchase agreements and other similar secured lending

     34,027         32,820         102,922         1,887         15,123         186,779   

Available for sale debt securities

     29,540         33,816         20,189         5,875         1,878         91,298   

Other assets

     917         380         260         324         117         1,998   

Total on-balance sheet

        446,906            319,307            331,705              59,055              74,415         1,231,388   

Off-balance sheet:

                 

Contingent liabilities

     10,349         2,475         4,521         2,110         220         19,675   

Documentary credits and other short-term trade related transactions

     496         121                 163                 780   

Forward starting reverse repurchase agreements

     5,254         3,903         4,753         4         6,022         19,936   

Standby facilities, credit lines and other commitments

     102,456         35,612         99,240         15,584         1,963         254,855   

Total off-balance sheet

     118,555         42,111         108,514         17,861         8,205         295,246   

Total

     565,461         361,418         440,219         76,916         82,620         1,526,634   

 

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barclays.com/annualreport    Barclays PLC Annual Report 2013 > 145


Table of Contents

Risk review >

Credit risk continued

     

 

 

 

 

 

Credit risk concentrations by geography (audited)

 

 

As at 31 December 2012

 

  

 

United
Kingdom
£m

 

    

Europe

£m

 

    

Americas
£m

 

    

Africa and
Middle East
£m

 

    

Asia

£m

 

    

Total

£m

 

 

On-balance sheet:

                 

Cash and balances at central banks

     3,547         70,173         6,568         2,354         3,549         86,191   

Items in the course of collection from other banks

     788         313                 371         1         1,473   

Trading portfolio assets

     16,540         21,526         63,998         3,056         13,597         118,717   

Financial assets designated at fair value

     24,113         4,476         5,094         1,947         604         36,234   

Derivative financial instruments

     147,651         157,609         127,377         4,264         32,255         469,156   

Loans and advances to banks

     7,506         14,915         12,278         2,110         3,653         40,462   

Loans and advances to customers

     228,008         81,267         61,859         45,930         6,842         423,906   

Reverse repurchase agreements and other similar secured lending

     29,565         25,309         98,313         4,133         19,202         176,522   

Available for sale debt securities

     24,018         29,803         11,128         7,103         2,619         74,671   

Other assets

     987         332         328         290         64         2,001   

Total on-balance sheet

        482,723            405,723            386,943              71,558              82,386         1,429,333   

Off-balance sheet:

                 

Contingent liabilities

     10,343         3,372         5,045         2,342         755         21,857   

Documentary credits and other short-term trade related transactions

     629         103                 295                 1,027   

Forward starting reverse repurchase agreements

     7,186         5,331         4,597         6         6,429         23,549   

Standby facilities, credit lines and other commitmentsa

     100,260         32,736         91,574         21,637         1,609         247,816   

Total off-balance sheetb

     118,418         41,542         101,216         24,280         8,793         294,249   

Total

     601,141         447,265         488,159         95,838         91,179         1,723,582   

Industrial concentrations

As at 31 December 2013, the industrial concentration of the Group’s assets remained broadly consistent year on year. 48% (2012: 50%) of total assets were concentrated towards banks and other financial institutions, predominantly within derivative financial instruments which decreased significantly during the year. The proportion of the overall balance concentrated towards governments and central banks reduced to 12% (2012: 14%) primarily driven by the reduction in cash balances held within the liquidity pool. Home loans now contribute 13% (2012: 11%) of the total, due to growth within UK RBB.

 

 

Notes

a 2012 amounts have been revised to accurately reflect the exposures within those regions. This resulted in a £6.2bn increase in the UK and a corresponding decrease in Europe.
b Off-balance sheet commitments have been revised to reflect the inclusion of forward starting reverse repurchase agreements.

 

 

 

146 > Barclays PLC Annual Report 2013    barclays.com/annualreport


Table of Contents
  

 

 

 

 

 

Credit risk concentrations by industry (audited)

 

 

As at

31 December 2013

 

 

Banks £m

 

 

Other  financial insti- tutions £m

 

 

Manu-  facturing £m

 

 

Const- ruction and  property £m

 

 

Govern-  ment and central bank

£m

 

 

 Energy and water £m

 

 

 Wholesale and retail distrib- ution and leisure

£m

 

 

 Business and other services £m

 

 

Home  loans

£m

 

 

 

Cards,  unsecured loans and other personal lending

£m

 

 

 Other

£m

 

   

 

 

 Total

£m

 

  

  

 

On-balance sheet:

                       

Cash and balances at central banks

          45,687                 45,687   

Items in the course of collection from other banks

  1,174         108                 1,282   

Trading portfolio assets

  6,964   18,064   1,379   655   50,955   3,265   545   3,312       1,068     86,207   

Financial assets designated at fair value

  4,720   2,835   164   8,589   5,613   162   327   3,038       90     25,538   

Derivative financial instruments

  219,059   78,031   1,782   2,621   6,630   8,334   1,690   3,733       2,455     324,335   

Loans and advances to banks

  35,738         2,115                 37,853   

Loans and advances to customers

    99,355   10,343   23,951   4,988   7,452   12,864   20,062   179,527   52,715   19,154     430,411   

Reverse repurchase agreements and other similar secured lending

  62,180   116,148     1,083   6,019     23   1,326           186,779   

Available for sale debt securities

  15,625   12,817   25   97   56,780     21   5,435       498     91,298   

Other assets

  470   1,295     17   82       134           1,998   

Total on-balance sheet

  345,930   328,545   13,693   37,013   178,977   19,213   15,470   37,040   179,527   52,715   23,265     1,231,388   

Off-balance sheet:

                       

Contingent liabilities

  1,620   4,783   2,243   882   302   2,275   1,391   4,709   9   295   1,166     19,675   

Documentary credits and other short-term trade related transactions

  270   4   51   10     9   181   171     82   2     780   

Forward starting reverse repurchase agreements

  13,884   5,650       2       400           19,936   

Standby facilities, credit lines and other commitments

  1,886   29,348   24,381   8,935   2,839   23,765   13,221   17,474   18,731   102,088   12,167     254,855   

Total off-balance sheet

  17,660   39,785   26,675   9,827   3,143   26,049   14,793   22,754   18,760   102,465   13,335     295,246   

Total

   363,590    368,330    40,368    46,840    182,120    45,262    30,263    59,794    198,287    155,180    36,600      1,526,634   

 

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Table of Contents

Risk review >

Credit risk continued

     

 

 

 

 

 

Credit risk concentrations by industry (audited)

 

 

As at

31 December 2012

 

 

Banks

£m

 

 

Other   financial insti- tutions £m

 

 

Manu-   facturing £m

 

 

Const- ruction and   property £m

 

 

Govern-   ment and central bank

£m

 

 

  Energy and water £m

 

 

  Wholesale and retail distrib- ution and leisure

£m

 

 

Business   and other services £m

 

 

Home loans

£m

 

 

 

Cards,   unsecured loans and other personal lending

£m

 

 

  Other £m

 

   

 

 

  Total

£m

 

  

  

 

On-balance sheet:

                       

Cash and balances at central banks

          86,191                 86,191   

Items in the course of collection from other banks

  1,473                         1,473   

Trading portfolio assets

  9,240   25,966   2,072   504   73,848   3,124   446   2,257       1,260     118,717   

Financial assets designated at fair value

  5,798   3,677   175   10,087   11,579   335   600   3,581       402     36,234   

Derivative financial instruments

  349,481   81,090   2,401   4,478   9,589   10,011   2,203   6,906       2,997     469,156   

Loans and advances to banks

  38,842         1,620                 40,462   

Loans and advances to customers

    86,330   11,518   25,877   4,788   7,622   14,603   24,152   171,993   55,645   21,378     423,906   

Reverse repurchase agreements and other similar secured lending

  64,616   106,231   4   1,014   3,684   261   98   610       4     176,522   

Available for sale debt securities

  16,933   10,267   92   91   46,177   122   42   846       101     74,671   

Other assets

  249   632   2   34   165   6   8   192   13   694   6     2,001   

Total on-balance sheet

  486,632   314,193   16,264   42,085   237,641   21,481   18,000   38,544   172,006   56,339   26,148     1,429,333   

Off-balance sheet:

                       

Contingent liabilities

  1,369   4,701   2,532   1,218   1,690   2,684   1,484   4,219   89   333   1,538     21,857   

Documentary credits and other short-term trade related transactions

  559   51   55   3     1   77   275     4   2     1,027   

Forward starting reverse repurchase agreements

  17,853   5,086   20     1     33   548     8       23,549   

Standby facilities, credit lines and other commitmentsa

  8,068   26,396   24,937   8,675   3,829   21,790   10,566   13,727   17,538   96,993   15,297     247,816   

Total off-balance sheetb

  27,849   36,234   27,544   9,896   5,520   24,475   12,160   18,769   17,627   97,338   16,837     294,249   

Total

    514,481     350,427     43,808     51,981     243,161     45,956     30,160     57,313     189,633     153,677     42,985     1,723,582   

 

Notes

a 2012 amounts for Banks have been revised to include £8,068m previously categorised as Other financial institutions.
b Off-balance sheet commitments have been revised to reflect the inclusion of forward starting reverse repurchase agreements.

 

 

 

148 > Barclays PLC Annual Report 2013    barclays.com/annualreport


Table of Contents
  

 

 

 

 

Balance sheet credit quality

The following tables present the credit quality of Group assets exposed to credit risk.

Basis of preparation

For performing loans that are neither past due nor impaired, which form the majority of loans in the portfolios, the following internal measures of credit quality have been used for the purposes of this analysis:

 

¡   Strong – there is a very high likelihood of the asset being recovered in full, these include investment grade;

 

¡   Satisfactory – while there is a high likelihood that the asset will be recovered and, therefore, is of no current cause for concern to the Group, the asset may not be collateralised, or may relate to facilities such as unsecured loans and credit card balances; and

 

¡   Higher risk – there is concern over the obligor’s ability to make payments when due. However, these have not yet converted to actual delinquency.

Non-performing loans – loans that are impaired or are past due but not impaired – have been included in the Higher risk category for this analysis with prior year comparatives restated to align presentation. An age analysis of both is presented on pages 155 and 156.

For assets held at fair value, the carrying value on the balance sheet will include, among other things, the credit risk of the issuer. Most listed and some unlisted securities are rated by external rating agencies. The Group mainly uses external credit ratings provided by Standard & Poor’s or Moody’s. Where such ratings are not available or are not current, the Group will use its own internal ratings for the securities.

For further information on the way in which Barclays measures the credit quality of its loan portfolios, refer to page 404.

Overview

As at 31 December 2013, the proportion of the Group’s assets classified as strong remains flat at 83% (2012: 83%) of total assets exposed to credit risk.

Traded assets remain mostly investment grade within the strong category, with counterparties to 95% (2012: 94%) of total derivative financial instruments, and issuers of 95% (2012: 93%) of debt securities held for trading and 96% (2012: 94%) of debt securities held available for sale being investment grade. The credit quality of counterparties to reverse repurchase agreements held at amortised cost remained broadly stable at 76% (2012: 73%). The credit risk of these assets is significantly reduced due to the high levels of collateralisation held.

In the loan portfolios, 85% of home loans (2012: 82%) to customers are measured as strong, The increase in the period reflects the acquisition of the largely strong credit quality portfolio in Barclays Direct during the year and improvements in the UK portfolio. The majority of credit card, unsecured and other retail lending remained satisfactory, reflecting the unsecured nature of a significant proportion of the balance, comprising 71% of the total (2012: 69%). The credit quality profile of the Group’s wholesale lending improved with counterparties rated strong increasing to 69% (2012: 66 %), primarily due to increases in settlement and collateral balances which are generally rated strong in the Investment Bank.

 

LOGO   Further analysis of debt securities by issuer and issuer type is presented on page 178
  Further information on netting and collateral arrangements on derivatives financial instruments is presented on pages 179 and 180

 

LOGO
 

 

barclays.com/annualreport    Barclays PLC Annual Report 2013 > 149


Table of Contents

Risk review >

Credit risk continued

     

 

 

 

 

 

 

Balance sheet credit quality (audited)

 

 

 
  As at 31 December 2013   

Strong
(including
investment
grade)

£m

     Satisfactory
(BB+ to B)
£m
    

Higher risk
(B- and
below)

£m

    

Maximum
exposure
to credit
risk

£m

    

Strong
(including
investment
grade)

%

    Satisfactory
(BB+ to B)
%
   

Higher risk
(B- and
below)

%

    Maximum  
exposure to  
credit risk  
%  
 

 

 

Cash and balances at central banks

     45,687                         45,687         100     0     0     100%     

 

 

Items in the course of collection from other banks

     1,218         51         13         1,282         95     4     1     100%     

 

 

Trading portfolio assets:

                    

Debt securities

     80,190         3,633         737         84,560         95     4     1     100%     

Traded loans

     526         700         421         1,647         32     42     26     100%     

 

 

Total trading portfolio assets

     80,716         4,333         1,158         86,207         94     5     1     100%     

 

 

Financial assets designated at fair value:

                    

Loans and advances

     17,020         1,017         658         18,695         91     5     4     100%     

Debt securities

     403         36         403         842         48     4     48     100%     

Reverse repurchase agreements

     4,492         794         37         5,323         84     15     1     100%     

Other financial assets

     255         191         232         678         38     28     34     100%     

 

 

Total financial assets designated at fair value

     22,170         2,038         1,330         25,538         87     8     5     100%     

 

 

Derivative financial instruments

     309,069         14,549         717         324,335         95     4     1     100%     

 

 

Loans and advances to banks

     35,181         1,634         1,038         37,853         93     4     3     100%     

 

 

Loans and advances to customers:

                    

Home loans

     153,299         14,373         11,855         179,527         85     8     7     100%     

Credit cards, unsecured and other retail lending

     14,728         50,100         5,550         70,378         21     71     8     100%     

Corporate loans

     124,560         46,187         9,759         180,506         69     26     5     100%     

 

 

Total loans and advances to customers

     292,587         110,660         27,164         430,411         68     26     6     100%     

 

 

Reverse repurchase agreements and other similar secured lending

     141,861         44,906         12         186,779         76     24     0     100%     

 

 

Available for sale debt securities

     87,888         1,354         2,056         91,298         96     2     2     100%     

 

 

Other assets

     1,598         340         60         1,998         80     17     3     100%     

 

 

Total assets

     1,017,975         179,865         33,548         1,231,388         83     14     3     100%     

 

 

As at 31 December 2012

                    

Cash and balances at central banks

     86,191                         86,191         100     0     0     100%     

 

 

Items in the course of collection from other banks

     1,337         103         33         1,473         91     7     2     100%     

 

 

Trading portfolio assets:

                    

Debt securities

     108,379         5,841         2,087         116,307         93     5     2     100%     

Traded loans

     460         1,617         333         2,410         19     67     14     100%     

 

 

Total trading portfolio assets

     108,839         7,458         2,420         118,717         92     6     2     100%     

 

 

Financial assets designated at fair value:

                    

Loans and advances

     19,609         1,684         703         21,996         89     8     3     100%     

Debt securities

     6,219         287         469         6,975         89     4     7     100%     

Reverse repurchase agreements

     5,010         963         61         6,034         83     16     1     100%     

Other financial assets

     664         462         103         1,229         54     38     8     100%     

 

 

Total financial assets designated at fair value

     31,502         3,396         1,336         36,234         87     9     4     100%     

 

 

Derivative financial instruments

     443,112         23,498         2,546         469,156         94     5     1     100%     

 

 

Loans and advances to banks

     36,668         2,868         926         40,462         91     7     2     100%     

 

 

Loans and advances to customers:

                    

Home loans

     142,828         20,407         11,753         174,988         81     12     7     100%     

Credit cards, unsecured and other retail lending

     15,169         45,852         5,393         66,414         23     69     8     100%     

Wholesale

     121,161         51,196         10,147         182,504         66     28     6     100%     

 

 

Total loans and advances to customers

     279,158         117,455         27,293         423,906         66     28     6     100%     

 

 

Reverse repurchase agreements and other similar secured lending

     129,687         46,644         191         176,522         74     26     0     100%     

 

 

Available for sale debt securities

     69,871         2,331         2,469         74,671         94     3     3     100%     

 

 

Other assets

     1,623         322         56         2,001         81     16     3     100%     

 

 

Total assets

     1,187,988         204,075         37,270         1,429,333         83     14     3     100%     

 

 

 

 

 

150 > Barclays PLC Annual Report 2013    barclays.com/annualreport


Table of Contents
  

 

 

 

 

As the principal source of credit risk to the Group, loans and advances to customers and banks are analysed in detail below:

Analysis of loans and advances and impairment

 

 

 

Retail and wholesale loans and advances to customers and banks

 

 

 
    

Gross

L&A

£m

     Impairment
allowance
£m
     L&A net of
impairment
£m
    

Credit risk
loansa

£m

     CRLs % of
gross L&A
%
     Loan
impairment
charges
£m
    Loan  
loss rates  
bps  
 

 

 

As at 31 December 2013

                   

Total retail

     236,219         4,372         231,847         7,567         3.2         2,161        91     

Wholesale – customers

     201,998         2,876         199,122         5,713         2.8         918        45     

Wholesale – banks

     37,305         10         37,295         18                 (17     (5)    

 

 

Total wholesale

     239,303         2,886         236,417         5,731         2.4         901        38     
                   

 

 

Loans and advances at amortised cost

     475,522         7,258         468,264         13,298         2.8         3,062        64     
           

Traded loans

     1,647         n/a         1,647      

Loans and advances designated at fair value

     18,695         n/a         18,695      

 

    

Loans and advances held at fair value

     20,342         n/a         20,342      
           

 

    

Total loans and advances

     495,864         7,258         488,606      

 

    
                   

As at 31 December 2012

                   

Total retail

     232,672         4,635         228,037         8,722         3.7         2,075        89     

Wholesale – customers

     199,423         3,123         196,300         6,252         3.1         1,251        63     

Wholesale – banks

     40,072         41         40,031         51         0.1         (23     (6)    

 

 

Total wholesale

     239,495         3,164         236,331         6,303         2.6         1,228        51     
                   

 

 

Loans and advances at amortised cost

     472,167         7,799         464,368         15,025         3.2         3,303        70     
                   

Traded loans

     2,410         n/a         2,410              

Loans and advances designated at fair value

     21,996         n/a         21,996              

 

            

Loans and advances held at fair value

     24,406         n/a         24,406              
                   

 

            

Total loans and advances

     496,573         7,799         488,774              

 

            

Loans and advances to customers and banks at amortised cost net of impairment remained stable at £468.3bn (2012: £464.4bn). This reflected a £3.8bn increase to £231.8bn in the retail portfolios, driven by increased mortgage lending and the acquisition of Barclays Direct in UK RBB. This was offset by reductions in Africa RBB, largely reflecting currency movements.

This growth combined with lower impairment charges on loans and advances resulted in a lower loan loss rate of 64bps (2012: 70bps).

 

LOGO   Further detail can be found in the Retail and Wholesale Credit Risk sections on pages 158 and 173 respectively

 

LOGO
 

 

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Table of Contents

Risk review >

Credit risk continued

     

 

 

 

 

Group loans and advances held at amortised cost, by industry sector and geography

Loans and advances, net of impairment allowances, held at amortised cost increased by 0.8% to £468,264m. This was driven by a rise in cash collateral and settlement balances, reflected in lending to other financial institutions, and an increase in home loans in the UK due to increased demand and the acquisition of Barclays Direct. This was offset by decreases in Africa, due to currency movements, and in Europe, due to the realignment of our target customer profile.

 

 

 

Loans and advances at amortised cost net of impairment allowances by industry sector and geography

 

 

 
     United
Kingdom
£m
    Europe
£m
    Americas
£m
    Africa and
Middle East
£m
   

Asia

£m

   

Total  

£m  

 

 

 

As at 31 December 2013

            

Banks

     5,718        11,322        10,141        2,318        6,239        35,738     

Other financial institutions

     21,142        18,359        45,963        6,117        7,774        99,355     

Manufacturing

     5,306        1,916        1,297        1,218        606        10,343     

Construction

     3,133        417        19        347        27        3,943     

Property

     15,022        1,985        937        1,941        123        20,008     

Government and central bank

     1,546        1,739        685        1,325        1,808        7,103     

Energy and water

     1,715        3,035        1,489        735        478        7,452     

Wholesale and retail distribution and leisure

     9,609        1,296        464        1,320        175        12,864     

Business and other services

     12,826        2,656        2,220        1,926        434        20,062     

Home loans

     129,591        34,752        782        14,051        351        179,527     

Cards, unsecured loans and other personal lending

     28,168        6,792        12,630        3,842        1,283        52,715     

Other

     8,373        1,871        1,295        6,996        619        19,154     

 

 

Net loans and advances to customers and banks

     242,149        86,140        77,922        42,136        19,917        468,264     

 

 

Impairment allowance

     (2,980     (2,486     (654     (1,079     (59     (7,258)    

 

 

As at 31 December 2012

            

Banks

     7,134        14,447        12,050        1,806        3,405        38,842     

Other financial institutions

     17,113        20,812        40,884        4,490        3,031        86,330     

Manufacturing

     6,041        2,533        1,225        1,232        487        11,518     

Construction

     3,077        476        1        699        21        4,274     

Property

     15,167        2,411        677        3,101        247        21,603     

Government and central bank

     558        2,985        1,012        1,600        253        6,408     

Energy and water

     2,286        2,365        1,757        821        393        7,622     

Wholesale and retail distribution and leisure

     9,567        2,463        734        1,748        91        14,603     

Business and other services

     15,754        2,754        2,360        2,654        630        24,152     

Home loans

     119,653        36,659        480        14,931        270        171,993     

Cards, unsecured loans and other personal lending

     29,716        5,887        11,725        7,170        1,147        55,645     

Other

     9,448        2,390        1,232        7,788        520        21,378     

 

 

Net loans and advances to customers and banks

     235,514        96,182        74,137        48,040        10,495        464,368     

 

 

Impairment allowance

     (3,270     (2,606     (472     (1,381     (70     (7,799)    

 

 

 

 

 

152 > Barclays PLC Annual Report 2013    barclays.com/annualreport


Table of Contents
  

 

 

 

 

Loans and advances held at fair value by industry sector and geography

Total loans and advances held at fair value, principally reflecting balances held in the Corporate and Investment Bank, decreased 16.7% to £20.3bn (2012: £24.4bn) primarily reflecting an increase in long term interest rates and paydowns associated with the ESHLA portfolio. A large portion of the total comprises lending to property, government, and business and other services. Property includes lending to the Corporate Real Estate business and to social housing associations.

 

 

 

Loans and advances held at fair value, by industry sector and geography

 

 

 
     United
Kingdom
£m
     Europe
£m
     Americas
£m
     Africa and
Middle East
£m
     Asia
£m
    

Total  

£m  

 

 

 

As at 31 December 2013

                 

Banks

             150         72         273         1         496     

Other financial institutionsa

     12         782         409         24         42         1,269     

Manufacturing

     21         41         98                 6         166     

Construction

     148         1                 11                 160     

Property

     7,595         766         164         3                 8,528     

Government and central bank

     5,288         8                 98         1         5,395     

Energy and water

     12         65         465         48                 590     

Wholesale and retail distribution and leisure

     40         75         97         53                 265     

Business and other services

     2,865         59         261         127         1         3,313     

Other

     11         27         51         63         8         160     

 

 

Total

     15,992         1,974         1,617         700         59         20,342     

 

 

As at 31 December 2012

                 

Banks

             493         120         422                 1,035     

Other financial institutions

     13         611         622         8         39         1,293     

Manufacturing

     6         38         601         16         15         676     

Construction

     161         1                 28         4         194     

Property

     8,671         830         295         121                 9,917     

Government and central bank

     5,762         6         314         17         5         6,104     

Energy and water

     10         73         41         46         3         173     

Wholesale and retail distribution and leisure

     33         2         220         72         1         328     

Business and other services

     3,404         20         685         14                 4,123     

Other

     105         132         46         224         56         563     

 

 

Total

     18,165         2,206         2,944         968         123         24,406     

 

 

 

Note

a Included within Other financial institutions Americas are £250m (2012: £427m) of loans backed by retail mortgage collateral.

 

LOGO
 

 

barclays.com/annualreport    Barclays PLC Annual Report 2013 > 153


Table of Contents

Risk review >

Credit risk continued

     

 

 

 

 

Impairment charges (audited)

Loan impairment charges reduced 7% to £3,062m, reflecting lower charges in Corporate Banking and Africa RBB, partially offset by increased charges across the rest of the Group. Combined with a 1% increase in gross loans and advances, this resulted in a lower overall Group loan loss rate of 64 bps (2012: 70bps; 2011: 77bps).

 

 

 

Credit impairment charges and other provisions by business (audited)

 

 

 
     2013
£m
    2012
£m
    2011  
£m  
 

 

 

Loan impairment

      

UK RBB

     347        269        536     

Europe RBB

     287        257        188     

Africa RBB

     324        632        462     

Barclaycard

     1,264        1,049        1,312     

Investment Bank

     209        192        129     

Corporate Banking

     512        864        1,124     

Wealth and Investment Management

     121        38        41     

Head Office and Other Operations

     (2     2        (2)    

 

 

Total loan impairment chargesa

     3,062        3,303        3,790     

Impairment charges on available for sale financial investments (excluding BlackRock, Inc.)

     1        40        60     

Impairment of reverse repurchase agreements

     8        (3     (48)    

 

 

Total credit impairment charges and other provisions

     3,071        3,340        3,802     

 

 

Impairment of investment in BlackRock, Inc.

                   1,800     

Impairment allowances (audited)

Impairment allowances decreased 7% to £7,258m, principally due to a reduction in corporate loans in Corporate Banking Europe, largely due to actions to reduce exposure in the Spanish property and construction sectors, and lower working capital funding requirements from UK counterparties.

 

 

 

Movements in allowance for impairment by asset class (audited)

 

 

 
    

At beginning
of year

£m

     Acquisitions
and
disposals
£m
    Unwind of
discount
£m
    Exchange
and other
adjustments
£m
    Amounts
written off
£m
    Recoveries
£m
     Amounts
charged to
income
statement
£m
     Balance at  
31 December  
£m  
 

 

 

2013

                   

Home loans

     855                (38     (147     (199     30         287         788     

Credit cards, unsecured and other retail lending

     3,780         (5     (132     50        (2,050     123         1,837         3,603     

Corporate loans

     3,164                (9     (163     (1,094     48         921         2,867     

 

 

Total impairment allowance

     7,799         (5     (179     (260     (3,343     201         3,045         7,258     

 

 

2012

                   

Home loans

     834                (45     (33     (382     24         457         855     

Credit cards, unsecured and other retail lending

     4,540         (59     (144     (248     (2,102     119         1,674         3,780     

Corporate loans

     3,522         (21     (22     75        (1,635     69         1,176         3,164     

 

 

Total impairment allowance

     8,896         (80     (211     (206     (4,119     212         3,307         7,799     

 

 

 

Note

a Includes charges of £17m (2012: £4m write back; 2011: £24m charge) in respect of undrawn facilities and guarantees.

 

 

 

154 > Barclays PLC Annual Report 2013    barclays.com/annualreport


Table of Contents
  

 

 

 

 

Impaired loans

The following table represents an analysis of impaired loans in line with the disclosure requirements from the Enhanced Disclosure Taskforce. For further information on definitions of impaired loans refer to the identifying potential credit risk loans section on page 395.

 

 

 

Movement in impaired loans

 

 

 
    

At beginning
of year

£m

    

Classified
as impaired
during

the year

£m

    

Transferred
to not
impaired
during

the year

£m

    Repayments
£m
    Amounts
written off
£m
    Acquisitions
and
disposals
£m
    Exchange
and other
adjustments
£m
    Balance at  
31 December  
£m  
 

 

 

2013

                  

Home loans

     2,207         1,217         (509     (576     (230            (126     1,983     

Credit cards, unsecured and other retail lending

     3,874         2,449         (168     (362     (2,267            (141     3,385     

Wholesale loans

     5,666         2,188         (804     (710     (1,074            (124     5,142     

 

 

Total impaired loans

     11,747         5,854         (1,481     (1,648     (3,571            (391     10,510     

 

 

2012

                  

Home loans

     2,198         1,421         (531     (512     (254            (115     2,207     

Credit cards, unsecured and other retail lending

     5,024         2,228         (332     (417     (2,482     (59     (148     3,874     

Wholesale loans

     6,349         2,650         (649     (1,282     (1,145     (80     (177     5,666     

 

 

Total impaired loans

     13,571         6,359         (1,512     (2,211     (3,881     (139     (440     11,747     

 

 

 

LOGO   For information over restructured loans refer to disclosures on forbearance on page 157

Age analysis of loans and advances that are past due (audited)

The following tables present an age analysis of loans and advances that are past due but not impaired and loans that are assessed as impaired. These loans are reflected in the balance sheet credit quality tables on page 150 as being Higher Risk.

 

 

 

Loans and advances past due but not impaired (audited)

 

 

 
     Past due up
to 1 month
£m
    

Past due

1-2 months
£m

     Past due
2-3 months
£m
     Past due
3-6 months
£m
     Past due
6 months
and over
£m
     Total  
£m  
 

 

 

As at 31 December 2013

                 

Loans and advances designated at fair value

     113         45         9         10         170         347     

Home loans

     36         5         19         76         51         187     

Credit cards, unsecured and other retail lending

     103         37         16         56         109         321     

Corporate loans

     4,210         407         308         248         407         5,580     

 

 

Total

     4,462         494         352         390         737         6,435     

 

 

As at 31 December 2012

                 

Loans and advances designated at fair value

     108         50         39         19         176         392     

Home loans

     127         23         48         42         39         279     

Credit cards, unsecured and other retail lending

     133         6         6         8         35         188     

Corporate loans

     4,261         471         459         236         427         5,854     

 

 

Total

     4,629         550         552         305         677         6,713     

 

 

 

LOGO
 

 

barclays.com/annualreport    Barclays PLC Annual Report 2013 > 155


Table of Contents

Risk review >

Credit risk continued

     

 

 

 

 

Analysis of loans and advances assessed as impaired (audited)

The following tables present an age analysis of loans and advances collectively impaired, total individually impaired loans, and total impairment allowance.

 

 

 

Loans advance assessed as impaired (audited)

 

 

 
     Past due up
to 1 month
    

Past due

1-2 months

     Past due
2-3 months
     Past due
3-6 months
     Past due
6 months
and over
     Total      Individually
assessed for
impairment
     Total    

 

 

As at 31 December 2013

                       

Home loans

     5,726         2,161         667         728         1,818         11,100         510         11,610     

Credit cards, unsecured and other retail lending

     1,589         1,029         411         632         2,866         6,527         1,548         8,075     

Corporate loans

     1,047         40         35         59         400         1,581         3,892         5,473     

 

 

Total

     8,362         3,230         1,113         1,419         5,084         19,208         5,950         25,158     

 

 

As at 31 December 2012

                       

Home loans

     4,649         2,297         650         888         1,964         10,448         783         11,231     

Credit cards, unsecured and other retail lending

     1,539         938         345         550         2,864         6,236         1,617         7,853     

Corporate loans

     344         57         46         57         872         1,376         4,010         5,386     

 

 

Total

     6,532         3,292         1,041         1,495         5,700         18,060         6,410         24,470     

 

 

Potential Credit Risk Loans (PCRLs)

The Group reports potentially and actually impaired loans as PCRLs. PCRLs comprise two categories of loans: Credit Risk Loans (CRLs) and Potential Problem Loans (PPLs). For further information on definitions of CRLs and PPLs refer to the identifying potential credit risk loans section on page 395.

 

                                                                                                                 

 

 

PCRLs and coverage ratios

 

 

 
     CRLs      PPLs      PCRLs  
  

 

 

 

As at 31 December

  

2013

£m

    

2012

£m

     2013
£m
     2012
£m
     2013
£m
     2012  
£m  
 

 

 

Retaila

     7,567         8,722         708         758         8,275         9,480     

Wholesale

     5,731         6,303         1,100         1,102         6,831         7,405     

 

 

Group

     13,298         15,025         1,808         1,860         15,106         16,885     

 

 

 

 
     Impairment allowance      CRL coverage      PCRL coverage  

 

 

As at 31 December

   2013
£m
     2012
£m
     2013
£m
     2012
£m
     2013
£m
    

2012  

£m  

 

 

 

Retail

     4,372         4,635         57.8         53.1         52.8         48.9     

Wholesale

     2,886         3,164         50.4         50.2         42.2         42.7     

 

 

Group

     7,258         7,799         54.6         51.9         48.0         46.2     

 

 

For more information refer to the Retail Credit risk section, Wholesale Credit risk section and Risk management section.

 

 

Note

a 2012 PCRL balances in Africa RBB have been restated to better reflect their PCRL categorisation. As a result CRLs decreased by £99m and PPLs increased by £102m. This has been allocated between Home Loans (CRL: £76m and PPL: £59m) and Other Retail Lending (CRL: £23m and PPL: £43m).

 

 

 

156 > Barclays PLC Annual Report 2013    barclays.com/annualreport


Table of Contents
  

 

 

 

 

Forbearance

The following table summaries balances within forbearance programmes across the Group by division.

 

                                                                                                                 

 

 

Analysis of Group balances in forbearance programmes

 

 

 
     Balances      Impairment stock      Coverage  
  

 

 

 

As at 31 December

   2013
£m
     2012
£m
     2013
£m
     2012
£m
     2013
%
     2012  
%  
 

 

 

Retail

     5,002         5,447         581         575         11.6         10.6     

UK RBB

     2,785         2,907         89         96         3.2         3.3     

Europe RBB

     704         756         60         37         8.5         4.9     

Africa RBB

     305         481         38         33         12.5         6.9     

Barclaycard

     1,156         1,237         388         395         33.5         31.9     

Corporate Bankinga

     23         34         5         12         22.0         35.4     

Wealth and Investment Management

     29         32         1         2         3.9         6.0     

Wholesale

     3,385         4,254         891         1,149         26.3         27.0     

Investment Bank

     495         846         30         180         6.1         21.3     

Corporate Bankinga

     2,003         2,482         777         896         38.8         36.1     

Africa RBB

     159         243         14         38         8.8         15.6     

Wealth and Investment Management

     728         683         70         35         9.6         5.1     

 

 

Group

     8,387         9,701         1,472         1,724         17.6         17.8     

 

 

Wholesale and retail balances in forbearance are reported as a CRL as long as they meet the normal CRL criteria (see identifying potential credit risk loans on page 395). In addition, for card portfolios, all forbearance balances less than 90 days in arrears where revised payments are less than 50% of contractual monthly payments are also included in CRLs.

 

LOGO   Further detail can be found in the Retail and Wholesale Credit risk sections on pages 161 to 164 and pages 175 and 176 respectively

Exposure to UK Commercial Real Estate (CRE)

This table details the Group’s total exposure to UK CRE split by retail and wholesale lending classification.

 

                                                                                                                 

 

 

Exposure to UK CRE

 

 

 
     Loans and advances
at amortised cost
     Balances past due      Impairment allowances  
  

 

 

 

As at 31 December

   2013      2012      2013      2012      2013      2012    

 

 

Wholesale

     9,842         10,036         361         469         110         106     

Retail

     1,593         1,534         103         123         16         20     

 

 

Group

     11,435         11,570         464         592         126         126     

 

 

 

LOGO   Further detail can be found in the Retail and Wholesale Credit risk sections on pages 172 and 177 respectively

 

 

Note

a Primarily comprises UAE retail portfolios in 2013. Includes India portfolios in 2012.

 

LOGO
 

 

barclays.com/annualreport    Barclays PLC Annual Report 2013 > 157


Table of Contents

Risk review >

Credit risk continued

     

 

 

 

 

Retail credit risk

Gross loans and advances to customers and banks in the retail portfolios increased 2% to £236.2bn; principally reflecting movements in UK RBB, where a 6% increase to £138bn reflected the acquisition of Barclays Direct and growth in home loans. This was partially offset by a reduction in Africa RBB, principally reflecting currency movements.

The loan impairment charge increased 4% to £2,161m principally the result of:

 

¡   UK RBB increased 29% to £347m primarily due to the non-recurrence of releases in 2012 impacting unsecured lending and mortgages. Excluding these, impairment was broadly in line with prior year;

 

¡   Barclaycard increased 20% to £1,264m primarily driven by higher assets, including the impact of the acquisition of the Edcon portfolio in late 2012, and the non-recurrence of releases in 2012. Impairment loan loss rates in consumer credit cards remained stable at 356bps (2012: 358bps) in the UK and at 268bps (2012: 268bps) in the US, but increased to 560bps (2012: 160bps) in South Africa;

 

¡   Europe RBB increased 12% to £287m due in part to additional charges resulting from decreases in Spanish government subsidies to the renewable energy sector, foreign currency movements and an increase in home loan balances in recoveries. This was partially offset by improvements in underlying collections performance;

 

¡   Africa RBB decreased 45% to £259m driven by lower charges in the South African home loans portfolios and foreign currency movements;

 

¡   Wealth and Investment Management increased to £9m (2012: nil) driven primarily by losses on Spanish residential property; and

 

¡   Corporate Banking decreased to a £5m release (2012: £27m charge) driven by a sharp improvement in residential property values.

Higher overall impairment charges led to an increase in the retail loan loss rate to 91bps (2012: 89bps).

 

 

 

Retail loans and advances at amortised cost

 

 

 
    

Gross

L&A

£m

     Impairment
allowance
£m
     L&A net of
impairment
£m
    

Credit risk
loans

£m

     CRLs % of
gross L&A
%
     Loan
impairment
charges
£m
    Loan  
loss rates  
bps  
 

 

 

As at 31 December 2013

                   

UK RBB

     138,056         1,308         136,748         2,664         1.9         347        25     

Europe RBB

     38,016         660         37,356         1,801         4.7         287        75     

Africa RBB

     19,363         491         18,872         1,026         5.3         259        134     

Barclaycard

     37,468         1,856         35,612         1,992         5.3         1,264        337     

Corporate Bankinga

     488         39         449         45         9.2         (5     (102)    

Wealth and Investment Management

     2,828         18         2,810         39         1.4         9        32     

 

 

Total

     236,219         4,372         231,847         7,567         3.2         2,161        91     

 

 

As at 31 December 2012

                   

UK RBB

     129,682         1,369         128,313         2,883         2.2         269        21     

Europe RBB

     39,997         560         39,437         1,734         4.3         257        64     

Africa RBB

     23,987         700         23,287         1,691         7.0         472        197     

Barclaycard

     35,732         1,911         33,821         2,288         6.4         1,050        294     

Corporate Bankinga

     739         79         660         92         12.4         27        365     

Wealth and Investment Management

     2,535         16         2,519         34         1.3                –     

 

 

Total

     232,672         4,635         228,037         8,722         3.7         2,075        89     

 

 

 

 

Note

a Primarily comprises UAE retail portfolios in 2013. Includes India portfolios in 2012 that were predominantly disposed of in 2013.

 

 

 

158 > Barclays PLC Annual Report 2013    barclays.com/annualreport


Table of Contents
  

 

 

 

 

 

 

Analysis of retail gross loans and advances

 

 

 
     Secured home loansa
£m
     Credit cards,
overdrafts and
unsecured loans
£m
     Other secured
retail lendingb
£m
     Business lending
£m
     Total retail  
£m  
 

 

 

As at 31 December 2013

              

UK RBB

     122,879         6,854                 8,323         138,056     

Europe RBB

     33,615         2,870                 1,531         38,016     

Africa RBB

     13,664         2,469         2,584         646         19,363     

Barclaycard

             34,276         2,487         705         37,468     

Corporate Banking

     252         199         30         7         488     

Wealth and Investment Management

     2,575         91         162                 2,828     

 

 

Total

     172,985         46,759         5,263         11,212         236,219     

 

 

As at 31 December 2012

              

UK RBB

     114,766         6,863                 8,053         129,682     

Europe RBB

     34,825         3,430                 1,742         39,997     

Africa RBB

     17,422         2,792         3,086         687         23,987     

Barclaycard

             32,432         2,730         570         35,732     

Corporate Banking

     274         336         117         12         739     

Wealth and Investment Management

     2,267         63         205                 2,535     

 

 

Total

     169,554         45,916         6,138         11,064         232,672     

 

 

Secured home loans and credit cards, overdrafts and unsecured loans are analysed on pages 165 and 169, respectively.

Management adjustments to models for impairment

Management adjustments to models for impairment in retail portfolios are applied in order to factor in certain conditions or changes in policy that are not incorporated into the relevant impairment models or to ensure that the impairment allowance reflects all known facts and circumstances at the period end. Adjustments typically increase the model derived impairment allowance.

Management adjustments to models of more than £10m with respect to impairment charge in our principal retail portfolios are presented below.

 

                                                     

 

 

Principal portfolios with management adjustments greater than £10m

 

 

 

As at 31 December 2013

   Management
adjustments to
impairment charge,
including forbearance
£m
     Proportion of total  
impairment charge  
%  
 

 

 

UK home loans

     13         61.9     

South Africa home loans

     11         10.7     

UK personal loans

     20         13.7     

UK overdrafts

     10         14.3     

Iberia cards

     12         14.1     

Spain business lending

     25         40.1     

 

 

The significant management adjustments to impairment were due to:

 

¡   UK home loans – higher impairment allowances reflecting the external environment;

 

¡   South Africa home loans – maintaining impairment coverage on the recoveries book following a reduction in the loss given default rate;

 

¡   UK personal loans – impacts from changes to the impairment policy for emergence periods, forbearance and high risk pending their inclusion into the impairment models;

 

¡   UK overdraft – additional coverage for dormant accounts together with changes to the impairment policy for emergence periods, forbearance and high risk pending inclusion into the impairment models;

 

¡   Iberia cards – impacts from changes to impairment policy for emergence periods forbearance and high risk pending their inclusion into the impairment models; and

 

¡   Spain business lending – additional charges resulting from decreases in subsidies to the renewable energy sector in Spain.

Notes

a All portfolios under secured home loans are primarily first lien mortgages. Other secured retail lending under Barclaycard is a second lien mortgage portfolio.
b Other secured retail lending includes vehicle auto finance in Africa RBB and UK secured lending in Barclaycard.

 

LOGO
 

 

barclays.com/annualreport    Barclays PLC Annual Report 2013 > 159


Table of Contents

 

Risk review >

Credit risk continued

     

 

 

 

 

Potential Credit Risk Loans and coverage ratios

 

                                                                                                                 

 

 

PCRLs and coverage ratios

                                         

 

 
     CRLs      PPLs      PCRLs  
  

 

 

 

As at 31 December

  

2013

£m

    

2012

£m

     2013
£m
     2012
£m
    

2013

£m

     2012  
£m  
 

 

 

Home loans

     2,803         3,321         316         321         3,119         3,642     

Credit cards and unsecured lending

     3,468         3,954         279         295         3,747         4,249     

Other retail lending and business banking

     1,296         1,447         113         142         1,409         1,589     

 

 

Total retaila

     7,567         8,722         708         758         8,275         9,480     

 

 

 

 
     Impairment allowance      CRL coverage      PCRL coverage  
  

 

 

 

As at 31 December

  

2013

£m

    

2012

£m

     2013
£m
     2012
£m
    

2013

£m

     2012  
£m  
 

 

 

Home loans

     776         849         27.7         25.6         24.9         23.3     

Credit cards and unsecured lending

     3,026         3,212         87.3         81.2         80.8         75.6     

Other retail lending and business banking

     570         574         44.0         39.7         40.5         36.1     

 

 

Total retail

     4,372         4,635         57.8         53.1         52.8         48.9     

 

 

 

 

PCRLs and coverage ratios by business

                                         

 

 
     CRLs      PPLs      PCRLs  
  

 

 

 

As at 31 December

  

2013

£m

    

2012

£m

     2013
£m
     2012
£m
     2013
£m
     2012  
£m  
 

 

 

UK RBB

     2,664         2,883         239         283         2,903         3,166     

Europe RBB

     1,801         1,734         73         98         1,874         1,832     

Africa RBBa

     1,026         1,691         153         163         1,179         1,854     

Barclaycard

     1,992         2,288         239         208         2,231         2,496     

Corporate Banking

     45         92         2         5         47         97     

Wealth and Investment Management

     39         34         2         1         41         35     

 

 

Total retail

     7,567         8,722         708         758         8,275         9,480     

 

 
                 

 

 
     Impairment allowance      CRL coverage      PCRL coverage  
  

 

 

 

As at 31 December

  

2013

£m

    

2012

£m

     2013
£m
     2012
£m
    

2013

£m

     2012  
£m  
 

 

 

UK RBB

     1,308         1,369         49.1         47.5         45.1         43.2     

Europe RBB

     660         560         36.6         32.3         35.2         30.6     

Africa RBB

     491         700         47.9         41.4         41.6         37.8     

Barclaycard

     1,856         1,911         93.2         83.5         83.2         76.6     

Corporate Banking

     39         79         86.7         85.9         83.0         81.4     

Wealth and Investment Management

     18         16         46.2         47.1         43.9         45.7     

 

 

Total retail

     4,372         4,635         57.8         53.1         52.8         48.9     

 

 

CRL balances in retail portfolios decreased 13.2% to £7,567m. This is primarily driven by Africa RBB and the associated depreciation of ZAR against GBP and the reduction in the recovery book in South Africa home loans. The reduction in UK RBB reflected higher cash recoveries in Business Banking and lower flows into recovery in Consumer Lending. The reduction in Barclaycard reflected lower balances in recovery across the principal portfolios. The CRL decrease was partially offset by higher balances in Europe RBB, primarily due to appreciation of EUR against GBP and an increase in recovery balances across all home loans portfolios.

 

 

Note

a 2012 PCRL balances in Africa RBB have been restated to better reflect their PCRL categorisation. As a result PCRL balances increased by £3m; CRLs decreased by £99m; and PPLs increased by £102m. This has been allocated between Home Loans (CRL: £76m and PPL: £59m) and Other Retail Lending (CRL: £23m and PPL: £43m).

 

 

 

160 > Barclays PLC Annual Report 2013    barclays.com/annualreport


Table of Contents
  

 

 

 

 

Retail forbearance programmes

Forbearance programmes on principal credit cards, overdrafts, unsecured loans, home loans and business lending portfolios

Retail forbearance is available to customers experiencing financial difficulties. Forbearance solutions may take a number of forms depending on the extent of the financial dislocation. Short term solutions normally focus on temporary reductions to contractual payments and switches from capital and interest payments to interest only. For customers with longer term financial difficulties, term extensions may be offered, which may also include interest rate concessions and fully amortising balances for card portfolios.

Forbearance on the Group’s principal portfolios in the US, UK, Eurozone and South Africa is presented below. The principal portfolios listed below account for 93% (2012: 94%) of total retail forbearance balances.

 

 

 

Analysis of key portfolios in forbearance programmes

 

 

 
     Balances on forbearance programmes     

Marked to
market

LTV of
forbearance
balances:
balance
weighted

%

    

Marked to
market

LTV of
forbearance
balances:
valuation
weighted

%

    

Impairment

allowances
marked
against
balances on
forbearance
programmes
£m

    

Total  
balances on  
forbearance  
programmes  
coverage  
ratio  

%  

 
  

 

 

             
           of which:               
                          Past due of which:              
        

 

 

             
     Total
£m
     % of
gross L&A
%
     Up-to-date
£m
     1-90 days
past due
£m
     91 or
more days
past due
£m
             

 

 

As at 31 December 2013

                          

Home Loans

                          

UK

     2,364         1.9         1,867         313         184         63.4         51.6         23         1.0     

South Africa

     248         2.1         117         115         16         74.4         60.5         17         6.9     

Spain

     171         1.4         124         36         11         68.3         52.3         8         4.9     

Italy

     307         2.0         248         31         28         62.2         50.9         10         3.2     

Credit Cards

                          

UK

     912         5.6         861         44         7         n/a         n/a         333         36.5     

US

     106         1.1         73         24         9         n/a         n/a         10         9.8     

Unsecured Loans

                          

UK

     142         2.9         94         40         8         n/a         n/a         34         23.7     

 

 
                          

As at 31 December 2012

                          

Home Loans

                          

UK

     2,536         2.2         1,961         391         184         67.7         56.1         24         0.9     

South Africa

     404         2.6         170         164         70         78.3         64.7         16         4.0     

Spain

     174         1.3         118         45         11         68.9         53.3         10         5.7     

Italy

     426         2.6         391         20         15         62.6         52.2         7         1.7     

Credit Cards

                          

UK

     991         6.3         927         56         8         n/a         n/a         350         35.3     

US

     116         1.3         77         29         10         n/a         n/a         15         12.9     

Unsecured Loans

                          

UK

     168         3.4         113         42         13         n/a         n/a         44         26.2     

 

 

Loans in forbearance in the principal home loans portfolios decreased 13% to £3,090m primarily due to decreases in UK, South Africa and Italy.

 

¡   The UK home loans under forbearance programmes decreased 7% to £2,364m. In H213, the definition was expanded to include customers who are up to date on their mortgage but have either been granted a term extension or have drawn against their Mortgage Current Account and displayed other indicators of financial stress. 2012 forbearance balances were restated from £1,596m to £2,536m in line with the new definition. As a result of the restatement, Mortgage Current Account balances (see page 169) now account for 71% of the total forbearance balances, the majority of the remainder being term extensions which account for 17%. Total past due balances reduced 14% to £497m due to improved collections procedures.

 

¡   In South Africa, the reduction in forbearance balances is due to the implementation of enhanced qualification criteria which results in a more appropriate and sustainable programme for the customer, and a depreciation of ZAR against GBP.

 

¡   In Italy, the majority of the balances relate to specific schemes required by the government, including schemes in response to natural disasters and amendments are primarily payment holidays and interest suspensions. The decrease of 28% to £307m is in part due to customers exiting such government forbearance schemes after recommencing payments. The coverage for forbearance accounts remains low, at 3.2% (2012: 1.7%) reflecting the underlying quality of customers on these government schemes, with 85% of customers being up-to-date upon entering the forbearance schemes for natural disasters.

Forbearance balances on principal credit cards, overdrafts and unsecured loan portfolios decreased by 9% to £1,160m. Forbearance programmes as a proportion of outstanding balances reduced in UK and US cards due to better payment rates arising from an improved credit environment.

 

¡   In UK Cards, Repayment Plans which account for majority of the forbearance balances exit forbearance treatment when they are more than 60 days past due. The small residual balance reported as >90 days past due relates to accounts that remain on legacy terms and conditions. Impairment allowances against UK cards forbearance decreased following a review of the qualification criteria in the forbearance policy, the impacts of which became evident from Q2 2013. This included a reduction of balances on forbearance programmes and better performance resulting in a decrease in impairment coverage ratio.

 

¡   US cards forbearance programme coverage ratio was lower than the UK due to the nature of the customer mix (partnership focused) and the type of forbearance, where long-term fully amortising forbearance plans make up over 50% of all forborne accounts. These plans have lower loss rates compared to the UK and carry lower levels of impairment driven by higher payment success rates compared with the UK.

 

LOGO
 

 

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Table of Contents

Risk review >

Credit risk continued

     

 

 

 

 

Business lending

 

 

 
     Balances on forbearance programmes: arrears managed     

Impairment

allowances
marked
against
balances on
forbearance
programmes
£m

    

Total  
balances on  
forbearance  
programmes  
coverage  
ratio  

%  

 
  

 

 

       
           of which:         
                          Past due of which:        
        

 

 

       

As at 31 December 2013

   Total
£m
     % of
gross L&A
%
     Up-to-date
£m
    

 

1-90 days

past due

£m

    

91 or more

days past due

£m

       

 

 

UK

     49         0.6         25         4         20         12.1         24.7     

Spain

     4         0.4         3         1                 0.2         5.7     

Portugal

     8         1.8         7         1                 1.9         23.3     

 

 

 

 
            Balances on forbearance programmes: EWL managed     

Impairment

allowances

marked
against
balances on
forbearance
programmes
£m

    

Total  

balances on  
forbearance  
programmes  
coverage  
ratio  

%  

 
     

 

 

       
                          of which:        
           

 

 

       

As at 31 December 2013

         

Total

£m

     % of
gross
L&A %
    

Performing
balances

£m

    

 

Non-performing
balances

£m

       

 

 

UK

        229         2.7         159         70         19.9         8.7     

Spain

        122         11.9         116         6         25.0         20.5     

Portugal

        9         1.9         9                 2.2         25.9     

 

 

 

 

As at 31 December 2013

                        Balances on
forbearance
programmes
£m
    

% of

gross L&A

%

     Impairment
allowances
marked
against
balances on
forbearance
programmes
£m
    

Total  
balances on  
forbearance  
programmes  
coverage  
ratio  

%  

 

 

 

UK

              278         3.3         32.0         11.5     

Spain

              126         12.3         25.2         20.0     

Portugal

              17         3.7         4.1         24.6     

 

 

 

 

 

 

162 > Barclays PLC Annual Report 2013    barclays.com/annualreport


Table of Contents
  

 

 

 

 

 

 
     Balances on forbearance programmes: arrears managed     

Impairment

allowances
marked
against
balances on
forbearance
programmes
£m

    

Total  
balances on  
forbearance  
programmes  
coverage  
ratio  

%  

 
  

 

 

       
           of which:         
                          Past due of which:        
        

 

 

       
  As at 31 December 2012    Total
£m
     % of
gross L&A
%
     Up-to-date
£m
    

 

1-90 days

past due

£m

    

91 or more

days past due

£m

       

 

 

UK

     60         0.7         26         8         26         15.6         26.4     

Spain

     4         0.5         3         1                 0.3         7.5     

Portugal

     7         1.2         2         1         4         0.6         9.5     

 

 
                    

 

 
            Balances on forbearance programmes: EWL managed     

Impairment

allowances

marked
against
balances on
forbearance
programmes
£m

    

Total  

balances on  
forbearance  
programmes  
coverage  
ratio  

%  

 
     

 

 

       
                          of which:        
        

 

 

       
                          Past due of which:        
        

 

 

       
  As at 31 December 2012          

Total

£m

     % of
gross L&A
%
    

 

Performing
balances

£m

    

Non-performing
balances

£m

       

 

 

UK

        143         1.8         89         54         12.4         8.7     

Spain

        79         7.1         75         4         8.4         10.6     

Portugal

        3         0.4         2         1         0.6         21.0     

 

 

 

 
  As at 31 December 2012                         Balances on
forbearance
programmes
£m
    

% of

gross L&A

%

     Impairment
allowances
marked
against
balances on
forbearance
programmes
£m
    

Total  
balances on  
forbearance  
programmes  
coverage  
ratio  

%  

 

 

 

UK

              203         2.5         28.0         13.8     

Spain

              83         7.6         8.7         10.5     

Portugal

              10         1.6         1.2         12.8     

 

 

Total business lending forbearance balances in the UK increased 37% to £278m due to the monitoring of customers under forbearance for a longer period before they are recategorised as performing, and an increase in customers being granted forbearance while a review of their derivative position is being undertaken. Non-performing balances increased 13% to £90m, with a significant proportion of customers operating within the terms of their amended terms and conditions.

The relatively low total balances on forbearance coverage ratio of 8.7% (2012: 8.7%) for UK business lending EWL managed balances principally reflects focus on obtaining good quality collateral/security for secured deals.

Balances in Spain and Portugal increased 55% to £144m primarily due to the restructuring of facilities for EWL managed customers including loans to the renewable energy sector in Spain due to the reduction in government subsidies to this sector. Impairment coverage increased in Spain reflecting the additional charges taken against loans to the renewable energy sector.

Forbearance by type

Home loans

¡   Interest-only conversions: A temporary change from a capital and interest repayment to an interest-only repayment, for a maximum of 24 months.

 

¡   Interest rate reductions: A temporary reduction in interest rate, for a maximum of 12 months.

 

¡   Payment concessions: An agreement to temporarily accept reduced loan repayments, for a maximum of 24 months.

 

¡   Term extensions: A permanent extension to the loan maturity date which may involve a reduction in interest rates, and usually involves the capitalisation of arrears.

Credit cards and unsecured loans

¡   Payment concessions (loans only): An agreement to temporarily accept reduced loan repayments, for a maximum of 12 months.

 

¡   Term extensions (loans only): A permanent extension to the loan maturity date, usually involving the capitalisation of arrears.

 

¡   Repayment plans (cards only): A temporary reduction in the minimum payment due, for a maximum of 60 months. This may involve a reduction in interest rates to prevent negative amortisation.

 

¡   Fully amortising (cards and loans): A permanent conversion of the outstanding balance into a fully amortising loan, over a maximum period of 60 months for cards and 120 months for loans.

 

 

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barclays.com/annualreport    Barclays PLC Annual Report 2013 > 163


Table of Contents

Risk review >

Credit risk continued

     

 

 

 

 

 

 

Forebearance by type

                           

 

 
     Home loans  
  

 

 

 
    

UK

£m

     Spain
£m
     Italya
%
     South  
Africa  
%  
 

 

 

As at 31 December 2013

           

Interest only conversion

     135         8                 –     

Interest rate reduction

             78                 2     

Payment concession

     160                 144         187     

Term extension

     413         85         163         59     

Other

     1,656                         –     

 

 

Total

     2,364         171         307         248     

 

 

As at 31 December 2012

           

Interest only conversion

     153         14                 –     

Interest rate reduction

             74                 9     

Payment concession

     173                 295         236     

Term extension

     371         87         131         159     

Other

     1,839                         –     

 

 

Total

     2,536         175         426         404     

 

 

 

 

 
     Credit cards and unsecured loans  
  

 

 

 
     UK cards
£m
     US cards
£m
    

UK personal  
loans  

%  

 

 

 

As at 31 December 2013

        

Payment concession

     63                 1     

Term extension

                     31     

Fully amortising

             56         110     

Repayment plan

     833         50         –     

Other

     16                 –     

 

 

Total

     912         106         142     

 

 

As at 31 December 2012

        

Payment concession

     74                 7     

Term extension

                     34     

Fully amortising

             60         127     

Repayment plan

     900         56         –     

Other

     17                 –     

 

 

Total

     991         116         168     

 

 

Forbearance balances for UK home loans classified as ‘Other’ relates to Mortgage Current Accounts where the customer has drawn against available reserve, and displayed other indicators of financial stress. Term extensions made up 23% (2012: 21%) of home loan forbearance balances across principal portfolios.

In UK cards, Other represents legacy rehabilitated repayment plan accounts that have continued to be included and tracked as forbearance given their continued interest rate concessions.

 

 

Notes
a In Italy, payment concessions include plans where the customer has been extended a payment holiday and may be converted to a term extension once the agreed period is completed.

 

 

 

164 > Barclays PLC Annual Report 2013    barclays.com/annualreport


Table of Contents
  

 

 

 

 

Portfolio reviews

Secured home loans

Total home loans to retail customers represented 73% (2012: 73%) of the Group’s total retail balances. Home loan balances increased 2% to £173bn.

The principal home loan portfolios listed below account for 97% (2012: 96%) of total home loans in the Group’s retail portfolios.

 

 

 

Home loans principal portfoliosa

                                         

 

 
     Gross loans
and
advances
£m
     > 90 day
arrears
%
     > 90 day
arrears,
including
recoveriesb
%
    

Annualised
gross
charge-off
ratesc

%

     Recoveries
proportion
of
outstanding
balances %
    

Recoveries  
impairment  
coverage  
ratio  

%  

 

 

 

As at 31 December 2013

                 

UK

     122,880         0.3         0.8         0.5         0.5         14.7     

South Africa

     12,172         0.7         6.2         2.6         5.6         34.7     

Spain

     12,748         0.7         3.0         1.1         2.4         36.0     

Italy

     15,518         1.1         3.5         0.7         2.4         25.8     

Portugal

     3,641         0.5         3.9         1.1         3.4         31.9     

 

 

As at 31 December 2012

                 

UK

     114,766         0.3         0.8         0.6         0.5         13.4     

South Africa

     15,773         1.6         8.4         3.9         6.9         34.6     

Spain

     13,551         0.7         2.6         1.1         1.9         34.0     

Italy

     15,529         1.0         2.9         0.8         1.8         25.4     

Portugal

     3,710         0.7         3.4         1.4         2.8         25.6     

 

 

Arrears rates remained steady in the UK due to a conservative credit policy and stable economic conditions including the continued low base rate environment. The recoveries impairment coverage ratio increased reflecting a delay in impairment releases while the business assesses the changing environment conditions.

In the UK, gross loans and advances increased 7% to £123bn which includes £5.4bn of balances at acquisition from the Barclays Direct (formerly ING Direct) mortgage portfolio in February 2013. Within the total home loans portfolio:

 

¡   Owner-occupiedd interest-only balances of £44.5bn (2012: £45.7bn) represented 36% of total home loan balances (see page 168 for more detail). The average balance weighted LTV for interest-only balances remained low at 54.2% (2012: 58.8%) and 90 day arrears rates remained stable at 30bps (2012: 30bps) which was in line with the overall portfolio performance; and

 

¡   Buy-to-lete home loans comprised 8% (2012: 7%) of the total balances. For buy-to-let home loans, 90 day arrears rates improved marginally from 0.2% to 0.1% while balance weighted portfolio LTV remained broadly stable at 62.9% (2012: 65.7%).

Gross loans and advances in South Africa of £12.2bn (2012: £15.8bn) were broadly unchanged in local currency. The improvement in the arrears and charge-off rates was driven by the continued strong performance of new lending and improvements in collections capabilities. The decrease in recoveries balances was driven by revised strategies in the recoveries environment to reduce this portfolio, and lower charge-off rates.

In the principal European home loans portfolios, gross loans and advances reduced 3% to £31.9bn reflecting the amortisation of existing balances and reduced new business flows following the realignment of our target Europe RBB customer profile (see page 14 for further detail). 90 day arrears rates and charge-off rates have remained broadly stable in Spain and Italy, but have reduced in Portugal due to improved collections performance.

 

¡   Balances in recoveries and recovery impairment coverage rates have increased in Spain in part due to an increase in the legal recovery timescales following introduction of new Spanish mortgage protection laws. The lengthy legal process in Europe and difficult property market conditions have contributed to the increased recovery balances and higher impairment coverage ratios.

 

 

Notes
a Excluded from the above analysis are Wealth International home loans, which are managed on an individual customer exposure basis, France home loans and other small home loans portfolios. All portfolios under Secured Home Loans are primarily first lien mortgages. Other Secured Retail Lending under Barclaycard is a second lien mortgage portfolio.
b 90 day arrears including recoveries is the sum of balances greater than 90 day arrears and balances charged off to recoveries, expressed as a percentage of total outstanding balances.
c Gross charge-off rates are calculated over average monthly outstanding balances through the year.
d Owner-occupied refers to mortgages where the intention of the customer was to occupy the property at origination.
e Buy to let refers to mortgages where the intention of the customer (investor) was to let the property at origination.

 

LOGO
 

 

barclays.com/annualreport    Barclays PLC Annual Report 2013 > 165


Table of Contents

Risk review >

Credit risk continued

     

 

 

 

 

 

 

Home loans principal portfolios – distribution of balances by LTV (updated valuations)a

 

 

 
     UK      South Africa      Spain      Italy      Portugal  
  

 

 

 
    

2013

%

    

2012

%

    

2013

%

    

2012

%

    

2013

%

    

2012

%

    

2013

%

    

2012

%

    

2013

%

    

2012  

%  

 

 

 

As at 31 December

                             

<=75%

     84.2         76.1         69.6         62.8         65.9         64.2         74.9         74.3         42.3         40.3     

>75% and <=80%

     6.9         9.2         8.8         9.0         6.6         6.5         14.2         16.0         8.6         8.3     

>80% and <=85%

     3.4         5.4         7.1         8.2         6.1         6.1         6.0         5.5         11.7         10.6     

>85% and <=90%

     2.1         3.3         4.8         6.4         5.5         5.5         1.8         1.4         12.1         11.1     

>90% and <=95%

     1.3         2.2         3.3         4.0         4.5         4.4         0.9         0.9         9.0         10.2     

>95% and <=100%

     0.8         1.4         1.9         2.8         3.3         3.3         0.6         0.6         7.3         7.6     

>100%

     1.3         2.4         4.5         6.8         8.1         10.0         1.6         1.3         9.0         11.9     
                             

 

 

Portfolio Marked to market LTV:

                             

Balance weighted %

     56.3         59.1         62.3         65.6         63.4         64.6         60.0         59.6         76.4         77.6     

Valuation weighted %

     43.6         45.5         42.1         44.2         44.8         45.4         46.5         46.7         66.2         67.7     

Performing Balances:

                             

Balance weighted %

     56.2         59.0         60.5         62.9         62.2         63.6         58.6         58.7         75.1         76.7     

Valuation weighted %

     43.5         45.5         41.1         42.6         44.7         45.3         46.5         46.6         66.1         67.6     

Non-performing Balances:

                             

Balance weighted %

     68.9         72.7         92.9         95.8         103.3         100.9         98.8         90.2         79.2         83.2     

Valuation weighted %

     55.1         58.6         71.4         77.9         60.6         61.5         53.1         54.2         74.3         80.3     

For >100% LTVs:

                             

Balances £m

     1,596         2,698         540         1,064         1,027         1,343         244         203         324         440     

Marked to market collateral £m

     1,411         2,478         452         898         864         1,136         191         167         294         405     

Average LTV: balance weighted %

     120.5         112.3         123.1         121.7         118.0         118.1         151.1         137.0         113.7         110.7     

Average LTV: valuation weighted %

     113.2         108.9         119.5         118.4         118.8         118.2         128.2         121.1         110.1         108.5     

% of balances in recoveries

     3.2         2.6         45.6         46.2         18.6         12.0         62.1         51.2         20.8         12.5     

 

 

Credit quality of the principal home loan portfolios reflected relatively conservative levels of high LTV new lending and moderate LTV on existing portfolios.

During 2013, the average balanced weighted portfolio LTV in the UK decreased to 56.3% (2012: 59.1%) primarily due to appreciating house prices.

For >100% LTV, with the exception of Italy, balances decreased during 2013:

 

¡   In the UK, balances were 41% lower at £1,596m, partly driven by appreciating house prices. However, the average balance weighted LTV for the same period increased due to the remaining balances having higher LTVs than those paid down;

 

¡   In South Africa, the 49% reduction in the balances to £540m (2012: £1,064m) was driven by a reduction in the recoveries book and an appreciation in house prices;

 

¡   In Spain and Portugal, the balances decreased by 24% and 26%, respectively due to the increasing levels of repossessions where the assets are now held as ‘Other Real Estate Owned’ (see page 167 Foreclosures in process and properties in possession); and

 

¡   In Italy, the balances increased by 20% due to the falling property prices and court set auction valuations for properties going through the lengthy repossession process (see section ‘Foreclosures in process and properties in possession’).

 

Note
a Portfolio marked to market based on the most updated valuation including recoveries balances. Updated valuations reflect the application of the latest house price index available in the country as at 31 December 2013. Valuation weighted LTV is the ratio between total outstanding balances and the value of total collateral held against these balances. Balance weighted LTV approach is derived by calculating individual LTVs at account level and weighting by the individual loan balances to arrive at the average position.

 

 

 

166 > Barclays PLC Annual Report 2013    barclays.com/annualreport


Table of Contents
  

 

 

 

 

 

 

Home loans principal portfolios – new lending

 

 

 
     UK     South Africa      Spain      Italy      Portugala  
  

 

 

 

As at 31 December

   2013      2012     2013      2012      2013      2012      2013      2012      2013      2012    

 

 

New bookings £m

     17,100         18,170        1,209         1,186         277         284         494         848         20         83     

New mortgages proportion above 85% LTV (%)

     3.8         3.9 b      30.4         36.8         1.8         4.1                         15.6         4.9     

Average LTV on new mortgages: balance weighted (%)

     64.2         64.6        74.9         76.1         61.7         62.8         59.8         62.8         64.8         60.8     

Average LTV on new mortgages: valuation weighted (%)

     57.1         57.4 b      64.9         64.7         52.9         55.8         52.2         55.4         54.2         56.7     

 

 

New bookings in UK decreased 6% to £17.1bn. The decrease in average balance weighted LTV in the UK to 64.2% (2012: 64.6%) was driven by an increased proportion of lower LTV origination.

In South Africa, new home loans above 85% LTV decreased to 30.4% (2012: 36.8%) due to an increase of new bookings in the 80-85% LTV band, the average LTV remained broadly unchanged.

New bookings in Spain, Italy and Portugal reduced 35% to £791m due to changes to business strategy, a tightening of the standard LTV credit criteria and active management to reduce funding mismatch. Average balance weighted LTV on new mortgages remained stable across these jurisdictions reflecting these credit criteria.

The proportion of new home loans above 85% LTV in Spain has decreased, and now primarily reflects lending to customers to finance the purchase of properties which were previously repossessed by the Bank and held as ‘Other Real Estate Owned’ (see Foreclosures in process and properties in possession below).

Foreclosures in process and properties in possession

Foreclosure is the process by which the bank initiates legal action against a customer with the intention of terminating a loan agreement whereby the bank may repossess the property subject to local law and recover amounts it is owed. This process can be initiated by the bank independent of the impairment treatment and it is therefore possible that the foreclosure process may be initiated while the account is still in Collections (delinquent) or in Recoveries (post charge-off) where the customer has not agreed a satisfactory repayment schedule with the bank.

Properties in possession include properties held as ‘Loans and Advances to Customers’ and properties held as ‘Other Real Estate Owned’.

Held as ’Loans and Advances to Customers’ (UK and Italy) refer to the properties where the customer continues to retain legal title but where the bank has enforced the possession order as part of the foreclosure process to allow for the disposal of the asset or the court has ordered the auction of the property.

Held as ‘Other Real Estate Owned’ (South Africa, Spain and Portugal) refers to properties where the bank has taken legal ownership of the title as a result of purchase at an auction or similar and treated as ‘Other Real Estate Owned’ within other assets on the bank’s balance sheet.

 

 

 

Home loans principal portfolios

                           

 

 
     Foreclosures in process      Properties in possession    
  

 

 

 
     number      £m      number      £m    

 

 

As at 31 December 2013

           

UK

     1,835         254         157         22     

South Africa

     10,161         484         398         5     

Spain

     1,560         236         1,305         93     

Italyc

     3,782         371         504         64     

Portugald

     2,086         137         540         50     

 

 

As at 31 December 2012

           

UK

     1,612         203         234         33     

South Africa

     12,145         778         1,314         27     

Spain

     1,396         194         945         117     

Italy

     2,888         283         436         58     

Portugald

     1,506         110         336         45     

 

 

In UK Home Loans, foreclosure in process increased 14% to 1,835 in 2013. This increase includes customers where contact and formal agreement of payment plans for arrears is still to be achieved. On average, 22% of customers in foreclosures in process made a monthly repayment which was less than the monthly contractual payment. 31% of customers in Recovery have recommenced full contractual payments as a minimum, and the foreclosure process for these customers are in temporary suspension pending agreement on the arrears.

 

Notes
a The proportion of new home loans above 85% LTV in Portugal includes home loans to restructure customer existing home loans, with no increase in exposure.
b Figures were restated following a detailed review of the LTVs post-migration to a new data management system.
c In Italy, customers continue to retain legal title of the property after the court has ordered an auction. These are classified as properties in possession and excluded from foreclosures in process.
d In Portugal, properties in possession is based on the number of associated mortgage contracts.

 

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barclays.com/annualreport    Barclays PLC Annual Report 2013 > 167


Table of Contents

Risk review >

Credit risk continued

     

 

 

 

 

The properties in possession portfolio in South Africa is comprised entirely of ‘Other Real Estate Owned’. The reduction in 2013 is due to a more cautious approach adopted for taking ownership of properties at auction when the reserve price is not met, and improved sale processes for existing properties.

Foreclosures in process in the European mortgage portfolios increased driven by the continuing charge-offs. Foreclosures in process and property in possession stocks are increasing and are impacted by the increasing time to repossess and sell property.

Exposures to interest-only home loans

The Group provides interest-only mortgages to customers, mainly in the UK. Under the terms of these loans, the customer makes payments of interest only for the entire term of the mortgage, although customers may make early repayments of the principal within the terms of their agreement.

Subject to such early repayments, the entire principal remains outstanding until the end of the loan term and the customer is responsible for repaying this on maturity. The means of repayment may include the sale of the mortgaged property.

Interest-only lending is subject to bespoke underwriting criteria that includes: a maximum size of loan, maximum LTV ratios, affordability and maximum loan term amongst other criteria. Borrowers on interest-only terms must have a repayment strategy in place to repay the loan at maturity and a customer contact strategy has been developed to ensure ongoing communications are in place with interest-only customers at various points during the term of the mortgage. The contact strategy is varied dependent on our view of the risk of the customer.

Interest-only mortgages comprise £53bn (2012: £53bn) of the total £123bn (2012: £115bn) UK home loans portfolio. Of these, £45bn (2012: £46bn) are owner-occupied with the remaining £8bn (2012: £7bn) buy-to-let.

 

 

 

Exposure to interest only owner-occupied home loans

             

 

 

As at 31 December

   2013      2012    

 

 

Interest-only balances (£m)a

     44,543         45,746     

Of which:b

     

Performing balances

     37,050         37,919     

Non-performing balances

     218         239     

90 day arrears (%)

     0.3         0.3     

Total impairment coverage (bps)

     2         3     

Marked-to-market LTV:

     

Balance weighted %

     54.2         58.8     

Valuation weighted %

     42.4         45.1     

Marked-to-market LTV: Performing balances

     

Balance weighted %

     55.0         58.7     

Valuation weighted %

     42.3         45.1     

Marked-to-market LTV: Non-performing balances

     

Balance weighted %

     71.7         74.1     

Valuation weighted %

     56.5         59.0     

For >100% LTVs:

     

Balances £m

     765         1,239     

Marked-to-market collateral £m

     669         1,133     

Interest-only home loans maturity years:

     

2014

     812         877     

2015

     875         985     

2016

     1,183         1,324     

2017

     1,582         1,707     

2018

     1,659         1,763     

2019-2023

     8,815         9,138     

Post 2023

     29,466         29,057     

 

 

The average balance weighted LTV for interest only owner-occupied balances reduced to 54.2% (2012: 58.8%) driven by appreciating property prices.

Total impairment coverage at 2bps (2012: 3bps) is broadly in line with overall portfolio performance and highlights improvement year on year as a result of portfolio quality.

 

Notes
a Includes forborne interest-only loans. 2013 balances include the impact of the acquisition of Barclays Direct. Balances also include the interest only portion of the Part and Part UK owner-occupied portfolio. A Part and Part Home Loan is a product in which part of the loan is interest only and part is amortising.
b Performing and non-performing balances do not include the interest only portion of the Part and Part book which is £7,725m (2012: £7,587m).

 

 

 

168 > Barclays PLC Annual Report 2013    barclays.com/annualreport


Table of Contents
  

 

 

 

 

Exposures to Mortgage Current Accounts (MCA) reserves

MCA reserve is a secured overdraft facility available to home loan customers which allows them to borrow against the equity in their home. It allows draw-down up to an agreed available limit on a separate but connected account to the main mortgage loan facility. The balance drawn must be repaid on redemption of the mortgage.

Of total 953,000 home loan customers in the UK, 573,000 have MCA reserves, with total reserve limits of £18.3bn.

 

 

 

Exposure to Mortgage Current Accounts reserves (UK)

             

 

 

As at 31 December

   2013      2012    

 

 

Total outstanding of home loans with MCA reserve balances (£bn)

     72.7         82.2     

Home loan customers with active reserves (000s)

     573         638     

Proportion of outstanding UK home loan balances (%)

     59.2         71.6     

Total reserve limits (£bn)

     18.3         18.5     

Utilisation rate (%)

     31.9         30.9     

Marked to market LTV: Balance weighted (%)

     53.9         57.7     

 

 

While the MCA reserve was withdrawn from sale in December 2012, existing customers can continue to draw down against their available reserve limit (£12.5bn of undrawn limits as at December 2013).

The total overall home loans balances for customers who have a current account reserve has reduced by 12% to £72.7bn primarily due to amortising payments on the main mortgage account. The average marked to market LTV has reduced to 53.9% (2012: 57.7%) reflecting increasing house prices and paydown of the main mortgage loan.

Credit cards, overdrafts and unsecured loans

The principal portfolios listed below account for 91% (2012: 90%) of total credit cards, overdrafts and unsecured loans in the Group’s retail portfolios.

 

 

 
Principal portfolios                                          

 

 
     Gross loans
and
advances
£m
     30 day
arrears
%
     90 day
arrears
%
    

Annualised
gross
charge-off
ratesc

%

    

Recoveries
proportion
of
outstanding
balances

%

    

Recoveries  
impairment  
coverage  
ratio  

%  

 

 

 

As at 31 December 2013

                 

UK cards

     15,937         2.4         1.1         4.4         4.6         86.2     

US cards

     10,301         2.1         1.0         4.0         1.8         86.6     

UK personal loans

     4,958         2.7         1.2         4.6         15.8         79.4     

Barclays Partner Finance

     2,499         1.6         0.8         2.9         3.2         83.2     

South Africa cardsa

     2,224         8.1         4.3         7.3         5.1         70.7     

Germany cards

     2,169         2.5         1.0         3.7         2.9         81.9     

UK overdrafts

     1,307         4.8         3.3         7.6         14.5         94.5     

Italy salary advance loansb

     1,008         2.2         1.0         7.9         13.8         18.8     

Iberia cards

     1,139         5.3         2.3         9.9         9.2         84.6     

South Africa personal loans

     906         5.4         2.6         7.9         7.4         70.4     

 

 

As at 31 December 2012

                 

UK cards

     15,434         2.5         1.1         4.9         6.2         80.4     

US cards

     9,296         2.4         1.1         5.0         2.3         90.7     

UK personal loans

     4,861         3.0         1.3         5.1         17.4         78.9     

South Africa cardsa

     2,511         7.4         3.9         4.7         4.7         70.9     

Barclays Partner Finance

     2,323         1.9         1.0         3.9         4.8         78.1     

Germany cards

     1,778         2.5         0.9         3.6         3.2         79.4     

UK overdrafts

     1,382         5.3         3.5         8.2         14.6         92.7     

Italy salary advance loansb

     1,354         2.3         0.9         8.4         9.4         12.5     

Iberia cards

     1,140         7.5         3.5         9.6         12.4         88.2     

South Africa personal loans

     1,061         5.6         3.1         8.5         7.6         72.3     

 

 

Gross loans and advances in credit cards, overdrafts and unsecured loans increased 2% to £47bn with increases in UK and US card portfolios, Germany cards and Barclays Partner Finance being offset by decreases in Italy salary advance loans, South Africa cards and UK overdrafts. With the exception of South Africa cards, arrears rates remained broadly stable.

 

Notes
a South Africa cards now includes the acquired Edcon portfolio in both 2012 (reflected partially for a 2 month period) and 2013 figures. The outstanding acquired balances have been excluded from the recoveries impairment coverage ratio on the basis that the portfolio has been recognised on acquisition at fair value during 2012 (with no related impairment allowance). Impairment allowances have been recognised as appropriate where these relate to the period post acquisition.
b The recoveries impairment coverage ratio for Italy salary advance loans is lower than unsecured portfolios as these loans are extended to customers where the repayment is made via a salary deduction at source by qualifying employers often through third-party payment collection companies and Barclays is insured in the event of termination of employment or death.
c Gross charge-off rates are calculated over average monthly outstanding balances through the year.

 

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Risk review >

Credit risk continued

     

 

 

 

 

Recovery coverage increased significantly for UK cards, while the proportion of recovery balances was lower. This was driven by increased debt sale activity which also resulted in a lower recovery expectation across the remaining recovery book, thereby resulting in a higher impairment requirement.

Significant improvement in US cards arrears rates was driven by a targeted strategy focused on growth in high quality customers and low-risk Partnerships.

In the UK personal loans arrears rates reduced due to the improved performance of new bookings following changes to credit criteria.

In South Africa cards, delinquency and charge-off rates deterioration reflected the change in product mix following the acquisition of the Edcon portfolio in late 2012, maturing vintages and portfolio seasoning. Charge-off rates excluding Edcon would be 4.9% for 2013 (2012: 4.2%).

The Italy salary advance loans portfolio was closed to new business in August 2012, and the increasing proportion of outstanding balances in recovery primarily reflects the reduction in loans and advances.

Iberia cards portfolios showed improved arrears rates, notably during the second half of 2013 reflecting the tightening of credit risk strategies through the recessionary period, combined with the non-recurrence of one-off events in 2012 which included challenges in migrating to a new card management system and enhancing some collections tools.

Re-age activity

Re-age is applicable only to revolving products where a minimum due payment is required. Re-age refers to returning of a delinquent account to up-to-date status without collecting the full arrears (principal, interest and fees). The changes in timing of cash flows following re-aging do not result in any additional cost to Barclays. The following are the principal portfolios in which re-age activity occurs.

 

 

 

Principal portfolios

                                         

 

 
     Re-aged balances in total
outstanding, excluding
recoveries balances
     Re-aged balances as
proportion of total
outstanding, excluding
recoveries balances
     30 day arrears of re-aged  
balances at 12 months  
on booka  
 
  

 

 

 

As at 31 December 2013

  

2013

£m

    

2012

£m

    

2013

£m

    

2012

£m

    

2013

£m

    

2012   

£m  

 

 

 

UK cards

     209         232         1.3         1.6         14.0         17.2   

US cards

     88         96         0.9         1.1         12.8         13.8   

 

 

Re-aged balances as a percentage of total outstanding, excluding recoveries balances decreased in the UK cards portfolios. The decrease in US cards has been driven by improved ability of customers to self cure from a position of delinquency. The re-age activity in South Africa and Europe RBB cards portfolios are not considered to be material.

For further detail on policy relating to the re-aging of loans, please refer to the Risk Management section on page 402.

Other secured retail lending

The principal portfolio listed below accounts for 48% (2012: 50%) of total other secured retail lending loans in the Group’s retail portfolios. The balances have reduced reflecting foreign currency movements.

 

 

 

Principal portfolios

                                         

 

 

South Africa auto loans

   Gross
loans and
advances
£m
     30 day
arrears
£m
     90 day
arrears
£m
    

Annualised
gross
charge-off
ratesb

£m

     Recoveries
proportion of
outstanding
balances £m
    

Recoveries  
impairment  
coverage  
ratio  

£m  

 

 

 

As at 31 December 2013

     2,546         1.6         0.4         3.2         1.9         51.6     

As at 31 December 2012

     3,081         2.0         0.7         3.6         3.0         57.6     

 

 

The reduction in arrears and charge-off rates in South Africa is driven by improvements in collections capabilities and stable performance of the existing portfolio.

 

 

Notes
a Defined as the yearly average of 30+ delinquency at 12 months on book (maturing in 2012 and 2013) for accounts re-aged during 2011 and 2012.
b Gross charge-off rates are calculated over average monthly outstanding balances through the year.

 

 

 

170 > Barclays PLC Annual Report 2013    barclays.com/annualreport


Table of Contents
  

 

 

 

 

Business lending

Business lending primarily relates to small and medium enterprises typically with exposures up to £3m or with a turnover up to £5m.

The portfolio is managed in two ways: arrears managed and early warning list (EWL) managed.

 

¡   Arrears Managed accounts are principally customers with an exposure limit less than £50,000 in the UK and 100,000 in Europe, with processes designed to manage a homogeneous set of assets. Arrears balances reflect the total balances of accounts which are past due on payments.

 

¡   EWL Managed accounts are customers that exceed the Arrears Managed limits and are monitored with standard processes that record heightened levels of risk through an EWL grading. EWL balances comprise of a list of three categories graded in line with the perceived severity of the risk attached to the lending, and can include customers that are up-to-date with contractual payments or subject to forbearance as appropriate.

The principal portfolios listed below account for 87% (2012: 88%) of total business lending loans in the Group’s retail portfolios.

 

 

 

Principal portfolios

 

 

 
     Arrears managed      Early Warning List managed                              
  

 

 

             
     Drawn
balances
£m
     Of which
arrears
balances
%
     Drawn
balances
£m
     Of which Early
Warning
List balances
%
    

Loan loss
rates

bps

    

Annualised
gross
charge-off
ratesa

%

    

Recoveries
proportion of
outstanding
balances

%

    

Recoveries  
coverage  
ratio  

%  

 

 

 

As at 31 December 2013

                       

UK

     629         4.0         7,424         7.7         134         2.0         3.3         47.0     

Spain

     82         11.1         875         33.9         608         3.0         6.9         47.7     

Portugal

     157         4.6         268         25.1         691         6.6         9.2         65.4     

 

 

As at 31 December 2012

                       

UK

     713         6.0         7,122         9.2         140         2.5         4.3         34.9     

Spain

     95         11.3         993         60.4         210         3.8         6.6         45.0     

Portugal

     185         6.4         393         17.8         503         5.7         6.7         65.9     

 

 

While UK business lending balances increased 3%, closer management of the portfolio has reduced the level of arrears and EWL balances leading to a reduction in recoveries balances.

The reduction in business lending balances in Spain and Portugal was primarily due to the tightening of credit policy and a reduction in new business volumes.

The loan loss rates in Spain increased to 608bps (2012: 210bps) due primarily to the impact of changes in the renewable energy sector impacting the cash flow of customers in this sector and the difficult macro environment. EWL balances in Spain as a percentage of drawn balances reduced significantly following the review of cases and identification of performing assets that were moved to the performing book.

The loan loss rates in Portugal increased to 691bps (2012: 503bps) driven by increasing charge-off rates and recovery balances due to the macroeconomic environment.

 

Note
a Gross charge-off rates are calculated over average monthly outstanding balances through the year.

 

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UK Commercial Real Estate (UK CRE)

The UK CRE portfolio includes property investment, development, trading and housebuilders.

During 2013 the gross loans and advances increased 4% to £1,593m in line with the overall business lending growth, whereas past due balances reduced to 6.5% (2012: 8.0%) due to continued focus by a dedicated team with early engagement of distressed customers and developments reducing new flows into delinquency. The balance weighted LTV reduced marginally to 54.9% (2012: 57.5%).

 

 

 

UK Commercial Real Estate

 

 

 

As at 31 December

   2013      2012    

 

 

UK CRE loans and advances (£m)

     1,593         1,534     

Past due balances (£m)

     103         123     

Balances past due as % of UK CRE total loans and advances

     6.5%         8.0%    

Impairment allowances (£m)

     16.2         19.9     

Past due coverage ratio

     15.7%         16.1%    

Total collateral (£m)

     3,792         3,385     

Marked-to-market LTV:

     

Balance weighted (%)

     54.9         57.5     

Valuation weighted (%)

     50.7         53.5     

Marked-to-Market LTV – performing balances:

     

Balance weighted (%)

     54.2         57.2     

Valuation weighted (%)

     50.3         53.2     

Marked-to-Market LTV – non-performing balances:

     

Balance weighted (%)

     75.8         75.4     

Valuation weighted (%)

     69.8         70.7     

 

 

Twelve months ended 31 December

     

Impairment charge (£m)

     18.4         16.5     

 

 

 

 

 

Maturity analysis of exposure to UK CRE

 

 

 
     Contractual maturity of UK CRE loans and advances at amortised cost                
  

 

 

       
     Past due
balances
£m
     Not more
than six
months
£m
     Over six
months
but not
more than
one year
£m
    

Over one
year

but not
more than
two years
£m

    

Over two
years

but not
more than
five years
£m

     Over five
years
but not
more than
ten years
£m
     Over ten
years
£m
     Total loans  
& advances  
£m  
 

 

 

2013

     103         69         37         45         163         276         900         1,593     

2012

     123         82         32         34         134         251         878         1,534     

 

 

 

 

 

UK CRE LTV analysis

 

 

 
     Balances      Balances as
proportion of total
     Collateral held    
  

 

 

 

As at 31 December

   2013
£m
     2012
£m
    

2013

%

    

2012

%

     2013
£m
     2012  
£m  
 

 

 

<=75%

     1,187         1,080         74         70         3,437         2,989     

>75% and <=80%

     69         67         4         4         90         86     

>80% and <=85%

     57         62         4         4         70         76     

>85% and <=90%

     47         42         3         3         54         48     

>90% and <=95%

     28         47         2         3         31         52     

>95% and <=100%

     24         33         2         2         24         35     

>100% and <=125%

     66         81         4         5         63         75     

>125%

     36         39         2         3         23         24     

Unsecured balances

     79         83         5         6         n/a         n/a     

 

 

Total

     1,593         1,534         100         100         3,792         3,385     

 

 

Portfolio LTVs have reduced due to appreciating commercial property values. Unsecured balances primarily relate to working capital facilities agreed with CRE companies.

 

 

 

172 > Barclays PLC Annual Report 2013    barclays.com/annualreport


Table of Contents
  

 

 

 

 

Wholesale credit risk

Gross loans and advances to customers and banks in the wholesale portfolios remained stable at £239.3bn. This reflected currency movements in Africa RBB offset by an increase in Wealth and Investment Management, primarily reflecting growth in the home loans portfolio.

The total loan impairment charge across the wholesale portfolios decreased 27% to £901m principally due to lower charges in Corporate Banking, mainly as a result of lower charges in Europe, reflecting actions to reduce exposure to the Spanish property and construction sectors and, in the UK, against large corporate clients. Impairment in Investment Bank was 9% higher than 2012 and was principally driven by a charge against a single name exposure in Q2 2013.

Key judgements were made on a number of identified cases within Investment Bank, Corporate Banking and Wealth and Investment Management. No material changes were made to unidentified impairment in 2013.

The lower impairment charge coupled with the lower loan balances resulted in an loan loss rate of 38bps (2012: 51bps).

Presented below is further information related to the Group’s wholesale lending portfolios by business, with additional analysis of portfolios in Investment Bank and Corporate Banking. Further detail is presented on the Group’s wholesale exposure to selected Eurozone countries (pages 182 to 189); geographic and industry asset concentrations (pages 145 to 148 and 152 to 153) and asset credit quality (page 150).

 

 

 

Wholesale loans and advances at amortised cost

 

 

 
    

Gross

L&A

£m

     Impairment
allowance
£m
     L&A net of
impairment
£m
    

Credit risk
loans

£m

    

CRLs % of
gross L&A

%

     Loan
impairment
charges
£m
   

Loan loss  
rates  

bps  

 

 

 

As at 31 December 2013

                   

Investment Banka

     144,312         468         143,844         753         0.5         209        14     

Corporate Banking

     66,246         1,991         64,255         3,694         5.6         517        78     

– UK

     51,805         369         51,436         1,175         2.3         173        33     

– Europe

     6,327         1,494         4,833         2,343         37.0         321        507     

– Rest of World

     8,114         128         7,986         176         2.2         23        28     

Wealth and Investment Management

     20,995         192         20,803         704         3.4         112        53     

Africa RBB

     5,875         235         5,640         580         9.9         65        111     

Head Office and Other Functions

     1,875                 1,875                         (2     (11)    

 

 

Total

     239,303         2,886         236,417         5,731         2.4         901        38     

 

 

As at 31 December 2012

                   

Investment Banka

     144,143         586         143,557         768         0.5         192        13     

Corporate Banking

     67,337         2,171         65,166         4,232         6.3         838        124     

– UK

     52,667         428         52,239         1,381         2.6         279        53     

– Europe

     8,122         1,536         6,586         2,607         32.1         527        649     

– Rest of World

     6,548         207         6,341         244         3.7         32        49     

Wealth and Investment Management

     19,236         141         19,095         603         3.1         38        20     

Africa RBB

     7,313         250         7,063         681         9.3         160        219     

Head Office and Other Functions

     1,466         16         1,450         19         1.3                –     

 

 

Total

     239,495         3,164         236,331         6,303         2.6         1,228        51     

 

 

Note

a Investment Bank gross loans and advances include cash collateral and settlement balances of £91,305m as at 31 December 2013 and £85,116m as at 31 December 2012. Excluding these balances, CRLs as a proportion of gross loans and advances were 3.9% and the loan loss rate was 61bps.

 

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Credit risk continued

     

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

PCRLs and coverage ratios

                                         

 

 
     CRLs      PPLs      PCRLs  
  

 

 

 

As at 31 December

   2013
£m
     2012
£m
     2013
£m
     2012
£m
     2013
£m
     2012  
£m  
 

 

 

Investment Bank

     753         768         173         327         926         1,095     

Corporate Banking

     3,694         4,232         718         624         4,412         4,856     

Wealth and Investment Management

     704         603         159         74         863         677     

Africa RBB

     580         681         50         77         630         758     

Head Office and Other Functions

             19                                 19     

 

 

Total wholesale

     5,731         6,303         1,100         1,102         6,831         7,405     

 

 

 

 
     Impairment allowance      CRL coverage      PCRL coverage  
  

 

 

 

As at 31 December

   2013
£m
     2012
£m
     2013
£m
     2012
£m
     2013
£m
     2012  
£m  
 

 

 

Investment Bank

     468         586         62.2         76.3         50.5         53.5     

Corporate Banking

     1,991         2,171         53.9         51.3         45.1         44.7     

Wealth and Investment Management

     192         141         27.3         23.4         22.2         20.8     

Africa RBB

     235         250         40.5         36.7         37.3         33.0     

Head Office and Other Functions

             16                 84.2                 84.2     

 

 

Total wholesale

     2,886         3,164         50.4         50.2         42.2         42.7     

 

 

CRL balances decreased 9% to £5,731m primarily due to Corporate Banking where lower balances principally reflected a reduction in Europe, most notably Spain, following write-offs and a debt sale. This decrease was partially offset by a higher balance in Wealth and Investment Management, principally reflecting the inclusion of balances against two individual names. The CRL coverage ratio increased to 50.4% (2012: 50.2%).

 

 

 

Analysis of Investment Bank wholesale loans and advances at amortised cost

 

 

 

As at 31 December 2013

  

Gross

L&A

£m

     Impairment
allowance
£m
     L&A net of
impairment
£m
    

Credit risk
loans

£m

     CRLs % of
gross L&A
%
     Loan
impairment
charges
£m
   

Loan loss  
rates  

bps  

 

 

 

Loans and advances to banks

                   

Interbank lending

     11,975         10         11,965         18         0.2                –     

Cash collateral and settlement balances

     19,892                 19,892                                –     

 

 

Loans and advances to customers

                   

Corporate lending

     27,503         85         27,418         137         0.5         19        7     

Government lending

     1,149                 1,149                                –     

Other wholesale lending

     12,380         373         12,007         598         4.8         190        153     

Cash collateral and settlement balances

     71,413                 71,413                                –     

 

 

Total

     144,312         468         143,844         753         0.5         209        14     

 

 

As at 31 December 2012

                   

Loans and advances to banks

                   

Interbank lending

     13,763         41         13,722         51         0.4         41        30     

Cash collateral and settlement balances

     23,350                 23,350                                –     

 

 

Loans and advances to customers

                   

Corporate lending

     29,546         205         29,341         349         1.2         160        54     

Government lending

     1,369                 1,369                                –     

Other wholesale lending

     14,349         340         14,009         368         2.6         (9     (6)    

Cash collateral and settlement balances

     61,766                 61,766                                –     

 

 

Total

     144,143         586         143,557         768         0.5         192        13     

 

 

 

 

 

174 > Barclays PLC Annual Report 2013    barclays.com/annualreport


Table of Contents
  

 

 

 

 

Wholesale forbearance programmes

Wholesale client relationships are individually managed with lending decisions made with reference to specific circumstances and on bespoke terms. Forbearance takes place when a concession is made on the contractual terms of a loan in response to an obligor’s financial difficulties. Forbearance occurs when Barclays, for reasons relating to the actual or perceived financial difficulty of an obligor, grants a concession below current Barclays standard rates (i.e. lending criteria below our current lending terms), that would not normally be considered. This includes all troubled debt restructures granted below our standard rates but excludes loans that have been renegotiated for commercial reasons that are not indicative of increased credit risk.

Personal and Trusts includes Wealth and Investment Management clients that are, at the time of origination, high net worth individuals who use funds and trusts to organise their personal financial affairs.

 

 

 

Analysis of wholesale balances in forbearance programmes

 

 

 
     Balances on forbearance programmes                       
  

 

 

          
  As at 31 December 2013    Balances
between
1 and 90
days
past due
£m
     Balances
91 days
or more
past due
£m
     Total
balances
past due
£m
     Impaired
up to date
balances
£m
     Performing
balances
£m
     Total
balances
£m
     Impairment
allowances
marked
against
balances on
forbearance
programmes
£m
    

Total
balances on
forbearance
programmes
coverage
ratio

%

    

Total  
balances on  
forbearance  
programmes  
% of gross  
L&A  

%  

 

 

 

Investment Bank

             48         48         13         434         495         30         6.1         0.3     

Corporate Banking

     92         770         862         682         459         2,003         777         38.8         3.0     

Africa RBB

     21         25         46         7         106         159         14         8.8         2.7     

Wealth Management

             377         377         67         284         728         70         9.6         3.5     

Group

     113         1,220         1,333         769         1,283         3,385         891         26.3         1.4     

 

 

 

 

 

Wholesale forbearance reporting split by exposure class

 

 

 
     Sovereign
£m
     Financial
institutions
£m
     Corporate
£m
    

Personal and
trusts

£m

     Total  
£m  
 

 

 

As at 31 December 2013

              

Restructure: reduced contractual cash flows

                     281                 281     

Restructure: maturity date extension

     5         50         1,164         65         1,284     

Restructure: changed cash flow profile (other than extension)

     5                 579         25         609     

Restructure: payment other than cash

                     23         1         24     

Change in security

                     27                 27     

Adjustments or non-enforcement of covenants

                     410         96         506     

Other (e.g. capital repayment holiday; restructure pending)

     1                 546         107         654     

 

 

Total

     11         50         3,030         294         3,385     

 

 

As at 31 December 2012

              

Restructure: reduced contractual cash flows

     4         16         405                 425     

Restructure: maturity date extension

     5         107         1,412         33         1,557     

Restructure: changed cash flow profile (other than extension)

     5         46         876         26         953     

Restructure: payment other than cash

                     71         1         72     

Change in security

                     76         8         84     

Adjustments or non-enforcement of covenants

     10         7         626         128         771     

Other (e.g. capital repayment holiday; restructure pending)

                     318         74         392     

 

 

Total

     24         176         3,784         270         4,254     

 

 

 

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barclays.com/annualreport    Barclays PLC Annual Report 2013 > 175


Table of Contents

Risk review >

Credit risk continued

     

 

 

 

 

 

 

Wholesale forbearance reporting split by business unit

 

 

 
     Corporate
Banking
£m
    

Investment
Bank

£m

     Wealth and
Investment
Management
£m
     Africa RBB
£m
     Total  
£m  
 

 

 

As at 31 December 2013

              

Restructure: reduced contractual cash flows

     272         1                 8         281     

Restructure: maturity date extension

     671         377         133         103         1,284     

Restructure: changed cash flow profile (other than extension)

     467         25         73         44         609     

Restructure: payment other than cash

     23                 1                 24     

Change in security

     22                 4         1         27     

Adjustments or non-enforcements of covenants

     247         45         213         1         506     

Other (e.g. capital repayment holiday; restructure pending)

     301         47         304         2         654     

 

 

Total

     2,003         495         728         159         3,385     

 

 

As at 31 December 2012

              

Restructure: reduced contractual cash flows

     258         138                 29         425     

Restructure: maturity date extension

     952         408         112         85         1,557     

Restructure: changed cash flow profile (other than extension)

     624         152         70         107         953     

Restructure: payment other than cash

     64         7         1                 72     

Change in security

     45         26         12         1         84     

Adjustments or non-enforcements of covenants

     377         115         277         2         771     

Other (e.g. capital repayment holiday; restructure pending)

     162                 211         19         392     

 

 

Total

     2,482         846         683         243         4,254     

 

 

 

 

 

Wholesale forbearance flows in 2013

      

 

 

As at 1 January 2013

   Balance  
£m  
 

 

 

Added to forbearance

     4,254     

Removed from forbearance (credit improvement)

     1,370     

Fully or partially repaid and other movements (including FX)

     (509)    

Written off/moved to recoveries

     (1,129)    

 

 

As at 31 December 2013

     (601)    

 

 

The tables above detail balance information for wholesale forbearance cases.

Loan impairment on forbearance cases reduced 22% to £891m, which represented 26.3% of total forbearance balances.

Corporate borrowers accounted for 90% (2012: 89%) of balances and 94% (2012: 95%) of impairment booked to forbearance exposures, with impairment representing 28% (2012: 29%) of forbearance balances.

Corporate Banking accounted for 59% (2012: 58%) of overall wholesale forbearance with forbearance exposures in Corporate Banking in the UK accounting for 23% (2012: 16%) of total Wholesale forbearance balances and Corporate Banking in Spain accounting for 20% (2012: 29%). Corporate Spain accounted for 42% (2012: 45%) of total impairment booked to forbearance exposures.

The overall reduction in forbearance balances was driven primarily by full and partial repayments and balances written off or moved to recoveries.

 

¡   The 19% reduction in Corporate Banking forbearance was driven primarily by reductions in Spain, which is predominantly property and construction exposure. This reflects the overall strategic drive to reduce exposure in the Corporate Spain portfolio, including a small number of large write-offs taken as a result of debt sales;

 

¡   Wealth forbearance increased 7% driven by a combination of current EWL cases moving into forbearance, specifically due to a large number of property deals, along with newly reported cases booked in USA, Spain and Jersey. The increase was partially offset by balance reductions as a result of repayments or cases returned to performing, as well as balances that moving to full legal recovery or being written off in the year; and

 

¡   Reductions in Investment Bank forbearance balances were primarily driven by repayment by clients and the sale of debt/assets.

Movements into forbearance were principally in Corporate Banking and Wealth and Investment Management, which accounted for 62% and 19% respectively of balances added to forbearance.

 

 

 

176 > Barclays PLC Annual Report 2013    barclays.com/annualreport


Table of Contents
  

 

 

 

 

UK Commercial Real Estate (UK CRE)

The UK CRE portfolio includes property investment, development, trading and housebuilders but excludes social housing contractors. The wholesale businesses operate to specific lending criteria and the portfolio of assets is continually monitored through a range of mandate and scale limits.

Total loans and advances at amortised cost to UK CRE remained broadly stable at £9,842m (31 December 2012: £10,036m) with new lending limited to high quality assets.

The impairment charge of £62m (2012: £69m) was almost entirely in UK Corporate Banking.

 

 

 

Commercial Real Estate

             

 

 

As at 31 December 2013

   2013      2012b    

 

 

UK CRE loans and advances (£m)a

     9,842         10,036     

Past due balances (£m)

     361         469     

Balances past due as % of total loans

     3.7         4.7     

Impairment provision (£m)

     110         106     

Balances past due coverage ratio (%)

     30         23     

 

 

 

 

Twelve months ended 31 December

   2013      2012    

 

 

Impairment charge (£m)

     62         69     

 

 

 

 

 

Maturity analysis of exposure to UK CRE

 

 

 
     Contractual maturity of UK CRE loans and advances at amortised cost                
  

 

 

       
     Past due
balances
£m
     Not more
than six
months
£m
     Over
six months
but not
more than
one year
£m
     Over
one year
but not
more than
two years
£m
     Over
two years
but not
more than
five years
£m
     Over
five years
but not
more than
ten years
£m
     Over
ten years
£m
     Total  
loans and  
advances  
£m  
 

 

 

As at 31 December 2013

     361         592         931         1,342         4,128         1,115         1,373         9,842     

As at 31 December 2012

     469         849         593         1,037         4,574         957         1,557         10,036     

 

 

 

 

 

LTV analysis of UK CRE assets and collateral

 

 

 

As at 31 December 2013

   Balances
£m
    

Balances as
proportion
of total

%

    

Collateral  
held  

£m  

 

 

 

<=50%

     2,717         28         9,626     

>50% and <=75%

     4,511         46         7,570     

>75% and <=100%

     622         6         539     

>100% and <=125%

     132         1         126     

>125%

     165         2         44     

Unassessed balancesc

     1,314         13         –     

Unsecured balances

     381         4         n/a     

 

 

Total

     9,842         100         17,905     

 

 

 

 

 

Maturity analysis of exposure to Corporate Spain

 

 

 
     Contractual maturity of Corporate Spain loans and advances at amortised cost                
  

 

 

       
     Past due
balances
£m
     Not more
than six
months
£m
     Over
six months
but not
more than
one year
£m
     Over
one year
but not
more than
two years
£m
     Over
two years
but not
more than
five years
£m
     Over
five years
but not
more than
ten years
£m
     Over
ten years
£m
     Total
loans and
advances
£m
     Impairment  
allowances  
£m  
 

 

 

As at 31 December 2013

     1,101         796         130         151         315         256         163         2,912         977     

As at 31 December 2012

     1,156         1,197         78         327         772         253         282         4,065         1,074     

 

 

 

Notes
a Includes £83m (2012: £270m) of UK CRE exposure held at fair value.
b 2012 numbers restated to reflect inclusion of a small numbers of assets now classified as UK CRE exposure.
c Corporate Banking balances under £1m.

 

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Table of Contents

Risk review >

Credit risk continued

     

 

 

 

 

 

 

LTV analysis of Corporate Spain assets and collateral

                    

 

 

As at 31 December 2013

   Balances
£m
    

Balances as
proportion
of total

%

    

Collateral  
held  

£m  

 

 

 

<=75%

     707         24         1,770     

>75% and <=85%

     138         5         173     

>85% and <=90%

     48         2         54     

>90% and <=95%

     23         1         25     

>95% and <=100%

     68         2         70     

>100% and <=125%

     209         7         189     

>125%

     287         10         122     

Unsecured balances

     1,432         49         n/a     

 

 

Total

     2,912         100         2,403     

 

 

Timely management actions were taken in Spain to address emerging issues as the downturn developed. This resulted in problems being identified at an early stage.

Impairment allowances represented 34% of total balances to Corporate Spain (2012: 26%).

Total balances reduced 28% to £2,912m (2012: £4,064m), primarily due to debt sales and repayments. The maturity profile is well spread across different tenor buckets with a relatively low proportion above two years.

Collateral held in the above table includes cash, investment funds, equities, mortgages, bank guarantees and state guarantees.

Analysis of debt securities

Debt securities include government securities held as part of the Group’s treasury management portfolio for asset and liability, liquidity and regulatory purposes and are for use on a continuing basis in the activities of the Group.

The following tables provide an analysis of debt securities held by the Group for trading and investment purposes by issuer type and where the Group held government securities exceeding 10% of shareholders’ equity.

Further information on the credit quality of debt securities is presented on page 150. Further disclosure on sovereign exposures in the Eurozone is presented on pages 182 to 189.

 

 

 

Debt securities

                           

 

 

As at 31 December

   2013      2012  
     £m      £m      £m      £m    

 

 

Of which issued by:

           

Governments and other public bodies

     112,613         63.7         125,178         63.2     

Corporate and other issuers

     39,679         22.5         36,003         18.2     

US agency

     11,145         6.3         19,886         10.1     

Mortgage and asset-backed securities

     12,880         7.3         16,103         8.1     

Bank and building society certificates of deposit

     383         0.2         783         0.4     

 

 

Total

     176,700         100.0         197,953         100.0     

 

 

 

 

 

Government securities

             

 

 

As at 31 December

  

2013

Fair value
£m

    

2012  

Fair value  
£m  

 

 

 

United Kingdom

     30,951         29,252     

United States

     28,979         36,740     

France

     9,868         6,462     

South Africa

     5,136         6,582     

Germany

     4,856         4,506     

Japan

     3,952         6,439     

Italy

     2,564         3,717     

Spain

     1,147         2,828     

 

 

 

 

 

178 > Barclays PLC Annual Report 2013    barclays.com/annualreport


Table of Contents
  

 

 

 

 

Analysis of derivatives (audited)

The tables below set out the fair values of the derivative assets together with the value of those assets subject to enforceable counterparty netting arrangements for which the Group holds offsetting liabilities and eligible collateral.

 

 

 

Derivative assets (audited)

                    

 

 
    

Balance
sheet
assets

£m

    

Counterparty
nettinga

£m

     Net  
exposure  
£m  
 

 

 

As at 31 December 2013

        

Foreign exchange

     60,123         46,806         13,317     

Interest rate

     218,300         182,335         35,965     

Credit derivatives

     21,923         18,555         3,368     

Equity and stock index

     13,349         9,553         3,796     

Commodity derivatives

     10,640         1,279         9,361     

 

 

Total derivative assets

     324,335         258,528         65,807     

 

 

Cash collateral held

           33,509     

 

 

Net exposure less collateral

           32,298     

 

 

As at 31 December 2012

        

Foreign exchange

     59,479         45,009         14,470     

Interest rate

     355,000         307,173         47,827     

Credit derivatives

     29,797         25,497         4,300     

Equity and stock index

     10,987         6,821         4,166     

Commodity derivatives

     13,893         3,172         10,721     

 

 

Total derivative assets

     469,156         387,672         81,484     

 

 

Cash collateral held

           46,855     

 

 

Net exposure less collateral

           34,629     

 

 

Derivative asset exposures would be £292bn (2012: £435bn) lower than reported under IFRS if netting were permitted for assets and liabilities with the same counterparty or for which we hold cash collateral. Similarly, derivative liabilities would be £288bn (2012: £427bn) lower reflecting counterparty netting and collateral placed. In addition non-cash collateral of £8bn (2012: £6bn) was held in respect of derivative assets. Barclays received collateral from clients in support of over-the-counter (OTC) derivative transactions. These transactions are generally undertaken under International Swaps and Derivative Association (ISDA) agreements governed by either UK or New York law.

Exposure relating to derivatives, repurchase agreements, reverse repurchase agreements, stock borrowing and loan transactions is calculated using internal PRA approved models. These are used as the basis to assess both regulatory capital and capital appetite and are managed on a daily basis. The methodology encompasses all relevant factors to enable the current value to be calculated and the future value to be estimated, for example, current market rates, market volatility and legal documentation (including collateral rights).

 

 

Note
a 2012 counterparty netting for foreign exchange, interest rate and commodity derivatives have been revised to be on a consistent basis with 2013.

 

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Table of Contents

Risk review >

Credit risk continued

     

 

 

 

 

The table below sets out the fair value and notional amounts of OTC derivative financial instruments by collateral agreement type. Unilateral (one way) arrangements are where only one party needs to provide collateral and can be in favour of either Barclays or the counterparty. Bilateral agreements require either party to post security, depending on the value of the contract.

 

 

 

Derivatives by collateral arrangement

                                        

 

 
     2013     2012  
     Notional      Fair value     Notional      Fair value  
     

 

 

      

 

 

 
     contract                   contract                
    

amount

£m

     Assets
£m
     Liabilities
£m
   

amount

£m

     Assets
£m
     Liabilities  
£m  
 

 

 

Unilateral in favour of Barclays

                

Foreign exchange

     29,098         363         (344     27,261         492         (423)    

Interest rate

     6,495         652         (115     17,019         1,064         (145)    

Credit derivatives

     402         14         (7     493         4         (7)    

Equity and stock index

     486         4         (17     660                 (18)    

Commodity derivatives

     5,477         84         (90     6,426         451         (432)    

 

 

Total unilateral in favour of Barclays

     41,958         1,117         (573     51,859         2,011         (1,025)    

 

 

Unilateral in favour of counterparty

                

Foreign exchange

     37,223         1,023         (2,995     38,081         1,316         (3,052)    

Interest rate

     153,566         5,221         (7,067     152,021         7,920         (10,778)    

Credit derivatives

     378         1         (46     5,326         2         (24)    

Equity and stock index

     1,158         90         (112     1,352         21         (291)    

Commodity derivatives

     5,645         236         (109     4,592         327         (85)    

 

 

Total unilateral in favour of counterparty

     197,970         6,571         (10,329     201,372         9,586         (14,230)    

 

 

Bilateral arrangement

                

Foreign exchange

     4,245,971         53,917         (57,005     3,962,623         53,002         (55,952)    

Interest rate

     11,740,243         205,781         (194,414     14,414,758         335,532         (324,340)    

Credit derivatives

     1,261,171         21,390         (20,969     1,507,569         28,134         (28,222)    

Equity and stock index

     143,121         7,173         (12,170     145,888         6,787         (9,120)    

Commodity derivatives

     157,639         8,673         (8,310     205,628         11,208         (12,525)    

 

 

Total bilateral arrangement

     17,548,145         296,934         (292,868     20,236,466         434,663         (430,159)    

 

 

Uncollateralised derivatives

                

Foreign exchange

     293,733         4,820         (4,350     293,052         4,628         (4,413)    

Interest rate

     222,676         5,577         (1,945     370,754         10,306         (4,381)    

Credit derivatives

     8,069         517         (611     16,596         1,648         (945)    

Equity and stock index

     17,877         2,659         (2,383     14,515         1,087         (2,394)    

Commodity derivatives

     35,090         1,104         (1,673     29,912         1,241         (1,260)    

 

 

Total uncollateralised derivatives

     577,445         14,677         (10,962     724,829         18,910         (13,393)    

 

 

Total OTC derivative assets/(liabilities)

     18,365,518         319,299         (314,732     21,214,526         465,170         (458,807)    

 

 

The uncollateralised derivative asset exposure (including unilateral in favour of counterparty) of £21bn would be £7bn lower than reported under IRFS if netting was permitted for assets and liabilities with the same counterparty and that are subject to set off under netting agreements.

 

 

 

180 > Barclays PLC Annual Report 2013    barclays.com/annualreport


Table of Contents
  

 

 

 

 

Exit Quadrant assetsa

On 12 February 2013, the Group announced as part of its Strategic Review that, following a rigorous bottom-up analysis of each of its businesses based on the attractiveness of the sector they operate in and their ability to generate sustainable returns on equity above cost of equity, it would be exiting certain assets.

The table below presents selected financial data for these Exit Quadrant assets:

 

 

 
     CRD IV RWAsb      Balance sheet      2013  

 

 

Investment Bank

   2013
£bn
     2012  
£bn  
     2013
£bn
     2012
£bn
     Income/
(expense)
£m
   

Impairment
(charge)/
release

£m

    Net  
operating  
(expense)/  
income  
£m
  
 

 

 

US residential mortgages

     1.1         5.3           0.5         2.2         478               478     

Commercial mortgages and real estate

     1.6         3.1           2.0         4.0         182               182     

Leveraged and other loans

     9.7         10.1           6.0         11.5         (88     11        (77)    

CLOs and other insured assets

     3.2         5.9           11.7         16.3         (281            (281)    

Structured credit and other

     3.8         9.4           5.2         8.6         (128            (128)    

Monoline derivatives

     2.2         3.1           0.3         0.6         (21            (21)    

Corporate derivatives

     1.9         8.3           2.2         3.6                       –     

 

 

Portfolio assets

     23.5         45.2           27.9         46.8         142        11        153     

 

 

Pre-CRD IV rates portfolio

     18.7         33.9                  

 

              

Total Investment Bank

     42.2         79.1                  

 

              
                  

 

 

Corporate Banking European assets

     3.2         5.0           2.6         3.9         80        (321     (241)    
                  

 

 

Europe RBB assets

     9.0         9.7           21.3         22.9         118        (187     (69)    

 

 

Total

     54.4         93.8                  

 

              

Exit Quadrant income shown on page 261 differs from the income above due to revenues relating to associated litigation matters and recoverability of certain assets not yet received from the 2008 US Lehman acquisition.

The CRD IV RWAs of the Exit Quadrant businesses decreased £39.4bn to £54.4bn including reductions of £36.9bn in the Investment Bank. This reflects reductions in Investment Bank portfolio assets of £21.7bn to £23.5bn, relating to US Residential, Structured Credit Portfolios and optimisation initiatives within the derivatives portfolio. Pre CRD IV Rates derivatives RWAs decreased £15.2bn to £18.7bn. RWAs in Corporate Banking and Europe RBB Exit Quadrant portfolios decreased due to continued asset run down.

Portfolio Assets balance sheet assets decreased £18.9bn to £27.9bn driven by net sales and paydowns across asset classes. Income of £142m was primarily driven by gains relating to US Residential Mortgage exposures, partially offset by funding charges on Collateralised Loan Obligations and Other Insured Assets and the acceleration of disposals. Portfolio Assets income reduced to £142m (2012: £578m), largely driven by a reduction in fair value gains on US Residential Mortgages and sale of Commercial Real Estate loans.

Corporate Banking Exit Quadrant balance sheet assets in Europe decreased £1.3bn to £2.6bn largely driven by reductions in Spain and Portugal.

Europe RBB Exit Quadrant balance sheet assets decreased £1.6bn to £21.3bn largely driven by mortgage reductions in Spain and Italy, partially offset by foreign currency movements.

 

 

Notes
a The Exit Quadrant Assets note is subject to audit, excluding RWAs.
b The table above provides an indication of the CRD IV RWAs that are currently allocated to the Exit Quadrant businesses.

 

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Table of Contents

Risk review >

Credit risk continued

     

 

 

 

 

Exposures to Eurozone countries (audited)

Overview

The Group recognises the credit and market risk resulting from the ongoing volatility in the Eurozone and continues to monitor events closely while taking coordinated steps to mitigate the risks associated with the challenging economic environment. Risks associated with a potential partial break-up of the Euro area include:

 

¡   Direct risk arising from sovereign default of an exiting country and the impact on the economy of, and the Group’s counterparties in, that country;

 

¡   Indirect risk arising from the subsequent impact on the economy of, and the Group’s counterparties in, other Eurozone countries;

 

¡   Indirect risk arising from credit derivatives that reference Eurozone sovereign debt (see page 188); and

 

¡   Direct redenomination risk on the potential mismatch in the currency of the assets and liabilities on balance sheets of the Group’s local operations in countries in the Eurozone (see page 189).

Contingency planning began in early 2012 based on a series of potential scenarios that might arise from an escalation in the crisis. Multiple tests have been run throughout 2012 and 2013 to establish the impact on customers, systems, processes and staff in the event of the most plausible scenarios. Where issues have been identified, appropriate remedial actions have either been completed or are underway.

During 2013 the Group’s net on-balance sheet exposures to Spain, Italy, Portugal, Ireland, Cyprus and Greece reduced by 11% to £53bn. Exposure to retail customers and corporate clients reduced 17% to £13.0bn; largely reflecting reduced lending in Spain, Italy and Portugal as part of the active management to reduce redenomination risk. Sovereign exposure decreased 60% to £2.2bn principally due to a reduction in government bonds held as available for sale.

Basis of preparation

The Group presents the direct balance sheet exposure to credit and market risk by country, with the totals reflecting allowance for impairment, netting and cash collateral held where appropriate.

Trading and derivatives balances relate to Investment Bank activities, principally as market-maker for government bond positions. Positions are held at fair value, with daily movements taken through profit and loss:

 

¡   Trading assets and liabilities are presented by issuer type, whereby positions are netted to the extent allowable under IFRS. Where liability positions exceed asset positions by counterparty type, exposures are presented as nil;

 

¡   Derivative assets and liabilities are presented by counterparty type, whereby positions are netted to the extent allowable under IFRS. Cash collateral held is then added to give a net credit exposure. Where liability positions and collateral held exceed asset positions by counterparty type, exposures are presented as nil; and

 

¡   Assets designated at fair value include debt and equity securities, loans and reverse repurchase agreements that have been designated at fair value.

Available for sale investments principally relate to investments in government bonds and other debt securities. Balances are reported on a fair value basis, with movements in fair value going through other comprehensive income (OCI).

Loans and advances held at amortised costa comprise: (i) retail lending portfolios, predominantly mortgages secured on residential property; and (ii) corporate lending portfolios. Settlement balances and cash collateral are excluded from this analysis.

Sovereign exposures reflect direct exposures to central and local governmentsb, the majority of which are used for hedging interest rate risk and liquidity purposes. The remaining portion is actively managed reflecting our role as a leading primary dealer, market maker and liquidity provider to our clients. Financial institution and corporate exposures reflect the country of operations of the counterparty or issuer depending on the asset class analysed (including foreign subsidiaries and without reference to cross-border guarantees). Retail exposures reflect the country of residence for retail customers and country of operations for business banking customers. Off-balance sheet exposure consists primarily of undrawn commitments and guarantees issued to third parties on behalf of our corporate clients.

 

Notes
a The Group also enters into reverse repurchase agreements and other similar secured lending, which are materially fully collateralised.
b In addition, the Group held cash with the central banks of these countries totalling £0.2bn as at 31 December 2013 (2012: £0.7bn). Other material balances with central banks are classified within loans to financial institutions.

 

 

 

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Table of Contents
  

 

 

 

 

Summary of Group exposures

The following table shows Barclays exposure to Eurozone countries monitored internally as being higher risk and thus being the subject of particular management focus. Detailed analysis on these countries is on pages 184 to 187a. Exposures on loans and advances to geographic regions including Europe as a whole are set out on pages 152 and 153. The net exposure provides the most appropriate measure of the credit risk to which the Group is exposed. The gross exposure is also presented below, alongside off-balance sheet contingent liabilities and commitments. Gross exposure reflects total exposures before the effects of economic hedging by way of trading portfolio liabilities, derivative liabilities and cash collateral, but after taking into account impairment allowances and IFRS netting.

 

 

 

Net exposure by country and counterparty (audited)

 

 

 
     Sovereign
£m
     Financial
institutions
£m
     Corporate
£m
     Residential
mortgages
£m
    

Other retail
lending

£m

     Total net
on-balance
sheet
exposure
£m
     Contingent
liabilities and
commitments
£m
     Total net  
exposure  
£m  
 

 

 

As at 31 December 2013

                       

Spain

     184         1,029         3,203         12,537         2,292         19,245         3,253         22,498     

Italy

     1,556         417         1,479         15,295         1,881         20,628         3,124         23,752     

Portugal

     372         38         891         3,413         1,548         6,262         2,288         8,550     

Ireland

     67         5,030         1,356         103         100         6,656         2,047         8,703     

Cyprus

             7         106         19         43         175         66         241     

Greece

     8         5         51         6         12         82         3         85     

 

 

As at 31 December 2012

                       

Spain

     2,067         1,525         4,138         13,305         2,428         23,463         3,301         26,764     

Italy

     2,669         567         1,962         15,591         1,936         22,725         3,082         25,807     

Portugal

     637         48         1,958         3,474         1,783         7,900         2,588         10,488     

Ireland

     21         3,585         1,127         112         83         4,928         1,644         6,572     

Cyprus

     8                 106         44         26         184         131         315     

Greece

     1                 61         8         9         79         5         84     

 

 

During 2013 the Group’s net on-balance sheet exposures to Spain, Italy, Portugal, Ireland, Cyprus and Greece reduced by 11% to £53bn. This reduction is principally due to a decrease in sovereign exposures by 60% to £2.2bn which was driven by a reduction in Spanish sovereign exposure by 91% to £0.2bn due to the disposal of available for sale government bonds, held for the purpose of interest rate hedging and liquidity, which have been replaced by interest rate swaps with alternative counterparties. Italian sovereign exposure decreased 42% to £1.6bn principally due to a reduction in government bonds held as available for sale.

Residential mortgage exposure reduced by 4% to £31.4bn, reflecting lower new originations across Spain, Italy and Portugal in line with Group strategy to reduce redenomination risk. Other retail lending reduced by 6% to £5.9bn driven primarily by reduced lending to business banking customers in Spain and Portugal as a result of the challenging economic conditions. Corporate exposure reduced 24% to £7.1bn, largely reflecting reduced lending in Spain, Italy and Portugal as part of the active management to reduce redenomination risk. Exposures to financial institutions increased by 14% to £6.5bn, with increased exposure in Ireland relating to securitised lending offset predominately by reductions in exposures for Spain and Italy.

 

 

 

Gross exposure by country and counterparty (audited)

 

 

 
     Sovereign
£m
     Financial
institutions
£m
     Corporate
£m
     Residential
mortgages
£m
    

Other retail
lending

£m

     Total gross
on-balance
sheet
exposure
£m
     Contingent
liabilities and
commitments
£m
     Total gross  
exposure  
£m  
 

 

 

As at 31 December 2013

                       

Spain

     1,198         6,715         3,596         12,537         2,292         26,338         3,253         29,591     

Italy

     4,104         4,339         1,836         15,295         1,881         27,455         3,124         30,579     

Portugal

     526         171         950         3,413         1,548         6,608         2,288         8,896     

Ireland

     587         7,819         1,424         103         100         10,033         2,047         12,080     

Cyprus

             68         126         19         43         256         66         322     

Greece

     9         824         52         6         12         903         3         906     

 

 

As at 31 December 2012

                       

Spain

     2,900         9,291         4,450         13,305         2,428         32,374         3,301         35,675     

Italy

     5,429         7,725         2,348         15,591         1,936         33,029         3,082         36,111     

Portugal

     1,035         346         2,130         3,475         1,783         8,769         2,588         11,357     

Ireland

     56         8,432         1,395         112         83         10,078         1,644         11,722     

Cyprus

     9         102         119         44         26         300         131         431     

Greece

     3         1,181         61         8         9         1,262         5         1,267     

 

 

 

Note
a Detailed analysis is not provided for Ireland as there is no redenomination risk due to local funding and due to significant risk relating to the underlying assets residing in an alternative country. The exposures for Cyprus and Greece are deemed immaterial to the Group.

 

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Table of Contents

Risk review >

Credit risk continued

     

 

 

 

 

Spain (audited)

 

 

 

Fair value through profit or loss

 

 

 
    

Trading portfolio

     Derivatives     

Designated

at FV

    Total  
  

 

 

 

As at 31 December

   Assets
£m
    

Liabilities

£m

    Net
£m
     Assets
£m
     Liabilities
£m
    Cash
collateral
£m
    

Net

£m

    

Assets

£m

    2013
£m
     2012  
£m  
 

 

 

Sovereign

     1,020         (1,011     9         28         (4             24         107        140         476     

Financial institutions

     612         (114     498         5,572         (5,572                     359        857         788     

Corporate

     479         (187     292         398         (206             192         421        905         817     

 

 

 

 

Fair value through OCI

                                                                  

 

 
                                             Available for sale investmentsa  
            

 

 

 

As at 31 December

                                           Cost
£m
    

AFS
reserve

£m

    2013
Total
£m
     2012  
Total  
£m  
 

 

 

Sovereign

                     22         1        23         1,562     

Financial institutions

                     159         4        163         480     

Corporate

                     7         1        8         10     

 

 

 

 

Held at amortised cost

 

 

 
                                             Loans and advances  
            

 

 

 

As at 31 December

                                           Gross
£m
     Impairment
allowances
£m
    2013
Total
£m
     2012  
Total  
£m  
 

 

 

Sovereign

                     21                21         29   

Financial institutions

                     24         (15     9         257   

Residential mortgages

                     12,670         (133     12,537         13,305   

Corporate

                     3,224         (934     2,290         3,311   

Other retail lending

                     2,453         (161     2,292         2,428   

 

 

 

 

Off-balance sheet

                                                                  

 

 
                                                          Contingent liabilities
and commitments
 
                 

 

 

 

As at 31 December

                                                        2013
£m
     2012  
£m  
 

 

 

Sovereign

                                  –     

Financial institutions

                          283         88     

Residential mortgages

                          7         12     

Corporate

                          1,831         1,938     

Other retail lending

                          1,132         1,263     

 

 

 

 

Note
a ‘Cost’ refers to the fair value of the asset at recognition, less any impairment booked. ‘AFS reserve’ is the cumulative fair value gain or loss on the assets that is held in equity. ‘Total’ is the fair value of the assets at the balance sheet date.

 

 

 

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Table of Contents
  

 

 

 

 

Sovereign

¡   £184m (2012: £2,067m) largely consisting of holdings in government bonds held at fair value through profit and loss. During the period Spanish sovereign exposure reduced due to the disposal of AFS government bonds.

Financial institutions

¡   £857m (2012: £788m) held at fair value through profit and loss, predominantly debt securities held by the Investment Bank to support trading and market making activities; and

 

¡   £163m (2012: £480m) AFS investments with £4m (2012: £11m loss) cumulative gain held in AFS reserve.

Residential mortgages

¡   £12,537m (2012: £13,305m) fully secured on residential property with average balance weighted marked to market LTV of 63% (2012: 65%). The increase in LTV is reflected in the CRL coverage of 37% (2012: 36%); and

 

¡   90 day arrears rates have remained stable at 0.7% and 1.1% respectively.

Corporate

¡   Net lending to corporates of £2,290m (2012: £3,311m) with CRLs of £1,651m (2012: £1,887m), impairment allowance of £934m (2012: £1,060m) and CRL coverage of 57% (2012: 56%). Balances on EWL peaked in November 2010;

 

¡   The portfolio is kept under close review. EWL balances remain on the reducing trend seen since the peak in H110. Over this period, EWL balances have more than halved;

 

¡   Net lending to property and construction industry of £774m (2012: £1,188m) largely secured on real estate collateral, with CRLs of £1,112m (2012: £1,429m), impairment allowance of £659m (2012: £820m) and CRL coverage of 59% (2012: 57%);

 

¡   Corporate impairment in Spain was at its highest level during H110 when commercial property declines were reflected earlier in the cycle; and

 

¡   £284m (2012: £359m) lending to multinational and large national corporates, which continues to perform.

Other retail lending

¡   £961m (2012: £1,052m) credit cards and unsecured loans. 30 day arrears marginally improved while 90 day arrears rates increased. Gross charge off rates in credit cards and unsecured loans were stable in during the year; and

 

¡   £933m (2012: £1,045m) lending to small and medium enterprises (SMEs), largely secured against residential or commercial property.

 

 

 

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barclays.com/annualreport    Barclays PLC Annual Report 2013 > 185


Table of Contents

Risk review >

Credit risk continued

     

 

 

 

 

Italy (audited)

 

 

 

Fair value through profit or loss

 

 

 
    

Trading portfolio

     Derivatives    

Designated

at FV

    Total  
  

 

 

 

As at 31 December

   Assets
£m
    

Liabilities

£m

    Net
£m
     Assets
£m
     Liabilities
£m
    Cash
collateral
£m
   

Net

£m

    

Assets

£m

   

2013

£m

    

2012  

£m  

 

Sovereign

     2,403         (2,324     79         1,542         (224            1,318         2        1,399         1,123     

Financial institutions

     210         (145     65         3,777         (2,831     (946             239        304         391     

Corporate

     302         (144     158         312         (107     (107     98         336        592         699     

 

 

 

 

Fair value through OCI

                                                                 

 

 
                                            Available for sale investmentsa  
           

 

 

 

As at 31 December

                                         

Cost

£m

    

AFS
reserve

£m

   

2013
Total

£m

    

2012  

Total  

£m  

 

 

 

Sovereign

                    154         3        157         1,537     

Financial institutions

                    60         3        63         138     

Corporate

                    27         2        29         29     

 

 

 

 

Held at amortised cost

                                                                 

 

 
                                            Loans and advances  
           

 

 

 

As at 31 December

                                          Gross
£m
     Impairment
allowances
£m
   

2013
Total

£m

    

2012  
Total  

£m  

 

 

 

Sovereign

                                           9     

Financial institutions

                    50                50         38     

Residential mortgages

                    15,433         (138     15,295         15,591     

Corporate

                    997         (139     858         1,234     

Other retail lending

                    1,978         (97     1,881         1,936     

 

 

 

 

Off-balance sheet

                                                                 

 

 
                                                        

Contingent liabilities

and commitments

 
                

 

 

 

As at 31 December

                                                      

2013

£m

    

2012  

£m  

 

 

 

Financial institutions

                         361         90     

Residential mortgages

                         25         45     

Corporate

                         2,069         2,158     

Other retail lending

                         669         789     

 

 

Sovereign

¡   £1,399m (2012: £1,123m) predominantly of government bonds held at fair value through profit and loss and AFS government bonds of £157m (2012: £1,537m). AFS government bonds have a cumulative fair value gain of £3m (2012: £28m) held in the AFS reserve.

Residential mortgages

¡   £15,295m (2012: £15,591m) secured on residential property with average balance weighted marked to market LTVs of 60% (2012: 60%). CRL coverage of 24% (2012: 23%) marginally increased; and

 

¡   90 day arrears at 1.1% (2012: 1.0%) were broadly stable, however gross charge-off rates improved to 0.7% (2012: 0.8%).

Corporate

¡   £858m (2012: £1,234m) focused on large corporate clients with limited exposure to property sector; and

 

¡   Balances on EWL increased in 2013 due to the inclusion of a single counterparty. Excluding this counterparty, balances on early warning list have been broadly stable.

Other retail lending

¡   £982m (2012: £1,337m) Italian salary advance loans (repayment deducted at source by qualifying employers and Barclays is insured in the event of termination of employment or death). Arrears rates on salary loans deteriorated during 2013 while charge-off rates improved; and

 

¡   £394m (2012: £434m) of credit cards and other unsecured loans. Arrears rates (both 30 and 90 days) in cards and unsecured loans slightly increased while gross charge-off rates have improved.

 

 

 

Note
a ‘Cost’ refers to the fair value of the asset at recognition, less any impairment booked. ‘AFS reserve’ is the cumulative fair value gain or loss on the assets that is held in equity. ‘Total’ is the fair value of the assets at the balance sheet date.

 

 

 

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Table of Contents
  

 

 

 

 

Portugal (audited)

 

 

 

Fair value through profit or loss

 

 

 
     Trading portfolio            Derivatives     

Designated

at FV

    Total  
  

 

 

 

As at 31 December

   Assets
£m
     Liabilities
£m
    Net
£m
     Assets
£m
     Liabilities
£m
    Cash
collateral
£m
   

Net

£m

    

Assets

£m

    2013
£m
     2012  
£m  
 

 

 

Sovereign

     88         (67     21         87         (87                           21         8     

Financial institutions

     18         (5     13         129         (120     (9                    13         18     

Corporate

     45         (18     27         75         (37     (4     34                61         252     

 

 

 

 

Fair value through OCI

                                                                 

 

 
                                            Available for sale investmentsa  
           

 

 

 

As at 31 December

                                          Cost
£m
    

AFS
reserve

£m

    2013
Total
£m
     2012  
Total  
£m  
 

 

 

Sovereign

                    307         3        310         594     

Financial institutions

                    2                2         2     

Corporate

                    65                65         331     

 

 

 

 

Held at amortised cost

                                                                 

 

 
                                                   Loans and advances  
           

 

 

 

As at 31 December

                                          Gross
£m
     Impairment
allowances
£m
    2013
Total
£m
     2012  
Total  
£m  
 

 

 

Sovereign

                    42         (1     41         35     

Financial institutions

                    23                23         28     

Residential mortgages

                    3,460         (47     3,413         3,474     

Corporate

                    1,117         (352     765         1,375     

Other retail lending

                    1,714         (166     1,548         1,783     

 

 

 

 

Off-balance sheet

                                                                 

 

 
                                                         Contingent liabilities
and commitments
 
                

 

 

 

As at 31 December

                                                       2013
£m
     2012  
£m  
 

 

 

Financial institutions

                         1         1     

Residential mortgages

                         11         25     

Corporate

                         627         889     

Other retail lending

                         1,649         1,673     

 

 

Sovereign

¡   £372m (2012: £637m) of largely AFS government bonds. No impairment and £3m (2012: £4m loss) cumulative fair value gain held in the AFS reserve.

Residential mortgages

¡   Secured on residential property with average balance weighted LTVs of 76% (2012: 78%). CRL coverage of 34% (2012: 29%) marginally increased; and

 

¡   90 day arrears rates improved to 0.5% (2012: 0.7%) while recoveries impairment coverage increased to 31.9% (2012: 25.6%) driven by an increase in loss given default rates.

Corporate

¡   Net lending to corporates of £765m (2012: £1,375m), with CRLs of £548m (2012: £501m), impairment allowance of £352m (2012: £296m) and CRL coverage of 64% (2012: 59%); and

 

¡   Net lending to the property and construction industry of £217m (2012: £364m) secured, in part, against real estate collateral, with CRLs of £281m (2012: £275m), impairment allowance of £183m (2012: £149m) and CRL coverage of 65% (2012: 54%).

Other retail lending

¡   £890m (2012: £950m) credit cards and unsecured loans. During 2013, arrears rates in cards portfolio deteriorated while charge-off rates remained stable; and

 

¡   CRL coverage of 87% (2012: 74%) driven by credit cards and unsecured loans exposure.

 

Note
a ‘Cost’ refers to the fair value of the asset at recognition, less any impairment booked. ‘AFS reserve’ is the cumulative fair value gain or loss on the assets that is held in equity. ‘Total’ is the fair value of the assets at the balance sheet date.

 

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Table of Contents

Risk review >

Credit risk continued

     

 

 

 

 

Analysis of indirect exposures

Indirect exposure to sovereigns can arise through a number of different sources, including credit derivatives referencing sovereign debt; guarantees to savings and investment funds which hold sovereign risk; lending to financial institutions who themselves hold exposure to sovereigns and guarantees, implicit or explicit, by the sovereign to the Group’s counterparties. A geographic and industrial analysis of the Group’s loans and advances, including lending to European counterparties by type, is set out on pages 152 and 153.

Credit derivatives referencing sovereign debt

The Group enters into credit mitigation arrangements (principally credit default swaps and total return swaps) for which the reference asset is government debt. For Spain, Italy and Portugal, these have the net effect of reducing the Group’s exposure in the event of sovereign default. An analysis of the Group’s credit derivatives referencing sovereign debt is presented below.

 

 

 
    

Spain

£m

   

Italy

£m

   

Portugal

£m

   

Ireland

£m

   

Cyprus

£m

   

Greece  

£m  

 

 

 

As at 31 December 2013

            

Fair value

            

– Bought

     59        311        186        (10     1        –     

– Sold

     (51     (289     (183     2        (1     –     

 

 

Net derivative fair value

     8        22        3        (8            –     

 

 

Contract notional amount

            

– Bought

     (8,333     (17,083     (3,456     (2,901     (7     –     

– Sold

     8,307        16,528        3,430        2,971        7        –     

 

 

Net derivative notional amount

     (26     (555     (26     70               –     

 

 

Net protection from credit derivatives in the event of sovereign default (notional less fair value)

     (18     (533     (23     62               –     

 

 

As at 31 December 2012

            

Net protection from credit derivatives in the event of sovereign default (notional less fair value)

     (122     (307     (88     44               –     

 

 

The fair values and notional amounts of credit derivative assets and liabilities would be lower than reported under IFRS if netting was permitted for assets and liabilities with the same counterparty or for which we hold cash collateral. An analysis of the effects of such netting is presented below.

 

 

 
    

Spain

£m

   

Italy

£m

   

Portugal

£m

   

Ireland

£m

   

Cyprus

£m

   

Greece  

£m  

 

 

 

As at 31 December 2013

            

Fair value

            

– Bought

     31        88        72        (10     1        –     

– Sold

     (23     (66     (69     2        (1     –     

 

 

Net derivative fair value

     8        22        3        (8            –     

 

 

Contract notional amount

            

– Bought

     (2,468     (4,273     (1,068     (800     (4     –     

– Sold

     2,442        3,718        1,042        870        4        –     

 

 

Net derivative notional amount

     (26     (555     (26     70               –     

 

 

Net protection from credit derivatives in the event of sovereign default (notional less fair value)

     (18     (533     (23     62               –     

 

 

As at 31 December 2012

            

Net protection from credit derivatives in the event of sovereign default (notional less fair value)

     (122     (307     (88     44               –     

 

 

Credit derivatives are contracts whereby the default risk of an asset (reference asset) is transferred from the buyer to the seller of the credit derivative contract. Credit derivatives referencing sovereign assets are bought and sold to support client transactions and for risk management purposes. The contract notional amount represents the size of the credit derivative contracts that have been bought or sold, while the fair value represents the change in the value of the reference asset. The net protection or exposure from credit derivatives in the event of sovereign default amount represents a net purchase or sale of insurance by the Group. This insurance reduces or increases the Group’s total exposure and should be considered alongside the direct exposures disclosed in the preceding pages.

 

 

 

188 > Barclays PLC Annual Report 2013    barclays.com/annualreport


Table of Contents
  

 

 

 

 

Exposure to Eurozone residential property sector

Barclays risk exposure and impairment in Spain and Portugal has been and will be affected by the housing sector in those countries as a result of changes to the bank’s risk appetite in a declining housing sector, where the desired level of new business has been reduced, and with it, the total exposure.

The 2013 impairment charge to the residential mortgage book in Spain was £42m (2012: £72m) and in Portugal was £22m (2012: £24m). These decreases were principally driven by:

 

¡   Improvement in underlying performance following credit tightening and collections improvements; and

 

¡   A slowdown in the rate of growth in our Loss Given Default, driven by a slowdown in house price deterioration and a one off charge on Spain in 2012 not being repeated.

The impairment charge to our residential mortgage book in Italy increased to £41m (2012: £27m). However underlying portfolio performance is broadly in line with expectations, with 90 day arrears rates and charge off remaining broadly stable.

For information on our exposures to home loans in Spain, Portugal and Italy see pages 165 to 167.

Eurozone Balance Sheet Redenomination Risk

Redenomination risk is the risk of financial loss to the Group should one or more countries exit the Euro, leading to the devaluation of balance sheet assets and liabilities. The Group is directly exposed to redenomination risk where there is a mismatch between the level of locally denominated assets and liabilities.

Within Barclays, retail banking, corporate banking and wealth management activities in the Eurozone are generally booked locally within each country. Locally booked customer assets and liabilities, primarily loans and advances to customers and customer deposits, are predominantly denominated in Euros. The remaining funding needed is met through local funding secured against customer loans and advances, with any residual need funded through the Group.

During 2013, the net funding mismatch decreased 0.2bn to 11.6bn in Italy and 1.1bn to 3.0bn in Portugal. The surplus in Spain increased 0.8bn to 3.1bn.

Barclays continues to monitor the potential impact of the Eurozone volatility on local balance sheet funding and will consider actions as appropriate to manage the risk.

Direct exposure to Greece is very small with negligible net funding required from Group. For Ireland there is no local balance sheet funding requirement by the Group as total liabilities in this country exceed total assets.

 

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Table of Contents

Risk review >

Market risk

     

 

 

 

 

 

LOGO   Market risk is the risk of a reduction to earnings or capital due to volatility of trading book positions or an inability to hedge the banking book balance sheet.

All disclosures in this section (pages 190 to 198) are unaudited unless otherwise stated

 

Introduction

This section contains key statistics describing the market risk profile of the bank. It includes both regulatory and management measures. This includes risk weighted assets by major business line, as well as Value at Risk (VaR) measures. Throughout the section, measures on a regulatory and a management basis are shown. The market risk management section on pages 405 to 414 provides full descriptions of these metrics.

The Group has seen a significant decrease in market risk, from lower business activities and disposals (notably Exit Quadrant assets). These movements are reflected in a wide range of risk measures within this section.

 

¡   The relationship between the Group’s market risk measures and balance sheet is presented on page 191.

 

¡   Measures of traded market risk, such as value at risk, decreased in the year due to lower levels of client activity and improved market conditions. More details are provided on pages 191 to 193.

 

¡   This translated into lower volatility in daily trading revenue in the Investment Bank, although with lower average daily revenue from 2012 levels.

 

¡   Market risk RWAs fell from 2012 levels as a result of improving market conditions and general reduction in exposures across the main books.

 

¡   The section also covers non-traded market risks that mainly occur as a consequence of banking activities other than trading activities; for instance, interest rate risk that arises in the banking book (IRRBB).

 

¡   Annual Earnings at Risk (AEaR) to interest rate shocks, a key measure of IRRBB, reduced in 2013. This reduction was predominately driven by changes in the equity structural hedge durations and a change in the hedge ineffectiveness sensitivity.

 

¡   Other market risks, such as pension risk, are disclosed from page 197 onwards.

 

 

 

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Table of Contents
  

 

 

 

 

Balance sheet view of trading and banking books

As defined by the regulatory rules, a trading book consists of positions held for trading intent or to hedge elements of the trading book. Trading intent must be evidenced in the basis of the strategies, policies and procedures set up by the firm to manage the position or portfolio. The below table provides a group wide overview of where assets on the Group’s regulatory balance sheet are managed within regulatory traded and non-traded books. A reconciliation between the IFRS and regulatory balance sheet is provided in the Pillar 3 report.

 

 

 

Balance sheet split by trading and banking books

                    

 

 

As at 31 December 2013

  

Banking

booka

    

Traded

book

£m

    

Total  

£m  

 

 

 

Cash, balances at central banks and items in the course of collection

     47,072                 47,072     

Trading portfolio assets

             132,984         132,984     

Financial assets designated a fair value

     20,455         16,881         37,336     

Derivative financial instruments

             324,330         324,330     

Available for sale investments

     89,521                 89,521     

Loans and advances to banks

     20,148         17,570         37,718     

Loans and advances to customers

     357,565         70,627         428,192     

Reverse repurchase agreements and other similar secured lending

     1,648         185,110         186,758     

Other assets

     19,878         312         20,190     

 

 

Total assets

     556,287         747,814         1,304,101     

 

 

Deposits and items in the course of collection due to banks

     47,787         9,605         57,392     

Customer accounts

     376,256         51,674         427,930     

Repurchase agreements and other similar secured borrowings

     6,511         190,212         196,723     

Trading portfolio liabilities

             53,464         53,464     

Financial liabilities designated at fair value

     9,471         54,756         64,227     

Derivative financial instruments

             320,634         320,634     

Debt securities in issue

     69,191         12,654         81,845     

Subordinated liabilities

     21,695                 21,695     

Other liabilities

     15,322         1,046         16,368     

 

 

Total liabilities

     546,233         694,045         1,240,278     

 

 

Included within the trading book are assets and liabilities which are included in the market risk regulatory measures. For more information on these measures (VaR, SVaR, IRC and APR) see the risk management section on pages 405 to 414.

Traded market risk review

Review of management measures

The following disclosures provide details on management measures of market risk. See page 407 for more detail on management measures and the differences when compared to regulatory measures.

The table below shows the total Investment Bank Management VaR on a diversified basis by risk factor (see page 407 for risk factor definitions). Limits are applied against each risk factor VaR as well as total Management VaR, which are then cascaded further by risk managers to each business.

The Management VaR numbers in the table below include add-ons, to better represent the market risk where the VaR model may not fully represent some risk factors. See page 408 for a description of risks not in VaR (RNIVs).

Average Management VaR reduced in 2013 due to a combination of lower client activity and improved market conditions, notably, tightening of credit spreads. Market volatility, which was mainly driven by Eurozone in the previous year, improved in 2013 along with general market sentiment, supported by improving macroeconomic trends in developed markets resulting in the review of quantitative easing programmes.

 

 

Note
a The primary risk factors for banking book assets and liabilities are interest rates and to a lesser extent, foreign exchange rates. Credit spreads and equity prices will also be a factor where the Group holds debt and equity securities respectively, either as Financial Assets Designated at Fair Value (see note 14) or as Available for Sale (see note 16).

 

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Table of Contents

Risk review >

Market risk continued

     

 

 

 

 

 

 

The daily average, maximum and minimum values of Management VaR

 

 

 

For the year ended 31 December

   2013      2012  
  

 

 

 

Management VaR (95%)

  

Average

£m

   

Higha

£m

    

Lowa

£m

     Average
£m
    Higha
£m
     Lowa  
£m  
 

 

 

Credit risk

     18        25         12         26        44         18     

Interest rate risk

     13        24         6         14        23         7     

Spread risk

     11        21         5         23        31         17     

Basis risk

     11        17         7         11        21         5     

Equity risk

     11        21         5         9        19         4     

Commodity risk

     5        8         2         6        9         4     

Foreign exchange risk

     4        7         2         6        10         2     

Inflation risk

     3        8         2         3        7         2     

Diversification effecta

     (47     n/a         n/a         (60     n/a         n/a     

 

 

Total Management VaR

     29        39         21         38        75         27     

 

 

The three main contributors to total Management VaR were credit, interest rate and spread risks. From average 2012 levels, average VaR for credit risk fell by £8m (31%), interest rate risk fell by £1m (7%) and spread risk fell by £12m (52%). Overall average VaR for the Investment Bank fell by £9m (24%).

Equity risk VaR is the only risk factor that has shown an increase since 2012 as the business supported several key primary market activities over the year as well as increased volume.

The business remained within the Management VaR limits approved by the Board Financial Risk Committee (BFRC) throughout 2013 for both risk factor VaR and total VaR.

 

Investment bank management VaR

 

 

Investment bank daily trading revenue

 

LOGO   LOGO

The histogram above shows the distribution of daily revenue for the Investment Bank in 2013 and 2012. This includes all income generated by Investment Bank except for Private Equity and Principal Investments. Business performance is discussed in more detail on pages 260 and 261.

The average daily revenue at the Investment Bank in 2013 was £41m, down 11% from 2012, however, there were more positive trading revenue days in 2013 than in 2012, with 97% of days generating positive trading revenue compared to 88% in 2012. The volatility of income was lower in 2013, in line with the decrease in average Management VaR and lower market volatility.

 

 

Note
a The high and low VaR figures reported for each category did not necessarily occur on the same day as the high and low VaR reported as a whole. Consequently a diversification effect balance for the high and low VaR figures would not be meaningful and is therefore omitted from the above table.

 

192 > Barclays PLC Annual Report 2013    barclays.com/annualreport
 

 


Table of Contents
  

 

 

 

 

Investment Bank balance sheet and Management VaR

The table below provides an overview of the assets and liabilities of the major trading portfolios in Investment Bank and associated standalone Management VaR. Whilst the table on page 191 shows the total balance sheet breakdown for the Group, split by traded and non-traded net balance sheet, the table below shows the assets and liabilities for the major trading portfolios in Investment Bank that are most sensitive to market risk. These comprise available for sale investments, debt securities in issue, derivative financial instruments, positions with other financial institutions at fair value, repurchase agreements, and trading portfolio assets/liabilities. The corresponding Management VaR shown is on a standalone business perspective; refer to the table on page 192 for the total Investment Bank Management VaR by risk factor.

 

 

For the year ended 31 December 2013

                  

 

Portfolio

   Description of
business activity
  

Assets

£m

  

Liabilities

£m

  

Average

Standalone

Management

VaR

£m

 

Principal balance

sheet line items

  

Principal market

risk exposure

 

Fixed Income, Currencies and Commodities

   Market maker in fixed
income, currencies
and commodity
markets.
   518,647    505,356    19   Derivative financial
instruments and
repurchase agreements
and trading portfolio
assets/liabilities.
   Market risk exposure arises
from credit trading including
bond syndication, and
interest rate, currency and
commodity market making
and trading. The business is
well–diversified leading to
lower risk.

 

Client Capital Management

   This function primarily
manages counterparty
risk exposures arising
from derivative
contracts.
   3,221    4,996    15   Trading portfolio assets/
liabilities and derivative
financial instruments and
available for sale
financial instruments.
   Hedging the firm’s credit
including counterparty risk
exposure on derivatives.

 

Other Credit

   Provides specific credit
market exposures.
   1,237    370    9   Trading portfolio assets/
liabilities.
   Risk exposure is primarily

to credit markets.

 

Equities

   Provides equity market
making and risk
management services
for clients.
   16,265    16,954    8   Trading portfolio assets/
liabilities and derivative
financial instruments.
   Provides derivative solutions
to clients. The business also
supports cash equity
trading, primary market
issuance and block trades.

 

Portfolio Asset Book

   Manages assets from
non–core operations,
including Exit
Quadrant assets.
   14,754    6,036    2   Trading portfolio assets/
liabilities and derivative
financial instruments and
repurchase agreements.
   Credit exposures which

the business has been
managing down.

 

Investment Bank Treasury

   Provides funding and
liquidity services.
   27,780    22,128    11   Available for sale
financial investments
and debt securities in
issue.
   The principal service is the
execution of liquidity and
funding operations.

 

Other Investment Bank assets and liabilities

      281,888    238,588      Loans and advances and
cash at central banks.
  

 

Other Investment Bank VaR and VaR diversification

            (36)     

 

Total Investment Bank

      863,792    794,428    29     

 

In order to provide an estimation of the scale of the balance sheet instruments that generate market risk, as defined by Barclays for purposes of risk management, assets and liabilities of the significant Investment Bank business lines have been aggregated. Due to differences in data sets for market risk and IFRS reporting, whilst assets and liabilities exclude balance sheet line items that would clearly not generate market risk (e.g. fixed assets), some line items included (e.g. Financial assets designated at fair value) could contain assets that do not generate market risk. Therefore other Investment Bank assets and liabilities contains (i) business lines that are primarily defined as banking book, and (ii) line items that should not generate market risk.

Management VaR is shown at 95th percentile. Market risks arising from the individual portfolios listed above diversify to provide total Investment Bank management VaR shown on page 192. Some functions such as Treasury and Client Capital Management shows exposure as a result of the service it provides to the client facing franchise, such as managing the firm’s exposure to counterparty default or providing funding to execute business. Some client activities are not within the scope of Management VaR, resulting in the potential diversification not being captured. On the other hand, Management VaR associated with Fixed Income, Currencies and Commodities reflects diversification within that business line.

The primary client facing businesses such as FICC and Equities contribute to the majority of the total balance sheet assets. The Portfolio Asset Book manages credit exposures, which have been reduced over the year in line with the Exit Quadrant strategy.

 

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Table of Contents

Risk review >

Market risk continued

     

 

 

 

 

Combined Scenario Stresses

As part of Barclays risk management framework, on a regular basis the performance of the trading business in hypothetical scenarios characterised by severe macroeconomic conditions is modelled. Up to six global scenarios are modelled on a regular basis, for example, a sharp deterioration in liquidity, a slowdown in the global economy, terrorist attacks, global recession and a sovereign peripheral crisis.

Similar to 2012, throughout 2013 the scenarios analysis showed the biggest market risk related impact would be due to a severe deterioration in liquidity and a rapid slowdown in global economy.

Review of regulatory measures

The following disclosures provide details on regulatory measures of market risk. See page 409 for more detail on regulatory measures and the differences when compared to management measures.

Barclays’ market risk capital requirements comprise two elements:

 

¡   Trading book positions booked to legal entities within the scope of Barclays’ PRA waiver where the market risk is measured under a PRA approved internal models approach, including Regulatory VaR, Stressed Value at Risk (SVaR), Incremental Risk Charge (IRC) and All Price Risk (APR) as required; and

 

¡   Trading book positions that do not meet the conditions for inclusion within the approved internal models approach. Their capital requirement is calculated using standardised rules.

The below table summarises the regulatory market risk measures, under the internal models approach.

 

 

 

Analysis of Regulatory VaR, SVaR, IRC and APR measures

                           

 

 

As at 31 December 2013

  

Year-end

£m

    

Average

£m

    

Max

£m

    

Min  

£m  

 

 

 

Regulatory VaR

     42         46         67         31     

SVaR

     90         85         112         61     

IRC

     139         238         539         115     

APR

     29         141         183         29     

 

 

As at 31 December 2012

           

Regulatory VaR

     44         68         133         42     

SVaR

     68         111         139         68     

IRC

     532         574         931         362     

APR

     176         213         275         176     

 

 

Average Regulatory VaR fell by 32% to £46m (2012: £68m) and average SVaR fell by 23% to £85m (2012: £111m), both driven by improving market volatility and portfolio diversification.

Average IRC fell by 59% to £238m (2012: £574m) driven by a reduction in exposure to lower rated sovereign positions and a change in directional risk in corporate debt.

Average APR reduced by 34% to £141m (2012: £213m) due to an exit of a significant portion of the correlation portfolio.

 

 

 

As at 31 December 2013

(Year end)

  

Fixed Income,

Currencies

and
Commodities

£m

    

Client

Capital

Management

£m

    

Other

Credit

£m

    

Equities

£m

    

Portfolio

Asset

Book

£m

    

Treasury  

£m  

 

 

 

Regulatory VaR

     24         25         1         21         2         3     

SVaR

     53         41         5         82         3         14     

IRC

     240         60                 24         79         2     

APR

     27                                 8         –     

 

 

The table above shows the primary portfolios which are driving Investment Bank’s modelled capital requirement as at 2013 year end. The standalone portfolio results diversify at the total Investment Bank level and are not necessarily additive. Regulatory VaR in the prior table shows the total Investment Bank results.

 

 

 

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Table of Contents
  

 

 

 

 

Non-traded market risk review

Net interest income sensitivity

The table below shows sensitivity analysis on the pre-tax net interest income for the non-trading financial assets and financial liabilities held at 31 December 2013 and 31 December 2012. The sensitivity has been measured using the Annual Earnings at Risk (AEaR) methodology as described on page 413. The benchmark interest rate for each currency is set as at 31 December 2013. The effect of structural hedging is taken into account.

 

 

 

Net interest income sensitivity (AEaR) by business unit

 

 

 

As at 31 December

  

UK RBB

£m

   

Europe RBB

£m

   

Africa RBB

£m

   

Barclaycard

£m

    Corporate
Banking
£m
   

Wealth and

Investment

Management

£m

   

Othera

£m

   

Total  

£m  

 

 

 

2013

                

+200bps

     219        9        19        (84     101        53        (92     225     

+100bps

     118        5        9        (42     50        27        (57     110     

-100bps

     (140     (1     (8     25        (160     (15     56        (243)    

-200bps

     (160     (1     (15     26        (170     (22     49        (293)    

 

 

2012

                

+200bps

     254        (3     62        (99     83        51        22        370     

+100bps

     135        (2     29        (49     41        25        3        182     

-100bps

     (175     2        (25     27        (143     (15     (45     (374)    

-200bps

     (214     2        (50     18        (147     (16     (26     (433)    

 

 

Total AEaR to a +200bp shock decreased by 39% to £225m (2012: £370m), and to a -200bp shock, total AEaR decreased by 32% to £(293)m (2012: £(433)m). The drivers of these differences were predominantly due to large changes in UK RBB, Africa RBB and Other.

The change in UK RBB was due to a reduction in savings margin compression sensitivity due to additional hedges being transacted and a change in modelling pricing assumptions for Managed Rate Deposits in that they will follow market movements more closely.

The change in Africa RBB was primarily due to exchange rates and a reduction in asset and liability mismatch positions.

The change in Other was a combination of changes in the equity structural hedge durations (across GBP, EUR and USD) and a change in the hedge ineffectiveness sensitivity driven by increases in hedge positions (partly due to the rights issue in 2013).

Banking book exposures held or issued by the Investment Bank are excluded as these are measured and managed using VaR. AEaR to 100bp shocks decreased for the same reasons as outlined above and is split by currency in the table below.

 

 

 

Net interest income sensitivity (AEaR) by currency (audited)

                         

 

 

As at 31 December

   2013     2012  

 

 
    

+100 bps

£m

   

-100 bps

£m

   

+100 bps

£m

    

-100 bps  

£m  

 

 

 

GBP

     92        (199     96         (273)    

USD

     9        (21     30         (23)    

EUR

     (18     (7     20         (49)    

ZAR

     10        (9     27         (25)    

Other currencies

     17        (7     9         (4)    

 

 

Total

     110        (243     182         (374)    

 

 

As percentage of net interest income

     0.95%        (2.09%     1.56%         (3.21%)    

 

 

Barclays measure some non-traded market risks using an Economic Capital (EC) methodology. EC is predominantly calculated using a daily VaR model and then scaled up to a 1 year EC confidence interval (99.98%). For more information on definitions of prepayment, recruitment and residual risk, and on how EC is used to manage market risk, see the market risk management section on page 413.

 

Note
a Other consists of Group Treasury and adjustments made for hedge ineffectiveness.

 

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Risk review >

Market risk continued

     

 

 

 

 

 

 

Economic capital

 

 

 

As at 31 December

  

UK RBB

£m

    

Europe RBB

£m

    

Africa RBB

£m

    

Barclaycard

£m

     Corporate
Banking
£m
    

Wealth and
Investment

Management

£m

    

Total  

£m  

 

 

 

2013

                    

Prepayment risk

     29                         10         2                 41     

Recruitment risk

     111                         2         1                 114     

Residual risk

     6         13         38         4         1         3         65     

 

 

2012

                    

Prepayment risk

     38                         13         2                 53     

Recruitment risk

     27                         1         1                 29     

Residual risk

     5         15         35         2         1         1         59     

 

 

Total Economic Capital (EC) increased by 56% to £220m, predominately due to the increase in recruitment risk, the risk that arises when the Group commits to providing a product at a predetermined price for a future period, but where the customer has no contractual obligation to take up the product. Recruitment risk EC in UK RBB increased from £27m to £111m driven by an increase in mortgage pre-hedging due to continuing high volumes (particularly in the five year term).

Analysis of equity sensitivity

The table below measures the overall impact of a +/- 100bps movement in interest rates on available for sale and cash flow hedge reserves. This data is captured using PV01 (Present Value of 1bp) which is an indicator of the shift in asset value for a 1bp shift in the yield.

 

 

 

Analysis of equity sensitivity (audited)

                        

 

 

As at 31 December

   2013     2012  

 

 
    

+100 bps

£m

   

-100 bps

£m

   

+100 bps

£m

   

-100 bps  

£m  

 

 

 

Net Interest Income

     110        (243     182        (374)    

Taxation effects on the above

     (27     61        (51     105     

 

 

Effect on profit for the year

     83        (182     131        (269)    

 

 

As percentage of net profit after tax

     6.40%        (14.03%     72.38%        (148.62%)    

 

 

Effect on profit for the year (per above)

     83        (182     131        (269)    

Available for sale reserve

     (861     861        (673     673     

Cash flow hedge reserve

     (2,831     2,808        (2,179     2,260     

Taxation effects on the above

     923        (917     799        (821)    

 

 

Effect on equity

     (2,686     2,570        (1,922     1,843     

 

 

As percentage of equity

     (4.20%     4.02%        (3.20%     3.07%    

 

 

The higher sensitivity on AFS reserves is driven by an increase in debt securities held for liquidity purposes. The higher sensitivity on cash flow hedge reserves is driven by an increased volume of positions during the period.

 

 

 

 

 

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Foreign exchange risk (audited)

The Group is exposed to two sources of foreign exchange risk.

a) Transactional foreign currency exposure

Transactional foreign exchange exposures represent exposure on banking assets and liabilities, denominated in currencies other than the functional currency of the transacting entity.

The Group’s risk management policies prevent the holding of significant open positions in foreign currencies outside the trading portfolio managed by the Investment Bank which is monitored through DVaR.

There were no material net transactional foreign currency exposures outside the trading portfolio during 2013 or 2012. Due to the low level of non-trading exposures no reasonably possible change in foreign exchange rates would have a material effect on either the Group’s profit or movements in equity for either of the years ended 31 December 2013 or 2012.

b) Translational foreign exchange exposure

The Group’s investments in overseas subsidiaries and branches create capital resources denominated in foreign currencies principally US Dollar, Euro and South African Rand. Changes in the GBP value of the net investments due to foreign currency movements are captured in the currency translation reserve, resulting in a movement in Common Equity Tier 1 Capital.

The Group’s strategy is to minimise the volatility of the capital ratios caused by foreign exchange movements, by using the Common Equity Tier 1 Capital movements to broadly match the revaluation of the Group’s foreign currency RWA exposures.

During 2013, total structural currency exposures net of hedging instruments remained stable at £16.2bn (2012: £15.7bn).

The economic hedges primarily represent the US Dollar and Euro preference shares and additional Tier 1 instruments that are held as equity, accounted for at historic cost under IFRS and do not qualify as hedges for accounting purposes.

 

 

 

Functional currency of operations (audited)

 

 

 
    

Foreign

currency

net

investments

£m

    

Borrowings

which hedge

the net

investments

£m

    

Derivatives

which hedge

the net

investments

£m

    

Structural

currency

exposures

pre

economic

hedges

£m

    

Economic

hedges

£m

    

Remaining  

structural  

currency  

exposures  

£m  

 

 

 

As at 31 December 2013

                 

US Dollar

     34,220         5,555         12,558         16,107         5,812         10,295     

Euro

     9,336         538         5,570         3,228         2,833         395     

Rand

     3,835                 114         3,721                 3,721     

Japanese Yen

     454         89         352         13                 13     

Other

     2,850                 1,101         1,749                 1,749     

 

 

Total

     50,695         6,182         19,695         24,818         8,645         16,173     

 

 

As at 31 December 2012

                 

US Dollar

     34,798         6,251         13,861         14,686         4,822         9,864     

Euro

     5,314         1,494         1,990         1,830         1,951         (121)    

Rand

     4,080                 131         3,949                 3,949     

Japanese Yen

     597         175         407         15                 15     

Other

     3,040                 1,027         2,013                 2,013     

 

 

Total

     47,829         7,920         17,416         22,493         6,773         15,720     

 

 

Pension risk review

The UK Retirement Fund (UKRF) represents approximately 91% of the Group’s total retirement benefit obligations globally. The other material overseas schemes are in South Africa and the US where they represent approximately 5% and 2% respectively of the Group’s total retirement benefit obligations. As such, this risk review section focuses exclusively on the UKRF.

Pension risk arises because the estimated market value of the pension fund assets might decline; or the investment returns might reduce; or the estimated value of the pension liabilities might increase.

See page 198 for more information on how pension risk is managed.

Assets

The Board of Trustees defines an overall long-term investment strategy for the UKRF, with investments across a broad range of asset classes. This ensures an appropriate mix of return seeking assets to generate future returns as well as liability matching assets to better match the future pension obligations. The main market risks within the asset portfolio are against interest rates and equities, as shown by the analysis of scheme assets within Note 37.

Fair value of UKRF plan assets increased by 4% to £23.7bn (2012: £22.8bn), driven by equities on the back of an equities rally. However, equities risk within the portfolio was relatively unchanged as its percentage against the rest of the portfolio remained stable.

 

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Risk review >

Market risk continued

     

 

 

 

 

Liabilities

The retirement benefit obligations are a series of future cash flows with relatively long duration. On an IAS 19R basis these cash flows are sensitive to changes in the expected long term inflation rate and the discount rate (AA corporate bond yield curve):

 

¡   An increase in long term inflation corresponds to an increase in liabilities

 

¡   An increase in the discount rate corresponds to a decrease in liabilities

Pension risk is generated through the Group’s defined benefits schemes and this risk is deemed to move to zero over time as the chart below shows. The chart below outline the shape of the uninflated liability cashflow profile with the majority of the cash flows (approximately 75%) falling between 0 and 40 years, peaking within the 21 to 30 year band and reducing thereafter. The shape may vary depending on changes in inflation expectation and mortality and it is updated in line with Triennial Valuation process.

For more detail on liability assumptions see note 37.

Proportion of liability cashflows

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Risk measurement

In line with Barclays risk management framework, the assets and liabilities of the UKRF are modelled within a VaR framework to show the volatility of the pension positions on a total portfolio level. This ensures that the risks, diversification benefits and liability matching characteristics of the UKRF obligations and investments are adequately captured. VaR is measured and monitored on a monthly basis at the pension risk for a such as the Market Risk Committee, Pension Management Group and Pensions Executive Board. The VaR model takes into account the valuation of the liabilities based on an IAS 19R basis (see note 37). The Trustees, via their consultants Towers Watson, receive quarterly VaR measures on a Funding basis.

In addition to this, the impact of Pension risk to the Group is taken into account as part of the stress testing process. Stress testing is performed internally at least on an annual basis, covering scenario such as European economic crisis and quantitative easing. The UKRF exposure is also included as part of the regulatory stress tests and exercises indicated the UKRF risk profle is resilient to severe stress events.

Unlike traded market risk, the capital requirement for pension risk is not reflected in risk weighted assets. Instead, the calculation is applied as a deduction from capital resources which has a similar effect on capital ratios.

Triennial valuation

The last triennial valuation was started with an effective date of 30 September 2010. In compliance with the Pensions Act 2004, the current valuation is being carried out with an effective date of 30 September 2013. During 2014, the Bank and Trustees will agree a scheme-specific fund.

 

 

 

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Table of Contents

Risk review >

Funding risk – Capital

  

 

 

 

 

 

 

   LOGO

 

 

Capital risk is the risk that the Group is unable to maintain appropriate capital ratios, which could lead to (i) an inability to support business activity; (ii) a failure to meet regulatory requirements; or (iii) a change to credit ratings.

 

 

  All disclosures in this section (pages 199 to 207) are unaudited unless otherwise stated

 

 

Capital management is integral to the Group’s approach to financial stability and sustainability management and is therefore embedded in the way our businesses and legal entities operate. Our capital management strategy is driven by the strategic aims of the Group and the risk appetite set by the Board.

Barclays has continued to maintain a capital buffer over the PRA’s minimum regulatory capital requirements.

For further information on funding capital risk policies, please refer to the Risk management section on pages 420 and 421.

For further information on future regulatory impacts and supervision and regulation, refer to pages 230 to 235.

The Core Tier 1 ratio increased to 13.2% (2012: 10.8%) reflecting an increase in Core Tier 1 capital of £5.1bn to £46.8bn. Barclays generated £1.3bn Core Tier 1 capital from earnings after absorbing the impact of provisions for PPI and interest rate hedging product redress. After deducting £1.7bn of dividends paid during 2013, retained regulatory capital generated from earnings decreased Core Tier 1 capital by £0.4bn. Other material movements in Core Tier 1 capital were:

 

¡   £5.8bn increase in share capital and share premium due to the rights issue;

 

¡   £0.8bn increase in share capital and share premium due to warrants exercised;

 

¡   £1.8bn decrease due to foreign currency movements, primarily due to the strengthening of GBP against USD and ZAR; and

 

¡   £0.5bn decrease in securitisation deductions due to rundown of exit quadrant assets.

Total Capital Resources increased overall by £4.8bn to £70.7bn.

The increases in Core Tier 1 capital were partially reduced by decreases in Tier 2 capital as a result of £1.4bn of redemptions of dated subordinated liabilities offset by £0.7bn of new issuances and a further £0.5bn decrease in securitisation deductions at a total capital level.

 

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Risk review >

Funding risk – Capital continued

  

 

 

 

 

Capital Composition

 

 

 

Key capital ratios

             

 

 

As at 31 December

   2013        2012    

 

 

Core Tier 1

     13.2%          10.8%    

Tier 1

     15.7%          13.2%    

Total capital

     19.9%          17.0%    
     

 

 

Capital Resources (audited)

             

 

 

As at 31 December

  

2013 

£m 

    

2012  

£m  

 

 

 

Shareholders’ equity (excluding non-controlling interests) per balance sheet

     55,385          50,615     

– Less: CRD IV additional Tier 1 equitya

     (2,063)         –     

Own credit cumulative lossb

     806          804     

Unrealised losses/(gains) on available for sale debt securitiesb

             (417)    

Unrealised gains on available for sale equity (recognised as Tier 2 capital)b

     (151)         (110)    

Cash flow hedging reserveb

     (273)         (2,099)    

Non-controlling interests per balance sheet

     8,564          9,371     

– Less: Other Tier 1 capital – preference shares

     (6,131)         (6,203)    

– Less: Non-controlling Tier 2 capital

     (478)         (547)    

Other regulatory adjustments to non-controlling interests

     (23)         (171)    

Other regulatory adjustments and deductions:

     

Defined benefit pension adjustmentb

     195          49     

Goodwill and intangible assetsb

     (7,618)         (7,622)    

50% excess of expected losses over impairmentb

     (787)         (648)    

50% of securitisation positions

     (503)         (997)    

Other regulatory adjustments

     (142)         (303)    

 

 

Core Tier 1 capital

     46,784          41,722     

Other Tier 1 capital:

     

Preference shares

     6,131          6,203     

Tier 1 notesc

     500          509     

Reserve capital instrumentsc

     2,858          2,866     

Regulatory adjustments and deductions:

     

50% of material holdings

     (459)         (241)    

50% of the tax on excess of expected losses over impairment

             176     

 

 

Total Tier 1 capital

     55,820          51,235     

Tier 2 capital:

     

Undated subordinated liabilities

     1,522          1,625     

Dated subordinated liabilities

     13,626          14,066     

Non-controlling Tier 2 capital

     478          547     

Reserves arising on revaluation of propertyb

             39     

Unrealised gains on available for sale equityb

     153          110     

Collectively assessed impairment allowances

     1,875          2,002     

Tier 2 deductions:

     

50% of material holdings

     (459)         (241)    

50% excess of expected losses over impairment (gross of tax)

     (793)         (824)    

50% of securitisation positions

     (503)         (997)    

Total capital regulatory adjustments and deductions:

     

Investments that are not material holdings or qualifying holdings

     (768)         (1,139)    

Other deductions from total capital

     (288)         (550)    

 

 

Total regulatory capital

     70,670          65,873     

 

 

Notes

a Additional Tier 1 instruments that are not eligible for CRD III capital but are eligible under CRD IV rules.
b The capital impacts of these items are net of tax.
c Tier 1 notes and reserve capital instruments are included in subordinated liabilities in the consolidated balance sheet.

 

 

 

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Movement in total regulatory capital

             

 

 
    

2013 

£m 

    

2012  

£m  

 

 

 

Core Tier 1 capital as at 1 January

     41,722          42,093     

Profit for the period

     1,297          181     

Removal of own credita

             3,484     

Dividends paid

     (1,672)         (1,427)    

 

 

Retained regulatory capital generated from earnings

     (373)         2,238     

Rights issue

     5,830          –     

Movement in reserves – impact of ordinary shares and share schemes

     1,203          (165)    

Movement in currency translation reserves

     (1,767)         (1,548)    

Movement in retirement benefit reserves

     (515)         (1,235)    

Other reserves movements

     17          33     

 

 

Movement in other qualifying reserves

     4,768          (2,915)    

Movement in regulatory adjustments and deductions:

     

Defined benefit pension adjustmenta

     146          53     

Goodwill and intangible asset balancesa

             (62)    

50% excess of expected losses over impairmenta

     (139)         (142)    

50% of securitisation positions

     494          320     

Other regulatory adjustments

     162          137     

 

 

Core Tier 1 capital as at 31 December

     46,784          41,722     

Other Tier 1 capital as at 1 January

     9,513          7,407     

Regulatory adjustments and other movements

     (89)         (82)    

50% of material holdings

     (218)         2,141     

50% of the tax on excess of expected losses over impairment

     (170)         47     

 

 

Tier 1 capital as at 31 December

     55,820          51,235     

Tier 2 capital as at 1 January

     16,327          16,323     

Issuance of contingent capital notes and subordinated notes

     652          2,258     

Redemption of subordinated notes

     (1,391)         (2,672)    

Amortisation adjustments

     349          (155)    

Regulatory adjustments and other movements

     (220)         (612)    

Reserves arising on revaluation of propertya

     (32)         14     

Unrealised gains on available for sale equitya

     43          (718)    

Collectively assessed impairment allowances

     (127)         (383)    

50% of material holdings

     (218)         2,141     

50% excess of expected losses over impairment (gross of tax)

     31          (189)    

50% of securitisation positions

     494          320     

 

 

Tier 2 capital as at 31 December

     15,906          16,327     

Other deductions from total capital as at 1 January

     (1,689)         (2,588)    

Investments that are not material holdings or qualifying holdings

     371          852     

Other deductions from total capital

     262          47     

 

 

Other deductions from total capital as at 31 December

 

    

 

(1,056)

 

  

 

    

 

(1,689) 

 

  

 

 

 

Total regulatory capital as at 31 December

     70,670          65,873     

 

 

Note

a The capital impacts of these items are net of tax.

 

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Risk review >

Funding risk – Capital continued

  

 

 

 

 

The following table represents risk weighted assets (RWAs) by risk type and business, using specific risk measurement approaches as defined under CRD III.

 

Risk Weighted Assets (RWAs) by risk type and business

 
     Credit risk     Counterparty
credit risk
    Market risk     Operational 
risk 
    Total
RWAs
 

As at 31 December 2013

   

 

STD

£m

  

  

   
 
F-IRB
£m
  
  
   

 

A-IRB 

£m 

  

  

   
 
 
 
Internal
model
method
£m
  
  
  
  
   
 
 
 
Non- 
model 
method 
£m 
  
  
  
  
   

 

STD

£m

  

  

   
 
 
Modelled
VaR
£m
  
 
  
   
 
 
 
 
 
Charges 
add-on 
and 
non-VaR 
modelled 
£m 
  
  
  
  
  
  
    £m         £m   
                                                                                 

UK RBB

    2,639               34,765                –                       –         6,680         44,084   

Europe RBB

    4,206               9,568                                     –         2,128         15,906   

Africa RBB

    5,196        4,820        8,400                                     –         3,965         22,384   

Barclaycard

    18,070               16,479                –                       –         6,594         41,143   

Investment Bank

    7,306        3,142        41,031         20,847        6,120         16,957        14,932        7,490         24,807         142,632   

Corporate Bank

    22,582        2,846        36,132         649                             –         6,717         68,928   

Wealth and Investment Management

    11,209        225        1,796                230                       –         3,261         16,721   

Head Office Functions and Other

                       

Operations

    168               2,684                –                       –         159         3,011   
                                                                                 

Total RWAs

    71,376        11,033        150,855         21,496        6,359         16,957        14,932        7,490         54,311         354,809   
                                                                                 

As at 31 December 2012

                       

UK RBB

    1,163               31,401                –                       –         6,524         39,088   

Europe RBB

    5,051               8,786                                     –         1,955         15,795   

Africa RBB

    3,801        5,778        10,602                                     –         4,344         24,532   

Barclaycard

    17,326               13,957                –                       –         6,553         37,836   

Investment Bank

    9,386        3,055        48,000         25,127        4,264         25,396        22,497        15,429         24,730         177,884   

Corporate Bank

    28,295        3,430        31,897         500        –                       –         6,736         70,858   

Wealth and Investment Management

    11,647        317        707                199                       –         3,184         16,054   

Head Office Functions and Other

                       

Operations

    205               4,961                –                       –         160         5,326   
                                                                                 

Total RWAs

    76,874        12,580        150,311         25,627        4,473         25,396        22,497        15,429         54,186         387,373   
                                                                                 

The table below outlines the 2013 changes in RWAs, split by risk type and key drivers for the movements. A more comprehensive basis of preparation for this table is disclosed within the Barclays Pillar 3 report on page 24.

 

 

 

Movement analysis of RWAs

 

 

 
     Credit
Risk
£bn
    Counterparty
credit risk
£bn
    Market
risk
£bn
   

Operational
risk

£bn

    Total
£bn
 

 

 

As at 1 January 2013

     239.8        30.1        63.3        54.2         387.4    

Book size

     6.0        (2.1     (17.9     0.1         (13.9)   

Acquisitions and disposals (including Exit Quadrant)

     (7.7     (0.2     (3.6     0.1         (11.4)   

Book quality

     (4.5     0.2        (0.1     –         (4.4)   

Model updates

     2.6        0.8        (0.1     –         3.3    

Methodology and policy

     1.6        (0.2     –         –         1.4    

Foreign exchange movementa

     (4.6     (0.3     (0.2     (0.1     (5.2)   

Other

     0.1        (0.4     (2.1     –         (2.4)   

 

 

As at 31 December 2013

     233.3        27.9        39.3        54.3         354.8    

 

 

RWAs decreased by £32.6bn, reflecting:

 

¡   Reductions in book size decreased RWAs by £13.9bn, primarily driven by reduced sovereign exposure and risk reductions in the trading book, offset by asset growth in UK RBB and Barclaycard;

 

¡   Acquisitions and disposals decreased RWAs by £11.4bn, primarily driven by Exit Quadrant reductions, offset by the acquisition of Barclays Direct;

 

¡   Book quality improved resulting in a RWA reduction of £4.4bn, primarily driven by changing risk profile within UK RBB, Corporate Bank and the Investment Bank;

 

¡   Model updates increased RWAs by £3.3bn, primarily driven by model changes within Barclaycard in order to meet changes in regulatory guidance;

 

¡   Methodology and policy changes increased RWAs by £1.4bn, driven by changes to the treatment of forbearance, offset by improvements to the application of collateral to credit exposures;

 

¡   Foreign exchange movements decreased RWAs by £5.2bn, primarily driven by the appreciation of GBP against ZAR; and

 

¡   Other decreased RWAs by £2.4bn, primarily driven by changes in measurement within the trading book.

Note

a Foreign exchange movement does not include FX for IMM, Modelled Market Risk or Exit Quadrant.

 

 

 

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CRD IV as implemented by the Prudential Regulation Authority

The new Capital Requirements Regulation and amended Capital Requirements Directive have implemented Basel 3 within the EU (collectively known as CRD IV) with effect from 1 January 2014. However, certain aspects of CRD IV are dependent on final technical standards to be issued by the European Banking Authority (EBA) and adopted by the European Commission as well as UK implementation of the rules. Barclays has calculated RWAs, Capital and Leverage ratios reflecting our interpretation of the current rules and guidance. Further changes to the impact of CRD IV may emerge as the requirements are finalised and implemented within Barclays.

Capital ratios

Barclays continues to be in excess of minimum CRD IV capital ratios on both a transitional and fully loaded basis.

As at 31 December 2013 Barclays exceeded the PRA target fully loaded CET1 ratio of 7%. On a transitional basis the PRA has implemented a minimum requirement CET1 ratio of 4%, Tier 1 ratio of 5.5% (in 2014) and Total Capital ratio of 8%.

Barclays’ current regulatory target is to meet a fully loaded CET1 ratio of 9% by 2019, plus a Pillar 2A add-on. The 9% comprises the required 4.5% minimum CET1 ratio and, phased in from 2016, a Combined Buffer Requirement made up of a Capital Conservation Buffer (CCB) of 2.5% and an expected Globally Systemically Important Institution (G-SII) buffer of 2%.

Under current PRA guidance, the Pillar 2A add-on will need to be met with 56% CET1 from 2015, which would equate to approximately 1.4%a of RWAs if the requirement were to be applied today. The Pillar 2A add-on would be expected to vary over time according to the PRA’s individual capital guidance.

In addition, a Counter-Cyclical Capital Buffer (CCCB) and/or additional Sectoral Capital Requirements (SCR) may be required by the Bank of England to protect against perceived threats to financial stability. CRD IV also includes the potential for a Systemic Risk Buffer (SRB). These buffers could be applied at the Group level or at a legal entity, sub-consolidated or portfolio level. No CCCB, SCR or SRB has currently been set by the Bank of England.

Capital resources

The PRA has announced the acceleration of transitional provisions relating to CET1 deductions and filters so the fully loaded requirements are applicable from 1 January 2014, with the exception of unrealised gains on available for sale debt and equity. As a result, transitional capital ratios are now closely aligned to fully loaded ratios.

Following the issuance of the EBA’s final draft technical standard on own funds, a deduction has been recognised for foreseeable dividends. As at 31 December 2013, this represents an accrual for the final dividend for 2013, calculated at 3.5p per share, and the coupons on other equity accounted instruments.

Grandfathering limits on capital instruments, previously qualifying as Tier 1 and Tier 2, are unchanged under the PRA transitional rules.

The Prudential Valuation Adjustment (PVA) is shown as fully deducted from CET1 upon adoption of CRD IV. PVA is subject to a technical standard being drafted by the EBA and the impact is currently based on methodology agreed with the PRA. The PVA deduction as at 31 December 2013 was £2.5bn.

Barclays continues to recognise minority interests in eligible subsidiaries within African operations as CET1 (subject to regulatory haircuts prescribed in CRD IV) in accordance with our application of regulatory requirements on own funds.

As a result of the application of the EBA’s final draft technical standard, PRA guidance and management actions taken during 2013, net long non-significant holdings in financial entities amount to £3.5bn and are below the 10% CET1 threshold that would require a capital deduction.

RWAs

The PRA has confirmed Barclays model approvals under CRD IV, with certain provisions reflecting relevant changes to the rules and guidance; the impact of which has been reflected in our CRD IV disclosures where applicable. Barclays models are subject to continuous monitoring, update and regulatory review, which may result in future changes to CRD IV capital requirements.

It is assumed that corporates, pension funds and sovereigns that meet the eligibility conditions are exempt from CVA volatility charges.

Under CRD IV rules, all Central Clearing Counterparties (CCPs) are deemed to be ‘Qualifying’ on a transitional basis. The final determination of Qualifying status will be made by the European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA).

RWAs include 1250% risk weighting of securitisation positions that were previously deducted from Core Tier 1 and Tier 2 capital. The RWA increases are reflected in Credit Risk, Counterparty Credit Risk and Market Risk.

Securitisation RWAs include the impact of CRD IV on applying either standardised or advanced methods for securitisation exposures dependent on the character of the underlying assets.

Note

a Based on a point in time assessment made by the PRA, at least annually. The PRA is developing proposals to reform its Pillar 2 framework and, as noted in PS7/13 (PRA policy statement PS7/13 on strengthening capital standards published in December 2013), it expects to consult on those proposals during the course of 2014. The EBA is also developing guidelines on the Supervisory Review and Evaluation Process (SREP) and on Pillar 2 capital, which are likely to affect how the PRA approaches Pillar 2.

 

LOGO
 

 

 

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Risk review >

Funding risk – Capital continued

  

 

 

 

 

 

 

Impact of CRD IV – Capital

      

 

 

As at 31 December 2013

  

Fully-loaded  

£bn  

 

 

 

Core Tier 1 capital (CRD III)

     46.8     

RWA (CRD III)

     354.8     

Core Tier 1 ratio (CRD III)

     13.2%    

CRD IV impact on Core Tier 1 capital:

  

Conversion from securitisation deductions to RWAs

     0.5     

Prudential Valuation Adjustment (PVA)

     (2.5)    

Debit Valuation Adjustment (DVA)

     (0.2)    

Expected losses over impairment

     (1.3)    

Deferred tax assets deduction

     (1.0)    

Excess minority interest

     (0.6)    

Pensions

     (0.2)    

Foreseeable dividends

     (0.7)    

Gains on available for sale equity and debt

     0.2     

Other

     (0.6)    

 

 

CET1 capital

     40.4     

Tier 1 capital

     42.7     

Total capital

     61.6     

 

 

RWAs (CRD III)

     354.8     

CRD IV impact to RWAs:

  

Credit Valuation Adjustment (CVA)

     17.3     

Securitisation

     19.3     

Other Counterparty Credit Risk (including Central Counterparty Clearing)

     30.6     

Othera

     13.6     

 

 

RWA impact

     80.8     

CRD IV RWAs

 

    

 

435.6  

 

  

 

 

 

CET1 ratio

     9.3%    

Tier 1 ratio

     9.8%    

Total capital ratio

     14.1%    

 

 

As at 31 December 2013, assuming 2013 was the first year of application under the PRA’s transitional rules, which reflect the maximum pace of transition, Barclays CET1 ratio would be 9.2%b,c, the Tier 1 ratio would be 11.5% and the total capital ratio would be 15.3%.

 

 

 

CRD IV – RWA by risk type and business

 

 

 

As at 31 December 2013

   Credit risk
£m
     Counterparty
credit risk
£m
     Market risk
£m
    

Operational

risk

£m

    

Total  

CRD IV RWAs  

£m  

 

 

 

UK RBB

     37,456                         6,680         44,136     

Europe RBB

     14,084         4         2         2,128         16,218     

Africa RBB

     18,838         3                 3,965         22,806     

Barclaycard

     33,859                         6,594         40,453     

Investment Bank

     69,621         58,188         69,029         24,807         221,645     

Corporate Bank

     63,101         651                 6,717         70,469     

Wealth and Investment Management

     13,714         231         74         3,261         17,280     

Head Office Functions and Other Operations

     2,389                         159         2,548     

 

 

Total CRD IV RWAs

     253,062         59,077         69,105         54,311         435,555     

 

 

Notes

a Other CRD IV impacts to RWAs include deferred tax asset, significant holdings in financial institutions and other items.
b Difference to fully loaded ratio arises from an additional capital deduction for unrealised gains on available for sale debt and equity of £0.2bn.
c The transitional CET1 ratio according to the FSA October 2012 transitional statement would be 11.3%.

 

 

 

 

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Leverage ratio requirements

CRD IV introduces a non-risk based leverage ratio that is intended to act as a supplementary back-stop to the risk-based capital measures. The CRD IV leverage ratio is calculated as CRD IV Tier 1 capital divided by CRD IV leverage exposure. Under CRD IV, banks are required to report their leverage ratio for supervisory review purposes from 2014 and from 2015 banks are required to publish their leverage ratios in Pillar 3 disclosures, with the expectation that a binding Pillar I requirement will be introduced across the EU from 2018. The EBA is tasked with monitoring banks’ submissions with regard to the leverage ratio by the end of 2016 which may result in further changes to the leverage ratio.

The PRA has communicated its expectation that Barclays meets a 3% estimated PRA leverage ratio by June 2014. The estimated PRA leverage ratio is calculated on the fully loaded CRD IV Tier 1 capital base adjusted for certain PRA defined deductions, and a PRA adjusteda CRD IV leverage exposure measure.

Barclays expects to meet the leverage expectation of 3% communicated by the PRA.

Barclays has disclosed an estimated leverage ratio based on our understanding of the requirements and guidance of CRD IV as currently published and is subject to further change as the rules are fully implemented. The estimated ratio does not take account of the finalisation of the Basel 3 leverage ratio framework issued by the Basel Committee on 12 January 2014.

CRD IV leverage ratio calculation

In calculating the CRD IV leverage ratio the IFRS balance sheet is taken as a starting point and the following key adjustments to total assets have been applied:

 

¡   Derivatives netting adjustment: regulatory netting applied across asset and liability mark-to-market derivative positions pursuant to legally enforceable bilateral netting agreements and meeting the requirements of CRD IV;

 

¡   Potential Future Exposure (PFE) on derivatives: regulatory add-on for potential future credit exposures, calculated in accordance with the CRD IV mark-to-market method by assigning standardised percentages to the notional values on derivative contracts;

 

¡   Securities Financing Transactions (SFTs) adjustments: under CRD IV, the IFRS measure of SFTs is replaced with the Financial Collateral Comprehensive Method (FCCM) measure, calculated as an add-on equal to exposure less collateral, taking into account master netting agreements and adjusting for volatility haircuts;

 

¡   Undrawn Commitments: regulatory add-ons relating to off balance sheet undrawn commitments are based on a standardised credit conversion factor of 10% for unconditionally cancellable commitments and 100% for all other commitments. The rules specify relief to be applied to trade finance related undrawn commitments which are deemed to be medium/low risk (20%) and medium risk (50%);

 

¡   Regulatory deductions: items (comprising goodwill and intangibles, deferred tax asset permanent losses, own paper, cash flow hedge reserve, pension assets and PVA) that are deducted from the capital measure are also deducted from total leverage exposure to ensure consistency between the numerator and denominator;

 

¡   Other adjustments: includes adjustments required to change from an IFRS scope of consolidation to a regulatory scope of consolidation, adjustments for significant investments in financial sector entities that are consolidated for accounting purposes but not for regulatory purposes, and the removal of IFRS reduction in assets for the recognition of Credit Risk Mitigation and the netting of loans with deposits; and

 

¡   In addition, in accordance with SS3/13b the estimated PRA adjusted leverage exposure allows for further adjustments that reduce leverage exposure by £14bn. These adjustments:

 

  *   Exclude potential future exposure on the qualifying central clearing counterparties (QCCPs) legs of client clearing transactions where Barclays does not guarantee the performance of the QCCP to the client
  *   Allow for the netting of assets with cash collateral received for variation margin in relation to derivatives trades to facilitate customer central clearing as well as cash collateral received and posted on Barclays own derivative transactions with QCCPs.

Basel Committee leverage ratio

On 12 January 2014, the Basel Committee announced the finalisation of its revised rules for calculating the Basel 3 leverage ratio. These included a number of elements that would require amendments to CRD IV if adopted in the EU, although implementation timeframes within the EU are not yet clear. Compared to the current CRD IV implementation, the revised rules contain elements that will increase leverage exposure; including capturing a calculation for net written credit derivatives based upon their notional value and the inclusion of netted cash legs of SFTs. The revised rules also include elements that will reduce leverage exposure including, the removal of volatility haircuts in relation to the SFTs’ add-on, the ability to net down derivative MTM exposures with eligible cash collateral (this element includes the impact of the PRA rule changes, and expands upon them), and more favourable credit conversion factors for undrawn commitments. Based on an initial high level impact analysis we have estimated the changes would decrease the CRD IV leverage ratio by approximately 20 basis points prior to management actions.

Notes

a Adjusted to avoid creating disincentives to facilitate central clearing for customers and cash variation margin received and posted (as specified under SS3/132).
b PRA Supervisory Statement SS3/13 on Capital and leverage ratios for major UK banks and building societies published in November 2013.

 

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Risk review >

Funding risk – Capital continued

  

 

 

 

 

 

Estimated impact of CRD IV – leverage

 

Fully loaded Leverage exposure

  

IFRS Balance
Sheet

As at
31.12.13

£bn

    

Leverage
exposure

As at
31.12.13

£bn

    

Leverage  

exposure  

As at  

30.06.13  

£bn  

 

Derivatives

        

IFRS derivative financial instruments

     324          324        403  

Additional netting adjustments for derivatives

        (260)       (324) 

Potential future exposure on derivatives

        256        308  

 

Total derivatives

        320        387  

Securities Financing Transaction (SFTs)

        

Reverse repurchase agreements and other similar secured lending

     187          187        223  

Remove IFRS reverse repurchase agreements and other similar secured lending

        (187)       (223) 

Add leverage exposure measure for SFTs

        92        93  

 

Total securities financing transactions

        92        93  

Other assets and adjustments

        

Loans and advances and other assets

     801          801        907  

Undrawn commitments

        179        190  

Regulatory deductions and other adjustments

        (15)       (18) 

 

Total other assets and adjustments

        965        1,079  

 

Total exposure

     1,312          1,377        1,559  

PRA adjustment to CRD IV leverage exposure

        (14)       –  

 

PRA adjusted leverage exposure

        1,363        1,559  

 

 

Leverage ratio

         

Leverage
ratio

As at
31.12.13

    

Leverage  

ratio  

As at  

30.06.13  

 

CET1 capital

        40.4        38.1  

Additional Tier 1 capital

        2.3        0.2  

Tier 1 capital

        42.7        38.3  

PRA deductions to CET1 capitala

        (2.2)       (4.1) 

 

PRA adjusted Tier 1 capital

        40.5        34.2  

CRD IV fully loaded leverage ratio

        3.1%        2.5% 

PRA fully loaded leverage ratio

        3.0%        2.2% 

 

The estimated PRA leverage exposure decreased to £1,363bn (June 2013: £1,559bn). Excluding the impact of movements in foreign currency, leverage exposure reduced approximately £140bn driven by reductions in loans and advances, trading portfolio assets and potential future exposure on derivatives.

Applying the Basel 3 2010 text for the calculation of leverage would result in an estimated leverage exposure of £1,521bn (June 2013: £1,665bn), reflecting an increase of £144bn in the SFT exposure calculation from the CRD IV exposure. The estimated fully loaded leverage ratio would be 2.8% (June 2013: 2.3%) on this basis.

Note

a The PRA adjustment to CET1 capital as at 30 June 2013 included incremental expected loss charges on specific portfolios deemed vulnerable by the PRA and a deduction relating to the calculation of PVA. No adjustment for PVA was applied as at 31 December 2013 as the underlying calculation of CET1 capital has been updated to reflect the agreed change in methodology.

 

 

 

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Economic capital (EC) and its use as part of the ICAAP assessment (Pillar 2)

RWAs, as provided in previous pages, are measured based on generic regulatory capital rules that assume all financial institutions have a well diversified portfolio. An alternative approach to measure Capital risk is to use an Economic Capital calculation approach that takes into consideration firm specific concentrations (e.g. sector, geography, single name), risk exposures and portfolio correlations.

Economic capital is an internal measure of the risk profile of the bank expressed as the estimated stress loss at a 99.98% confidence level. Barclays assesses capital requirements by measuring the Group’s risk profile using internally developed models. The Group assigns economic capital primarily within the following risk categories: credit risk, market risk, operational risk, fixed asset risk (mainly property) and pension risk.

The Group regularly reviews its economic capital methodology and benchmarks outputs to external reference points. The framework uses default probabilities during average credit conditions, rather than those prevailing at the balance sheet date, thus seeking to remove cyclicality from the economic capital calculation. The economic capital framework takes into consideration time horizon, correlation of risks and risk concentrations. Economic capital is allocated on a consistent basis across all of Barclays businesses and risk activities.

UK firms, as part of Pillar 2 framework, are required to update annually the firm’s Internal Capital Adequacy Assessment Process (ICAAP). The information provided by Barclays within the ICAAP is used by the PRA/BoE to support the regulator capital solvency review. Requirements for local ICAAPs also exist in a number of jurisdictions in which Barclays operates (e.g. South Africa). The Group ICAAP is used to assesses Group-wide capital adequacy to cover for all risks to which the Group is exposed.

As part of the Group ICAAP, and in line with PRA/BoE rules, the internal measure of Capital (EC) is used to support the Group’s assessment of the appropriateness of capital allocated to each risk type. Economic Capital is also used to assess capital adequacy of a number of Barclays subsidiaries (as part of Local ICAAPs). Key risks considered as part of the Group and Local ICAAPs are:

 

¡   Pillar 1 risks (i.e. Credit, Market and Operational risk) – for which capital requirements are primarily based on the Regulatory Capital framework (IRB and Standardised approaches) and calculated in line with PRA rules set out in GENPRU/BIPRU. Regulatory Capital requirements are then benchmarked against our Economic Capital calculations as part of our ICAAP assessment.

 

¡   Non-Pillar 1 risks – for which we have bespoke approaches that are mainly included in the EC framework. Main non-Pillar 1 risks:

 

  *   Pension risk – Barclays does not have ownership of the investments within the pension fund but rather works with the Trustees’ dedicate investment team to ensure that the risk profile is appropriate and within risk appetite;
  *   Concentration risk (e.g. single name, industry, geography) – managed and monitored as part of BAU, mainly through Group risk appetite framework, policy setting, monitoring, stress testing and EC framework. For EC purposes concentration risk is accounted for within each relevant risk type (mainly as part of the Wholesale Credit Risk EC calculation); and
  *   Interest Rate Risk in the Banking Book (IRRBB), also called non-traded interest rate risk (included as part of Market Risk in graphics below) – Barclays’ objective is to minimise non-traded interest rate risk and this is achieved by transferring IRRBB from the business to Barclays Treasury, which in turn hedges the net exposure via Barclays Investment Bank with the external market. Limits exist to ensure no material risk is retained within any business/product area.

 

LOGO

  

LOGO

Notes

a Figures are rounded to the nearest £50m for presentation purposes.
b Total period end spot economic capital requirement (including pension risk) as at 31 December 2013 stood at £31,050m (2012: £31,050m).
c Economic capital charts exclude the economic capital calculated for pension risk (spot pension risk for 2013 is £4,450m compared with £3,400m in 2012).
d Includes Transition Businesses and capital for central function risk.
e Includes credit risk loans.
f Includes investments in associates, private equity risk, insurance risk, residual value and business risk.

 

LOGO
 

 

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Risk review >

Funding risk – Liquidity

  

 

 

 

 

 

   LOGO   Liquidity risk is the risk that a firm, although solvent, either does not have sufficient financial resources available to enable it to meet its obligations as they fall due, or can secure such resources only at excessive cost. This also results in a firm’s inability to meet regulatory liquidity requirements. This risk is inherent in all banking operations and can be affected by a range of Group-specific and market-wide events.

 

 

  All disclosures in this section (pages 208 to 224) are unaudited and exclude BAGL unless otherwise stated

 

Barclays has a comprehensive Liquidity Risk Management Framework (the Liquidity Framework) for managing the Group’s liquidity risk. The Liquidity Framework meets the PRA’s standards and is designed to ensure the Group maintains liquidity resources that are sufficient in amount and quality and a funding profile that is appropriate to meet the liquidity risk appetite. The Liquidity Framework is delivered via a combination of policy formation, review and governance, analysis, stress testing, limit setting and monitoring.

Liquidity risk is managed separately at Barclays Africa Group Limited (BAGL) due to local currency and funding requirements. Unless stated otherwise, all disclosures in this section exclude BAGL and they are reported on a stand-alone basis. Adjusting for local requirements, BAGL liquidity risk is managed on a consistent basis to Barclays Group.

For further detail on liquidity risk governance and framework see page 418.

Liquidity risk stress testing

Under the Liquidity Framework, Barclays has established a Liquidity Risk Appetite (LRA) together with the appropriate limits for the management of the liquidity risk. This is the level of liquidity risk the Group chooses to take in pursuit of its business objectives and in meeting its regulatory obligations. The key expression of the liquidity risk is through internal stress testing. This involves comparing the liquidity pool with anticipated stressed net contractual and contingent outflows for each of three stress scenarios.

Liquidity Risk Appetite

The three primary liquidity stress scenarios run by the Group under its LRA and aligned to the PRA’s prescribed stresses are:

 

¡   90 day market-wide stress event;

 

¡   30 day Barclays-specific stress event; and

 

¡   combined 30 day market-wide and Barclays-specific stress event.

Under normal market conditions, the liquidity pool is managed to be at least 100% of anticipated outflows under each of these stress scenarios. The 30 day Barclays-specific stress scenario, results in the greatest net outflows of each of the liquidity stress tests. The combined 30 day scenario assumes outflows consistent with a firm-specific stress for the first two weeks of the stress period, followed by relatively lower outflows consistent with a market-wide stress for the remainder of the stress period.

 

 

 

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Key LRA assumptions include:

 

 

Liquidity risk driver

   Barclays specific stress

 

  Wholesale unsecured
  funding
  

¡  Zero rollover of wholesale deposits, senior unsecured debt and conduit commercial paper

 

  

¡  Prime brokerage: 100% withdrawal of excess client derivative margin and cash.

 

 

  Wholesale   secured
  funding
  

¡  Zero rollover of trades secured on less-liquid collateral

 

  

¡  Rollover of trades secured on highly-liquid collateral, subject to haircut widening.

 

 

  Deposit outflow   

¡  Substantial deposit outflows of Retail and Business Banking, Corporate Banking, Wealth and Investment Management as Barclays is seen as greater credit risk than competitors.

 

 

  Funding concentration   

¡  Additional outflows recognized against concentration of providers of wholesale secured financing

 

  

¡  Largest less-liquid secured funding counterparty refuses to roll trades.

 

 

  Intra-day liquidity   

¡  Anticipated liquidity required to support intra-day requirements at payment and settlement systems.

 

 

  Intra-group   

¡  Anticipated liquidity required to support material subsidiaries, based on stand-alone stress tests.

 

 

  Off-balance sheet   

¡  Significant drawdown on committed facilities based on facility type, counterparty type and counterparty creditworthiness

  

¡  Outflow of all collateral owed to counterparties but not yet called

  

¡  Collateral outflows contingent upon a multi-notch credit rating downgrade of Barclays Bank PLC

  

¡  Variation margin outflows due to market movements, taking into account the mismatch between collateralised and uncollateralised positions

  

¡  Increase in the firm’s derivative initial margin requirement.

 

 

  Franchise viability   

¡  Liquidity required in order to meet outflows that are non-contractual in nature but necessary in order to support the firm’s ongoing franchise (for example, market-making activities).

 

 

  Mitigating actions   

¡  Monetisation of unencumbered assets that are of known liquidity value to the firm but held outside the liquidity pool (subject to haircut/valuation adjustment).

 

 

Liquidity regulation

Since June 2010, the Group has reported its liquidity position against Individual Liquidity Guidance (ILG) provided by the PRA. The PRA defines both eligible liquidity pool assets and stress outflows against reported balances.

The Group also monitors its position against anticipated Basel 3 liquidity metrics – the Liquidity Coverage Ratio (LCR) and the Net Stable Funding Ratio (NSFR). The LCR is designed to promote short-term resilience of a bank’s liquidity risk profile by ensuring that it has sufficient high quality liquid resources to survive an acute stress scenario lasting for 30 days. The NSFR has a time horizon of at least 12 months and has been developed to promote a sustainable maturity structure of assets and liabilities.

In January 2013, the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision published a final standard for the LCR. The European CRR requires phased compliance with LCR standard from January 2015 at minimum of 60% increasing to 100% by January 2018.

In January 2014, the BCBS published a consultation proposing revision to the NSFR standards. The minimum NSFR requirement is to be introduced in January 2018 at 100%.

The methodology for estimating the LCR and NSFR is based on an interpretation of the Basel standards and includes a number of assumptions which are subject to change prior to the implementation of CRD IV.

Based on the revised Basel standards, as at 31 December 2013, Barclays had a surplus to both of these metrics with an estimated Basel 3 LCR of 102% (2012: 126%) and an estimated Basel 3 NSFR of 110% (2012: 112%).

 

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Risk review >

Funding risk – Liquidity continued

  

 

 

 

 

Comparing internal and regulatory liquidity stress tests

The LRA stress scenarios, the PRA ILG and Basel 3 LCR are all broadly comparable short term stress scenarios in which the adequacy of defined liquidity resources is assessed against contractual and contingent stress outflows. The PRA ILG and the Basel 3 LCR stress tests provide an independent assessment of the Group’s liquidity risk profile.

 

 

Stress Test

   Barclays LRA    PRA ILG    Basel 3 LCR    Basel 3 NSFR

 

Time Horizon    30-90 days    3 months    30 days    12 months

 

Calculation    Liquid assets to net cash    Liquid assets to net cash    Liquid assets to net cash    Stable funding resources
   outflows    outflows    outflows    to stable funding
            requirements

 

As at 31 December 2013, the Group held eligible liquid assets in excess of 100% of stress requirements for all three LRA stress tests:

 

 

 

Compliance with internal and regulatory stress tests

 

 

 

As at 31 December 2013

   Barclays’ LRA
(30 day
Barclay
specific
requirement)a
£bn
   

Estimated  
Basel 3 LCR  
(revised text  
January  
2013)   

£bn  

 

 

 

Total eligible liquidity pool

     127        130   

 

 

Asset inflows

            12   

Stress outflows

    

Retail and commercial deposit outflows

     (47     (60

Wholesale funding

     (33     (23

Net secured funding

     (14     (12

Derivatives

     (7     (7

Contractual credit rating downgrade exposure

     (13     (13

Drawdowns of loan commitments

     (7     (25

Other

     (1       

 

 

Total stress net cash flows

     (122     (128

 

 

Surplus

     5        2   

 

 

Liquidity pool as a percentage of anticipated net cash flows

     104%        102%   

 

 

As at 31 December 2012

     129%        126%   

 

 

In 2013, Barclays Group right sized its liquidity pool to reduce the large LRA and LCR surpluses to support the leverage plan and reduce the costs of surplus liquidity, while maintaining compliance with its internal liquidity risk appetite and external regulatory requirements.

Barclays plans to maintain its surplus to the internal and regulatory stress requirements at an efficient level, continuing to monitor the money markets closely, in particular for early indications of the tightening of available funding. In these conditions, the nature and severity of the stress scenarios are reassessed and appropriate action taken with respect to the liquidity pool. This may include further increasing the size of pool or monetising the pool to meet stress outflows.

Note

a Of the three stress scenarios monitored as part of the LRA, the 30 day Barclays-specific scenario results in the lowest ratio at 104% (2012: 129%). This compares to 127% (2012: 141%) under the 90 day market-wide scenario and 112% (2012: 145%) under the 30 day combined scenario.

 

 

 

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Liquidity pool

The Group liquidity pool as at 31 December 2013 was £127bn (2012: £150bn). During 2013, the month-end liquidity pool ranged from £127bn to £157bn (2012: £150bn to £173bn), and the month-end average balance was £144bn (2012: £162bn). The liquidity pool is held unencumbered and is not used to support payment or clearing requirements. Such requirements are treated as part of our regular business funding. The liquidity pool is intended to offset stress outflows and comprises cash and unencumbered assets set out below. The decrease of the size of the liquidity pool during 2013 is consistent with Group plans to optimise the size of the liquidity pool, within our established liquidity risk appetite framework, while maintaining compliance with regulatory requirements. The change in the composition of the liquidity pool, from cash and deposits with central banks to government bonds, was done to reduce the overall cost of the liquidity pool.

 

 

 

Composition of the Group liquidity pool as at 31 December 2013

 

 

 
                   Liquidity pool of which
Basel 3 LCR eligibleb
        
     Liquidity
pool
£bn
    

Liquidity pool
of which PRA
eligiblea

£bn

     Level 1
£bn
     Level 2A
£bn
     2012
Liquidity
pool
 

 

 

Cash and deposits with central banksc

     43          42          41          –          85    

Government bondsd

              

AAA rated

     52         51          52          –          40    

AA+ to AA- rated

                             –            

Other government bonds

             –          –          –            

 

 

Total government bonds

     62          59          60          –          46    

Other

              

Supranational bonds and multilateral development banks

                             –            

Agencies and agency mortgage-backed securities

     10          –                            

Covered bonds (rated AA- and above)

             –          –                    

Other

             –          –          –            

 

 

Total Other

     22                          11          19    

 

 

Total as at 31 December 2013

     127          104          109          11       

Total as at 31 December 2012

     150          129          136               

The Group liquidity pool is well diversified by major currency and the Group monitors LRA stress scenarios for major currencies.

 

 

 

Liquidity pool by currency

                                  

 

 
     USD
£bn
     EUR
£bn
     GBP
£bn
     Other
£bn
     Total
£bn
 

 

 

Liquidity pool as at 31 December 2013

     31         32         38         26         127    

Liquidity pool as at 31 December 2012

     26         66         25         33         150    

 

 

Management of the Group liquidity pool

The composition of the Group liquidity pool is efficiently managed. The maintenance of the liquidity pool increases the Group’s costs as the interest expense paid on the liabilities used to fund the liquidity pool is greater than the interest income received on liquidity pool assets. This cost can be reduced by investing a greater portion of the Group liquidity pool in highly liquid assets other than cash and deposits with central banks. These assets primarily comprise government bonds and their inclusion in the liquidity pool does not compromise the liquidity position of the Group.

The composition of the liquidity pool is subject to limits set by the Board, Treasury Committee and the independent credit risk and market risk functions. In addition, the investment of the liquidity pool is monitored for concentration risk by issuer, currency, asset type and country. Given the incremental returns generated by these highly liquid assets, the risk and reward profile is continuously managed.

As at 31 December 2013, the portion of the Group liquidity pool comprised of cash and deposits with central banks reduced to £43bn (2012: £85bn) as a result of a reallocation to government bonds and other highly liquid assets.

Barclays manages the liquidity pool on a centralised basis. As at 31 December 2013, 90% of the liquidity pool was located in Barclays Bank PLC (2012: 90%) and was available to meet liquidity needs across the Group. The residual liquidity pool is held predominantly within Barclays Capital Inc. (BCI). The portion of the liquidity pool outside of Barclays Bank PLC is held against entity-specific stressed outflows and regulatory requirements. To the extent the use of this portion of the liquidity pool is restricted due to regulatory requirements, it is assumed to be unavailable to the rest of the Group.

 

Notes

a £104bn of the liquidity pool is PRA eligible as per BIPRU 12.7. In addition, there are £9bn of Level 2 assets available, as per PRA’s announcement in August 2013 that certain assets specified by PRA as Level 2 assets can be used on a transitional basis.
b The LCR-eligible assets presented in this table represent only those assets which are also eligible for the Group liquidity pool and do not include any Level 2B assets as defined by the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision.
c Of which over 95% (2012: over 95%) was placed with the Bank of England, US Federal Reserve, European Central Bank, Bank of Japan and Swiss National Bank.
d Of which over 85% (2012: over 80%) of securities are comprised of UK, US, Japan, France, Germany, Denmark and the Netherlands.

 

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Risk review >

Funding risk – Liquidity continued

  

 

 

 

 

Contingent liquidity

In addition to the Group liquidity pool, Barclays has access to other unencumbered assets which provide a source of contingent liquidity. Whilst these are not relied on in the Group’s LRA, a portion of these assets may be monetised in a stress to generate liquidity through use as collateral for secured funding or through outright sale.

In either a Barclays-specific or market-wide liquidity stress, liquidity available via market sources could be severely disrupted. In circumstances where market liquidity is unavailable or available only at heavily discounted prices, Barclays could generate liquidity via central bank facilities. The Group maintains a significant amount of collateral pre-positioned at central banks and available to raise funding.

For more detail on the Group’s other unencumbered assets see page 216.

Funding structure

The basis for sound liquidity risk management is a solid funding structure that reduces the probability of a liquidity stress leading to an inability to meet funding obligations as they fall due. The Group’s overall funding strategy is to develop a diversified funding base (both geographically and by depositor type) and maintain access to a variety of alternative funding sources, to provide protection against unexpected fluctuations, while minimising the cost of funding.

Within this, the Group aims to align the sources and uses of funding. As such, retail and commercial customer loans and advances are funded by customer deposits. Other assets together with other loans and advances and unencumbered assets are funded by long term wholesale debt and equity.

Trading portfolio assets are largely funded by repurchase agreements. The majority of reverse repurchase agreements are matched by repurchase agreements. The remainder of reverse repurchase agreements are used to settle trading portfolio liabilities. The liquidity pool is predominantly funded through wholesale markets. These funding relationships are summarised below:

 

Assetsa            Liabilitiesa      

 

£360m (2012: £362m   

Customer loans and advances

 

           £366m (2012: £335m)    Customer depositsb
£127m (2012: £ 150m)    Group liquidity pool              £82m (2012: £102m)    <1 Year wholesale funding
              £103m (2012: £138m)    >1 Year wholesale funding
£162m (2012: £163m)    Other assets            £102m (2012: £106m)    Equity and other liabilities
£340m (2012: £347m)    Reverse repurchase agreements and other similar secured borrowingc            £340m (2012: £347m)    Repurchase agreements and other similar secured borrowingc
£323m (2012: £466m)    Derivative financial instruments            £319m (2012: £460m)    Derivative financial instruments

 

 

Deposit funding (including BAGL) (audited)  

 

 

Deposit fundingd

 

 

 
     2013      2012    

 

 

Funding of loans and advances to customers

As at 31 December 2013

   Loans and
advances to
customers
£bn
     Customer
deposits
£bn
    

Loan to
deposit
ratio

%

    

Loan to  
deposit  
ratio  

%  

 

 

 

Retail and Business Banking

     234         174         

Corporate Bankinge

     61         109         

Wealth and Investment Management

     23         63         

 

 

Total funding excluding secured

     318         346         92         102   

Secured fundingf

             41         

 

 

Sub-total including secured funding

     318         387         82         88   

 

 

Retail and Business Banking, Corporate Banking and Wealth and Investment Managemente

     318         346         92         102   

Investment Bank

     41         20         

Head Office and Other Operations

     1                 

Trading settlement balances and cash collateral

     70         62         

 

 

Total

     430         428         101         110   

 

 

The Group loan to deposit ratio as at 31 December 2013 was 101% (2012: 110%).

Notes

a BAGL Group balances other than customer loans and advances of £34bn and customer deposits of £33bn are included in other assets and liabilities.
b Excluding cash collateral and settlement balances.
c Comprised of reverse repurchases that provide financing to customers collateralised by highly liquid securities on a short term basis or are used to settle short term inventory positions; repo financing of trading portfolio assets and matched cash collateral and settlement balances.
d Included within Retail, Corporate Banking, Wealth and Investment Management and the Investment Bank are BAGL Group related balances totalling £34bn of loans and advances to customers funded by £33bn of customer deposits (£7bn of which is BAGL Investment Bank).
e In addition Corporate Banking holds £15.7bn (2012: £17.6bn) loans and advances as financial assets held at fair value.
f Secured funding includes covered bonds, public securitisations, bilateral repos and central banks borrowings. These are not included within customer deposits.

 

 

 

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Retail and Business Banking, Corporate Banking and Wealth and Investment Management activities are funded with customer deposits. As at 31 December 2013, the loan to deposit ratio for these businesses was 92% (2012: 102%). The excess of the Investment Bank’s loans and advances over deposits is funded with long-term debt and equity. The Investment Bank does not rely on customer deposit funding from Retail and Business Banking, Corporate Banking and Wealth and Investment Management.

As at 31 December 2013, £122bn (2012: £112bn) of total customer deposits were insured through the UK Financial Services Compensation Scheme (FSCS) and other similar schemes. In addition to these customer deposits, there were £3bn (2012: £3bn) of other liabilities insured by governments.

Although, contractually, current accounts are repayable on demand and savings accounts at short notice, the Group’s broad base of customers – numerically and by depositor type – helps protect against unexpected fluctuations in balances. Such accounts form a stable funding base for the Group’s operations and liquidity needs. Barclays models the behaviour of both assets and liabilities to assess balance sheet funding gaps. The behavioural modelling approach reflects the forward-looking macroeconomic outlook and captures customer roll-over behaviour and optionality within a given asset or liability product. These behavioural maturities are used to determine funds transfer pricing interest rates at which businesses are rewarded and charged for sources and uses of funds.

 

 

 

Behavioural Maturity Profile (including BAGL)

                                

 

 
                         Behavioural maturity profile
cash outflow/(inflow)
 

As at 31 December 2013

   Loans and
advances to
customers
£bn
     Customer
deposits
£bn
     Customer
funding
surplus/
(deficit)
£bn
    Less
than
one
year
£bn
   

Greater than
one year

£bn

 

 

 

Retail and Business Banking

     234         174         (60     (6     (54

Corporate Banking

     61         109         48        20        28   

Wealth and Investment Management

     23         63         40        6        34   

 

 

Total Retail and Business Banking, Corporate Banking and Wealth and Investment Management funding excluding secured

     318         346         28        20        8   

 

 

As at 31 December 2012

            

Retail and Business Banking

     231         156         (75     (17     (58

Corporate Banking

     64         100         36        12        24   

Wealth and Investment Management

     21         54         33        7        26   

 

 

Total Retail and Business Banking, Corporate Banking and Wealth and Investment Management funding excluding secured

     316         310         (6     2        (8

 

 

The relatively low cash outflow within one year demonstrates that customer funding remains broadly matched from a behavioural perspective.

Wholesale funding

Wholesale funding relationships are summarised below:

 

 

 

Assets

             

 

 
     2013
£bn
     2012
£bn
 

 

 
Trading portfolio assets and other securities      63         85   

Reverse repurchase agreements

     133         132   

Reverse repurchase agreements

     53         44   

Derivative financial instruments

     323         466   

Liquidity pool

     127         150   

Other assetsa

     119         145   

 

 

 

 
  Liabilities              

 

 
     2013
£bn
     2012
£bn
 

 

 

Repurchase agreements

     196         217   

Trading portfolio liabilities

     53         44   

Derivative financial instruments

     319         460   

Less than 1 year wholesale debt

     82         102   

Greater than 1 year wholesale debt and equity

     164         194   

 

 
 

 

Trading portfolio assets are largely funded by repurchase agreements. The majority of reverse repurchase agreements (i.e. secured lending) are matched by repurchase agreements. The remainder of reverse repurchase agreements are used to settle trading portfolio liabilities (see note 19 ‘offsetting financial assets and liabilities’ for further detail on netting).

Derivative assets and liabilities are largely matched. A substantial proportion of balance sheet derivative positions qualify for counterparty netting and the remaining portions are largely offset once netted against cash collateral received and paid.

The liquidity pool is largely funded by wholesale debt, the majority of which matures in less than one year. Other assets are largely matched by term wholesale debt and equity.

Note

a Predominantly available for sale investments, trading portfolio assets, financial assets designated at fair value and loans and advances to banks funded by greater than one year wholesale debt and equity.

 

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Risk review >

Funding risk – Liquidity continued

  

 

 

 

 

Composition of wholesale funding

The Group maintains access to a variety of sources of wholesale funds in major currencies, including those available from money markets, repo markets and term investors, across a variety of distribution channels and geographies. The Group is an active participant in money markets, has direct access to US, European and Asian capital markets through its global investment banking operations and long-term investors through its clients worldwide. As a result, wholesale funding is well diversified by product, maturity, geography and major currency.

As at 31 December 2013, total wholesale funding outstanding (excluding repurchase agreements) was £186bn (2012: £240bn). £82bn (2012: £102bn) of wholesale funding matures in less than one year of which £23bn (2012: £18bn)a relates to term funding £104bn (2012: £138bn) of wholesale funding had a residual maturity of over one year. Maturing wholesale liabilities have been replaced with customer deposits to increase the resilience and sustainability of the funding structure.

As at 31 December 2013, outstanding wholesale funding comprised £35bn (2012: £40bn) of secured funding and £151bn (2012: £199bn) of unsecured funding.

 

 

 

Maturity profile of wholesale fundingb

 

 

 
     Not more
than one
month
£bn
     Over one
month but
not more
than three
months
£bn
     Over three
months
but not
more than
six months
£bn
    

Over six
months

but not

more than

nine months
£bn

     Over nine
months
but not
more than
one year
£bn
    

Sub-total

less than
one year
£bn

     Over one
year but
not more
than two
years
£bn
    

Over two
years but
not more
than
five years

£bn

     More
than five
years
£bn
     Total
£bn
 

 

 

Deposits from banks

     9.4         5.7         0.7         1.0         0.3         17.1         4.4         0.2                 21.7   

Certificates of deposit and commercial paper

     2.1         10.8         6.8         5.4         2.6         27.7         0.6         0.6         0.4         29.3   

Asset backed commercial paper

     2.7         2.1                                 4.8                                 4.8   

Senior unsecured (Public benchmark)

     2.5         0.8         2.6         1.6         0.1         7.6         3.9         6.0         3.9         21.4   

Senior unsecured (Privately placed)

     1.0         2.6         3.5         4.2         2.4         13.7         9.4         15.6         11.5         50.2   

Covered bonds/ABS

     0.3         0.4         0.4         3.3         0.6         5.0         6.9         6.0         7.1         25.0   

Subordinated liabilities

             0.2                                 0.2         0.1         2.9         17.6         20.8   

Otherc

     2.3         1.4         1.5         0.4         0.3         5.9         1.8         2.5         2.1         12.3   

 

 

Total as at 31 December 2013

     20.3         24.0         15.5         15.9         6.3         82.0         27.1         33.8         42.6         185.5   

 

 

Of which secured

     4.6         3.7         1.4         3.5         0.7         13.9         7.3         6.5         7.2         34.9   

Of which unsecured

     15.7         20.3         14.1         12.4         5.6         68.1         19.8         27.3         35.4         150.6   

 

 

Total as at 31 December 2012

     29.4         39.4         17.5         8.2         7.2         101.7         28.3         56.2         53.5         239.7   

 

 

Of which secured

     5.9         4.0         2.4         0.8         0.5         13.6         5.2         13.8         7.8         40.4   

Of which unsecured

     23.5         35.4         15.1         7.4         6.7         88.1         23.1         42.4         45.7         199.3   

 

 

Outstanding wholesale funding includes £50bn (2012: £63bn) of privately placed senior unsecured notes in issue. These notes are issued through a variety of distribution channels including intermediaries and private banks. A large proportion of end users of these products are individual retail investors.

In 2013, Barclays repaid 3bn of funding raised through the European Central Bank’s 3 year LTRO, leaving 5bn (2012: 8bn) outstanding as at 31 December 2013.

The liquidity risk of wholesale funding is carefully managed primarily through the LRA stress tests, against which the liquidity pool is held. Although not a requirement, the liquidity pool exceeded wholesale funding maturing in less than one year by £45bn (2012: £48bn).

The average maturity of wholesale funding net of the liquidity pool was at least 69 months (2012: 61 months).

Notes

a Term funding maturities comprise public benchmark and privately placed senior unsecured notes, covered bonds/asset-backed securities (ABS) and subordinated debt where the original maturity of the instrument was more than 1 year. In addition, at 31 December 2013, £3bn of these instruments were not counted towards term financing as they had an original maturity of less than 1 year.
b The composition of wholesale funds comprises the balance sheet reported deposits from banks, financial liabilities at fair value, debt securities in issue and subordinated liabilities, excluding cash collateral and settlement balances. It does not include collateral swaps, including participation in the Bank of England’s Funding for Lending Scheme. Included within deposits from banks are £4.1bn of liabilities drawn in the European Central Bank’s 3 year LTRO.
c Primarily comprised of fair value deposits (£4.6bn) and secured financing of physical gold (£5.0bn).

 

 

 

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Currency composition of wholesale debt

As at 31 December 2013 the proportion of wholesale funding by major currencies was as follows:

 

 

 

Currency composition of wholesale funds

                           

 

 
     USD
%
     EUR
%
     GBP
%
     Other
%
 

 

 

Deposits from banks

     14         55         24         7   

Certificates of deposits and commercial paper

     64         19         16         1   

Asset backed commercial paper

     87         6         7           

Senior unsecured

     30         34         16         20   

Covered bonds/ABS

     22         61         16         1   

Subordinated liabilities

     37         28         34         1   

 

 

Total as at 31 December 2013

     35         36         19         10   

 

 

Total as at 31 December 2012

     31         38         22         9   

 

 

To manage cross-currency refinancing risk Barclays manages to foreign exchange cash-flow limits, which limit risk at specific maturities. Across wholesale funding, the composition is materially unchanged.

Term financing

In 2013, term funding maturities were mostly offset by cash inflows arising from growth in customer deposits and run-off of Exit Quadrant assets, while a significant portion of the Group’s 2013 funding needs were pre-funded in 2012.

The Group issued £1bn of net term funding in 2013, including $1bn of CRD IV compliant Tier 2 capital. This issuance was an important transitional step towards Barclays end state CRD IV capital structure.

The Group has £24bn of term debt maturing in 2014 and a further £22bn maturing in 2015a. The Group expects to issue more public wholesale debt in 2014 than in 2013 in order to maintain a stable and diverse funding base by type, currency and distribution channel.

Encumbrance

Asset encumbrance arises from collateral pledged against secured funding and other collateralised obligations. Barclays funds a portion of trading portfolio assets and other securities via repurchase agreements and other similar borrowing and pledges a portion of customer loans and advances as collateral in securitisation, covered bond and other similar secured structures. Barclays monitors the mix of secured and unsecured funding sources within the Group’s funding plan and seeks to efficiently utilise available collateral to raise secured funding and meet other collateralised obligations.

As at 31 December 2013, £187bn (2012: £231bn) of the Group’s assets were encumbered (excluding reverse repurchase agreements), which primarily related to firm financing of trading portfolio assets and other securities and to funding secured against loans and advances to customers. Encumbered assets have been identified via the Group’s assets pledged process. For securities and commodities assets are considered encumbered if there has been legal title transfer against repurchase, stock lending and other similar secured borrowing agreements, trading portfolio liabilities or derivatives margin. Encumbered loans and advances have been identified where assets are pledged against external securitisations or covered bonds or have been used in external repurchase or other similar agreements with market counterparts or central banks. Additionally, encumbered assets include cash collateral posted. Encumbered assets do not include assets which may have been pledged for other reasons and do not include client activity.

In addition, £321bn (2012: £310bn) of the total £390bn (2012: £360bn) securities accepted as collateral, and held off-balance sheet, were on-pledged, the significant majority of which related to matched-book activity where reverse repurchase agreements are matched by repurchase agreements entered into to facilitate client activity. The remainder relates primarily to reverse repurchases used to settle trading portfolio liabilities as well as collateral posted against derivatives margin requirements.

Note

a Includes £0.3bn of bilateral secured funding in 2014 and £2bn in 2015.

 

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Risk review >

Funding risk – Liquidity continued

  

 

 

 

 

As at 31 December 2013, £332bn (2012: £300bn) of assets were identified as readily available. These consist of on and off-balance sheet assets that have not been identified as encumbered and are in transferable form. They include cash and securities held in the Group liquidity pool as well as additional unencumbered assets which provide a source of contingent liquidity. While these additional assets are not relied on in the Group’s LRA, a portion of these assets may be monetised in a stress to generate liquidity through use as collateral for secured funding or through outright sale. Loans and advances to customers are only classified as readily available if they are already in a form such that they can be used to raise funding without further management actions. This includes excess collateral already in secured funding vehicles and collateral pre-positioned at central banks and available for use in secured financing transactions.

As at 31 December 2013, £222bn (2012: £237bn) of assets were identified as available as collateral. These assets are not subject to any restrictions on their ability to secure funding, be offered as collateral, or sold to reduce potential future funding requirements, but are not immediately available in the normal course of business in their current form. They primarily consist of loans and advances a proportion of which would be suitable for use in secured funding structures but are conservatively classified as not readily available because they are not in transferable form.

Not available collateral consist of assets that cannot be pledged or used as security for funding due to restrictions that prevent their pledge or use as security for funding in the normal course of business.

Derivatives and reverse repo assets relate specifically to reverse repurchase agreements, derivatives and other similar secured lending. These are shown separately as these on-balance sheet assets cannot be pledged. However, these assets can give rise to the receipt of non-cash assets which are not recognised on the balance sheet, but can be used to raise secured funding or meet additional funding requirements.

 

 

 

Asset encumbrance

      

 

 
            Encumbered
assets
     Unencumbered assets      Unencumbered – cannot be
pledged as collateral
 

On-balance sheet

 

  As at 31 December 2013

   Assetsa
£bn
     Assets
pledged as
collateral
£bn
     Readily
available
assets
£bn
     Available
as collateral
£bn
     Not available
as collateral
£bn
     Derivatives
and reverse
repos
£bn
 

 

 

Cash and balances at central banks

     43.8          –          43.8          –          –          –    

Trading portfolio assets

     130.6          65.3          65.3          –          –          –    

Financial assets at fair value

     36.6          0.3          9.1          21.0          0.9          5.3    

Derivative financial instruments

     322.7          –          –          –          –          322.7    

Loans and advances – banksb

     16.6          –          5.6          4.0          7.0          –    

Loans and advances – customersb

     324.7          62.6          66.1          196.0          –          –    

Cash collateral and settlement balances

     91.3          50.6          –          –          40.7          –    

Available for sale financial investments

     86.8          8.4          74.6          0.5          3.3          –    

Reverse repurchase agreements

     186.0          –          –          –          –          186.0    

Property plant and equipment

     3.8          – 
        –          –          3.8          –    

Items in the course of collection from other banks

     1.0          –          –          –          1.0          –    

Other assets

     3.5          –          –          –          3.5          –    

Current tax asset

     0.2          –          –          –          0.2          –    

Investment in associates and joint ventures

     0.6          –          –          –          0.6          –    

Goodwill and intangible assets

     6.3          –          –          –          6.3          –    

Deferred tax assets

     4.8          –          –          –          4.8          –    

Retirement benefit assets

     –          –          –          –          –          –    

 

 

Total on-balance sheet

     1,259.3          187.2          264.5          221.5          72.1          514.0    

 

 

 

 

Off-balance sheet

     

 

                   Unencumbered assets      Unencumbered –cannot be
pledged as collateral
     Collateral
received
£bn
     Collateral
received of
which
on-pledge
£bn
     Readily
available
assets
£bn
     Available
as collateral
£bn
     Not available
as collateral
£bn
      

 

Fair value of securities accepted as collateral

     389.8          321.1          67.2          –          1.5       

 

Total unencumbered collateral

           331.7          221.5          73.6       

 

Notes

a The amounts included in the table are for the Group excluding BAGL. The assets relating to BAGL amount to £53bn (2012: £56.2bn), of which nil (2012: £0.2bn) are encumbered assets. Securities received as collateral by BAGL of £0.7bn (2012: £0.6bn) have also been excluded.
b Excluding cash collateral and settlement balances.

 

 

 

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Table of Contents
  

 

 

 

 

 

 

Asset encumbrance

      

 

 
            Encumbered
assets
     Unencumbered assets      Unencumbered – cannot be
pledged as collateral
 

On-balance sheet

As at 31 December 2012

   Assetsa
£bn
     Assets
pledged as
collateral
£bn
     Readily
available
assets
£bn
     Available
as collateral
£bn
     Not available
as collateral
£bn
    

Derivatives
and reverse
repos

£bn

 

 

 

Cash and balances at central banks

     84.6          –          84.6          –          –          –    

Trading portfolio assets

     143.3          85.3          58.0          –          –          –    

Financial assets at fair value

     43.5          8.1          6.7          22.2          0.8          5.7    

Derivative financial instruments

     466.4          –          –          –          –          466.4    

Loans and advances – banksb

     16.0          –          6.5          2.3          7.2          –    

Loans and advances – customersb

     325.8          72.9          40.4          212.5             –    

Cash collateral and settlement balances

     85.1          52.5                32.6          –    

Available for sale financial investments

     70.3          12.3          54.0          0.4          3.6          –    

Reverse repurchase agreements

     176.2          –          –          –          –          176.2    

Property, plant and equipment

     4.9          –          –          –          4.9          –    

Items in the course of collection from other banks

     1.1          –          –          –          1.1          –    

Other assets

     4.0          –          –          –          4.0          –    

Current tax asset

     0.2          –          –          –          0.2          –    

Investment in associates and joint ventures

     0.6          –          –          –          0.6          –    

Goodwill and intangible assets

     6.5          –          –          –          6.5          –    

Deferred tax assets

     3.5          –          –          –          3.5          –    

Retirement benefit assets

     0.1          –          –          –          0.1          –    

 

 

Total on-balance sheet

     1,432.1          231.1          250.2          237.4          65.1          648.3    

 

 

 

 

Off-balance sheet

             

 

 
                   Unencumbered assets      Unencumbered – cannot be
pledged as collateral
 
     Collateral
received
£bn
     Collateral
received of
which
on-pledge
£bn
     Readily
available
assets
£bn
     Available
as collateral
£bn
    

Not available

as collateral

£bn

        

 

 

Fair value of securities accepted as collateral

     360.5         309.5         50.1         –          0.9      

 

 

Total unencumbered collateral

           300.3         237.4          66.0      

 

 

 

 

Notes

a The amounts included in the table are for the Group excluding BAGL. The assets relating to BAGL amount to £53bn (2012: £50.2bn), of which nil (2012: £0.2bn) are encumbered assets. Securities received as collected by BAGL of £0.7bn (2012: £0.6bn) have also been excluded.
b Excluding cash collateral and settlement balances.

 

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Risk review >

Funding risk – Liquidity continued

  

 

 

 

 

Repurchase agreements and reverse repurchase agreements

Barclays enters into repurchase and other similar secured borrowing agreements to finance its trading portfolio assets. The majority of reverse repurchase agreements are matched by offsetting repurchase agreements entered into to facilitate client activity. The remainder are used to settle trading portfolio liabilities.

Due to the high quality of collateral provided against secured financing transactions, the liquidity risk associated with this activity is significantly lower than unsecured financing transactions. Nonetheless, Barclays manages to gross and net secured mismatch limits to limit refinancing risk under a severe stress scenario and a portion of the Group’s liquidity pool is held against stress outflows on these positions. The Group secured mismatch limits are calibrated based on market capacity, liquidity characteristics of the collateral and risk appetite of the Group.

The cash value of repurchase and reverse repurchase transactions will typically differ from the market value of the collateral against which these transactions are secured by an amount referred to as a haircut (or overcollateralisation). Typical haircut levels vary depending on the quality of the collateral that underlies these transactions. For transactions secured against highly liquid collateral, lenders demand relatively small haircuts (typically ranging from 0-2%). For transactions secured against less liquid collateral, haircuts vary by asset class (typically ranging from 5-10% for corporate bonds and other less liquid collateral).

As at 31 December 2013, the significant majority of repurchase activity related to matched-book activity. The Group may face refinancing risk on the net maturity mismatch for matched-book activity. 76% (2012: 75%) of matched-book activity is against highly liquid collateral. Where less liquid collateral is used, net repurchase refinancing requirements are managed to longer-tenors.

 

 

Net matched-book activitya,b

    

 

Negative number represents net repurchase agreement (net liability)

As at 31 December 2013

   Less than
one month
£bn
    One month
to three
months
£bn
    Over three  
months  
£bn  

 

Highly liquid

     (8.9     2.3      6.6   

Less liquid

     4.3        (0.1   (4.2)  

 

Total

     (4.6     2.2      2.4   

 

As at 31 December 2012

      

Highly liquid

     (14.1     6.6      7.5   

Less liquid

     5.7        (1.7   (4.0)  

 

Total

     (8.4     4.9      3.5   

 

The residual repurchase agreement activity is the firm-financing component and reflects Barclays funding of a portion of its trading portfolio assets. The primary risk related to firm-financing activity is the inability to roll-over transactions as they mature. However, 63% (2012: 74%) of firm-financing activity was secured against highly liquid assets and the weighted average maturity of firm-financing activity secured against less liquid assets was 69 days (2012: 84 days).

 

 

 

Firm-financing repurchase agreementsa,b

             

 

 

As at 31 December 2013

   Less than
one month
£bn
     One month
to three
months
£bn
     Over three
months
£bn
     Total  
£bn  
 

 

 

Highly liquid

     42.8         7.9         2.9         53.6     

Less liquid

     20.7         2.9         7.8         31.4     

 

 

Total

     63.5         10.8         10.7         85.0     

 

 

As at 31 December 2012

           

Highly liquid

     66.8         6.5         2.9         76.2     

Less liquid

     16.0         4.3         6.0         26.3     

 

 

Total

     82.8         10.8         8.9         102.5     

 

 

Notes

a Highly liquid assets include government bonds, agency securities and mortgage-backed securities. Less liquid assets include asset backed securities, corporate bonds, equities and other.
b Includes collateral swaps.

 

 

 

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Table of Contents
  

 

 

 

 

Credit ratings

In addition to monitoring and managing key metrics related to the financial strength of Barclays, we also subscribe to independent credit rating agency reviews by Standard & Poor’s, Moody’s, Fitch and DBRS. These ratings assess the credit worthiness of Barclays and are based on reviews of a broad range of business and financial attributes including risk management processes and procedures, capital strength, earnings, funding, liquidity, accounting and governance.

A credit rating downgrade could result in contractual outflows to meet collateral requirements on existing contracts. Outflows related to a multiple-notch credit rating downgrade are included in the LRA stress scenarios and a portion of the liquidity pool is held against this risk. Credit ratings downgrades could also result in increased costs or reduced capacity to raise funding.

 

 

Credit ratings

As at 31 December 2013 

  Standard & Poor’s   Moody’s   Fitch   DBRS

 

Barclays Bank PLC

 

A (Stable)

 

A2 (Negative)

 

A (Stable)

 

AA (Low) (Stable)

Long-term

 

A-1

 

P-1

 

F1

 

R-1 (mid)

Short-term

 

bbb+

 

C-/baa2

 

a

 

A (high)

 

Barclays PLC

       

Long-term

 

A- (Stable)

 

A3 (Negative)

 

A (Stable)

 

n/a

Short-term

 

A-2

 

P-2

 

F1

 

n/a

 

During 2013, Barclays was downgraded one notch by Standard & Poor’s, as the rating agency views increased risk for some large European banks operating in investment banking due to tightening regulation and uncertain market conditions. As a result Barclays Bank PLC’s rating moved to A/A-1 from A+/A-1, and Barclays PLC’s to A-/A-2 from A/A-1. Similarly, DBRS downgraded Barclays Bank PLC, to AA (Low)/R-1 (Mid) from AA/R-1 (High), mainly driven by the changing regulatory environment. The downgrades were fully reserved for in the liquidity pool and there was no significant change in deposit funding or wholesale funding. Fitch and Moody’s affirmed Barclays Bank PLC and Barclays PLC ratings.

Barclays’ ratings currently benefit from sovereign support assumptions made by rating agencies. Levels of sovereign supports are reflected in the difference between the standalone rating and Barclays Bank PLC’s long-term rating. As regulation evolves, rating agencies have communicated their intention to remove all or part of this support over time. As a consequence, Moody’s put Barclays’ long-term and short-term ratings on a Negative outlook.

The table below shows contractual collateral requirements and contingent obligations following one and two notch long-term and associated short-term simultaneous downgrades across all credit rating agencies, which are fully reserved for in the liquidity pool. These numbers do not assume any management or restructuring actions that could be taken to reduce posting requirements.

Further credit rating downgrades could result in contractual outflows to meet collateral requirements on existing contracts. These outflows do not include the potential liquidity impact from loss of unsecured funding, such as from money market funds, or loss of secured funding capacity. However, unsecured and secured funding stresses are included in the LRA stress scenarios and a portion of the liquidity pool is held against these risks.

 

 

 

Contractual credit rating downgrade exposure (cumulative cash flow)

      

 

 
     Cumulative cash outflow  

As at 31 December 2013

   One-notch
downgrade
£bn
     Two-notch
downgrade
£bn
 

 

 

Securitisation derivatives

     7         8   

Contingent liabilities

     6         6   

Derivatives margining

             1   

Liquidity facilities

     1         2   

 

 

Total contractual funding or margin requirements

     14         17   

 

 

As at 31 December 2012

     

Securitisation derivatives

     5         7   

Contingent liabilities

     7         7   

Derivatives margining

             1   

Liquidity facilities

     1         2   

 

 

Total contractual funding or margin requirements

     13         17   

 

 

Note

a Refers to Standard & Poor’s Stand-Alone Credit Profile (SACP), Moody’s Bank Financial Strength Ratio (BFSR) Baseline Credit Assessment (BCA), Fitch Viability Rating (VR) and DBRS Intrinsic Assessment (IA).

 

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Risk review >

Funding risk – Liquidity continued

  

 

 

 

 

Liquidity management at BAGL Group (audited)

Liquidity risk is managed separately at BAGL Group due to local currency, funding and regulatory requirements.

In addition to the Group liquidity pool, as at 31 December 2013, BAGL Group held £4bn (2012: £5bn) of liquidity pool assets against BAGL-specific anticipated stressed outflows. The liquidity pool consists of South African government bonds and Treasury bills.

The BAGL loan to deposit ratio as at 31 December 2013 was 103% (2012: 113%).

As at 31 December 2013, BAGL had £9bn of wholesale funding outstanding (2012: £12bn), of which £6bn matures in less than 12 months (2012: £6bn).

Contractual maturity of financial assets and liabilities (audited)

The table below provides detail on the contractual maturity of all financial instruments and other assets and liabilities. Derivatives (other than those designated in a hedging relationship) and trading portfolio assets and liabilities are included in the on demand column at their fair value. Liquidity risk on these items is not managed on the basis of contractual maturity since they are not held for settlement according to such maturity and will frequently be settled before contractual maturity at fair value. Derivatives designated in a hedging relationship are included according to their contractual maturity.

Financial assets designated at fair value in respect of linked liabilities to customers under investment contracts have been included in other assets and other liabilities as the Group is not exposed to liquidity risk arising from them; any request for funds from creditors would be met by simultaneously liquidating or transferring the related investment.

 

 

 

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Table of Contents
  

 

 

 

 

 

Contractual maturity of financial assets and liabilities (including BAGL) (audited)

 

As at 31 December 2013   On
demand
£m
  Not
more than
three
months
£m
 

Over three
months
but not
more
than six

months

£m

  Over
six
months
but not
more
than nine
months
£m
  Over
nine
months
but not
more
than one
year £m
 

Over
one year
but not
more
than two
years

£m

 

Over
two years
but not
more
than three
years

£m

 

Over three
years but
not more
than five
years

£m

 

Over five
years but
not more
than ten
years

£m

 

Over
ten
years

£m

 

Total

£m

 

Assets

                     

Cash and balances at central banks

  38,602   7,085                   45,687 

Items in the course of collection from other banks

  894   388                   1,282 

Trading portfolio assets

  133,069                     133,069 

Financial assets designated at fair value

  1,029   12,743   654   853   415   2,270   673   1,410   1,035   16,280   37,362 

Derivative financial instruments

  321,590   368   163   88   32   283   480   294   545   492   324,335 

Loans and advances to banks

  6,558   27,698   973   538   588   295   370   109   63   661   37,853 

Loans and advances to customers

  30,422   92,151   7,058   7,459   8,450   30,144   27,201   45,699   60,537   121,290   430,411 

Reverse repurchase agreements and other similar secured lending

  21   172,401   9,119   2,335   2,583   107     130     83   186,779 

Available for sale financial investments

  632   2,633   3,186   2,115   5,722   9,755   14,366   14,767   24,433   14,147   91,756 

Other financial assets

    1,693         305           1,998 

 

Total financial assets

  532,817   317,160   21,153   13,388   17,790   43,159   43,090   62,409   86,613   152,953   1,290,532 

 

Other assets

                      21,735 

 

Total assets

                      1,312,267 

 

Liabilities

                     

Deposits from banks

  7,005   40,631   738   1,112   426   4,658   111   137     16   54,834 

Items in the course of collection due to other banks

  1,037   322                   1,359 

Customer accounts

  293,708   102,873   8,708   5,928   6,308   3,436   1,587   2,237   1,869   1,248   427,902 

Repurchase agreements and other similar secured borrowing

  76   189,401   4,371   556   914   1,378   17   35       196,748 

Trading portfolio liabilities

  53,464                     53,464 

Financial liabilities designated at fair value

  636   8,215   5,257   4,712   3,425   11,107   6,527   10,138   6,678   6,396   63,091 

Derivative financial instruments

  319,361   11   11   13   6   48   157   208   583   236   320,634 

Debt securities in issue

  72   22,233   10,553   10,812   3,486   11,786   6,705   8,350   10,657   2,039   86,693 

Subordinated liabilities

    327   20   177     281   6   3,225   10,581   7,078   21,695 

Other financial liabilities

    3,471         1,478           4,949 

 

Total financial liabilities

  675,359   367,484   29,658   23,310   14,565   34,172   15,110   24,330   30,368   17,013   1,231,369 

 

Other liabilities

                      16,949 

 

Total liabilities

                      1,248,318 

 

Cumulative liquidity gap

  (142,542)   (192,866)   (201,371)   (211,293)   (208,068)   (199,081)   (171,101)   (133,022)   (76,777)   59,163   63,949 

 

 

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Risk review >

Funding risk – Liquidity continued

  

 

 

 

 

 

Contractual maturity of financial assets and liabilities (including BAGL) (audited)

 

As at 31 December 2012

  On
demand
£m
  Not more
than three
months £m
 

Over three
months but
not more
than six
months

£m

  Over six
months but
not more
than nine
months £m
  Over nine
months but
not more
than one
year £m
 

Over one
year but not
more than
two years

£m

 

Over two
years but
not more
than three
years

£m

 

Over three
years but
not more
than five
years

£m

 

Over five
years but
not more
than ten
years

£m

 

Over ten
years

£m

 

Total

£m

 

Assets

                     

Cash and balances at central banks

  42,435   43,756                   86,191

Items in the course of collection from other banks

  1,242   231                   1,473

Trading portfolio assets

  146,352                     146,352

Financial assets designated at fair value

  1,268   15,951   881   635   655   2,054   2,071   1,283   1,861   18,592   45,251

Derivative financial instruments

  465,357   169   49   32   24   355   643   1,349   717   461   469,156

Loans and advances to banks

  4,646   32,761   236   259   708   933   152   136   172   459   40,462

Loans and advances to customers

  37,503   76,112   7,971   8,399   8,844   26,789   28,141   46,338   64,445   119,364   423,906

Reverse repurchase agreements and other similar secured lending

  36   164,866   8,709   1,388   1,224   66   82   117   12   22   176,522

Available for sale financial investments

  333   4,338   2,770   5,230   4,725   10,805   5,263   14,145   15,189   12,311   75,109

Other financial assets

    1,615         386           2,001

 

Total financial assets

  699,172   339,799   20,616   15,943   16,180   41,388   36,352   63,368   82,396   151,209   1,466,423

 

Other assets

                      21,912

 

Total assets

                      1,488,335

 

Liabilities

                     

Deposits from banks

  8,619   57,101   1,664   532   312   1,617   5,591   334   229   1,013   77,012

Items in the course of collection due to other banks

  1,463   124                   1,587

Customer accounts

  255,747   90,490   9,810   8,086   4,572   11,148   865   1,925   1,981   787   385,411

Repurchase agreements and other similar secured borrowinga

  394   206,355   5,331   2,321   1,421   47   780   529       217,178

Trading portfolio liabilities

  44,794                     44,794

Financial liabilities designated at fair value

  1,434   7,982   6,278   3,929   3,249   11,977   11,922   11,248   10,145   8,855   77,019

Derivative financial instruments

  459,587   63   32   29   19   333   337   507   1,074   740   462,721

Debt securities in issue

  1,467   38,850   10,796   4,778   4,350   16,388   13,046   14,965   12,208   2,677   119,525

Subordinated liabilities

    877       92   363   400   1,840   11,883   8,563   24,018

Other financial liabilities

    4,080         641           4,721

 

Total financial liabilities

  773,505   405,922   33,911   19,675   14,015   42,514   32,941   31,348   37,520   22,635   1,413,986

 

Other liabilities

                      14,363

 

Total liabilities

                      1,428,349

 

Cumulative liquidity gap

  (74,333)   (140,456)   (153,751)   (157,483)   (155,318)   (156,444)   (153,033)   (121,013)   (76,137)   52,437   59,986

 

Expected maturity dates do not differ significantly from the contract dates, except for:

 

¡   Trading portfolio assets and liabilities and derivative financial instruments, which may not be held to maturity as part of the Group’s trading strategies;

 

¡   Retail deposits, which are included within customer accounts, are repayable on demand or at short notice on a contractual basis. In practice, these instruments form a stable base for the Group’s operations and liquidity needs because of the broad base of customers – both numerically and by depositor type (see Behavioural maturity profile on page 213; and

 

¡   Financial assets designated at fair value held in respect of linked liabilities, which are managed with the associated liabilities.

 

 

Note

a Balances have been revised to better reflect the contractual maturity of repurchase agreements.

 

 

 

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Contractual maturity of financial liabilities on an undiscounted basis

The table below presents the cash flows payable by the Group under financial liabilities by remaining contractual maturities at the balance sheet date. The amounts disclosed in the table are the contractual undiscounted cash flows of all financial liabilities (i.e. nominal values).

The balances in the below table do not agree directly to the balances in the consolidated balance sheet as the table incorporates all cash flows, on an undiscounted basis, related to both principal as well as those associated with all future coupon payments.

Derivative financial instruments held for trading and trading portfolio liabilities are included in the on demand column at their fair value.

Financial liabilities designated at fair value in respect of linked liabilities under investment contracts have been excluded from this analysis as the Group is not exposed to liquidity risk arising from them.

 

 

 

Contractual maturity of financial liabilities – undiscounted (including BAGL) (audited)

 

 

 
     On demand
£m
     Within one
year
£m
     Over one
year but not
more than
five years
£m
     Over five
years
£m
     Total
£m
 

 

 

As at 31 December 2013

              

Deposits from banks

     7,005          42,923          4,956          70          54,954    

Items in the course of collection due to other banks

     1,037          333          –          –          1,370    

Customer accounts

     293,708          124,023          8,175          5,077          430,983    

Repurchase agreements and other similar secured lending

     76          195,246          1,431          –          196,753    

Trading portfolio liabilities

     53,464          –          –          –          53,464    

Financial liabilities designated at fair value

     636          21,659          29,037          20,777          72,109    

Derivative financial instruments

     319,361          45          450          1,246          321,102    

Debt securities in issue

     72          48,333          29,192          14,813          92,410    

Subordinated liabilities

     –          1,468          7,082          19,117          27,667    

Other financial liabilities

     –          3,471          1,478          –          4,949    

 

 

Total financial liabilities

     675,359          437,501          81,801          61,100          1,255,761    

 

 

At 31 December 2012

              

Deposits from banks

     8,619          59,677          7,629          1,267          77,192    

Items in the course of collection due to other banks

     1,463          124          –          –          1,587    

Customer accounts

     255,747          113,220          14,492          3,624          387,083    

Repurchase agreements and other similar secured lending

     394          215,435          1,357          –          217,186    

Trading portfolio liabilities

     44,794          –          –          –          44,794    

Financial liabilities designated at fair value

     1,434          21,480          35,886          24,301          83,101    

Derivative financial instruments

     459,587          144          1,193          2,079          463,003    

Debt securities in issue

     1,467          60,396          46,742          16,566          125,171    

Subordinated liabilities

     –          1,948          6,284          24,266          32,498    

Other financial liabilities

     –          4,080          641          –          4,721    

 

 

Total financial liabilities

     773,505          476,504          114,224          72,103          1,436,336    

 

 

 

LOGO
 

 

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Risk review >

Funding risk – Liquidity continued

  

 

 

 

 

 

 

Maturity analysis of off-balance sheet commitments received (including BAGL)a

        

 

 
     On demand
£m
    

Within one
year

£m

     Over one
year but not
more than
five years
£m
     Over five
years
£m
    

Total

£m

 

 

 

As at 31 December 2013

              

Guarantees, letters of credit and credit insurance

     10,114          181          644          155          11,094    

Forward starting repurchase agreements

     –          14,334          –          –          14,334    

 

 

Total off balance sheet commitments received

     10,114          14,515          644          155          25,428    

 

 

As at 31 December 2012

              

Guarantees, letters of credit and credit insurance

     9,108          207          760          303          10,378    

Forward starting repurchase agreements

     –          22,831          –          –          22,831    

 

 

Total off balance sheet commitments received

     9,108          23,038          760          303          33,209    

 

 

 

 

Maturity analysis of off-balance sheet commitments given (including BAGL) (audited)a

        

 

 
     On demand
£m
    

Within one
year

£m

     Over one
year but not
more than
five years
£m
     Over five
years
£m
    

Total

£m

 

 

 

As at 31 December 2013

              

Contingent liabilities

     17,873          1,583          1,174          554          21,184    

Documentary credits and other short term trade related transactions

     504          188          88          –          780    

Forward starting reverse repurchase agreements

     –          19,936          –          –          19,936    

Standby facilities, credit lines and other commitments

     247,045          3,845          3,514          451          254,855    

 

 

Total off balance sheet commitments given

     265,422          25,552          4,776          1,005          296,755    

 

 

As at 31 December 2012

              

Contingent liabilities

     18,419          2,123          1,077          642          22,261    

Documentary credits and other short term trade related transactions

     134          732          111          50          1,027    

Forward starting reverse repurchase agreements

     –          23,549          –          –          23,549    

Standby facilities, credit lines and other commitments

     239,881          4,459          3,045          431          247,816    

 

 

Total off balance sheet commitments given

     258,434          30,863          4,233          1,123          294,653    

 

 

Note

a The presentation of the tables for off balances sheet commitments received and given has been enhanced in line with the Enhanced Disclosure Taskforce recommendations.

 

 

 

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Risk review >

Operational risk

  

 

 

 

 

 

   LOGO   Operational risk is defined as the risk of direct or indirect impacts resulting from human factors,
inadequate or failed internal processes and systems or external events.

 

 

All disclosures in this section (page 225) are unaudited

 

Operational risks are inherent in all the Group’s business activities and are typical of any large enterprise. It is not cost effective to attempt to eliminate all operational risks and in any event it would not be possible to do so. Small losses from operational risks are expected to occur and are accepted as part of the normal course of business. More material losses are less frequent and the Group seeks to reduce the likelihood of these in accordance with its risk appetite.

The Operational Principal Risk comprises the following Key Risks: CyberSecurity, External Suppliers, Financial Reporting, Fraud, Information, Legal, Payments, People, Premises and Security, Product, Regulatory, Taxation, Technology and Transaction Operations. For definitions of these key risks see page 415.

Operational risk profile

The Barclays operational risk profile in 2013 was dominated by further charges of £1,350m (2012: £1,600m) for PPI and interest rate hedging product redress of £650m (2012: £850m). In response to these and other historical issues, and following publication of the Salz review, work continues to enhance the internal control and risk management framework (see the Risk Management section on page 416) with the creation of a new Board-level committee charged with specific oversight of operational and conduct risks, reputational matters and the citizenship strategy.

Within operational risk a high proportion of risk events have a low associated financial cost and a very small proportion of operational risk events will have a material impact on the financial results of the Group. In 2013 79.2% of the Group’s net reportable operational risk losses had a value of £50,000 or less (2012: 74.7%) and accounted for only 1.8% (2012: 1.3%) of the Group’s total net loss impact.

The analysis below presents Barclays operational risk events by Basel 2 category. There has been a slight reduction in the proportion of losses by amount within the Clients, Products and Business Practices category to 90.0% (2012: 92.2%), but this is still heavily impacted by provisions for PPI and interest rate hedging product redress. Execution, Delivery and Process Management impacts increased to 5.2% (2012: 3.7%). These events are typical of the banking industry as a whole where high volumes of transactions are processed on a daily basis. These are often fully or partially recovered, resulting in low value net losses. External Fraud with 63% (2012: 41%), is the category with the highest frequency of events where high volume, low value events are also consistent with industry experience, driven by debit and credit card fraud.

The Group’s operational risk profile is informed by bottom-up risk assessments undertaken by each business unit and top-down qualitative review from the Operational Risk & Control Committee (ORCC). External Fraud and Technology have been noted by the ORCC as key operational risk exposures. External Fraud has increased driven by the higher number of fraud events, particularly in credit card portfolios, and business growth, whereas for Technology there is an ongoing programme of work to improve controls, through efficiency and automation, and a focus on infrastructure resilience. CyberSecurity risk continues to be an area of attention given the increasing sophistication and scope of potential cyber-attack. Risks to technology and CyberSecurity change rapidly and require continued focus and investment.

For further information see Risk Management section (pages 415 to 417).

 

 

Operational risk events by risk category

   Operational risk events by risk category

% of total risk events by count

  

% of total risk events by value

LOGO

   LOGO

 

LOGO
 

 

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Table of Contents

Risk review >

Reputation risk

  

 

 

 

 

 

   LOGO   Reputation risk is the risk of damage to Barclays brand arising from any association, action or inaction which is perceived by stakeholders (e.g. customers, clients, colleagues, shareholders, regulators, opinion formers) to be inappropriate or unethical.

 

 

All disclosures in this section (pages 226 and 227) are unaudited

 

Subsequent erosion of the bank’s brand reduces the attractiveness of Barclays to those stakeholders and, therefore, the ability to achieve the Group’s goals and business purpose.

The cost of reputation risk could manifest itself in one, or a combination of, the following outcomes: negative publicity; erosion of customer/client confidence; loss of revenue; litigation; regulatory or legislative action; loss of existing and potential client business; reduced internal morale; and difficulties in recruiting the talent required to deliver our commitments. Ultimately, it may destroy long-term shareholder value.

Reputation risk is pervasive in nature and may arise for a wide variety of reasons, real or perceived, for example:

 

¡   Failure to act in accordance with our stated values, standards and policies;

 

¡   Association with illegal activity or governance or regulatory breaches;

 

¡   Failure of technical systems and processes;

 

¡   Association with controversial clients or sectors; and

 

¡   Association with controversial business decisions or conduct relating to products, service provision, acquisitions, and employment practices.

Barclays’ reputation may also be impacted negatively by the standing of the banking and financial industry generally with stakeholders. Poor practice or controversy perpetrated by other banks affects the sector as a whole.

As reputation risk arises from a real or perceived failure to comply with expected norms, which are likely to change over time, the situation is not static. Today’s decisions may be judged tomorrow by different standards and this needs to be factored into our risk culture, evaluation and sanctioning procedures. Reputation risk is also pervasive, it can arise anywhere in the organisation, and management of it requires more subjective judgement than many other risks.

Barclays experienced a number of events negatively impacting its reputation in 2013, some of which arose as a result of decisions and behaviours which occurred in prior years. For example, Barclays’ participation in the submission of London interbank lending rates (LIBOR) between 2005 and 2009 fell short of the high standards by which we aim to conduct business. Barclays let down its customers and clients and regrets that these actions harmed trust and confidence among our stakeholders. While the findings involved only a relatively small number of the Group’s 140,000 employees, Barclays has fully acknowledged and accepted responsibility for this past conduct. With interest rate hedging products, Barclays recognises that we have not met the standards expected of us by our regulator and customers in some cases concerning small and medium-sized enterprises.

Barclays also took the decision to exit client relationships in the Money Service Business (MSB) sector because of financial crime and regulatory risks in the sector. Although we consider that this decision was necessary from a regulatory perspective, unfortunately it has impacted on businesses in this sector and the customers they serve.

Lessons learnt and remediation activity

Barclays has undertaken a range of initiatives to strengthen governance, drive positive cultural change through the organisation and apply a responsible and consistent ‘lens’ to decision-making.

In 2013, reputation risk was elevated by Barclays to Principal Risk status in acknowledgement of its significance for the business. Governance of all Principal and Key Risks is being revised and strengthened as part of the Transform initiative and in 2014 has been aligned with the new Enterprise Risk Management Framework, which will ensure all risks are managed in a co-ordinated manner according to consistent parameters.

Governance around the management of reputation risk is designed to promote such a consistent approach and a risk-aware culture across our organisation globally. Every member of staff must take responsibility for managing reputation risk associated with their decisions and actions. The implementation of The Barclays Way, the bank’s global code of conduct launched in October 2013, encourages Barclays’ colleagues to speak up if they encounter decisions or behaviours which are not in keeping with Barclays’ purpose and values, and promotes a more open culture conducive to the identification, management and reporting of reputation and other risks. Colleagues in all parts of the bank have attended values workshops and are required to attest annually to The Barclays Way, which explains how Barclays’ values and desired behaviours should be put into practice at work.

Where individuals are confronted by a decision which appears to have wider reputational consequences, they are supported by a clear set of processes outlined in the Barclays Reputation Risk Framework that articulates how businesses and functions should identify and manage this risk, including how to escalate an issue. The objective is to ensure that all decision-making includes an evaluation of the reputation risk potential and that, where material risk is identified, this is managed at the right level of seniority and in a timely way.

 

 

 

 

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Difficult decisions or dilemmas are referred initially to a business-level committee of senior executives familiar with the reputation risk profile and track record of their business area. If the issue is judged to be outside the scope of their authority, e.g. due to the materiality of the risk concerned or that it affects multiple business areas, then it can be escalated to the Barclays Reputation Committee. In 2013, this committee was re-designated a sub-committee of the new Conduct and Reputation Risk Committee (CRRC) chaired by Barclays’ Head of Compliance and comprising Executive Committee-level representatives from Barclays businesses and functions. The CRRC reports to the Board Conduct, Reputation and Operational Risk Committee (BCRORC), which maintains Board-level oversight of non-financial Principal Risks.

The strategic review of the business in February 2013, explicitly considered reputation risk. The focus was on how we deliver returns, as well as what returns may be delivered. The analysis assessed each business against a range of criteria, including market attractiveness, competitor positioning, regulation, and reputation risk – which was assessed using the lens of Barclays’ purpose and values. This review incorporated the earlier review of reputation risk associated with Corporate and Investment Banking business lines and resulted in Barclays’ exit from some businesses, including the Structured Capital Markets tax-related business unit. The view was that, while many tax services provided to clients are not controversial, there were some that relied on sophisticated and complex structures where transactions were carried out with the primary objective of accessing the tax benefits. Although this activity is legal, it was considered incompatible with the Group’s purpose and published tax principles.

A further review of Barclays Wealth and Investment Management identified over 130 countries in which the business would no longer seek new clients. The review was designed to ensure alignment of the business to Barclays’ purpose and values, reduce complexity and ensure we are well-placed to compete in a wealth management industry that has fundamentally changed.

On a more operational level, in 2013 we made the decision to drop using premium rate telephone numbers in the UK. As part of Which?’s campaign against the use of premium rate numbers, Barclays and Barclaycard committed to switching from more costly phone lines to local rate numbers, which are included in mobile phone packages and are free for customers using a landline. Barclays was the first financial services company to commit to do this.

 

 

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Table of Contents

Risk review >

Conduct risk

  

 

 

 

 

 

 

   LOGO

  Conduct risk is the risk that detriment is caused to our customers, clients, counterparties or Barclays and its employees because of inappropriate judgement in the execution of our business activities.

  All disclosures in this section (pages 228 and 229) are unaudited

 

 

In 2013 there were a number of conduct risk issues affecting the Group, where Barclays conduct has not met the expectations of regulators and other stakeholders and where the consequences are likely to extend into 2014 and beyond. These include participation in benchmark rates, interest rate hedging products and Payment Protection Insurance.

The lessons learnt from these events and our strategic intent to become the ‘Go-To’ bank has influenced our determination to put customer needs and market integrity at the heart of our decision making and business activities.

In January 2013 Barclays incepted a Conduct Risk Programme to drive change in Barclays’ culture and business practices to better align them with Barclays’ aim to help customers achieve their

ambitions in the right way. It is establishing a conduct risk framework to support the business and cultural changes required to take a more proactive and forward looking approach, building good outcomes into business models, provide risk management of conduct risks and appropriate governance and oversight.

Over the year Barclays has developed its approach to identifying, evaluating and managing conduct risk and introduced a new principal risk for conduct risk within the EMRF. This is underpinned by six underlying key risks which focus on potential detriment to customers or market integrity across Barclays’ end to end operations. Development of the Key Risk Framework will continue in 2014 with implementation of the complete framework planned to be complete by the end of the year.

 

 

Principal risk framework – Defines Conduct Risk, Risk Appetite and Roles and Responsibilities

 

    

The Six Conduct Risk Key Risks:

 

            
    

Business Model & Strategy

       Governance & Culture    
    

Is our current and future business robust, resilient and sustainable?

    

      

Is our business run in the right way?

   
                   
    

Product Design

       Transaction Servicing    
    

Are the products and services we offer designed properly?

    

      

Are the right products sold in the right way?

   
                   
    

Customer Servicing

       Financial Crime    
    

Are our new and existing customer expectations managed and met in

the right way?

    

      

Are we effectively protecting our business, our clients and market integrity?

   
                   

The Principal Risk Framework targets 10 outcomes, which are positive indicators that Barclays is putting its clients and customers and market integrity at the heart of its business.

 

1 Our culture places customer interests at the heart of our strategy, planning, decision making and judgements.
2 Our strategy is to develop long term banking relationships with our customers by providing banking products and services that meet their needs and do not cause detriment.
3 We do not disadvantage or exploit customers, customer segments, or markets. We do not distort market competition.
4 We proactively identify conduct risks and intervene before they crystallise by managing, escalating and mitigating them promptly.
5 Our products, services and distribution channels are designed, monitored and managed to provide value, accessibility and to meet the needs of our customers.
6 We provide banking products and services that meet our customers’ expectations and perform as represented. Our representations are accurate and comprehensible so our customers understand the products and services they are purchasing.
7 We address any customer detriment and dissatisfaction in a timely and fair manner.
8 We safeguard the privacy of personal data.
9 We do not conduct or facilitate market abuse.
10 We do not conduct or facilitate financial crime.

 

 

 

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In 2013 businesses across Barclays began conduct risk assessments to evaluate how their business models and strategy might impact customers and markets and generate poor outcomes and the action that should be taken to address this risk. See the Business review section on pages 18 to 45 for more information on how individual businesses have taken the conduct agenda forward.

Barclays has also established a new conduct risk governance structure. This will provide the Board with relevant information about how conduct risks are being identified and managed, including whether controls are designed and operating effectively. For more information on the management of conduct risk see the Governance in Action example relating to conduct risk in the Governance Report on page 74.

 

Governance framework for conduct risk

LOGO

 

The CRC oversees Barclays’ commitment to managing conduct risks and working towards delivering positive outcomes. Its responsibilities include investigation, consideration of areas of potential conduct risk, review of Barclays-wide Conduct Key Risk Profiles and review and challenge of conduct risk policies and standards.

The CRRC reviews and monitors the effectiveness of Barclays’ management of Conduct and Reputational risk. Its responsibilities include review, challenge and recommendation of the Conduct and Reputational risk tolerance and appetite to the BCRORC, annual review of the frameworks and associated policies, review of performance against Conduct risk appetite and escalation of conduct risks, at its discretion, to the BCRORC.

The BCRORC is a committee of the Board of Directors of Barclays PLC and has the authority to investigate matters of conduct, reputational and operational risk Barclays-wide. Its responsibilities include review and approval of the Conduct risk appetite, governance and oversight of the management of Conduct risk, ensuring that the potential conduct and reputation impact of significant business decisions has been fully considered.

During 2014 the conduct risk programme will continue to develop the conduct risk framework, including the development of risk indicators and reporting and will support Barclays to make the important changes to the way it operates, such as through provision of training and guidance.

Barclays’ approach to managing conduct risk has been developed in line with the regulatory expectations of the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) and is subject to assessment by the FCA through its Firm Systematic Framework. Periodic discussions have been held with the FCA throughout the year.

Barclays approach to promoting good customer outcomes and market integrity is consistent with the ‘Barclays Way’ – the new employee code of conduct adopted in 2013.

 

 

LOGO
 

 

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Table of Contents

Risk review >

Supervision and regulation

  

 

 

 

 

 

 

  All disclosures in this section (pages 230 to 235) are unaudited

Supervision of the Group

The Group’s operations, including its overseas offices, subsidiaries and associates, are subject to a significant body of rules and regulations that are a condition for authorisation to conduct banking and financial services business. These apply to business operations and affect financial returns and include reserve and reporting requirements and prudential and conduct of business regulations. These requirements are set by the relevant central banks and regulatory authorities that supervise the Group in the jurisdictions in which it operates. The requirements reflect global standards developed by, among others, the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision and the International Organisation of Securities Commissions. They also reflect requirements of or derived from EU legislation.

Under the Financial Services Act 2012, the Bank of England has responsibility for monitoring the financial system as a whole and the system of regulation in the UK has been reorganised. Since 1 April 2013, the regulation and supervision of the Group has been divided between the Prudential Regulation Authority (PRA) – which is established as part of the Bank of England – and the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA). In addition, the Financial Policy Committee (FPC) of the Bank of England has significant influence on the prudential requirements that may be imposed on the banking system through powers of direction and recommendation. The FPC has direction powers over sectoral capital requirements which the FPC can set in relation to exposures to specific sectors judged to pose a risk to the financial system as a whole. The government has also proposed to make the FPC responsible for the Basel III countercyclical capital buffer, introduced in the EU under the Capital Requirements Directive and Regulation (CRD).

The Financial Services and Markets Act 2000 (FSMA) as amended remains the principal statute under which financial institutions are regulated in the UK. Barclays Bank PLC is authorised under FSMA to carry on a range of regulated activities within the UK and is authorised and subject to solo and consolidated prudential supervision by the PRA and subject to conduct regulation and supervision by the FCA. Firms are subject to a rolling programme of continuous, intensive and assertive engagement on prudential and conduct matters.

In its role as supervisor, the PRA seeks to maintain the safety and soundness of financial institutions with the aim of strengthening, but not guaranteeing, the protection of customers and the financial system. The PRA’s continuing supervision of financial institutions is conducted through a variety of regulatory tools, including the collection of information from prudential returns, reports obtained from skilled persons, visits to firms and regular meetings with management to discuss issues such as performance, risk management and strategy.

The regulation and supervision of conduct matters is the responsibility of the FCA. FCA regulation of the Group is carried out through a combination of continuous assessment over rolling two-year periods; regular thematic and project work based on the FCA’s sector assessments, which analyse the different areas of the market and the risks that may lie ahead; and responding to crystallised risks, seeking to ensure remediation as appropriate.

The Banking Act 2009 (the Banking Act) provides a regime to allow the Bank of England (or, in certain circumstances, HM Treasury) to resolve failing banks in the UK, in consultation with the PRA and HM Treasury as appropriate. Under the Banking Act, these authorities are given powers, including (a) the power to make share transfer orders pursuant to which all or some of the securities issued by a UK bank may be transferred to a commercial purchaser or the UK government; and (b) the power to transfer all or some of the property, rights and liabilities of a UK bank to a commercial purchaser or Bank of England entity. A share transfer order can extend to a wide range of securities including shares and bonds issued by a UK bank (including Barclays Bank PLC) or its holding company (Barclays PLC) and warrants for such shares and bonds. From 1 April 2013, certain of these powers were extended to companies within the same group as a UK bank. The Act also gives the authorities powers to override events of default or termination rights that might be invoked as a result of the exercise of the resolution powers. The Banking Act powers apply regardless of any contractual restrictions and compensation may be payable in the context of both share transfer orders and property appropriation. These resolution powers were supplemented with a bail-in power through the Financial Services (Banking Reform) Act 2013. This power allows for the cancellation or modification of a liability owed by the bank, with the exception of ‘excluded liabilities’. Excluded liabilities include: deposits protected under a deposit insurance scheme, secured liabilities, client assets and assets with an original maturity of less than seven days owed to a credit institution or investment firm among others.

The Banking Act also gives the Bank of England the power to override, vary or impose contractual obligations between a UK bank, its holding company and its group undertakings for reasonable consideration, in order to enable any transferee or successor bank to operate effectively. There is also power for the Treasury to amend the law (excluding provisions made by or under the Banking Act) for the purpose of enabling it to use the regime powers effectively, potentially with retrospective effect.

The Financial Services Act 2010, among other things, requires the UK regulators to make rules about remuneration and to require regulated firms to have a remuneration policy that is consistent with effective risk management. The UK regulators are mandated to make rules that require authorised firms (or a subset of authorised firms) to draw up recovery and resolution plans and to consult with HM Treasury and the Bank of England on the adequacy of firms plans. This Act also allows the FCA to make rules requiring firms to operate a collective consumer redress scheme to deal with cases of widespread failure by regulated firms to meet regulatory requirements that may have created consumer detriment.

 

 

 

 

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In addition to establishing the FPC, PRA and FCA, the Financial Services Act 2012 among other things, clarifies responsibilities between HM Treasury and the Bank of England in the event of a financial crisis by giving the Chancellor of the Exchequer powers to direct the Bank of England where public funds are at risk and there is a serious threat to financial stability; it establishes the objectives and accountabilities of the new regulatory bodies; amends the Threshold Conditions for authorisation; and gives the new bodies additional powers, including powers of direction over unregulated parent undertakings (such as Barclays PLC) where this is necessary to ensure effective consolidated supervision of the Group; and a power for the FCA to make temporary product intervention rules for a maximum period of six months, if necessary without consultation. The Act also gives the FCA the power to set rules in relation to the setting of benchmarks and creates a new criminal offence relating to the making of a false or misleading statement, or the creation of a false or misleading impression, in connection with the setting of a benchmark.

In addition to providing for the bail-in stabilisation powers referred to above, the Financial Services (Banking Reform Act) 2013 (the 2013 Act) gives the UK authorities powers to implement the recommendations of the Independent Commission on Banking by requiring, amongst other things: (i) the separation of the retail banking activities of UK banks in the UK and European Economic Area (EEA) in a legally distinct, operationally separate and economically independent entity (so called ring fencing); (ii) the increase of the loss-absorbing capacity of ring-fenced banks and UK headquartered global systemically important banks to levels higher than required by the CRD and (iii) preference to deposits protected under the Financial Services Compensation Scheme if a bank enters insolvency.

The 2013 Act also implements key recommendations of the Parliamentary Commission on Banking Standards, which was asked by the government to review professional standards and culture in the banking industry. Recommendations that have been implemented include: (i) the establishment of a reserve power for the PRA to enforce full separation of UK banks under certain circumstances; (ii) the creation of a ‘senior managers’ regime for senior individuals in the banking and investment banking sectors to ensure better accountability for decisions made; (iii) the establishment of a criminal offence of causing a financial institution to fail; and (iv) the establishment of a regulator for payment systems.

The 2013 Act is primarily an enabling statute which provides HM Treasury with the requisite powers to implement the policy underlying the legislation through secondary legislation. The UK Government has published draft secondary legislation. The UK Government intends that both primary and secondary legislation will be in place by May 2015 and that UK banks will be required to be compliant with the structural reform requirements by 1 January 2019. Other elements of the Act will enter into force before that date.

Banks, insurance companies and other financial institutions in the UK are subject to a single compensation scheme (the Financial Services Compensation Scheme – FSCS) which operates when an authorised firm is unable or is likely to be unable to meet claims made against it because of its financial circumstances. Most deposits made with branches of Barclays Bank PLC within the EEA which are denominated in Sterling or other currencies are covered by the FSCS. Most claims made in respect of investment business will also be protected claims if the business was carried on from the UK or from a branch of the bank or investment firm in another EEA member state. The FSCS is funded by levies on authorised UK firms such as Barclays Bank PLC. In the event that the FSCS raises those funds more frequently or significantly increases the levies to be paid by firms, the associated costs to the Group may have a material impact on the Group’s results. Further details can be found in Note 28 on page 333.

Regulation in the UK is considerably shaped and influenced by EU directives and regulations. These provide the structure of the European Single Market, an important feature of which is the framework for the regulation of authorised firms. This framework is designed to enable a credit institution or investment firm authorised in one EU member state to conduct banking or investment business through the establishment of branches or by the provision of services on a cross-border basis in other member states without the need for local authorisation. Barclays operations in Europe are authorised and regulated by a combination of both home and host regulators.

Barclays operations in South Africa, including Barclays Africa Group Limited, are supervised and regulated by mainly the South African Reserve Bank (SARB), the Financial Services Board (FSB) as well as the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI). SARB oversees the banking industry and follows a risk-based approach to supervision, whilst the FSB oversees financial services such as insurance and investment business and focuses on enhancing consumer protection and regulating market conduct. The DTI regulates consumer credit through the National Credit Act (NCA) 2005, as well as other aspects of consumer protection not regulated under the jurisdiction of the FSB through the Consumer Protection Act (CPA) 2008. It is intended that regulatory responsibilities in South Africa will in future be divided between the SARB which will be responsible for prudential regulation and the FSB will be responsible for matters of market conduct. The precise timing for the move to ‘twin peaks’ regulation remains to be determined.

In the United States, Barclays PLC, Barclays Bank PLC and Barclays US subsidiaries are subject to a comprehensive regulatory framework involving numerous statutes, rules and regulations, including the International Banking Act of 1978, the Bank Holding Company Act of 1956 (BHC Act), the USA PATRIOT Act of 2001 and the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act of 2010 (DFA). This framework regulates the activities of Barclays, including its US banking subsidiaries and the US branches of Barclays Bank PLC, as well as imposing prudential restrictions, such as limits on extensions of credit by the Barclays Bank PLC’s US branches and the US banking subsidiaries to a single borrower and to affiliates. The New York and Florida branches of Barclays Bank PLC are subject to extensive federal and state supervision and regulation by the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System (FRB) and, as applicable, the New York State Department of Financial Services and the Florida Office of Financial Regulation. Barclays Bank Delaware, a Delaware chartered commercial bank, is subject to supervision and regulation by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC), the Delaware Office of the State Bank Commissioner and the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. The deposits of Barclays Bank Delaware are insured by the FDIC. Barclays Wealth Trustees (US) NA is an uninsured non-depository trust company chartered and supervised by the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency. The licensing authority of each US branch of Barclays Bank PLC has the authority, in certain circumstances, to take possession of the business and property of Barclays Bank PLC located in the state of the office it licenses or to revoke or suspend such licence. Such circumstances generally include violations of law, unsafe business practices and insolvency.

 

 

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Barclays PLC and Barclays Bank PLC are bank holding companies registered with the FRB, which exercises umbrella supervisory authority over Barclays US operations. Barclays PLC and Barclays Bank PLC have each elected to be treated as a financial holding company under the BHC Act. Financial holding companies may generally engage in a broader range of financial and related activities than are permitted to registered bank holding companies that do not maintain financial holding company status, including underwriting and dealing in all types of securities. Financial holding companies such as Barclays PLC and Barclays Bank PLC are required to meet or exceed certain capital ratios and be deemed to be ‘well managed’, and Barclays Bank Delaware and Barclays Wealth Trustees (US) NA are each required to meet certain capital requirements and be deemed to be ‘well managed’. In addition, Barclays Bank Delaware must have at least a ‘satisfactory’ rating under the Community Reinvestment Act of 1977 (CRA). Entities ceasing to meet any of these requirements, are allotted a period of time in which to restore capital levels or the management or CRA rating. Failure to meet such requirements during the allotted period of time may result in such institutions being prohibited from engaging in new types of financial activities or making certain acquisitions in the US. If the capital level or rating is not restored, the Group may ultimately be required by the FRB to cease certain activities in the United States. More generally, Barclays US activities and operations may by subject to other requirements and restrictions by the FRB under its supervisory authority, including with respect to safety and soundness.

Under the Federal Deposit Insurance Act, as amended by the DFA, Barclays is required to act as a source of financial strength for Barclays Bank Delaware. This could, among other things, require Barclays to inject capital into Barclays Bank Delaware if it fails to meet applicable regulatory capital requirements.

A major focus of US government policy relating to financial institutions in recent years has been combating money laundering and terrorist financing and enforcing compliance with US economic sanctions. Regulations applicable to US operations of Barclays Bank PLC and its subsidiaries impose obligations to maintain appropriate policies, procedures and controls to detect, prevent and report money laundering and terrorist financing and to ensure compliance with US economic sanctions against designated foreign countries, nationals and others. Failure of a financial institution to maintain and implement adequate programmes to combat money laundering and terrorist financing or to ensure economic sanction compliance could have serious legal and reputational consequences for the institution.

Barclays US securities broker/dealer, investment advisory and investment banking operations are also subject to ongoing supervision and regulation by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA) and other government agencies and self-regulatory organisations (SROs) as part of a comprehensive scheme of regulation of all aspects of the securities and commodities business under the US federal and state securities laws. Similarly, Barclays US commodity futures and options-related operations are subject to ongoing supervision and regulation by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CTFC), the National Futures Association and other SROs.

The credit card activities of the Group in the US are subject to the Credit Card Accountability, Responsibility and Disclosure Act of 2009 which prohibits certain pricing and marketing practices for consumer credit card accounts. Among the numerous provisions are those that prohibit increasing rates on existing balances and over limit fees in most instances, restrict increasing fees and rates prospectively, restrict what penalty fees can be assessed, regulate how payments are to be allocated to different balances and how the billing process is to work, and governs all communications to cardholders.

Regulatory developments

The regulatory change generated by the financial crisis is having and will continue to have a substantial impact on all financial institutions, including the Group. Regulatory change is being pursued at a number of levels, globally notably through the G20, Financial Stability Board (FSB) and Basel Committee on Banking Supervision (BCBS), regionally through the European Union and nationally, especially in the UK and US. Further changes to prudential requirements and further refinements to the definitions of capital and liquid assets may affect the Group’s planned activities and could increase costs and contribute to adverse impacts on the Group’s earnings. Similarly, increased requirements in relation to capital markets activities and to market conduct requirements may affect the Group’s planned activities and could increase costs and thereby contribute to adverse impacts on the Group’s earnings.

Global

The programme of reform of the global regulatory framework that was agreed by G20 Heads of Government in April 2009 has continued to be taken forward during 2013.

The FSB has been designated by the G20 as the body responsible for co-ordinating the delivery of the global reform programme. It has focused particularly on the risks posed by systemically important financial institutions. In 2011, G20 Heads of Government adopted FSB proposals to reform the regulation of globally systematically important financial institutions (G-SIFIs). A key element of this programme is that G-SIFIs should be capable of being resolved without recourse to taxpayer support. Barclays has been designated a G-SIFI by the FSB. G-SIFIs will be subject to a number of requirements, including additional loss absorption capacity above that required by Basel 3 standards (see below). The surcharges rise in increments from 1% to 2.5% of risk-weighted assets (with an empty category of 3.5% for institutions that increase the extent of the systemic risk they pose which is intended to discourage institutions from developing their business in a way that heightens their systemic nature). This additional buffer must be met with common equity.

In its November 2013 list of G-SIFIs, the FSB placed Barclays in a category that would require it to meet a 2% surcharge. The additional loss absorbency requirements will apply to those banks identified in November 2014 as globally systemically important and will be phased in starting in January 2016, with full implementation by January 2019. G-SIFIs must also meet the higher supervisory expectations for data aggregation capabilities by January 2016. In the EU the requirements for a systemic risk buffer will be implemented through the CRD.

The BCBS issued the final guidelines on Basel 3 capital and liquidity standards in June 2011, with revisions to counterparty credit risk in July and November 2011. It has continued to refine elements of this package through 2013, notably in relation to regulatory liquidity where revisions were agreed in January 2013 to the definitions of high quality liquid assets and net cash outflows for the purpose of calculating the Liquidity Coverage Ratio, as well as establishing a timetable for phasing-in the standard from January 2016. Amendments to the Basel 3 leverage ratio and liquidity frameworks were issued in January 2014. The requirements of Basel 3 as a whole are subject to a number of transitional provisions that run to the end of 2018. The Group is, however, primarily subject to the EU’s implementation of the Basel 3 standard through the CRD (see below). An assessment of the likely impact of the Basel 3 capital, leverage and liquidity requirements as implemented by the CRD and interpreted by the PRA can be found in the analysis of funding risk in relation to capital and to liquidity (pages 199 to 224).

The BCBS also maintains a number of active work streams that will affect the Group. These include a fundamental review of the trading book where a second consultation on enhanced capital standards was issued in October 2013 and further work on large exposures. The Committee also continues to focus on the consistency of risk weighting of assets and explaining the variations between banks. A second consultation on enhanced standards was also held in relation to the

 

 

 

 

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securitisation framework. The results of this work are expected in 2014. In conjunction with the International Organization of Securities Commissions, the BCBS issued enhanced standards for margin requirements for non-centrally cleared derivatives in September. The BCBS also issued risk management guidelines related to anti-money laundering and terrorist financing in January 2014. These and other developments may further increase the capital required by the Group to transact affected business and/or affect the ability of the Group to undertake certain transactions.

European Union

The EU continues to develop its regulatory structure in response to the financial and Eurozone crises. At the December 2012 meeting of EU Finance Ministers it was agreed to establish a single supervisory mechanism within the Eurozone. The European Central Bank (ECB) will have responsibility for the supervision of the most significant Eurozone credit institutions, financial holding companies or mixed financial holding companies. The ECB may extend its supervision to institutions of significant relevance that have established subsidiaries in more than one participating member state and with significant cross-border assets or liabilities. Following the passage of the regulation granting the ECB responsibility for banking supervision in the Eurozone in September 2013, it is expected that the single supervisory mechanism will become operational in autumn 2014.

Notwithstanding the new responsibilities of the ECB, the European Banking Authority (EBA) which came into being on 1 January 2011, along with the other European Supervisory Authorities, remains charged with the development of a single rulebook for the EU as a whole and with enhancing co-operation between national supervisory authorities. The European Securities Markets Authority (ESMA) has a similar role in relation to the capital markets and to banks and other firms doing investment and capital markets business. The progressive reduction of national discretion on the part of national regulatory authorities within the EU may lead to the elimination of prudential arrangements that have been agreed with those authorities. This may serve to increase or decrease the amount of capital and other resources that the Group is required to hold. The overall effect is not clear and may only become evident over a number of years. The EBA and ESMA each have the power to mediate between and override national authorities under certain circumstances. Responsibility for day to day supervision remains with national authorities and for banks, like the Group, that are incorporated in countries that will not participate in the single supervisory mechanism, is expected to remain so.

Basel 3 and (from 2016) the capital surcharge for systemic institutions have been implemented in the EU by the CRD. The CRD entered into force on 1 January 2014. Much of the implementation is expected to be done through binding technical standards being developed by the EBA, that are intended to ensure a harmonised application of rules through the EU which are still largely in the process of being developed and adopted. An assessment of the likely impact of the capital, leverage and liquidity requirements of CRD and CRR as interpreted by the PRA can be found in the analysis of funding risk in relation to capital and to liquidity (pages 199 to 207 in relation to capital and leverage and pages 208 to 224 in relation to liquidity).

A significant addition to the EU legislative framework for financial institutions is a directive establishing a framework for the recovery and resolution of credit institutions and investment firms. This Directive is intended to implement many of the requirements of the FSB’s ‘Key Attributes of Effective Resolution Regimes for Financial Institutions’, and political agreement on it was reached by the European Parliament and Council in December 2013, although it has yet to complete the legislative process. The directive would give resolution authorities powers to intervene in and resolve a financial institution that is no longer viable, including through the transfers of business and creditor financed recapitalisation (bail-in within resolution) that allocates losses to shareholders and unsecured and uninsured creditors in their order of seniority, at a regulator determined point of non-viability that may precede insolvency. The concept of bail-in may affect the rights of

senior unsecured creditors subject to any bail-in in the event of a resolution of a failing bank. It also stipulates that firms would need a minimum percentage of liabilities in a form that allows them to be subject to bail-in. The proposal also requires the development of recovery and resolution plans at group and firm-level. The proposal sets out a harmonised set of resolution tools across the EU, including the power to impose a temporary stay on the rights of creditors to terminate, accelerate or close out contracts. There are also significant funding implications for financial institutions: the proposal envisages the establishment of pre-funded resolution funds of 1% of covered deposits to be built up over 10 years, although the proposal also envisages that national deposit guarantee schemes may be able to fulfil this function. The proposal is to be implemented by 1 January 2015, with the exception of the bail-in powers which must be implemented by 1 January 2016.

A proposal to amend the Directive on Deposit Guarantee Schemes is also being considered. The draft directive envisages that national schemes should be pre-funded, with a fund to be raised over a number of years. This would be a significant change for UK banks where levies are currently raised as needed after failure. An agreement between Council and Parliament remains to be finalised, but would envisage a fund of 0.8% of covered deposits to be built up over 10 years.

In relation to both resolution funds and the funds required by the Directive on Deposit Guarantee Schemes, there may be scope for the UK to use the Bank Levy to meet pre-funding obligations, although whether this will happen and the manner in which this might operate remains unclear.

In October 2012, a group of experts set up by the European Commission to consider possible reform of the structure of the EU banking sector presented its report. Among other things, the group recommended the mandatory separation of proprietary trading and other high-risk trading activities from other banking activities. The European Commission issued proposals to implement these recommendations in January 2014. These proposals would apply to G-SIFIs and envisage, among other things: (i) a ban on proprietary trading in financial instruments and commodities; (ii) giving supervisors the power and, in certain instances, the obligation to require the transfer of other trading activities deemed to be ‘high risk’ to separate legal trading entities within the group; and (iii) rules on the economic, legal, governance, and operational links between the separated trading entity and the rest of the banking group. Contemporaneously, the European Commission also adopted proposals to enhance the transparency of shadow banking, especially in relation to securities financing transactions. These proposals have yet to be considered by the European Parliament and by the Council. Their impact, if they are adopted, remains to be determined.

The European Market Infrastructure Regulation (EMIR) introduces new requirements to improve transparency and reduce the risks associated with the derivatives market. These requirements come into force progressively through 2013 and 2014. When it enters fully into force, EMIR will require entities that enter into any form of derivative contract, including interest rate, foreign exchange, equity, credit and commodity derivatives, to: report every derivative contract that they enter to a trade repository; implement new risk management standards, including operational processes and margining, for all bilateral over-the-counter derivatives trades that are not cleared by a central counterparty; and clear, through a central counterparty, over-the-counter derivatives that are subject to a mandatory clearing obligation. EMIR has potential operational and financial impacts on the Group, including collateral requirements. Lower capital requirements for cleared trades are only available if the central counterparty is recognised as a ‘qualifying central counterparty’ which has been authorised or recognised under EMIR (in accordance with binding technical standards).

Proposals to amend the Markets in Financial Instruments Directive (known as MiFID II) were agreed in January 2014. These amendments

 

 

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take the form of a directive and a regulation and will affect many of the investment markets in which the Group operates and the instruments in which it trades, and how it transacts with market counterparties and other customers. Changes to the MiFID regime include the introduction of a new type of trading venue (the organised trading facility), to capture non-equity trading that falls outside the current regime. Investor protections have been strengthened, and new curbs imposed on high frequency and commodity trading. Pre- and post-trade transparency has been increased, and a new regime for third country firms introduced. The changes also include new requirements for non-discriminatory access to trading venues, central counterparties, and benchmarks, and harmonised supervisory powers and sanctions across the EU. Implementation is not expected until late 2016 and many of the provisions of MiFID II and its accompanying regulation will be implemented by means of technical standards to be drafted by ESMA. Some of the impacts on the Group will not be clear until these technical standards have been adopted.

United Kingdom

Developments in the UK have been dominated by the Financial Services Banking Reform Act 2013. The content and the impact of this legislation are discussed above. Secondary legislation and rule-making to implement both the Act and the recommendations of the Parliamentary Commission on Banking Standards will is anticipated through 2014.

As noted above, the FPC has a significant influence on prudential requirements. During 2013, the FPC continued to recommend that the PRA should seek to ensure that UK banks hold greater levels of capital. In particular, the FPC recommended that the PRA should apply higher capital requirements to any major bank or building society with concentrated exposure to vulnerable assets, where there were valuation uncertainties or where banks were highly leveraged relating to trading activities. This resulted in the PRA on 20 June 2013 requiring two firms, including Barclays, to submit plans to increase the Core Equity Tier 1 leverage ratio to 3% by end June 2014 after adjustment for prospective credit and conduct losses. Also responding to an FPC recommendation, the Bank of England and PRA are also developing an approach to annual stress testing of the UK banking system and the individual institutions within it. The first such exercise is planned for 2014.

Both the PRA and the FCA have continued to develop and apply a more assertive approach to supervision and the application of existing standards. This may include application of standards that either anticipate or go beyond requirements established by global or EU standards, whether in relation to capital, leverage and liquidity, resolvability and resolution of matters of conduct. In December 2013, the PRA published its requirements to implement the new European capital regime, clarifying key policy issues that affect the minimum level of Common Equity Tier 1 (CET1) capital which banks need to maintain. The PRA will require banks to meet a 4% Pillar 1 CET1 requirement in 2014, rising to 4.5% from 1 January 2015. Similarly, during the same period the required Pillar 1 Tier 1 capital ratio will be 5.5%, rising to 6% from 1 January 2015 onwards. The PRA will require UK banks to bring CET1 in line with the end-point definition from 1 January 2014 rather than benefiting from transitional arrangements. Additionally, the PRA will expect eight major UK banks and building societies including Barclays, to meet a 7% CET1 capital ratio and a 3% Tier 1 leverage ratio – after taking into account adjustments to risk-weighted assets and CET1 capital deemed necessary by the PRA – from 1 January 2014, except where – as in the case for Barclays – the PRA has agreed a plan with the firm to meet the standards over a longer time frame. Barclays has agreed with the PRA that it will meet this requirement by end-June 2014 at the latest. Details of Barclays leverage calculation are set out on pages 205 and 206.

The FCA has retained an approach to enforcement based on credible deterrence that has continued to see significant growth in the size of regulatory fines. The FCA has focused strongly on conduct risk and on customer outcomes and will continue to do so. This has included a focus on the design and operation of products, the behaviour of

customers and the operation of markets. This may impact both the incidence of conduct costs and increase the cost of remediation. The Retail Distribution Review entered into force on 1 January 2013 and the Mortgage Market Review will apply from 26 April 2014. These conduct initiatives will affect the economics of investment advice and home finance provision respectively.

United States

The DFA became law in July 2010. Although many of the DFA rules have been adopted and implemented, a number of rules have not yet been adopted, or have been adopted but not fully implemented. In addition, the rules that have been adopted and implemented have, for the most part, only recently become effective and their impact, in many cases, cannot yet be fully evaluated. Therefore, the full scale of the DFA’s impact on the Group continues to remain unclear. In addition, market practices and structures may change in response to the requirements of the DFA in ways that are difficult to predict but that could impact Barclays business. Nonetheless, certain provisions of the DFA are particularly likely to have a significant effect on the Group, including:

 

¡   Structural Reform: On 18 February 2014, the FRB issued final rules implementing various enhanced prudential standards under Section 165 of the DFA applicable to certain foreign banking organisations and their US operations (i.e. branches, agencies, and subsidiaries), including Barclays.

The final rules’ specific requirements depend on the amount of assets of the foreign banking organisation both inside and outside the United States. Because its total US and non-US assets exceed $50bn, Barclays would be subject to the most stringent requirements of the final rules, including the requirement to create a US intermediate holding company (IHC) structure to hold its US banking and non-banking subsidiaries, including Barclays Capital Inc. (the Group’s US broker-dealer subsidiary). The IHC would be subject to supervision and regulation, including as to regulatory capital and stress testing as described below, by the FRB as if it were a US bank holding company of comparable size. While the operations and assets of Barclays Bank PLC’s US branches would not be required to be held in the IHC, the branches would be subject to certain separate requirements.

Under the final rules, the consolidated IHC would be subject to a number of additional supervisory and prudential requirements, such as: (i) subject to certain limited exceptions, FRB regulatory capital requirements and leverage limits that are the same as those applicable to US banking organisations of comparable size; (ii) mandatory company-run and supervisory stress testing of capital levels and submission of a capital plan to the FRB; (iii) supervisory approval of and limitations on capital distributions by the IHC to Barclays Bank PLC; (iv) additional substantive liquidity requirements, including requirements to conduct monthly internal liquidity stress tests for the IHC (and also for Barclays Bank PLC’s US branch network, separately), and to maintain in the US a 30-day buffer of highly liquid assets for the IHC (the branch liquidity buffer is set at 14 days); (v) other liquidity risk management requirements, including compliance with liquidity risk management standards established by the FRB and maintenance of an independent review function to review and evaluate regularly the adequacy and effectiveness of the liquidity risk management practices of Barclays’ combined US operations; (vi) overall risk management requirements, including a US risk committee and a US chief risk officer; and (vii) a potential 15:1 debt-to-equity limit applicable to the IHC in the event of the occurrence of a designation by the U.S. Financial Stability Oversight Council under Section 165(j) of the DFA that the foreign banking organisation poses a grave threat to the systemic stability of the United States and the debt-to-equity limit is necessary to mitigate such risk.

The effective date of the final rule is 1 June 2014, although compliance with most of its requirements will be phased-in between 2015 and 2018. More particularly, (i) Barclays will not be required to form its IHC until 1 July 2016, (ii) the IHC will not be subject to the US

 

 

 

 

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generally applicable minimum leverage capital requirement (which is different than the Basel III international leverage ratio, including to the extent that the generally applicable US leverage ratio does not include off-balance sheet exposures) until 1 January 2018, and (iii) the IHC will first be required to make the aforementioned capital plan submission and be subject to the company-run and supervisory capital stress testing requirements of the final rules in January 2018.

In addition, Barclays’ US IHC will also be separately subject to the supplementary US version of the Basel III international minimum leverage capital requirement starting in 2018 to the extent the IHC has over $250bn of total consolidated assets or $10bn in total non-US exposures. In light of the recent release of the final rules, Barclays continues to evaluate their implications for Barclays. Nevertheless, the Group currently believes that, in the aggregate, the final rules (and, in particular, the leverage requirements in the final rules that will ultimately become applicable to the IHC) are likely to increase the operational costs and capital requirements and/or require changes to the business mix of Barclays’ US operations, which ultimately may have an adverse effect on the Group’s overall result of operations.

Finally, the final rules did not implement the single counterparty credit exposure limits or the early remediation framework that were originally proposed in 2012. The FRB expects to implement such provisions at a later date.

 

¡   Other enhanced prudential requirements: In addition to the requirements that would be implemented under the above final rules described under ‘Structural Reform’, the DFA and other US laws and regulations also impose higher capital, liquidity and leverage requirements on US banks and bank holding companies generally. As discussed above, these requirements will also be generally applicable to the IHC and Barclays US operations held by it.

 

¡   Restrictions on proprietary trading and fund-related activities: In December 2013, the relevant US regulatory agencies, including the FRB, the FDIC, the SEC and the CFTC, finalised the rules implementing the requirements of Section 619 of the DFA – the so-called ‘Volcker Rule’. The Volcker Rule, once fully effective, will prohibit banking entities, including Barclays PLC, Barclays Bank PLC and their various subsidiaries and affiliates from undertaking certain ‘proprietary trading’ (but will allow activities such as underwriting, market making and risk-mitigation hedging) and will limit the sponsorship of, and investment in, private equity funds (including non-conforming real estate and credit funds) and hedge funds, in each case broadly defined, by such entities. These restrictions are subject to certain exceptions and exemptions, including those listed above as well as exemptions applicable to transactions and investments occurring solely outside of the United States. The rules will require Barclays to develop an extensive compliance and monitoring programme (both inside and outside of the United States), subject to various executive officer attestation requirements, addressing proprietary trading and covered fund activities, and it is therefore expected that compliance costs will increase. The final rules are highly complex and differ in certain significant respects from the rules as proposed in October 2011. As such, their full impact will not be known with certainty until market practices and structures develop under them. Subject entities are generally required to be in compliance by July 2015 (with certain provisions subject to possible extensions).

 

¡   Resolution plans: The DFA requires bank holding companies with total consolidated assets of $50bn or more to submit to the FRB and the FDIC, and regularly update, a plan for ‘rapid and orderly’ resolution to be used if the company experiences material financial distress or failure. Non-US banking organisations that are treated as bank holding companies under US law, such as Barclays, are required to submit such plans with respect to their US operations if they have more than $50bn in US assets. As Barclays’ US assets exceed $250bn, it submitted its most recent annual resolution plan as required in October 2013.

 

¡   Regulation of derivatives markets: Among the changes mandated by the DFA are that many types of derivatives now (or previously) traded
   

in the over-the counter markets be traded on an exchange or swap execution facility and centrally cleared through a regulated clearing house. In addition, many participants in these markets are required to register with the CFTC as ‘swap dealers’ or ‘major swap participants’ and/or with the US SEC as ‘securities swap dealers’ or ‘major securities swap dealers’ and be subject to CFTC and SEC regulation and oversight. It is anticipated that additional participants in the derivatives markets will be required to register in the future. Barclays Bank PLC has registered as a swap dealer. Entities required to register are subject to business conduct, recordkeeping and reporting requirements and will be subject to capital and margin requirements. The DFA also requires most standardised derivatives to be traded on a regulated platform and cleared through a regulated clearing house. In addition, the CFTC, pursuant to the DFA, has proposed rules on position limits on derivatives on physical commodities. Once adopted and implemented, these rules will limit the size of positions that can be held by an entity, or a group of entities under common ownership or control, in futures and over-the-counter derivatives, subject to certain exemptions. These rules could restrict trading activity, reducing trading opportunities and market liquidity and potentially increasing the cost of hedging transactions and the volatility of the relevant markets. It is also possible that registration, execution, clearing and compliance requirements as well as other additional regulations (certain of which still are not final), and the related expenses and requirements, will increase the cost of and restrict participation in the derivative markets, thereby increasing the costs of engaging in hedging or other transactions and reducing liquidity and the use of the derivative markets. Barclays Bank PLC and its subsidiaries and affiliates may be exposed to these effects whether or not these subsidiaries are required to register in the capacities described. The new regulation of the derivative markets could adversely affect the business of Barclays Bank PLC and its affiliates in these markets and could make it more difficult and expensive to conduct hedging and trading activities.

 

¡   Risk retention requirements for securitisations: The US federal banking agencies are required by the DFA to develop rules whereby, subject to certain exceptions, any sponsor of an asset-backed security (ABS) transaction must retain, generally, not less than 5% of the credit risk of any asset that the sponsor, through the issuance of ABS, transfers, sells or conveys to a third party. This may impact the participation by the Group’s US operations in such transactions.

 

¡   The Bureau of Consumer Financial Protection (CFPB): The CFPB is empowered to regulate the credit card industry, including the terms of credit card agreements with consumers, disclosures and fees. Actions by the CFPB in this area are likely to impact the Group’s US credit card business. The CFPB became operational in July 2011, and has developed a model credit card disclosure form and is accepting consumer credit card complaints. More broadly, the CFPB has the authority to examine and take enforcement action against any US bank with over $10bn in total assets, such as Barclays Bank Delaware, with respect to its compliance with Federal laws regulating the provision of consumer financial services and with respect to ‘unfair, deceptive or abusive acts and practices.’ Since becoming operational, the CFPB has initiated several high-profile public actions against financial companies, including major credit card issuers. Settlements of those actions have included monetary penalties, customer remediation requirements and commitments to modify business practices.
 

 

LOGO
 

 

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Table of Contents

Financial review>

Contents

  

 

 

 

 

A review of the performance of Barclays, including the key performance indicators, and our businesses’ contribution to the overall performance of the Group.

 

Key performance indicators

 

  

238

 

 

 

Consolidated summary income statement

 

  

 

245

 

 

 

Income statement commentary

 

  

 

246

 

 

 

Consolidated summary balance sheet

 

  

 

247

 

 

 

Balance sheet commentary

 

  

 

248

 

 

 

Analysis of results by business

 

  

 

249

 

 

 

Margins and balances review

 

  

 

267

 

 

 

 

LOGO

 

 

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Table of Contents

Financial review >

Key performance indicators

  

 

 

 

 

 

Transform Financial Commitments and Leverage Plan

 

LOGO

 

 

On 12 February 2013, Barclays announced six Transform Financial Commitments based on the results of its strategic review. On 30 July 2013, Barclays also announced its Leverage Plan in order to achieve the PRA 3% leverage ratio target by June 2014. These metrics, alongside the financial KPIs used in the prior year (see pages 241 and 242) were used by management to assess performance during 2013.

 

Transform Financial Commitments

 

Performance metric         Definition    Why it is important to the business and
performance update

 

Return on average shareholders’ equity (RoE)

 

   RoE is calculated as profit for the year attributable to ordinary equity holders of the parent divided by average shareholders’ equity for the year excluding non-controlling and other equity interests. Shareholders’ equity is made up of share capital, retained earnings and other reserves.    This measure indicates the return generated by the management of the business based on the shareholders’ equity. Achieving a target RoE demonstrates the organisation’s ability to execute its strategy and align management’s interests with shareholders’. RoE lies at the heart of our capital allocation and performance management process.
Adjusted    Statutory      
2013 – 4.5%    2013 – 1.0%      
2012 – 9.0%    2012 – (1.2%)      
2011 – 6.7%    2011 – 5.9%      
2016 Target –         
> Cost of Equity         
     

Adjusted RoE excludes post tax adjusting items for movements in own credit, gains on debt buy-backs, loss/gains on acquisitions and disposals, impairment of investment in BlackRock, Inc., provisions for PPI and interest rate hedging products redress, and goodwill impairment. Average shareholders’ equity for adjusted RoE excludes the impact of own credit on retained earnings.

 

  

Adjusted RoE decreased to 4.5% (2012: 9.0%) principally reflecting the decrease in profit before tax, £440m write down of deferred tax assets relating to Spain and the rights issue equity raised of £5.8bn.

 

Transform commitment: deliver a return on equity in excess of cost of equity in 2016.

 

Operating expenses

 

  

Defined as total operating expenses.

 

Adjusted operating expenses exclude provisions for PPI and interest rate hedging products redress, and goodwill impairment.

  

Barclays views operating expenses as a key stategic battleground for banks in the next decade. Those who actively manage costs and control them effectively will gain a competitive advantage.

 

Adjusted operating expenses increased 7% to £19.9bn reflecting £1.2bn of costs to achieve Transform, provisions for litigation and regulatory penalties in Q4 2013 in the Investment Bank and an increase in UK bank levy to £504m (2012: £345m).

 

Transform commitment: deliver a cost reduction of £1.7bn in order to reduce operating expenses excluding costs to achieve Transform to £16.8bn in 2015.

Adjusted    Statutory      
2013 – £19,893m    2013 – £21,972m      
2012 – £18,562m    2012 – £21,012m      
2011 – £19,289m    2011 – £20,886m      
2015 Target –         
£16,800m         
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        

 

Cost: income ratio

 

  

The cost: income ratio is defined as operating expenses compared to total income net of insurance claims.

 

The adjusted cost: income ratio excludes movements on own credit, gains on debt buy-backs, loss/gains on acquisitions and disposals, provisions for PPI and interest rate hedging products redress, and goodwill impairment.

  

This is a measure management uses to assess the productivity of the business operations. Restructuring the cost base is a key execution priority for management and includes a review of all categories of discretionary spending and an analysis of how the business can be run to ensure that costs increase at a slower rate

than income.

 

The adjusted cost to income ratio increased to 71% (2012: 63%) primarily due to reductions in income.

 

Transform commitment: reduce cost to income ratio excluding cost to achieve transform of mid-50s by 2015.

Adjusted    Statutory      
2013 – 71%    2013 – 79%      
2012 – 63%    2012 – 84%      
2011 – 68%    2011 – 65%      
2015 Target –         
mid-50s         
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        

 

 

 

 

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Performance metric    Definition    Why it is important to the business and
performance update

CRD IV Risk Weighted Assets (RWAs)

 

2013 – £436bn

2012 – £468bn

2015 Target – £440bn

   A measure of a bank’s assets adjusted for their associated risks. Risk weightings are established in accordance with the Basel Capital Accord as implemented by the PRA.   

RWAs remain the primary measure to determine the effective allocation of capital across the Group.

 

CRD IV RWAs reduced £32bn to £436bn. The reduction during the year was primarily driven by reductions in Exit Quadrant RWAs of £39bn and reductions in trading book exposures, partially offset by methodology changes. This reduction was primarily in the Investment Bank, where Exit Quadrant RWAs reduced £37bn to £42bn. CRD III RWAs reduced £32bn to £355bn during the year.

 

Transform commitment: CRD IV RWAs of £440bn in 2015.

CRD IV fully loaded Common Equity Tier 1 (CET1) ratio

 

2013 – 9.3%

2015 Target – >10.5%

  

Capital requirements are part of the regulatory framework governing how banks and depository institutions are managed. Capital ratios express a bank’s capital as a percentage of its risk weighted assets as defined by the PRA.

 

In the context of CRD IV, the CRD IV fully loaded CET1 ratio uses a measure of capital that is predominantly common equity as defined by the Capital Requirements Regulation.

  

The Group’s capital management objective is to maximise shareholders’ value by prudently optimising the level and mix of its capital resources whilst maintaining sufficient capital resources to: ensure the Group and all of its subsidiaries are well capitalised relative to their minimum regulatory capital requirements; support the Group’s risk appetite and economic capital requirements; and support the Group’s credit rating.

 

As at 31 December 2013, the Group’s CRD IV fully loaded CET1 ratio was 9.3%.

 

Transform commitment: 10.5% CRD IV CET1 ratio on a fully loaded basis in 2015.

Dividend payout ratio   

It is the Group’s policy to declare and pay dividends on a quarterly basis. In a normal year there will be three equal payments in June, September and December and a final variable payment in March.

 

Dividend payout ratio is the percentage of earnings paid to shareholders in dividend and is calculated as a proportion of adjusted earnings per share as determined by the Board.

  

The ability to pay dividends demonstrates the financial strength of the Group. Dividends remained constant at 6.5p during 2013.

 

Transform commitment: 40%-50% dividend payout ratio over time.

 

The Group expects to be at 40% from 2014 to allow focus on capital accretion. The Group would not expect it to rise further until the 10.5% Core Equity Tier 1 milestone has been reached.

Dividend per share    Dividend payout ratio      
2013 –6.5p    2013 – 38.9%      
2012 – 6.5p    2012 – 18.3%      
2011 – 6.0p    2014 Target –
40-50%
     
        
            

 

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Table of Contents

Financial review >

Key performance indicators continued

  

 

 

 

 

Leverage Plan

 

Performance metric    Definition   

Why it is important to the business and

performance update

 

Estimated PRA leverage ratio

 

2013 – 3.0%

2015 Target – 3.5%

Target beyond 2015 – 3.5-4%

   In June 2013 the PRA announced the results of its review of the capital adequacy of major UK banks and building societies. As part of its review, the PRA introduced a 3% leverage ratio target – a non risk-based ratio calculated as fully loaded CET1 capital after PRA adjustments together with CRD IV qualifying Tier 1 and divided by a PRA adjusted CRD IV leverage exposure.   

In order to achieve the PRA 3% leverage ratio target by June 2014, Barclays announced a series of actions, including an underwritten Rights Issue, measures to reduce Barclays’ CRD IV leverage exposure, and the continued execution of Barclays’ capital plan with the issuance of CRD IV qualifying AT1 securities.

 

The estimated PRA leverage ratio increased to just under 3.0% (30 June 2013: 2.2%), reflecting a reduction in the PRA leverage exposure of £196bn and an increase in eligible PRA adjusted Tier 1 Capital to £40.5bn (30 June 2013: £34.2bn). The increase included £2.1bn of AT1 securities and a £1.9bn reduction in PRA adjustments to CET1 to £2.2bn largely driven by an elimination of the additional PRA add-on for PVA. The estimated CRD IV fully loaded leverage ratio increased to 3.1% (30 June 2013: 2.5%).

 

Leverage plan target: PRA leverage ratio of at least 3.5% by the end of 2015 and a range of 3.5% to 4% beyond 2015.

 

 

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LOGO

   Other Financial KPIs
  

The other financial KPIs outlined below were used alongside the six Transform Financial Commitments. Together they set out the way in which the performance of the Group has been measured during 2013.

 

Other Financial KPIs

 

Performance metric        Definition   Why it is important to the business and
performance update

 

Total income  

Defined as total income net of insurance claims.

 

Adjusted income excludes adjusting items for movements in own credit, gains on debt buy-backs, and loss/gains on acquisitions and disposals.

 

Total income is a key indicator of financial performance to many of Barclays’ stakeholders and income growth is a key execution priority for Barclays’ management.

 

Adjusted total income decreased 4% to £28,155m due to challenging economic conditions and the continuing low interest rate environment.

Adjusted    Statutory    
2013 – £28,155m    2013 – £27,935m    
2012 – £29,361m    2012 – £25,009m    
2011 – £ 28,513m    2011 – £ 32,292m    

 

Profit before tax  

Profit before tax and adjusted profit before tax are the two primary profitability measures used by management to assess performance. Profit before tax is stated in accordance with International Financial Reporting Standards and represents total income less impairment charges and operating expenses

 

 

Profit before tax is a key indicator of financial performance to many of our stakeholders.

 

Adjusted profit before tax is presented to provide a consistent basis for comparing business performance between periods. Adjusted profit before tax decreased by 32% to £5,167m due to costs to achieve Transform and a 4% reduction in income. Profit before tax in the Investment Bank decreased 37% to £2,523m.

Adjusted    Statutory    
2013 – £5,167m    2013 – £2,868m    
2012 – £7,599m    2012 – £797m    
2011 – £ 5,482m    2011 – £ 5,770m    
      
     Adjusted profit before tax excludes adjusting items for movements in own credit, gains on debt buy-backs, loss gains on acquisitions and disposals, impairment of investment in BlackRock Inc., provisions for PPI and interest rate hedging products redress, and goodwill impairment.  

 

Loan loss rate      The loan loss rate is quoted in basis points and represents total annualised loan impairment divided by gross loans and advances to customers and banks held at amortised cost at the balance sheet date.  

The granting of credit is one of Barclays major sources of income and its most significant risk. The loan loss rate is an indicator of the cost of granting credit.

2013– 64 bps       
2012 – 70 bps       
2011 – 77 bps       
      

The loan loss rate decreased to 64bps (2012: 70bps) reflecting an 8% reduction in impairment charge on loans and advances principally due to lower impairments in the wholesale businesses.

 

Return on average tangible shareholders’ equity (RoTE)   RoTE is calculated as profit for the year attributable to equity holders of the parent divided by average shareholders’ equity for the year, excluding non-controlling interests, goodwill and intangible assets.  

This measure indicates the return generated by the management of the business based on the tangible shareholders’ equity.

 

Adjusted return on average tangible shareholders’ equity decreased to 5.3% (2012: 10.6%), principally reflecting the decrease in profit before tax, £440m write down of deferred tax assets relating to Spain and the rights issue equity raised of £5.8bn.

Adjusted    Statutory    
2013 – 5.3%    2013 – 1.2%    
2012 – 10.6%    2012 – (1.4%)    
2011 – 8.1%    2011 – 7.1%  

Adjusted RoTE excludes post tax adjusting items for movements in own credit, gains on debt buy-backs, loss/gains on acquisitions and disposals, impairment of investment in BlackRock, Inc., provisions for PPI and interest rate hedging products redress, and goodwill impairment. Average tangible shareholders’ equity for adjusted RoTE excludes the impact of own credit on retained earnings.

 

 

 

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Financial review >

Key performance indicators continued

  

 

 

 

 

 

Performance metric    Definition    Why it is important to the business and
performance update

 

Return on average risk weighted assets

(RoRWA)

 

  

RoRWA is calculated as profit after tax for the year divided by average CRD III RWAs for the year.

 

Adjusted RoRWA excludes post tax adjusting items for movements in own credit, gains on debt buy-backs, loss/gains on acquisitions and disposals, impairment of investment in BlackRock, Inc., provisions for PPI and interest rate hedging products redress, and goodwill impairment.

  

This measure indicates the return generated by the management of the business based on RWAs.

 

Adjusted return on average risk weighted assets decreased to 0.8% (2012: 1.4%), principally reflecting the decrease in profit before tax and £440m write down of deferred tax assets relating to Spain, despite the reduction in RWAs.

Adjusted

2013 – 0.8%

2012 – 1.4%

2011 – 1.1%

  

Statutory

2013 – 0.3%

2012 – 0.0%

2011 – 1.0%

 

     

 

Core Tier 1 ratio

 

2013 – 13.2%

2012 – 10.8%

2011 – 11.0%

     

Capital requirements are part of the regulatory framework governing how banks and depositary institutions are managed. Capital ratios express a bank’s capital as a percentage of its risk weighted assets as defined by the PRA.

 

Core Tier 1 Capital is broadly tangible shareholders’ funds less certain capital deductions (see page 201 for a reconciliation).

  

The Group’s capital management activities seek to maximise shareholders’ value by prudently optimising the level and mix of its capital resources. The Group’s capital management objectives are to maintain sufficient capital resources to: ensure the financial holding company is well capitalised relative to the minimum regulatory capital requirements set by the PRA; ensure locally regulated subsidiaries can meet their minimum regulatory capital requirements; support the Group’s risk appetite and economic capital requirements; and support the Group’s credit rating.

 

During 2013, the Group’s Core Tier 1 ratio strengthened to 13.2% (2012: 10.8%) primarily due to the rights issue and a decrease in RWAs offset by new regulatory deductions primarily related to foreseeable dividends.

 

 

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   LOGO    Barclays Balanced Scorecard
   The Balanced Scorecard defines what Barclays need to achieve over the next five years to be well on the way to becoming the ‘Go-To’ bank. The Balanced Scorecard sets out 8 specific commitments against the 5Cs (Customer & Client, Colleague, Citizenship, Conduct, and Company), which will form part of the KPIs going forward. See the Strategic Report for further details and an overview of the Balanced Scorecard.

 

 

   LOGO    For further information on Balance Scorecard Methodology and Data Sources please visit barclays.com/balancedscorecard and see the ‘Metrics and targets’ page.

Customer & Client KPIs

 

Performance metric    Definition    Why it is important to the business and
management

 

Retail and Business Banking, Barclaycard and Wealth and Investment Management: Weighted average ranking of Relationship Net Promoter Score® vs. peer sets

 

2013 – 4th

2018 Target – 1st

  

Relationship Net Promoter Score® versus peer sets is an income weighted ranking using rankings for Barclays UK Retail Banking, Barclaycard UK Credit Cards, Barclaycard US Credit Cards and ABSA Retail Banking. Wealth and Investment Management will be added in future reporting.

 

   Relationship Net Promoter Score® is a measure of customer advocacy, and demonstrates progress in becoming ‘Go-To’ for customers and clients across Retail and Business Banking, Barclaycard and Wealth and Investment Management.

 

Corporate and Investment Bank (CIB) Client Franchise Rank: Weighted average ranking of wallet share or customer satisfaction with priority clients

 

2013 – 4th

2018 Target – Top 3

  

CIB Client Franchise Metric is an income weighted ranking comprised of metrics representing the wallet share with Barclays’ priority clients across four major product lines in the Investment Bank and client satisfaction of Corporate Banking priority clients.

 

   CIB Client Franchise Metric demonstrates progress in becoming ‘Go-To’ across Barclays’ major businesses in Corporate Banking and the Investment Bank.

 

Colleague KPIs

 

Performance metric    Definition    Why it is important to the business and
management

 

Sustained engagement of colleagues score

 

2013 – 74%

2018 Target – 87-91%

   The score is based on a survey of colleagues across the Barclays Group.    Demonstrates progress on colleague engagement. Strong levels of sustainable colleague engagement will be key in driving successful delivery of Barclays’ strategy for all stakeholders.

 

Percentage of women in senior leadership

 

2013 – 21%

2018 Target – 26%

   Percentage of women in senior leadership is defined as the number of female Directors and Managing Directors as a percentage of the entire Director and Managing Director population.    Demonstrates progress on the delivery of an improved gender mix across Barclays’ senior leadership, a key part of Barclays’ diversity strategy. Diversity and inclusion is important to Barclays as only through access to the most diverse pool of talent will Barclays recruit and retain the most talented individuals to serve all stakeholders.

 

 

LOGO

 

 

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Financial review >

Key performance indicators continued

  

 

 

 

 

Citizenship KPIs

 

Performance metric    Definition    Why it is important to the business and management

 

Citizenship Plan – number of initiatives on track or ahead

 

2013 – 10/11

2018 Target – Meet all Plan Targets (11/11)

   The KPI tracks overall performance against 11 metrics based on the 2015 Citizenship Plan commitments.    The 2015 Citizenship Plan provides the framework and targets for Barclays’ approach to positively impact the communities in which we operate. The KPI demonstrates how Barclays is making progress against 11 metrics based on the 2015 Citizenship Plan commitments across three areas: the way we do business, contributing to growth and supporting our communities.
   1.
   Attestation to ‘Barclays Way’ Code of Conduct;   
   2.    Reduction in Global Carbon Emissions;   
   3.    Percentage of suppliers paid on time;   
   4.    New and renewed lending to households;   
   5.    New and renewed lending to SMEs;   
   6.    Assist in raising financing for businesses and governments;   
   7.    Number of SMEs supported with seminars, tools and training;   
   8.    Number of apprenticeships at Barclays;   
   9.    Monetary investment in the community;   
   10.    10-35 year olds supported in building skills; and   
   11.    Citizenship Reputation (YouGov Survey).   

 

Conduct KPIs

 

Performance metric    Definition    Why it is important to the business and management

 

Conduct Reputation (YouGov survey)

 

2013 – 5.2/10

2018 Target – 6.5/10

   This measure is developed through a Conduct Reputation survey, conducted by YouGov, across opinion formers including MPs, business and political stakeholders, media, non-governmental organisations, charities, think tanks and other general opinion formers (drawn from academia, public sector, arts/ leisure, professionals and religion).    Demonstrates progress in improving Barclays’ Conduct Reputation through improvements in reputation across areas of trust, openness and transparency, delivering value for money for customers and clients, having high quality products and services and how Barclays treats staff at all levels of the business.

 

Company KPIs

 

Performance metric    Definition    Why it is important to the business and management

 

Return on Equity (Adjusted)

 

Adjusted

2013 – 4.5%

2018 Target – > Cost of Equity

  

RoE is calculated as profit for the year attributable to ordinary equity holders of the parent divided by average shareholders’ equity for the year excluding non-controlling and other equity interests. Shareholders’ equity is made up of share capital, retained earnings and other reserves.

 

Adjusted RoE excludes post tax adjusting items for movements in own credit, gains on debt buy-backs, provisions for PPI and interest rate hedging products redress, and goodwill impairment. Average shareholders’ equity for adjusted RoE excludes the impact of own credit on retained earnings.

   This measure demonstrates progress in achieving a return on equity in excess of cost of equity. Achieving a return on equity in excess of cost of equity in a sustainable way demonstrates the organisation’s ability to generate long-term returns for our shareholders.

 

CRD IV fully loaded CET1 ratio

 

2013 – 9.3%

2018 Target – > 10.5%

  

Capital requirements are part of the regulatory framework governing how banks and depository institutions are managed. Capital ratios express a bank’s capital as a percentage of its risk weighted assets as defined by the UK PRA.

 

In the context of CRD IV, the CRD IV fully loaded CET1 ratio uses a measure of capital that is predominantly common equity as defined by the Capital Requirements Regulation.

   The CRD IV fully loaded CET1 ratio is a key measure of Barclays’ capital strength in the new regulatory framework. This measure will demonstrate Barclays’ progress in achieving a CRD IV fully loaded CET1 ratio exceeding 10.5%.

 

 

 

 

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Financial review >

Consolidated summary income statement

  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

For the year ended 31 December

  

2013

£m

   

2012

£m

   

2011

£m

   

2010

£m

   

2009  

£m  

 

 

 

Continuing operations

          

Net interest income

     11,600        11,654        12,201        12,523        11,918     

Non-interest income net of claims and benefits on insurance contracts

     16,555        17,934        16,253        18,526        17,776     

Own credit (charge)/gain

     (220     (4,579     2,708        391        (1,820)    

Gains on debt buy-backs

                   1,130               1,249     

 

 

Total income net of insurance claims

     27,935        25,009        32,292        31,440        29,123     

Credit impairment charges and other provisions

     (3,071     (3,340     (3,802     (5,672     (8,071)    

Impairment of BlackRock investment

                   (1,800            –     

Provision for PPI redress

     (1,350     (1,600     (1,000            –     

Provision for interest rate hedging products redress

     (650     (850                   –     

Goodwill impairment

     (79            (597     (243     (1)    

Operating expenses

     (19,893     (18,562     (19,289     (19,794     (16,603)    

Other

     (24     140        (34     268        248     

 

 

Profit before tax

     2,868        797        5,770        5,999        4,696     

Taxation

     (1,571     (616     (1,902     (1,500     (1,103)    

 

 

Profit after tax from continuing operations

     1,297        181        3,868        4,499        3,593     

Profit for the year from discontinued operations, including gain on disposal

                                 6,777     

 

 

Profit after tax

     1,297        181        3,868        4,499        10,370     

 

 

Profit/(loss) attributable to equity holders of the parent

     540        (624     2,924        3,514        9,475     

Profit attributable to non-controlling interests

     757        805        944        985        895     

 

 
     1,297        181        3,868        4,499        10,370     

 

 

Selected financial statistics

          

 

 

Basic earnings/(loss) per share from continuing operations

     3.8p        (4.8p     22.9p        28.1p        23.3p     

Basic earnings/(loss) per share

     3.8p        (4.8p     22.9p        28.1p        81.5p     

Diluted earnings/(loss) per share

     3.7p        (4.8p     21.9p        26.5p        77.4p     

Dividends per ordinary share

     6.5p        6.5p        6.0p        5.5p        2.5p     

Dividend payout ratio

     171%        (135.4%     26.2%        19.6%        3.1%     

Return on average shareholders’ equitya

     1.0%        (1.2%     5.9%        7.4%        25.6%     

 

 

The financial information above is extracted from the published accounts. This information should be read together with the information included in the accompanying consolidated financial statements. All comparatives have been restated to reflect the IAS 19 revised standard, however, only the 2012 comparative has been restated to reflect the IFRS 10 standard.

Note

a Return on average shareholders’ equity represents profits attributable to the equity holders of the parent as a percentage of average shareholders’ equity.

 

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Table of Contents

Financial review >

Income statement commentary

  

 

 

 

 

 

2013

Profit before tax increased to £2,868m (2012: £797m). Excluding the adjusting items for movements in own credit, gain on disposal of investment in BlackRock, Inc., provisions for PPI and interest rate hedging products redress, and goodwill impairment, adjusted profit before tax decreased 32% to £5,167m.

Income increased 12% to £27,935m. Adjusted income excluding own credit and gain on disposal of investment in BlackRock, Inc. decreased 4% to £28,155m. The decrease reflected reductions in the Investment Bank, the Head Office and Africa RBB, partially offset by growth in Barclaycard and UK RBB.

Total net interest income was broadly stable at £11,600m, with lower net interest income in Head Office, Africa RBB and the Investment Bank offset by increases in Barclaycard, UK RBB and Corporate Banking. Customer net interest income for RBB, Barclaycard, Corporate Banking and Wealth and Investment Management increased to £10,365m (2012: £9,839m) driven by growth in customer assets, partially offset by contributions from Group structural hedging activities.

Total income in the Investment Bank decreased 9% to £10,733m driven by a decrease in FICC income of £1,141m, partially offset by increases in Equities and Prime Services of £489m, and Investment Banking of £63m. Exit Quadrant income also decreased £309m due to accelerated disposals and a £111m reversal of income relating to a litigation matter in Q413.

Credit impairment charges improved 8% to £3,071m, with a loan loss rate of 64bps (2012: 70bps). This reflected lower impairments in the wholesale businesses, mainly Corporate Banking in Europe and UK. In the RBB and Barclaycard businesses, Africa RBB arrears rates improved, particularly for South Africa home loans, however, impairment was higher in UK RBB and Barclaycard partly due to the non-recurrence of provision releases in 2012, and the Edcon acquisition in Barclaycard. Higher impairment in Europe reflected exposure to the renewable energy sector in Spain and weaker performance in European mortgages.

As a result, net operating income for the Group after impairment charges increased 15% to £24,864m. Net adjusted operating income excluding movements on own credit and gain on disposal of investment in BlackRock, Inc. decreased 4% to £25,084m.

Operating expenses increased 5% to £21,972m in 2013. Adjusted operating expenses excluding £1,350m (2012: £1,600m) provision for PPI redress, £650m (2012: £850m) provision for interest rate hedging products redress and £79m (2012: £nil) of goodwill impairment, were up 7% to £19,893m, reflecting £1,209m (2012: £nil) of costs to achieve Transform, £220m provisions for litigation and regulatory penalties in Q413 in the Investment Bank, mainly relating to the US residential mortgage-related business and UK bank levy of £504m (2012: £345m).

The cost: income ratio decreased to 79% (2012: 84%). The adjusted cost: income ratio excluding movements on own credit, gains on disposal of investment in BlackRock, Inc., provisions for PPI and interest rate hedging products redress, and goodwill impairment increased to 71% (2012: 63%).

The tax charge for continuing operations for 2013 was £1,571m (2012: £616m) on profit before tax of £2,868m (2012: £797m), representing an effective tax rate of 54.8% (2012: 77.3%). The effective tax rate on adjusted profit before tax increased to 39.0% (2012: 28.4%), mainly due to a charge of £440m reflecting the write down of deferred tax assets in Spain. The adjusted effective tax rate excluding the write down was 30.5% (2012: 28.4%), which primarily reflected profits outside of the UK taxed at local statutory tax rates that are higher than the UK statutory tax rate of 23.25% (2012: 24.5%) and the impact of the increase in the non deductable UK bank levy to £504m (2012: £345m).

2012

Barclays delivered profit before tax of £797m in 2012, a decrease from £5,770 in 2011. Excluding the adjusting items for movements in own credit, gains on debt buy-backs, loss/gains on acquisitions and disposals, impairment of investment in BlackRock, Inc, provision for PPI and interest rate hedging products redress, and goodwill impairment, adjusted profit before tax increased 39% to £7,599m.

Income decreased 23% to £25,009m. Adjusted income excluding own credit, debt buy back gains and gains on disposal of investment in BlackRock, Inc. increased 3% to £29,361m. Income increased despite challenging economic conditions, the continuing low interest rate environment and non-recurrence of £1,061m gains from the disposal of hedging instruments in 2011.

Customer net interest income for RBB, Barclaycard, Corporate Banking and Wealth and Investment Management remained stable at £9,839m (2011: £12,033m) while the net interest margin for these businesses declined to 184bps (2011: 204bps), principally reflecting the non-recurrence of gains from the disposal of hedging instruments in 2011.

Total income in the Investment Bank increased 15% to £11,775m driven by increases in Fixed Income, Currency and Commodities (FICC), Equities and Prime Services, and Investment Banking, particularly in the Americas.

Credit impairment charges decreased 40% to £3,340m. Adjusted credit impairment charges excluding impairment of investment in BlackRock, Inc decreased 12%, principally reflecting improvements in Barclaycard, Corporate Banking and UK RBB. This was partially offset by higher charges in the Investment Bank, Africa RBB and Europe RBB. Impairment charges as a proportion of Group loans and advances as at 31 December 2012 improved to 70bps, compared to 77bps for 2011.

As a result, net operating income for the Group after impairment charges decreased 19% to £21,669m. Net adjusted operating income excluding movements on own credit, gains on debt buy-backs, loss/ gains on acquisitions and disposals, impairment of investment in BlackRock, Inc., provision for PPI and interest rate hedging products redress and goodwill impairment increased 5% to £26,021m.

Operating expenses increased 1% to £21,012m in 2013. Adjusted operating expenses excluding £1,600m (2011: £1,000m) provision for PPI redress and £850m (2011: £nil) provision for interest rate hedging products redress, were down 4% to £18,562m, including £125m (2011: £408m) of restructuring charges.

The cost: income ratio increased to 84% (2011: 65%). The adjusted cost: income ratio excluding movements on own credit, gains on debt buy-backs, loss/gains on acquisitions and disposals, impairment of investment in BlackRock, Inc., provisions for PPI and interest rate hedging products redress, and goodwill impairment improved to 63% (2011: 68%).

The tax charge for continuing operations for 2012 was £616m (2011: £1,902m) on profit before tax of £797m (2011: £5,770m), representing an effective tax rate of 77.3% (2011: 33.0%). The high effective tax rate in 2012 is a result of the combination of losses in the UK, primarily relating to the own credit charge of £4,579m (2011: gain of £2,708m) with tax relief at 24.5% (2011: 26.5%) and profits outside the UK taxed at higher rates.

 

 

 

Adjusted profit reconciliation

            

 

 
     2013
£m
   

2012

£m

 

 

 
Adjusted profit before taxa      5,167        7,599    
Own credit      (220     (4,579)    
Gain on disposal of investment in BlackRock, Inc.             227    
Provision for PPI redress      (1,350     (1,600)    
Provision for interest rate hedging products redress      (650     (850)    
Goodwill impairment      (79     –    

 

 
Statutory profit before tax      2,868        797    
Selected financial statistics on an adjusted basis     

 

 
Adjusted basic earnings per share      16.7p        35.5p    
Adjusted dividend payout ratio      38.9%        18.3%    

 

 
 

 

 

 

246 > Barclays PLC Annual Report 2013    barclays.com/annualreport


Table of Contents

Financial review

Consolidated summary balance sheet

  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 
As at 31 December   

2013

£m

    

2012

£m

    

2011

£m

    

2010

£m

    

2009  

£m  

 

 

 
Assets               
Cash and balances at central banks      45,687         86,191         106,894         97,630         81,483     
Items in the course of collection from other banks      1,282         1,473         1,812         1,384         1,593     
Trading portfolio assets      133,069         146,352         152,183         168,867         151,344     
Financial assets designated at fair value      38,968         46,629         36,949         41,485         42,568     
Derivative financial instruments      324,335         469,156         538,964         420,319         416,815     
Available for sale investments      91,756         75,109         68,491         65,110         56,483     
Loans and advances to banks      37,853         40,462         47,446         37,799         41,135     
Loans and advances to customers      430,411         423,906         431,934         427,942         420,224     
Reverse repurchase agreements and other similar secured lending      186,779         176,522         153,665         205,772         143,431     
Other assets      22,127         22,535         23,745         23,972         24,664     

 

 
Total assets      1,312,267         1,488,335         1,562,083         1,490,280         1,379,740     

 

 
Liabilities               
Deposits from banks      54,834         77,012         91,116         77,975         76,446     
Items in the course of collection due to banks      1,359         1,587         969         1,321         1,466     
Customer accounts      427,902         385,411         366,032         345,788         322,429     
Repurchase agreements and other similar secured borrowings      196,748         217,178         207,292         225,534         198,781     
Trading portfolio liabilities      53,464         44,794         45,887         72,693         51,252     
Financial liabilities designated at fair value      64,796         78,561         87,997         97,729         87,881     
Derivative financial instruments      320,634         462,721         527,910         405,516         403,416     
Debt securities in issue      86,693         119,525         129,736         156,623         135,902     
Subordinated liabilities      21,695         24,018         24,870         28,499         25,816     
Other liabilities      20,193         17,542         16,315         18,362         20,310     

 

 
Total liabilities      1,248,318         1,428,349         1,498,124         1,430,040         1,323,699     

 

 
Total equity               
Called up share capital and share premium      19,887         12,477         12,380         12,339         10,804     
Other equity instruments      2,063                                 –     
Other reserves      249         3,674         3,837         1,754         2,628     
Retained earnings      33,186         34,464         38,135         34,743         31,408     

 

 
Total equity excluding non-controlling interests      55,385         50,615         54,352         48,836         44,840     
Non-controlling interests      8,564         9,371         9,607         11,404         11,201     

 

 
Total equity      63,949         59,986         63,959         60,240         56,041     

 

 
Total liabilities and equity      1,312,267         1,488,335         1,562,083         1,490,280         1,379,740     

 

 
Risk weighted assets and capital ratios under CRD III               

 

 
Risk weighted assets      354,809         387,373         390,999         398,031         382,653     
Core Tier 1 ratio      13.2%         10.8%         11.0%         10.8%         10.0%     
Tier 1 ratio      15.7%         13.2%         12.9%         13.5%         13.0%     
Risk asset ratio      19.9%         17.0%         16.4%         16.9%         16.6%     

 

 
              

 

 
Net asset value per ordinary sharea      331p         414p         446p         401p         393p     
Number of ordinary shares of Barclays PLC (in millions)      16,113         12,243         12,199         12,182         11,412     
Year-end United States Dollar Exchange rate      1.65         1.62         1.54         1.55         1.62     
Year-end Euro exchange rate      1.20         1.23         1.19         1.16         1.12     
Year-end Rand exchange rate      17.37         13.74         12.52         10.26         11.97     

 

 

The financial information above is extracted from the published accounts. This information should be read together with the information included in the accompanying consolidated financial statements. All the comparatives have been restated to reflect the IAS 19 revised standard, however, only the 2012 comparative has been restated to reflect the IFRS 10 standard.

Note

a Net asset value per share is calculated by dividing shareholders equity, excluding non-controlling and other equity interests, by the number of issued ordinary shares.

 

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Table of Contents

Financial review

Balance sheet commentary

  

 

 

 

 

 

Total assets

Total assets decreased £176bn to £1,312bn principally reflecting lower derivative assets due to increases in forward interest rates and exposure reduction initiatives with central clearing parties and a reduction in cash and balances at central banks due to a decrease in the liquidity pool.

Cash and balances at central banks and items in course of collection from other banks decreased £41bn to £47bn as the cash contribution to the Group liquidity pool was reduced.

Trading portfolio assets deceased £13bn to £133bn due to a reduction in debt securities and other eligible bills driven by a decrease in trading activity within the rates business within the Investment Bank. This decrease was partially offset by an increase in equity securities reflecting higher client volume in the equities and prime services businesses in the Investment Bank.

Financial assets designated at fair value decreased by £8bn to £39bn primarily reflecting decreases in debt securities due to the unwinding of deals.

Derivative financial assets decreased £145bn to £324bn primarily driven by a reduction in interest rate derivatives reflecting the decrease in mark-to-market valuations driven by increases in the major interest rate forward curves and balance sheet reduction initiatives.

Available for sale investments increased £17bn to £92bn primarily driven by an increase in debt securities in the liquidity pool as the mix of the pool is being adjusted from cash to eligible securities to increase returns.

Total loans and advances to banks and customers remained stable at £468bn (2012: £464bn) including increased settlement balances of £8.5bn, £4.4bn additional balances in UK RBB acquired through Barclays Direct, £1.8bn growth within Barclaycard across the UK and international business and a £1.8bn increase within Wealth and Investment Management. These increases were offset by a £5.7bn decrease within South Africa primarily due to the depreciation of ZAR against GBP.

Reverse repurchase agreements increased by £10bn to £187bn, driven by increased matched book trading opportunities and trading desks’ funding requirements.

Total liabilities

Total liabilities decreased £180bn to £1,248bn.

Deposits from banks decreased by £22bn to £55bn primarily driven by reduction in cash collateral due to lower derivative mark to market and reduced liquidity requirements.

Customer accounts increased by 11% to £428bn due to a £19.5bn increase in UK RBB deposits, a £15.2bn increase in settlements and cash collateral balances within the Investment Bank, a £9.6bn increase within Wealth and Investment Management, primarily reflected in the High Net Worth business, and a £9.1bn increase in the Corporate Bank, from UK deposit growth.

Repurchase agreements and other similar secured borrowing decreased £20bn to £197bn driven by a reduction in trading desks’ funding requirements partially offset by increased matched book trading.

Trading portfolio liabilities increased £9bn to £53bn primarily driven by increases in equity securities and debt securities.

Financial liabilities designated at fair value decreased £14bn to £65bn primarily reflecting trade maturities, buybacks/unwinding of existing notes due to favourable market conditions and reduced funding requirements.

Derivative financial liabilities decreased £142bn to £321bn in line with the decrease in derivative assets.

Debt securities in issue decreased £33bn to £87bn due to non-renewal of certificates of deposit and commercial paper primarily driven by reduced funding requirements.

Subordinated liabilities decreased by £2bn to £22bn due to redemptions in the year of subordinated notes, exchange movements and fair value hedge movements. This was partially offset by the issuance of £652m of Contingent Capital Notes (CCNs) and £48m of other subordinated fixed rate notes.

Shareholders’ equity

Total shareholders’ equity increased £4bn to £64bn.

Share capital and share premium increased by £7bn to £20bn reflecting an increase of £5.8bn from the issuance of 3.2bn additional shares through the rights issue. Other equity instruments increased by £2.1bn due to the issuance of equity accounted AT1 securities. Retained earnings decreased £1bn to £33bn driven by dividends paid of £0.9bn and a £0.5bn reduction due to an increase in retirement benefit liabilities.

The available for sale reserve decreased £0.4bn to £0.1bn driven by net losses on the fair value of debt securities held as part of the liquidity pool, offset partially by gains from fair value movements on hedging instruments.

Currency translation reserve decreased £1.2bn to £1.1bn, largely due to the strengthening of GBP against the USD and ZAR.

Non-controlling interests decreased £0.8bn to £8.6bn, primarily reflecting dividend payments of £0.8bn and currency translation movements of £0.6bn due to the depreciation of ZAR against GBP. These movements were offset by profit after tax of £0.8bn.

Net asset value per share decreased 20% to 331p and net tangible asset value per share decreased 19% to 283p. The decreases were mainly attributable to the issuance of shares as part of the rights issue, and decreases in the cash flow hedging and currency translation reserves.

 

 

 

 

248 > Barclays PLC Annual Report 2013    barclays.com/annualreport


Table of Contents

Financial review >

Analysis of results by business

  

 

 

 

 

 

Segmental analysis (audited)

 

 

 

Analysis of results by business (audited)

 

 

 
    UK RBB
£m
   

Europe

RBB

£m

   

Africa

RBB

£m

    Barclaycard
£m
   

Investment
Bank

£m

    Corporate
Banking
£m
   

Wealth and
Investment

Management
£m

   

Head Office
Functions
and Other

Operations
£m

   

Total  

£m  

 

 

 

As at 31 December 2013

                 

Total income net of

insurance claimsa

    4,523        666        2,617        4,786        10,733        3,115        1,839        (344     27,935     

Credit impairment charges and

other provisionsb

    (347     (287     (324     (1,264     (220     (510     (121     2        (3,071)    

Operating expensesc

    (2,812     (813     (1,842     (1,975     (7,417     (1,641     (1,665     (94     (18,259)    

Provision for PPI Redress

    (660                   (690                                 (1,350)    

Provision for Interest Rate Hedging products redress

                                       (650                   (650)    

UK Bank Levy

    (21     (26     (28     (24     (333     (51     (6     (15     (504)    

Costs to achieve Transform

    (175     (403     (26     (49     (262     (114     (158     (22     (1,209)    

Other income/(losses)d

    27        (133     7        33        22        2        13        5        (24)    

 

 

Profit/(loss) before tax from continuing operations

    535        (996     404        817        2,523        151        (98     (468     2,868     

 

 

Total assetse

    152,931        45,009        33,522        38,897        863,792        113,867        37,561        26,688        1,312,267     

 

 

As at 31 December 2012

                 

Total income net of insurance claimsa

    4,384        708        2,928        4,344        11,775        3,046        1,820        (3,996     25,009     

Credit impairment charges and

other provisionsb

    (269     (257     (632     (1,049     (204     (885     (38     (6     (3,340)    

Operating expenses

    (2,877     (787     (1,960     (1,826     (7,425     (1,672     (1,505     (165     (18,217)    

Provision for PPI Redress

    (1,180                   (420                                 (1,600)    

Provision for Interest Rate Hedging products redress

                                       (850                   (850)    

UK Bank Levy

    (17     (20     (24     (16     (206     (39     (4     (19     (345)    

Other income/(losses)d

    4        13        10        29        50        10        1        23        140     

 

 

Profit/(loss) before tax from continuing operations

    45        (343     322        1,062        3,990        (390     274        (4,163     797     

 

 

Total assets

    134,554        46,119        42,228        38,156        1,073,663        87,841        24,480        41,294        1,488,335     

 

 

As at 31 December 2011

                 

Total income net of insurance claimsa

    4,621        1,004        3,364        4,305        10,222        3,315        1,770        3,691        32,292     

Credit impairment charges and

other provisionsb

    (536     (207     (462     (1,312     (93     (1,150     (41     (1,801     (5,602)    

Operating expensesc

    (2,844     (1,555     (2,154     (1,843     (7,527     (2,056     (1,537     (45     (19,561)    

Provision for PPI Redress

    (400                   (600                                 (1,000)    

UK Bank Levy

    (22     (21     (23     (16     (199     (43     (1            (325)    

Other income/(losses)d

    3        12        5        31        12        (71     (3     (23     (34)    

 

 

Profit/(loss) before tax from continuing operations

    822        (767     730        565        2,415        (5     188        1,822        5,770     

 

 

Total assets

    127,123        50,243        45,852        34,780        1,158,706        92,890        20,821        31,668        1,562,083     

 

 

Notes

a The impact of own credit movements on the fair value of structured note issuance is a charge of £220m (2012: charge of £4,579m; 2011: gain of £2,708m). This charge is included within the results of Head Office Functions and Other Operations, reflecting the fact that the fair value movements relate to the credit worthiness of the issuer as a whole.
b Credit impairment charges included £nil (2012: £nil, 2011: £1,800m) impairment on the investment in BlackRock, Inc. within the results of Head Office Functions and Other Operations.
c Operating expenses includes £79m impairment of goodwill (2012: £nil, 2011: £597m) relating to Wealth & Investment Management (2012: £nil 2011:£nil), Europe RBB £nil (2012: £nil, 2011: £427m), Corporate Banking £nil (2012: £nil, 2011 £123m) and Barclaycard £nil (2012: £nil, 2011: £47m).
d Other income/(losses) represents the share of post-tax results of associates and joint ventures, profit or (loss) on disposal of subsidiaries, associates and joint ventures, and gains on acquisitions.
e 2013 total assets include an allocation of liquidity pool assets previously held centrally.

 

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Table of Contents

Financial review >

Analysis of results by business continued

 

 

 

 

The Group’s activities have been organised under the following business groupings:

 

¡   UK RBB is a leading UK high street bank providing current account and savings products and Woolwich branded mortgages. UK RBB also provides unsecured loans and general insurance as well as banking and money transmission services to small and medium sized businesses.

 

¡   Europe RBB provides retail services in Spain, Italy, Portugal and France, as well as business lending to small and medium sized enterprises, through a variety of distribution channels.

 

¡   Africa RBB provides retail services across Africa and the Indian Ocean.

 

¡   Barclaycard is an international payments services provider for consumer and business customers including credit cards and consumer lending.

 

¡   The Investment Bank provides large corporate, government and institutional clients with a full spectrum of solutions to meet their strategic advisory, financing and risk management needs.

 

¡   Corporate Banking provides integrated banking solutions to large corporates, financial institutions and multinationals in the UK and internationally.

 

¡   Wealth and Investment Management focuses on private and intermediary clients worldwide, providing international and private banking, investment management, fiduciary services and brokerage.

 

¡   Head Office Functions and Other Operations comprise head office and central support functions, businesses in transition and consolidation adjustments.

In order to align aggregated businesses’ results more closely to those of the Group, the following elements, previously included within the Head Office and Other Operations results have been allocated to the businesses:

 

¡   Intra-group allocation of funding costs and other income items now includes the majority of the costs of subordinated debt instruments, preference shares and allocation of liquidity costs; increased allocation of intra-group interest; and the elimination of fees to the Investment Bank for Structured Capital Markets activities.

 

¡   Head Office operating cost items, including the UK bank levy and Financial Services Compensation Scheme costs, have been allocated to businesses wherever practicable using the most appropriate driver of that cost.

The impact of the above allocations was an increase in Head Office and Other Operations profit before tax in 2012 of £1,281m (2011: £900m), offset by decreases in Investment Bank profit before tax in 2012 of £701m (2011: £573m), UK RBB of £220m (2011: £136m), Corporate Banking of £111m (2011: £24m), Africa RBB of £98m (2011: £80m), Barclaycard of £58m (2011: £35m), Europe RBB of £57m (2011: £43m), and Wealth and Investment Management of £36m (2011: £9m).

Portfolio reallocations also occurred to better reflect the management of the relevant businesses. The reallocations resulted in increases in profit before tax in 2012 in Barclaycard of £37m (2011: £52m), Corporate Banking of £28m (2011: £31m), and Investment Bank of £17m (2011: £17m), offset by decreases in Europe RBB of £52m (2011: £70m), and Africa RBB of £30m (2011: £30m).

 

 

 

 

Income by geographic region (audited)c

 

 

 
     Adjusteda,b      Statutory  

 

 
     2013
£m
     2012
£m
     2011
£m
    

2013

£m

     2012
£m
   

2011  

£m  

 

 

 

Continuing operations

                

UKa

     11,681         12,040         11,981         11,461         7,461        15,819     

Europe

     4,019         4,457         4,207         4,019         4,457        4,207     

Americasb

     7,034         7,327         6,083         7,034         7,554        6,025     

Africa and Middle East

     4,137         4,472         4,967         4,137         4,472        4,967     

Asia

     1,284         1,065         1,274         1,284         1,065        1,274     

 

 

Total

     28,155         29,361         28,512         27,935         25,009        32,292     

 

 
                

 

 

Statutory income from individual countries which represent more than 5% of total income (audited)c

 

 

 
      

2013

£m

     2012
£m
   

2011  

£m  

 

 

 

Continuing operations

  

       

UK

  

     11,461         7,461        15,819     

US

  

     6,760         7,333        5,802     

South Africa

  

     2,884         3,700 d      3,942     

 

 

Returns and equity by business

Returns on average equity and average tangible equity are calculated as profit for the period attributable to ordinary equity holders of the parent divided by average allocated equity or average allocated tangible equity for the period as appropriate, excluding non-controlling and other equity interests. Average allocated equity has been calculated as 10.5% of average risk weighted assets for each business, adjusted for capital deductions, including goodwill and

intangible assets, reflecting the assumptions the Group uses for capital planning purposes. The higher capital level currently held, reflecting Core Tier 1 capital ratio of 13.2% as at 31 December 2013, is allocated to Head Office and Other Operations. Average allocated tangible equity is calculated using the same method but excludes goodwill and intangible assets.

 

 

Notes

a UK adjusted income excludes the impact of an own credit charge of £220m (2012: £4,579m charge, 2011: gain of £2,708m), and gain on debt buy backs £nil (2012: £nil, 2011: gain of £1,130m).
b Americas adjusted income also excludes gain on disposal of strategic investment in BlackRock, Inc. of £nil (2012: £227m, 2011: loss of £58m).
c Total income net of insurance claims based on counterparty location.
d 2012 income derived from South Africa has been revised following a review of the 2012 method of allocation. £511m of 2012 income has now been allocated from South Africa to other African countries.

 

 

 

250 > Barclays PLC Annual Report 2013    barclays.com/annualreport


Table of Contents
     

 

 

 

 

   

 

 

Return on average equity

 

 

 
    

Adjusted

   

Statutory

 

 

 
    

2013

%

   

2012

%

   

2011

%

   

2013

%

   

2012

%

   

2011  

%  

 

 

 

UK RBB

     11.5        12.3        12.0        4.9        (0.3     7.8     

Europe RBB

     (45.2     (12.9     (9.7     (45.2     (12.9     (26.0)    

Africa RBB

     0.4        (0.1     7.4        0.4        (0.1     7.5     

Barclaycard

     18.4        19.8        16.1        8.3        13.3        6.0     

Investment Bank

     8.2        12.7        7.7        8.2        12.7        7.7     

Corporate Banking

     3.1        2.9        0.4        (3.5     (5.4     (2.0)    

Wealth and Investment Management

     (1.0     11.2        9.5        (4.5     11.2        9.5     

 

 

Group Excluding Head Office Functions & Other Operations

     5.8        9.8        7.0        2.3        5.9        4.1     

Head Office and Other Operations Impact

     (1.3     (0.8     (0.3     (1.3     (7.1     1.8     

 

 

Group

     4.5        9.0        6.7        1.0        (1.2     5.9     

 

 
            

 

 

Return on average tangible equity

                                    

 

 
     Adjusted     Statutory  

 

 
    

2013

%

   

2012

%

   

2011

%

   

2013

%

   

2012

%

   

2011  

%  

 

 

 

UK RBB

     20.0        22.9        22.5        8.5        (0.6     14.7     

Europe RBB

     (49.6     (14.2     (12.6     (49.6     (14.2     (33.7)    

Africa RBBa

     0.8        (0.2     16.9        0.8        (0.2     17.1     

Barclaycard

     24.5        26.9        21.4        11.1        18.0        8.0     

Investment Bank

     8.5        13.1        8.0        8.5        13.1        8.0     

Corporate Banking

     3.3        3.1        0.4        (3.6     (5.7     (2.1)    

Wealth and Investment Management

     (1.4     15.5        13.0        (5.9     15.5        13.0     

 

 

Group Excluding Head Office Functions & Other Operations

     7.0        11.8        8.5        2.7        7.1        5.0     

Head Office and Other Operations Impact

     (1.7     (1.2     (0.4     (1.5     (8.5     2.1     

 

 

Group

     5.3        10.6        8.1        1.2        (1.4     7.1     

 

 
            

 

 

Attributable profit

                                    

 

 
     Adjusted     Statutory  

 

 
     2013
£m
    2012
£m
    2011
£m
    2013
£m
    2012
£m
   

2011  

£m  

 

 

 

UK RBB

     917        875        841        389        (21     547     

Europe RBB

     (964     (277     (257     (964     (277     (684)    

Africa RBB

     9        (4     207        9        (4     209     

Barclaycard

     1,006        975        780        454        653        292     

Investment Bank

     1,548        2,680        1,636        1,548        2,680        1,636     

Corporate Banking

     247        228        32        (273     (419     (164)    

Wealth and Investment Management

     (24     222        166        (103     222        166     

Head Office Functions and Other Operations

     (344     (64     (166     (520     (3,458     922     

 

 

Group

     2,395        4,635        3,239        540        (624     2,924     

 

 
    

 

 
     Average allocated equity     Average allocated tangible equity  

 

 
     2013
£m
    2012
£m
    2011
£m
    2013
£m
    2012
£m
    2011  
£m  
 

 

 

UK RBB

     7,984        7,121        6,992        4,581        3,815        3,733     

Europe RBB

     2,133        2,143        2,634        1,943        1,957        2,028     

Africa RBB

     2,327        2,658        2,801        1,087        1,234        1,222     

Barclaycard

     5,468        4,924        4,844        4,106        3,623        3,648     

Investment Bank

     18,966        21,173        21,254        18,264        20,468        20,503     

Corporate Banking

     7,854        7,739        8,124        7,481        7,369        7,621     

Wealth and Investment Management

     2,306        1,981        1,738        1,746        1,436        1,273     

Head Office Functions and Other Operationsb

     5,130        4,313        1,404        5,110        4,311        1,401     

 

 

Groupc

     52,168        52,052        49,791        44,318        44,213        41,429     

 

 

 

 

Notes

a The return on average tangible equity for Africa RBB for 2011 and 2012 has been revised to exclude amounts relating to Absa Group’s non-controlling interests.
b Includes risk weighted assets and capital deductions in Head Office and Other Operations, plus the residual balance of average ordinary shareholders’ equity and tangible ordinary shareholders’ equity.
c Group average ordinary shareholders’ equity and average tangible ordinary shareholders’ equity exclude the cumulative impact of own credit on retained earnings for the calculation of adjusted performance measures.

 

LOGO
 

 

barclays.com/annualreport    Barclays PLC Annual Report 2013 > 251


Table of Contents

Financial review >

Analysis of results by business continued >

UK Retail and Business Banking

 

 

 

 

 

£4,523m

total income net of insurance claims

Up from £4,384m in 2012

 

 

 

£1,195m

adjusted profit before tax

Down from £1,225m in 2012

 

2013

Income increased 3% to £4,523m driven by strong mortgage growth and contribution from Barclays Direct (previously ING Direct UK, acquired during Q113).

Net interest income increased 6% to £3,395m. Net interest margin was down 6bps to 129bps primarily reflecting reduced contributions from structural hedges, however, customer generated margin increased from 102bps to 106bps. Customer asset margin increased 15bps to 122bps driven by lower funding costs and increased customer rates on new mortgage lending. Customer liability margin decreased 8bps to 89bps reflecting lower funding rates.

Net fee and commission income declined 5% to £1,098m due primarily to lower fees from customers.

Credit impairment charges increased £78m to £347m primarily due to the non-recurrence of provision releases in 2012 relating to unsecured lending and mortgages. Excluding this, impairment was broadly in line with prior year.

Adjusted operating expenses increased 4% to £3,008m due to costs to achieve Transform of £175m. Statutory operating expenses decreased by 10% to £3,668m due to the lower charge for PPI redress of £660m (2012: £1,180m).

Adjusted profit before tax decreased 2% to £1,195m, while statutory profit before tax was £535m (2012: £45m).

Loans and advances to customers increased 7% to £136.5bn due to Barclays Direct, which added £4.4bn, and other mortgage growth. Mortgage balances increased to £122.8bn (2012: £114.7bn), giving an increase in share of UK stock balance to 9.9% (2012: 9.4%). Gross new mortgage lending was £17.1bn (2012: £18.2bn) and mortgage repayments were £14.4bn (2012: £10.6bn). Portfolio quality continued to improve with an average balance weighted Loan to Value (LTV) ratio on the mortgage portfolio (including buy-to-let) of 56% (2012: 59%). Average balance weighted LTV of new mortgage lending was 64% (2012: 65%).

Customer deposits increased 17% to £135.5bn driven by growth in savings and Barclays Direct, which added £6.2bn.

 

 

 

 
    

2013

£m

   

2012

£m

   

2011  

£m  

 

 

 

Income Statement Information

      

Net interest income

     3,395        3,190        3,378     

Net fee and commission income

     1,098        1,154        1,157     

Net investment income

                   17     

Net premiums from insurance contracts

     46        74        92     

Other income/(expense)

     1        (1     (1)    

 

 

Total income

     4,540        4,417        4,643     

Net claims and benefits incurred under insurance contracts

     (17     (33     (22)    

 

 

Total income net of insurance claims

     4,523        4,384        4,621     

Credit impairment charges and other provisions

     (347     (269     (536)    

 

 

Net operating income

     4,176        4,115        4,085     

 

 

Operating expenses (excluding UK bank levy, costs to achieve Transform and
provision for PPI redress)

     (2,812     (2,877     (2,844)    

UK bank levy

     (21     (17     (22)    

Costs to achieve Transform

     (175            –     

Provision for PPI redress

     (660     (1,180     (400)    

 

 

Operating expenses

     (3,668     (4,074     (3,266)    

Other net income

     27        4        3     

 

 

Profit before tax

 

    

 

535

 

  

 

   

 

45

 

  

 

   

 

822  

 

  

 

 

 

Adjusted profit before taxa

     1,195        1,225        1,222     

Adjusted attributable profit a,b

 

    

 

917

 

  

 

   

 

875

 

  

 

   

 

841  

 

  

 

Balance Sheet Information

      

 

 

Loans and advances to customers at amortised cost

   £ 136.5bn      £ 128.1bn      £ 121.2bn     

Customer deposits

   £ 135.5bn      £ 116.0bn      £ 111.8bn     

Total assetsc

   £ 152.9bn      £ 134.6bn      £ 127.1bn     

Risk weighted assets – CRD IIIc

     £44.1bn        £39.1bn        £34.0bn     

Risk weighted assets – CRD IV fully loadedc

     £44.1bn       

 

 

 

 

Notes
a Adjusted profit before tax and adjusted attributable profit excludes the impact of the provision for PPI redress of £660m (2012: £1,180m; 2011: £400m).
b Adjusted attributable profit represents profit after tax excluding non-controlling interests’ share of those profits.
c 2013 total assets and risk weighted assets include an allocation of liquidity pool assets previously held centrally.

 

 

 

252 > Barclays PLC Annual Report 2013    barclays.com/annualreport


Table of Contents
    

 

LOGO

  

 

For more information on UK RBB

business model and strategy please

see pages 18 to 21

 

 

 

 

 

Total assets increased 14% to £152.9bn driven by the allocation of liquidity pool assets previously held centrally, and growth in loans and advances to customers.

CRD III RWAs increased 13% to £44.1bn primarily driven by Barclays Direct and mortgage asset growth.

2012

Income declined 5% to £4,384m reflecting higher funding costs and reduced contribution from structural hedges, including non-recurrence of gains from the disposal of hedging instruments in 2011.

Net interest income declined 6% to £3,190m with net interest margin down 14bps to 135bps principally due to reduced contributions from structural hedges. Customer asset margin decreased 15bps to 107bps reflecting higher funding costs. Average customer assets increased 5% to £124.3bn driven by mortgage growth. Customer liability margin increased 10bps to 97bps reflecting an increase in funding rates and therefore the value generated from customer liabilities. Average customer liabilities increased 4% to £111.8bn due to personal savings deposit growth.

Non-interest income declined 3% to £1,227m reflecting lower net insurance income.

Credit impairment charges decreased 50% to £269m reflecting improvements across all portfolios, principally in personal unsecured lending. The loan loss rate reduced to 21bps (2011: 44bps). 90 day arrears rates improved 40bps on UK personal loans to 1.3% and UK mortgages remained flat at 0.3%.

Adjusted operating expenses increased 1% to £2,894m. Statutory operating expenses increased 25% to £4,074m due to the higher charge for PPI redress of £1,180m (2011: £400m).

Adjusted profit before tax remained flat at £1,225m (2011: £1,222m), while statutory profit before tax declined 95% to £45m.

Loans and advances to customers increased 6% to £128.1bn driven by growth in mortgage balances to £114.7bn at 31 December 2012 (2011: £107.8bn). Gross new mortgage lending of £18.2bn (2011: £17.2bn) and mortgage redemptions of £11.3bn (2011: £10.7bn) resulted in net new mortgage lending of £6.9bn (2011: £6.5bn). Average LTV ratio for the mortgage portfolio (including buy-to-let) on a balance weighted basis was 59% (2011: 58%). Average balance weighted LTV of new mortgage lending was 65% (2011: 62%).

Customer deposits increased 4% to £116.0bn primarily driven by growth in savings from Individual Savings Accounts (ISAs) and retail bonds.

CRD III RWAs increased 15% to £39.1bn principally due to mortgage balance growth, an increased operational risk charge and adoption of a more comprehensive approach to loans subject to forbearance.

 

 

 

 
     Adjusteda      Statutory  

 

 
     2013      2012      2011      2013      2012     2011    

 

 

Performance Measures

                

Return on average tangible equity

     20.0%         22.9%         22.5%         8.5%         (0.6%     14.7%     

Return on average equity

     11.5%         12.3%         12.0%         4.9%         (0.3%     7.8%     

Return on average risk weighted assets

     2.2%         2.5%         2.5%         1.0%         0.0%        1.7%     

Cost: income ratio

     67%         66%         62%         81%         93%        71%     

Loan loss rate (bps)

     25         21         44         25         21        44     

 

 

Key Facts

                

 

 

90 day arrears rates – Personal loans

              1.2%         1.3%        1.7%     

90 day arrears rates – Home loans

              0.3%         0.3%        0.3%     

Average LTV of mortgage portfoliob

              56%         59%        58%     

Average LTV of new mortgage lendingb

              64%         65%        62%     

Number of customers

              16.7m         15.8m        16.1m     

Number of branches

              1,560         1,593        1,625     

Number of employees (full time equivalent)

              32,900         33,000        32,400     

 

 

 

Notes

a Adjusted performance measures exclude the impact of the provision for PPI redress of £660m (2012: £1,180m; 2011: £400m).
b Average LTV of mortgage portfolio and new mortgage lending calculated on the balance weighted basis. The comparative figure was restated following a detailed review of the LTVs post migration to a new data management system.

 

LOGO
 

 

barclays.com/annualreport    Barclays PLC Annual Report 2013 > 253


Table of Contents

Financial review >

Analysis of results by business continued >

Europe Retail and Business Banking

  

 

 

 

 

£666m

total income net of insurance claims

Down from £708m in 2012

 

 

 

 

£996m

adjusted loss before tax

Up from £343m in 2012

 

 

 

2013

Income declined 6% to £666m, reflecting actions taken to reduce assets, particularly in Spain and Italy, to address the continuing economic challenges across Europe, partially offset by an increase due to foreign currency movements.

Net interest income declined 2% to £420m due to the decline in average customer balances. Net interest margin remained broadly in line at 79bps (2012: 78bps) with improved pricing offset by higher funding costs.

Net fee and commission income declined 25% to £187m, reflecting reduced business volumes.

Net premiums from insurance contracts declined 17% to £276m due to reduced business volumes, following rationalisation of product offerings, leading to a corresponding 14% decline in net claims and benefits to £308m.

Credit impairment charges increased 12% to £287m due to exposure to the renewable energy sector in Spain, foreign currency movements and increased coverage for high risk mortgage customers. This was offset in part by improvement in collections performance.

Operating expenses increased by £435m to £1,242m, almost entirely reflecting costs to achieve Transform of £403m. These related to restructuring costs to significantly downsize the distribution network, with the remaining increase driven by foreign currency movements partially offset by cost savings resulting from restructuring.

Other net expense increased by £146m to £133m due to a valuation adjustment relating to contractual obligations to trading partners based in locations affected by our restructuring plans.

Loss before tax increased £653m to £996m, including costs to achieve Transform of £403m and an increase in other net expenses. Attributable loss increased to £964m (2012: £277m), including the impact of a deferred tax assets write down relating to Spain and the increase in loss before tax.

Loans and advances to customers fell by 6% to £37.0bn, driven by asset reduction activity as part of the Transform strategy, partially offset by foreign currency movements. Mortgage balances decreased to £33.6bn (2012: £34.8bn). The average balance weighted LTV ratio on the Spain mortgage portfolio was 63% (2012: 65%), on the Italy mortgage portfolio was 60% (2012: 60%) and the Portugal mortgage portfolio was 76% (2012: 78%).

 

 

 

 
    

2013

£m

   

2012

£m

   

2011

£m

 

 

 

Income Statement Information

      

Net interest income

     420        428        610     

Net fee and commission income

     187        248        376     

Net investment income

     78        52        91     

Net premiums from insurance contracts

     276        331        463     

Other income/(expense)

     13        8        (33)    

 

 

Total income

     974        1,067        1,507     

Net claims and benefits incurred under insurance contracts

     (308     (359     (503)    

 

 

Total income net of insurance claims

     666        708        1,004     

Credit impairment charges and other provisions

     (287     (257     (207)    

 

 

Net operating income

     379        451        797     

 

 

Operating expenses (excluding UK bank levy, costs to achieve Transform and goodwill impairment)

     (813     (787     (1,128)    

UK bank levy

     (26     (20     (21)    

Costs to achieve Transform

     (403            –     

Goodwill impairment

                   (427)    

 

 

Operating expenses

     (1,242     (807     (1,576)    

Other net (expense)/income

     (133     13        12     

 

 

Loss before tax

     (996     (343     (767)    
      

 

 

Adjusted loss before taxa

     (996     (343     (340)    

Adjusted attributable lossa,b

     (964     (277     (257)    

Balance Sheet Information

      

 

 

Loans and advances to customers at amortised cost

   £ 37.0bn      £ 39.2bn      £ 42.7bn     

Customer deposits

   £ 16.3bn      £ 17.6bn      £ 16.4bn     

Total assetsc

   £ 45.0bn      £ 46.1bn      £ 50.2bn     

Risk weighted assets – CRD IIIc

   £ 15.9bn      £ 15.8bn      £ 16.4bn     

Risk weighted assets – CRD IV fully loadedc

   £ 16.2bn       

 

 

 

 

Notes
a Adjusted loss before tax and adjusted attributable loss excludes the impact of goodwill impairment £nil (2012: £nil; 2011: £427m).
b Adjusted attributable loss represents loss after tax excluding non-controlling interests’ share of those losses.
c 2013 total assets and risk weighted assets include an allocation of liquidity pool assets previously held centrally.

 

 

 

254 > Barclays PLC Annual Report 2013    barclays.com/annualreport


Table of Contents
     

 

LOGO

  

 

For more information on Europe RBB

business model and strategy please

see pages 22 to 25

 

 

 

 

 

Customer deposits reduced by 7% to £16.3bn with customer attrition partially offset by foreign currency movements.

Total assets reduced by 2% to £45.0bn driven by the reduction in loans and advances to customers.

CRD III RWAs remained broadly flat at £15.9bn (2012: £15.8bn), with a reduction in Exit Quadrant RWAs offset by changes due to the treatment of forbearance.

2012

Income declined 29% to £708m reflecting the challenging economic environment across Europe and non-recurrence of gains from disposal of hedging instruments in 2011.

Net interest income declined 30% to £428m. Customer asset margin decreased 5bps to 46bps with net interest margin down 23bps to 78bps, driven by higher funding costs partially offset by product re-pricing. Average customer assets decreased 6% to £40.0bn driven by active management to reduce funding mismatch. Customer liability margin decreased 27bps to 38bps and average customer liabilities decreased 16% to £14.8bn, reflecting competitive pressures.

Non-interest income declined 29% to £639m, reflecting lower commissions mainly from Italy mortgage sales and lower sales of investment products.

Credit impairment charges increased 24% to £257m due to deterioration in credit performance across Europe, reflecting current economic conditions. The loan loss rate increased to 64bps (2011: 43bps). 90 day arrears rate for home loans increased 19bps to 0.8%.

Adjusted operating expenses decreased 30% to £807m, reflecting non-recurrence of 2011 restructuring charges of £189m and related ongoing cost savings. Statutory operating expenses decreased 49% to £807m due to the non-recurrence of the £427m goodwill impairment write off in 2011.

Adjusted loss before tax remained flat at £343m (2011: £340m), while statutory loss before tax decreased 55% to £343m resulting from the non-recurrence of the 2011 goodwill impairment write off.

Loans and advances to customers decreased 8% to £39.2bn reflecting currency movements and active management to reduce funding mismatch.

Customer deposits increased 7% to £17.6bn, reflecting active management to reduce funding mismatch.

Total assets reduced by 8% to £46.1bn driven by the reduction in loans and advances to customers.

CRD III RWAs decreased 4% to £15.8bn principally due to reductions in loans and advances to customers and currency movements, partially offset by an increased operational risk charge and portfolio deterioration in Spain.

 

 

 

 
     Adjusteda     Statutory  

 

 
     2013     2012     2011     2013     2012     2011    

 

 

Performance Measures

            

Return on average tangible equity

     (49.6%     (14.2%     (12.6%     (49.6%     (14.2%     (33.7%)    

Return on average equity

     (45.2%     (12.9%     (9.7%     (45.2%     (12.9%     (26.0%)    

Return on average risk weighted assets

     (5.7%     (1.7%     (1.4%     (5.7%     (1.7%     (4.0%)    

Cost: income ratio

     186%        114%        114%        186%        114%        157%     

Loan loss rate (bps)

     75        64        43        75        64        43     

 

 

Key Facts

            

 

 

90 day arrears rates – Home loans

  

        0.8%        0.8%        0.7%     

Average LTV of mortgage portfolio – Spainb

  

        63%        65%        60%     

Average LTV of mortgage portfolio – Italyb

  

        60%        60%        59%     

Average LTV of mortgage portfolio – Portugalb

  

        76%        78%        70%     

Number of customers

  

        1.8m        2.0m        2.0m     

Number of branches

  

        572        923        978     

Number of sales centres

  

        61        219        250     

 

 

Number of distribution points

  

        633        1,142        1,228     

Number of employees (full time equivalent)

  

        5,900        7,500        8,100     

EUR/£ – Period end

  

        1.20        1.23        1.19     

EUR/£ – Average

  

        1.18        1.23        1.15     

 

 

 

Notes

a Adjusted performance measures exclude the impact of goodwill impairment £nil (2012: £nil; 2011: £427m).
b Average LTV of mortgage portfolio and new mortgage lending calculated on the balance weighted basis.

 

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Table of Contents

Financial review >

Analysis of results by business continued >

Africa Retail and Business Banking

 

 

 

 

£2,617m

total income net of insurance claims

Down from £2,928m in 2012

 

 

 

 

£404m

adjusted profit before tax

Up from £322m in 2012

 

 

2013

Income declined 11% to £2,617m driven by foreign currency movements, partially offset by the non-recurrence of fair value adjustments in the commercial property finance portfolio in the prior year. On a constant currency basis, income improved 5%, despite continued pressure on transaction volumes in a competitive environment.

Net interest income declined 13% to £1,437m. On a constant currency basis, net interest income improved 2%. Net interest margin was down 3bps to 316bps. Customer asset margin remained stable at 310bps, with continued focus on competitive pricing of key products including home loans, personal loans and vehicle and asset finance. Customer liability margin decreased 2bps to 273bps driven by increased competition and a change in product mix towards lower margin savings products.

Net fee and commission income declined 13% to £924m. On a constant currency basis, income increased 2%.

Credit impairment charges decreased 49% to £324m. On a constant currency basis, credit impairment charges decreased 41% due to lower provisions on the South African home loans recovery book and business banking portfolio. This decrease was partly offset by deterioration in the South African unsecured lending portfolio due to the challenging economic environment. This fall in impairment resulted in a loan loss rate of 128bps (2012: 202bps).

Operating expenses decreased 4% to £1,896m. On a constant currency basis, costs increased 11% driven by a combination of increased investment spend on infrastructure and inflation increases in South Africa.

Profit before tax increased 25% to £404m, primarily due to lower credit impairment charges in the South African home loans recovery book and business banking portfolio, along with the non-recurrence of fair value adjustments on the commercial property finance portfolio in the prior year.

Loans and advances to customers decreased 19% to £24.2bn as foreign currency movements offset growth of 2%, particularly in vehicle and asset finance. The average balance weighted LTV ratio on the mortgage portfolio was 62% (2012: 66%). The average balance weighted LTV of new mortgage lending was 75% (2012: 76%).

Customer deposits decreased 13% to £16.9bn. Excluding foreign currency movements, deposits increased 8% reflecting growth in individual deposits, particularly in investment products.

Total assets decreased 21% to £33.5bn mainly due to foreign currency movements. On a constant currency basis, total assets were broadly in line.

CRD III RWAs decreased 9% to £22.4bn, primarily due to foreign currency movements, partially offset by balance sheet growth.

 

 

 

 
    

2013

£m

   

2012

£m

   

2011  

£m  

 

 

 

Income Statement Information

      

Net interest income

     1,437        1,654        1,874     

Net fee and commission income

     924        1,065        1,179     

Net premiums from insurance contracts

     359        417        432     

Other income/(expense)

     81        (1     94     

 

 

Total income

     2,801        3,135        3,579     

Net claims and benefits incurred under insurance contracts

     (184     (207     (215)    

 

 

Total income net of insurance claims

     2,617        2,928        3,364     

Credit impairment charges and other provisions

     (324     (632     (462)    

 

 

Net operating income

     2,293        2,296        2,902     

 

 

Operating expenses (excluding UK bank levy and costs to achieve Transform)

     (1,842     (1,960     (2,154)    

UK bank levy

     (28     (24     (23)    

Costs to achieve Transform

     (26            –     

 

 

Operating expenses

     (1,896     (1,984     (2,177)    

Other net income

     7        10        5     

 

 

Profit before tax

     404        322        730     

Attributable profit/(loss)a

     9        (4     207     

Balance Sheet Information

      

 

 

Loans and advances to customers at amortised cost

   £ 24.2bn      £ 29.9bn      £ 32.5bn     

Customer deposits

   £ 16.9bn      £ 19.5bn      £ 20.3bn     

Total assetsb

   £ 33.5bn      £ 42.2bn      £ 45.9bn     

Risk weighted assets – CRD IIIb

   £ 22.4bn      £ 24.5bn      £ 27.8bn     

Risk weighted assets – CRD IV fully loadedb

   £ 22.8bn       

 

 

Notes

a Attributable profit/(loss) represents profit/(loss) after tax excluding non-controlling interests’ share of those profits/(losses).
b 2013 total assets and risk weighted assets include an allocation of liquidity pool assets previously held centrally.

 

 

 

256 > Barclays PLC Annual Report 2013    barclays.com/annualreport


Table of Contents
     

 

LOGO

  

 

For more information on Africa RBB

business model and strategy please

see pages 26 to 29

 

 

 

 

 

2012

Income declined 13% to £2,928m. Excluding foreign currency movements, income declined reflecting non-recurrence of gains from the disposal of Group hedging instruments in 2011 and downward commercial property valuations, with underlying businesses across Africa remaining flat.

Net interest income declined 12% to £1,654m with the net interest margin down 9bps to 319bps primarily due to lower income generated through non-customer related items partially offset by increased higher margin business. Customer asset margin increased 14bps to 310bps reflecting a change in composition towards higher margin business. Average customer assets decreased 11% to £32.2bn driven by currency movements and a modest decline in the South African mortgage book. Customer liability margin decreased 15bps to 275bps driven by a decline in South Africa, partially offset by improving margins across a number of other African countries. Average customer liabilities decreased 7% to £19.6bn driven by foreign currency movements, as deposits continued to grow in South Africa where Absa remains a leader in retail deposits.

Non-interest income declined 13% to £1,481m driven largely by adverse currency movements.

Credit impairment charges increased 37% to £632m. Excluding foreign currency movements impairment charges increased principally reflecting higher loss given default rates and higher levels of write-offs in the South African home loans recovery book and the impact of one large name in the commercial property portfolio in South Africa. The loan loss rate increased to 202bps (2011: 136bps). However, 90 day arrears rates for home loans decreased by 150bps to 1.6% reflecting improved new business and the continuing low interest rate environment.

Operating expenses decreased 9% to £1,984m mainly due to foreign currency movements with underlying business growth broadly in line.

Profit before tax declined 56% to £322m.

Loans and advances to customers decreased 8% to £29.9bn mainly due to foreign currency movements and a modest decline in the South African mortgage book.

Customer deposits decreased 4% to £19.5bn. Excluding foreign currency movements customer deposits increased mainly due to growth in South African deposits.

CRD III RWAs decreased 12% to £24.5bn, principally due to foreign currency movements and a change in approach for sovereign risk weightings, offset by an increased operational risk charge.

 

 

 

 
     Adjusted      Statutory  

 

 
     2013      2012     2011      2013      2012     2011    

 

 

Performance Measures

               

Return on average tangible equitya

     0.8%         (0.2%     16.9%         0.8%         (0.2%     17.1%     

Return on average equity

     0.4%         (0.1%     7.4%         0.4%         (0.1%     7.5%     

Return on average risk weighted assets

     0.9%         0.7%        1.7%         0.9%         0.7%        1.7%     

Cost: income ratio

     72%         68%        65%         72%         68%        65%     

Loan loss rate (bps)

     128         202        136         128         202        136     

 

 

Key Facts

               

 

 

90 days arrears rate – Home loans

             0.7%         1.6%        3.1%     

90 days arrears rate – unsecured

             2.6%         3.1%        3.8%     

Average LTV of mortgage portfoliob

             62%         66%        67%     

Average LTV of new mortgage lendingb

             75%         76%        73%     

Number of customers

             12.1m         13.5m        14.5m     

Number of branches

             1,268         1,339        1,354     

Number of sales centres

             128         112        139     

 

 

Number of distribution points

             1,396         1,451        1,493     

Number of employees (full time equivalent)

             41,300         40,500        42,700     

ZAR/£ – Period end

             17.37         13.74        12.52     

ZAR/£ – Average

             15.10         13.03        11.60     

 

 

 

Notes

a Return on average tangible equity for 2011 and 2012 has been revised to exclude amounts relating to Absa Group’s non-controlling interests.
b Average LTV of mortgage portfolio and new mortgage lending calculated on the balance weighted basis.

 

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Table of Contents

Financial review >

Analysis of results by business continued >

Barclaycard

  

 

 

 

 

 

£4,786m

total income net of insurance claims

Up from £4,344m in 2012

 

 

 

 

£1,507m

adjusted profit before tax

Up from £1,482m in 2012

 

 

2013

Income improved 10% to £4,786m reflecting continued net lending growth and contributions from 2012 portfolio acquisitions. UK income increased 6% to £2,747m reflecting net lending growth and lower funding costs. International income improved 17% to £2,039m reflecting contributions from 2012 portfolio acquisitions and higher customer asset balances in the US and Germany.

Net interest income increased 10% to £3,318m driven by volume growth and a lower impact from structural hedges. Customer asset margin remained broadly stable at 9.39% with average customer assets increasing 8% to £36.3bn due to 2012 portfolio acquisitions and business growth. Customer liability margin was negative 0.29% reflecting deposit funding initiatives in the US and Germany.

Net fee and commission income improved 11% to £1,435m due to increased payment volumes, predominantly in the US and UK.

Credit impairment charges increased 20% to £1,264m primarily driven by the impact of portfolio acquisitions, and non-recurrence of provision releases in 2012. Impairment loan loss rates on consumer credit cards remained broadly stable at 366bps (2012: 359bps) in the UK, remained flat at 268bps in the US, and increased by 421bps to 581bps in South Africa due to the Edcon acquisition driving a change in product mix. 30 day arrears rates for consumer cards in the UK were down 10bps to 2.4%, in the US were down 30bps to 2.1% and in South Africa were up 70bps to 8.1%.

Adjusted operating expenses increased 11% to £2,048m reflecting increased costs from 2012 portfolio acquisitions, net lending growth, higher operating losses and costs to achieve Transform. Statutory operating expenses increased 21% to £2,738m due to the increased charge for PPI redress of £690m (2012: £420m).

Adjusted profit before tax improved 2% to £1,507m driven by the US and UK card portfolios, while statutory profit before tax decreased to £817m (2012: £1,062m) due to the increased charge for PPI redress.

Total assets increased 2% to £38.9bn primarily driven by the increase in loans and advances to customers across the UK and international businesses.

Customer deposits increased by £2.4bn to £5.2bn due to funding initiatives in the US and Germany.

CRD III RWAs increased 9% to £41.1bn primarily driven by asset growth and model changes in order to meet changes in regulatory guidance.

 

 

 

 
    

2013

£m

   

2012

£m

   

2011  

£m  

 

 

 

Income Statement Information

      

Net interest income

     3,318        3,009        3,047     

Net fee and commission income

     1,435        1,292        1,201     

Net premiums from insurance contracts

     26        36        42     

Other income

     7        7        16     

 

 

Total income net of insurance claims

     4,786        4,344        4,306     

Credit impairment charges and other provisions

     (1,264     (1,049     (1,312)    

 

 

Net operating income

     3,522        3,295        2,993     

 

 

Operating expenses (excluding UK bank levy, costs to achieve Transform, provision for PPI redress and goodwill impairment)

     (1,975     (1,826     (1,796)    

UK bank levy

     (24     (16     (16)    

Costs to achieve Transform

     (49            –     

Provision for PPI redress

     (690     (420     (600)    

Goodwill impairment

                   (47)    

 

 

Operating expenses

     (2,738     (2,262     (2,459)    

Other net income

     33        29        31     

 

 

Profit before tax

     817        1,062        565     
      

 

 

Adjusted profit before taxa

     1,507        1,482        1,212     

Adjusted attributable profita,b

     1,006        975        780     

Balance Sheet Information

      

 

 

Loans and advances to customers at amortised cost

     £35.6bn        £33.8bn        £31.0bn     

Customer deposits

     £5.2bn        £2.8bn        £0.6bn     

Total assetsc

     £38.9bn        £38.2bn        £34.8bn     

Risk weighted assets – CRD IIIc

     £41.1bn        £37.8bn        £35.2bn     

Risk weighted assets – CRD IV fully loadedc

     £40.5bn       

 

 

Notes

a Adjusted profit before tax and adjusted attributable profit excludes the impact of the provision for PPI redress of £690m (2012: £420m; 2011: £600m) and goodwill impairment in Firstplus secured lending portfolio of £nil (2012: £nil; 2011: £47m).
b Adjusted attributable profit represents profit after tax excluding non-controlling interests’ share of those profits.
c 2013 total assets and risk weighted assets include an allocation of liquidity pool assets previously held centrally.

 

 

 

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Table of Contents

 

    

 

LOGO

  

 

For more information on Barclaycard business model and strategy please see pages 30 to 33

 

 

 

 

 

2012

Income increased 1% to £4,344m reflecting continued growth across the business and contributions from portfolio acquisitions. This was partially offset by higher funding costs, non-recurrence of gains from the disposal of hedging instruments in 2011 and depreciation of ZAR against GBP. UK income decreased 1% to £2,601m including contribution from 2011 portfolio acquisitions and business growth, offset by increased funding costs. International income improved 4% to £1,743m driven by higher US outstanding balances and contribution from portfolio acquisitions.

Net interest income remained flat at £3,009m. Contributions from business growth and acquisitions were offset by lower net interest margin of 866bps (2011: 970bps), which stabilised in the second half of the year. Average customer assets increased 6% to £33.5bn due to portfolio acquisitions and business growth. Customer asset margin was down 14bps to 956bps due to higher funding costs.

Non-interest income improved 6% to £1,335m driven by increased volumes in the Business Payment and US portfolios.

Credit impairment charges decreased 20% to £1,049m resulting from improved delinquency, lower charge-offs and better recovery rates, primarily in the first half of 2012. The loan loss rate improved by 100bps to 294bps. 30 day arrears rates for consumer cards in UK were down to 2.5% (2011: 2.7%), in the US were down to 2.4% (2011: 3.1%) and in South Africa were up to 7.4% (2011: 4.8%).

Adjusted operating expenses increased 2% to £1,842m reflecting portfolio acquisitions, provision for certain other insurance products and investment spend. Statutory operating expenses decreased 8% to £2,262m due to the lower charge for PPI redress of £420m (2011: £600m).

Adjusted profit before tax improved 22% to £1,482m, while statutory profit before tax increased by £497m to £1,062m due to the lower charge for PPI redress.

Customer deposits increased £2.2bn to £2.8bn due to business funding initiatives in the US and Germany.

Total assets increased 10% to £38.2bn primarily driven by business growth and acquisitions.

CRD III RWAs increased 7% to £37.8bn, principally due to growth in assets and an increased operational risk charge.

 

 

 

 
     Adjusteda      Statutory  

 

 
     2013      2012      2011      2013      2012      2011  

 

 

Performance Measures

                 

Return on average tangible equity

     24.5%         26.9%         21.4%         11.1%         18.0%         8.0%     

Return on average equity

     18.4%         19.8%         16.1%         8.3%         13.3%         6.0%     

Return on average risk weighted assets

     2.8%         3.1%         2.5%         1.4%         2.2%         1.1%     

Cost: income ratio

     43%         42%         42%         57%         52%         57%     

Loan loss rate (bps)

     337         294         394         337         294         394     

 

 

Key Facts

                 

 

 

30 day arrears rates – UK cards

              2.4%         2.5%         2.7%     

30 day arrears rates – US cards

              2.1%         2.4%         3.1%     

30 day arrears rates – South Africa cardsb

              8.1%         7.4%         4.8%     

Total number of Barclaycard customers

              35.5m         32.8m         25.3m     

Total number of Barclaycard clients

              350,200         315,500         309,400     

Value of payments processed

            £ 254bn       £ 235bn       £ 214bn     

Number of employees (full time equivalent)

              12,100         11,100         10,900     

 

 

 

 

Notes
a Adjusted performance measures exclude the impact of the provision for PPI redress of £690m (2012: £420m; 2011: £600m) and goodwill impairment in Firstplus secured lending portfolio of £nil (2012: £nil; 2011: £47m).
b 2012 30 day arrears rates on South Africa cards restated to reflect the Edcon portfolio acquisition.

 

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Table of Contents

Financial review >

Analysis of results by business continued >

Investment Bank

  

 

 

 

 

£10,733m

total income

Down from £11,775m in 2012

 

 

 

 

£2,523m

profit before tax

Down from £3,990m in 2012

 

 

2013

Total income decreased 9% to £10,733m, including a reduction of £309m relating to the Exit Quadrant.

Fixed Income, Currency and Commodities (FICC) income decreased 17% to £5,537m. Macro Products and Credit Products income decreased 23% to £3,110m and 9% to £2,427m respectively, driven by Rates and Securitised Products, as market uncertainty around central banks’ tapering of quantitative easing programmes impacted activity. Europe and the US were particularly impacted, whilst Asia benefitted from improved currency income. The prior year benefitted from the European Long Term Refinancing Operation (LTRO) in H112, the ECB bond buying programme and reduced benchmark interest rates in H212.

Equities and Prime Services income increased 22% to £2,672m reflecting higher commission income and increased client volumes.

Investment Banking income increased 3% to £2,200m driven by increased equity underwriting fees, partly offset by declines in financial advisory activity.

Principal Investments income declined to £62m (2012: £206m) due to disposals and lower private equity income.

Exit Quadrant income reduced £309m to £262m due to accelerated disposals throughout 2013 and the prior year benefitting from higher gains on US residential mortgage assets and sale of, and gains on, US commercial real estate assets. 2013 included a gain of £259m as a result of greater certainty regarding the recoverability of certain assets not yet received from the 2008 US Lehman acquisition and current year reversal of £111m income relating to a litigation matter.

Net credit impairment charges of £220m (2012: £204m) were driven by a charge against a single name exposure in Q213.

Operating expenses increased 5% to £8,012m, driven by costs to achieve Transform of £262m primarily related to restructuring initiatives across Europe, Asia and America, and UK bank levy which increased 62% to £333m primarily due to an increase in the rate. Other costs included £325m (2012: £221m) relating to infrastructure improvement, including increased costs to meet the requirement of the Dodd-Frank Act, CRD IV and other regulatory reporting change projects. There were provisions for litigation and regulatory penalties of £220m in Q413, mainly relating to US residential mortgage-related business. 2012 was impacted by a £193m penalty relating to the setting of inter-bank offered rates.

 

 

 

 
   

2013  

£m  

   

2012  

£m  

   

2011  

£m  

 

 

 

Income Statement Information

     

Net interest income

    349          530          1,227     

Net fee and commission income

    3,236          3,029          2,805     

Net trading income

    6,610          7,688          5,322     

Net investment income

    530          521          868     

Other income

    8          7          –     

 

 

Total income

    10,733          11,775          10,222     

Credit impairment charges and other provisions

    (220)         (204)         (93)    

 

 

Net operating income

    10,513          11,571          10,129     

 

 

Operating expenses (excluding UK bank levy and costs to achieve Transform)

    (7,417)         (7,425)         (7,527)    

UK bank levy

    (333)         (206)         (199)    

Costs to achieve Transform

    (262)         –          –     

 

 

Operating expenses

    (8,012)         (7,631)         (7,726)    

Other net income

    22          50          12     

 

 

Profit before tax

    2,523          3,990          2,415     

Attributable profita

    1,548          2,680          1,636     

Balance Sheet Information

     

 

 

Loans and advances to banks and customers at amortised costb

    £143.8bn          £143.5bn          £159.1bn     

Customer depositsb

    £81.9bn          £75.9bn          £83.1bn     

Total assetsc

    £863.8bn          £1,073.7bn          £1,158.7bn     

Risk weighted assets – CRD IIIc

    £142.6bn          £177.9bn          £186.6bn     

Risk weighted assets – CRD IV fully loadedc

    £221.6bn         

 

 

 

Notes

a Attributable profit represents profit after tax excluding non-controlling interests’ share of those profits.
b As at 31 December 2013 loans and advances included £112bn of loans and advances to customers (including settlement balances of £35.4bn and cash collateral of £36bn) and loans £27bn relating to cash collateral.
c 2013 total assets and risk weighted assets reflect a reallocation of liquidity pool assets to other businesses.

 

 

 

260 > Barclays PLC Annual Report 2013    barclays.com/annualreport


Table of Contents
   

 

LOGO

 

 

For more information on Investment

Bank business model and strategy

please see pages 34 to 37

 

 

 

 

 

Including costs to achieve Transform, the cost to income ratio increased 10% to 75%. The compensation to income ratio increased to 43.2% (2012: 39.6%), with compensation costs broadly in line with prior year at £4,634m (2012: £4,667m).

Profit before tax decreased 37% to £2,523m.

Total assets decreased £209.9bn to £863.8bn, primarily reflecting decreases in derivative financial instruments, cash and balances at central banks, and trading portfolio assets.

CRD III RWAs decreased 20% to £142.6bn primarily driven by a reduction of sovereign exposures in the trading book, risk reductions in the trading book and Exit Quadrant RWAs.

2012

Profit before tax increased 65% to £3,990m driven by strong income growth and reduced operating expenses.

Total income increased 15% to £11,775m.

FICC income improved 6% to £6,678m in an uncertain but more favourable trading environment. Increased liquidity and higher client volumes across a number of product areas resulted in increased contributions from the Rates, Emerging Markets, Commodities, Securitised Products and Credit businesses, partially offset by lower contributions from Currency driven by subdued volumes and lower volatility.

Equities and Prime Services income increased 21% to £2,183m, reflecting global market share gains which resulted in improved performance in cash equities and equity derivatives, despite subdued market volumes.

Investment Banking income increased 1% to £2,137m, reflecting global market share gains and increases in revenues across global financial advisory and underwriting businesses more than offsetting the impact of increased internal sales concessions. Debt underwriting activity and equity underwriting in the Americas grew particularly strongly and were primary contributors to the 8% increase in total net fees and commission income.

Credit impairment charges of £204m (2011: £93m) primarily related to higher losses on single name exposures. The prior year included a non recurring release of £223m.

Operating expenses decreased 1% to £7,631m despite absorbing a £193m charge relating to the setting of inter-bank offered rates.

The cost to income ratio was 65% (2011: 76%). The compensation to income ratio improved to 39.6% (2011: 48.4%).

Total assets decreased 7% to £1,073.7bn reflecting decreases in derivative assets, cash and balances at central banks, trading portfolio assets, and lending to banks and customers. This was partially offset by an increase in reverse repurchase agreements and an increase in settlement balances.

CRD III RWAs decreased 5% to £177.9bn, principally reflecting reductions in risk exposures, including legacy asset sell downs, and foreign exchange movements. This was partially offset by an increased operational risk charge and a more conservative approach to sovereign exposures.

 

 

 

 
Analysis of total income                        

2013

£m

    

2012

£m

    

2011  

£m  

 

 

 

Macro Productsa

              3,110         4,024         3,232     

Credit Productsa

              2,427         2,654         3,058     

 

 

Fixed Income, Currency and Commodities

              5,537         6,678         6,290     

Equities and Prime Services

              2,672         2,183         1,807     

Investment Banking

              2,200         2,137         2,117     

Principal Investments

              62         206         232     

Exit Quadrant Assetsb

              262         571         (224)    

 

 

Total income

              10,733         11,775         10,222     

 

 

 

 
     Adjusteda      Statutory  

 

 
     2013      2012      2011      2013      2012      2011    

 

 

Performance Measures

                 

Return on average tangible equity

     8.5%         13.1%         8.0%         8.5%         13.1%         8.0%    

Return on average equity

     8.2%         12.7%         7.7%         8.2%         12.7%         7.7%    

Return on average risk weighted assets

     1.0%         1.6%         1.0%         1.0%         1.6%         1.0%    

Cost: income ratio

     75%         65%         76%         75%         65%         76%    

Compensation: income ratio

     43.2%         39.6%         48.4%         43.2%         39.6%         48.4%    

Loan loss rate (bps)

     14         13         8         14         13           

 

 

Other measures

                 

 

 

Average DVaR (95%)

              £29m         £38m         £57m    

Number of employees (full time equivalent)

              26,200         25,600         24,400    

 

 

 

Notes

a    Macro Products represent Rates, Currency and Commodities income. Credit Products represent Credit and Securitised Products income.
b    The Exit Quadrant consist of the Investment Bank Exit Quadrant business units as detailed on page 181, income regarding the recoverability of certain assets not yet received from the 2008 US Lehman acquisition and relevant litigation items.
c    2011 and 2012 FICC and Exit Quadrant amounts restated to appropriately refiect the Exit Quadrant portfolio.

 

LOGO
 

 

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Table of Contents

Financial review >

Analysis of results by business continued >

Corporate Banking

  

 

 

 

 

£3,115m

total income

Up from £3,046m in 2012

 

 

 

 

£801m

adjusted profit before tax

Up from £460m in 2012

 

 

 

2013

Total income increased 2% to £3,115m refiecting an increase in UK income, partially offset by non-recurring income from a reduction in Exit Quadrant assets in Europe and previously exited businesses. Net interest margin remained broadly fiat at 121bps (2012: 124bps) as reduced funding rates offset between assets and liabilities. Customer asset margin increased 16bps to 133bps and customer liability margin reduced 14bps to 97bps following the reduction in funding rates.

Credit impairment charges declined 42% to £510m largely driven by Europe, which saw charges reduce by £224m to £318m following

ongoing action to reduce exposure to the property and construction sector in Spain. Charges were also lower against large Corporate clients in the UK.

Adjusted operating expenses increased 6% to £1,806m including costs to achieve Transform of £114m, which primarily related to restructuring across all regions and the UK bank levy of £51m (2012: £39m). Statutory operating expenses improved 4% to £2,456m, due to a lower charge for interest rate hedging products redress of £650m (2012: £850m).

Adjusted profit before tax improved 74% to £801m. UK adjusted profit before tax improved 14% to £948m driven by lower credit impairment charges and higher income. Europe adjusted loss before tax improved 40% to £243m principally due to lower credit impairment charges, partially offset by reduced income from exited businesses and costs to achieve Transform. Rest of the World adjusted profit before tax improved £61m to £96m due to lower impairment and prior year costs refiecting the impact of exited businesses.

Statutory profit before tax was £151m (2012: loss of £390m) refiecting the reduced charge for interest rate hedging products redress. Adjusted attributable profit of £247m (2012: £228m) was impacted by a write down of deferred tax assets relating to Spain.

Loans and advances to customers decreased 5% to £61.1bn driven by the rundown of Exit Quadrant portfolios in Europe and a reduction in client demand as working capital deposits increased in the UK. Loans and advances to customers at fair value which consists of the Education, Social Housing and Local Authority (ESHLA) portfolio decreased 11% to £15.7bn from fair value adjustments reflecting rising long term interest rates and paydowns.

 

 

 

 
    

2013

£m

   

2012

£m

   

2011  

£m  

 

 

 

Income Statement Information

      

Net interest income

     1,987        1,911        2,298     

Net fee and commission income

     992        998        1,041     

Net trading income/(expense)

     97        87        (90)    

Net investment income

     12        23        29     

Other income

     27        27        37     

 

 

Total income

     3,115        3,046        3,315     

Credit impairment charges and other provisions

     (510     (885     (1,150)    

 

 

Net operating income

     2,605        2,161        2,165     

 

 

Operating expenses (excluding UK bank levy, costs to achieve Transform, provision for interest rate hedgingproducts redress and goodwill impairment)

     (1,641     (1,672     (1,933)    

UK bank levy

     (51     (39     (43)    

Costs to achieve Transform

     (114            –     

Provision for interest rate hedging products redress

     (650     (850     –     

Goodwill impairment

                   (123)    

 

 

Operating expenses

     (2,456     (2,561     (2,099)    

Other net income/(expense)

     2        10        (71)    

 

 

Profit/(loss) before tax

 

     151        (390     (5)    

 

 

Adjusted profit before taxa

     801        460        191     

Adjusted attributable profita,b

     247        228        32     

Balance Sheet Information and Key Facts

      

 

 

Loans and advances to customers at amortised cost

   £ 61.1bn      £ 64.3bn      £ 68.3bn     

Loans and advances to customers at fair value

   £ 15.7bn      £ 17.6bn      £ 17.2bn     

Customer deposits

   £ 108.7bn      £ 99.6bn      £ 87.5bn     

Total assetsc

   £ 113.9bn      £ 87.8bn      £ 92.9bn     

Risk weighted assets – CRD IIIc

   £ 68.9bn      £ 70.9bn      £ 75.4bn     

Risk weighted assets – CRD IV fully loadedc

   £ 70.5bn       

Number of employees (full time equivalents)

     12,800        13,000        14,000     

 

 

 

Notes

a Adjusted profit before tax excludes the impact of the provision for interest rate hedging products redress of £650m (2012: £850m; 2011:£nil), goodwill impairment of £nil (2012: £nil, 2011: £123m) and loss on disposal of £nil (2012: £nil; 2011: £73m).
b Adjusted attributable profit represents profit after tax excluding non-controlling interests’ share of those profits.
c 2013 total assets and risk weighted assets include an allocation of liquidity pool assets previously held centrally.

 

 

 

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Table of Contents

 

    

 

LOGO

  

 

For more information on Corporate Banking business model and strategy please see pages 38 to 41

 

 

 

 

 

Customer deposits increased 9% to £108.7bn primarily due to the growth of UK deposits.

Total assets increased £26.1bn to £113.9bn reflecting a reallocation of liquidity pool assets previously held centrally.

CRD III RWAs decreased 3% to £68.9bn driven primarily by improvements in book quality and a reduction in Exit Quadrant RWAs, offset by the reallocation of liquidity pool assets previously held centrally.

2012

Total income decreased 8% to £3,046m driven by a net interest income decline of 17% to £1,911m, reflecting increased funding costs, non-recurring income from exited businesses and gains on the disposal of hedging instruments. Net interest margin down 28bps to 124bps principally due to higher funding costs and non-recurring gains from the sale of hedging instruments. Customer asset margin decreased 32bps to 117bps reflecting higher funding costs and reduced balances due to the refocusing of our international business. Customer liability margin increased 15bps to 111bps principally due to higher balances in the UK, driven by currency deposits and current accounts, and reflecting an increase in funding rates and therefore the value generated from customer liabilities.

Credit impairment charges reduced 23% to £885m. The loan loss rate improved to 127bps (2011: 153bps). Impairment charges in Europe reduced by £174m to £542m, primarily as a result of ongoing action to reduce exposure within the property and construction sector in Spain.

Adjusted operating expenses improved 13% to £1,711m, reflecting the benefits of prior year restructuring and cost control initiatives.

The adjusted cost to income ratio improved to 56% (2011: 60%).

Adjusted profit before tax improved £269m to £460m including a gain of £71m (2011: loss of £111m) in the net valuation of fair value items, primarily driven by reduced credit impairment charges in Europe and the UK and lower operating expenses. UK adjusted profit before tax improved 15% to £830m reflecting the £182m improvement in the net valuation of fair value items, improved operating expenses and reduced credit impairment charges. Europe loss before tax reduced £124m to £405m principally due to reduced credit impairment charges in Spain of £337m (2011: £480m) and improved operating expenses benefitting from progress in restructuring, partially offset by reduced income from exited businesses and non-core clients. Rest of the World adjusted profit before tax improved £34m to £35m reflecting lower operating expenses as a result of refocusing of the international business.

Statutory loss before tax was £390m (2011: £5m) including a £850m provision for interest rate hedging products redress in the UK. Rest of the World statutory profit before tax improved £107m to £35m reflecting the non-recurrence of a prior year loss on disposal of Barclays Bank Russia.

Total assets in the UK were up £0.2bn driven by solid growth in net UK lending. Total assets were down £5.1bn to £87.8bn as increases in the UK were more than offset by reductions in Europe and the Rest of the World due to the refocusing of the international business. Customer deposits increased 14% to £99.6bn with increased balances in the UK and Europe due to higher currency deposits and current accounts.

CRD III RWAs decreased 6% to £70.9bn, principally reflecting the benefit of the refocusing of our international business, partially offset by an increased operational risk charge.

 

 

 

 
     Adjusteda     Statutory  

 

 
     2013     2012     2011     2013     2012     2011  

 

 

Performance Measures

            

Return on average tangible equity

     3.3     3.1     0.4     (3.6 %)      (5.7 %)      (2.1%)    

Return on average equity

     3.1     2.9     0.4     (3.5 %)      (5.4 %)      (2.0%)    

Return on average risk weighted assets

     0.5     0.5     0.2     (0.2 %)      (0.4 %)      (0.1%)    

Loan loss rate (bps)

     77        127        153        77        127        153         

Cost: income ratio

     58     56     60     79     84     63%     

 

 

 

 

 

Income Statement Information

  

 

 
     2013     2012  

 

 
    

UK

£m

    Europe
£m
    RoW
£m
    Total
£m
   

UK

£m

    Europe
£m
    RoW
£m
   

Total

£m

 

 

 

Income

     2,330        250        535        3,115        2,220        300        526        3,046     

Credit impairment charges and otherprovisions

     (174     (318     (18     (510     (284     (542     (59     (885)    

Operating expenses (excluding UK bank levy, costs to achieve Transform and provision for interest rate hedging products redress)

     (1,114     (146     (381     (1,641     (1,082     (156     (434     (1,672)    

UK bank levy

     (39     (6     (6     (51     (26     (7     (6     (39)    

Costs to achieve Transform

     (56     (23     (35     (114        

Provision for interest rate hedging redress

     (650                   (650     (850                   (850)    

Other net income

     1               1        2        2               8        10     

 

 

Profit/(loss) before tax

     298        (243     96        151        (20     (405     35        (390)    

 

 

Adjusted profit/(loss) before taxa

     948        (243     96        801        830        (405     35        460     

 

 

 

Note

a Adjusted profit/(loss) before tax and adjusted performance measures exclude the impact of the provision for interest rate hedging products redress of £650m (2012: £850m; 2011:£nil), goodwill impairment of £nil (2012: £nil; 2011: £123m) and loss on disposal of £nil (2012: £nil, 2011: £73m).

 

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Table of Contents

Financial review >

Analysis of results by business continued >

Wealth and Investment Management

  

 

 

 

 

 

 

£1,839m

total income

Down from £1,820m in 2012

 

 

 

 

 

£19m

adjusted loss before tax

From a profit of £274m in 2012

 

 

 

2013

Total income of £1,839m remained broadly in line with the prior year.

Net interest income of £859m was also in line with the prior year, as growth in deposit and lending balances, primarily in the High Net Worth business, was offset by a 19bps decrease in net interest margin to 104bps reflecting a change in product mix and reduced contributions from structural hedges. Customer asset margin increased 21bps to 86bps due to lower funding rates. Average customer assets increased 14% to £22.4bn. Customer liability margin decreased 15bps

to 97bps reflecting a change in product mix and lower funding rates. Average customer liabilities increased 21% to £60.6bn.

Net fees and commission income increased 2% to £968m.

Credit impairment charges increased £83m to £121m, largely reflecting the impact of deterioration in recovery values from property held as security, primarily in Europe. H113 included a charge of £15m relating to secured lending on Spanish property.

Adjusted operating expenses increased £241m to £1,750m largely reflecting costs to achieve Transform of £158m and a £23m customer remediation provision. Statutory operating expenses increased £320m to £1,829m including goodwill impairment of £79m (2012: £nil). For further details refer to Note 25 Goodwill and intangible assets on pages 328 and 329.

Adjusted loss before tax of £19m moved from a profit of £274m in 2012 primarily driven by costs to achieve Transform, increased credit impairment charges and the customer remediation provision. An adjusting item of £79m relating to the impairment of goodwill was also included in the statutory loss before tax of £98m (2012: profit of £274m).

Loans and advances to customers increased 8% to £23.1bn and customer deposits increased 18% to £63.4bn primarily driven by growth in the High Net Worth business.

CRD III RWAs increased 4% to £16.7bn driven by reallocation of liquidity pool assets previously held centrally, offset by improvements to the application of collateral to credit exposures.

 

 

 

 
    

2013

£m

   

2012

£m

   

2011

£m

 

 

 

Income Statement Information

      

Net interest income

     859        856        823   

Net fee and commission income

     968        948        944   

Net trading income

     18        16        5   

Other expense

     (6            (2

 

 

Total income

     1,839        1,820        1,770   

Credit impairment charges and other provisions

     (121     (38     (41

 

 

Net operating income

     1,718        1,782        1,729   

 

 

Operating expenses (excluding UK bank levy, costs to achieve Transform and goodwill impairment)

     (1,586     (1,505     (1,537

UK bank levy

     (6     (4     (1

Costs to achieve Transform

     (158              

Goodwill impairment

     (79              

 

 

Operating expenses

     (1,829     (1,509     (1,538

Other net income/(expense)

     13        1        (3

 

 

(Loss)/profit before tax

 

     (98     274        188   

 

 

Adjusted (loss)/profit before taxa

     (19     274        188   

Adjusted attributable (loss)/profita,b

     (24     222        166   

Balance Sheet Information

      

 

 

Loans and advances to customers at amortised cost

   £ 23.1bn      £ 21.3bn      £ 18.8bn   

Customer deposits

   £ 63.4bn      £ 53.8bn      £ 46.5bn   

Total assetsc

   £ 37.6bn      £ 24.5bn      £ 20.8bn   

Risk weighted assets – CRD IIIc

   £ 16.7bn      £ 16.1bn      £ 13.1bn   

Risk weighted assets – CRD IV fully loadedc

   £ 17.3bn       

 

 

 

Notes

a Adjusted profit before tax excludes the impact of goodwill impairment of £79m (2012: £nil; 2011: £nil).
b Adjusted attributable profit represents profit after tax excluding non-controlling interests’ share of those profits.
c 2013 total assets and risk weighted assets include an allocation of liquidity pool assets previously held centrally.

 

 

 

264 > Barclays PLC Annual Report 2013    barclays.com/annualreport


Table of Contents
    

 

LOGO

  

 

For more information on Wealth and Investment Management business model and strategy please see

pages 42 to 45

 

 

 

 

Client assets increased 10% to £204.8bn driven by growth in the High Net Worth business and favourable equity market movements.

2012

Income improved 3% to £1,820m primarily driven by an increase in the High Net Worth business.

Net interest income grew 4% to £856m reflecting growth in deposit and lending balances in the High Net Worth business. Net interest margin decreased 10bps to 123bps due to the ongoing low interest rate environment and reduced contribution from structural hedges.

Net fees and commissions income remained broadly in line at £948m (2011: £944m) despite challenging market conditions.

 

Operating expenses decreased 2% to £1,509m as cost control initiatives were partially offset by the continued cost of the strategic investment programme.

Profit before tax increased 46% to £274m.

Customer deposits increased 16% to £53.8bn and loans and advances to customers increased 13% to £21.3bn.

CRD III RWAs increased 23% to £16.1bn principally due to growth in lending and an increased operational risk charge.

Client assets increased 13% to £186.0bn (2011: £164.2bn) principally reflecting an increase in net new assets in the High Net Worth business.

 

 

 
     Adjusted      Statutory  

 

 
     2013      2012      2011a      2013      2012      2011    

 

 

Performance Measures

                 

Return on average tangible equity

     (1.4%)         15.5%         13.0%         (5.9%)         15.5%         13.0%     

Return on average equity

     (1.0%)         11.2%         9.5%         (4.5%)         11.2%         9.5%     

Return on average risk weighted assets

     (0.1%)         1.7%         1.4%         (0.5%)         1.7%         1.4%     

Cost: income ratio

     95.0%         83%         87%         99.0%         83%         87%     

Loan loss rate (bps)

     51         17         21         51         17         21     

 

 

Other financial measures

                 

 

 

Client assets

              £204.8bn         £186.0bn         £164.2bn     

Number of employees (full time equivalents)

              8,300         8,300         8,500     

 

 

Note

a Adjusted performance measures exclude the impact of goodwill impairment of £79m (2012: £nil; 2011: £nil).

 

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Table of Contents

Financial review >

Analysis of results by business continued >

Head Office and Other Operations

  

 

 

 

 

2013

Adjusted income declined to a net expense of £124m (2012: income of £356m), predominately due to the non-recurrence of gains related to hedges of employee share awards in Q112 of £235m and the residual net expense from treasury operations, including an adjustment to the carrying amount of subordinated liabilities.

Operating expenses decreased £53m to £131m, mainly due to the non-recurrence of the £97m penalty arising from the industry wide investigation into the setting of inter-bank offered rates recognised in H112, partially offset by costs to achieve Transform of £22m and regulatory investigation and legal costs.

Adjusted loss before tax of £248m moved from a profit of £189m in 2012. Statutory loss before tax improved to £468m (2012: £4,163m) including an own credit charge of £220m (2012: £4,579m), partially offset by the non-recurrence of the £227m gain on disposal of investment in BlackRock Inc. in 2012.

Total assets decreased 35% to £26.7bn primarily reflecting a reduction of group liquidity pool assets and a reallocation to the businesses.

CRD III RWAs decreased £2.3bn to £3.0bn primarily driven by reallocation of liquidity pool assets to the businesses.

 

2012

Adjusted income increased to £356m (2011: expense of £89m) principally due to changes in the value of hedges relating to employee share awards which were closed out during Q112.

Operating expenses increased £139m to £184m mainly from higher regulatory costs, including a charge relating to the allocation to Head Office and Other Operations of the penalty of £97m (2011: £nil) arising from the industry wide investigation into the setting of interbank offered rates, Financial Services Compensation Scheme of £135m (2011: £45m), UK bank levy to £19m (2011: £nil) and increased strategic initiative costs.

Adjusted profit before tax increased to £189m (2011 loss of £135m). Statutory loss before tax increased to £4,163m (2011: profit of £1,822m) including an own credit charge of £4,579m (2011: £2,708m gain) and non-recurrence of gains on debt buy-backs, partially offset by the impact of the BlackRock Inc. investment disposal and income from changes in the value of hedges relating to employee share awards that were closed out during in Q112.

Total assets increased to £41.3bn (2011: £31.7bn) reflecting growth in the liquidity bond portfolio held at Head Office, partially offset by the sale of the strategic investment in BlackRock Inc.

CRD III RWAs increased £2.8bn to £5.3bn, principally reflecting increases in sovereign bonds held for liquidity purposes and the application of a more conservative approach to risk weighting these exposures.

 

 

 

 
    

2013

£m

   

2012

£m

   

2011  

£m  

 

 

 

Income Statement Information

      

Adjusted total expense net of insurance claims

     (124     356        (89)    

Own credit (charge)/gain

     (220     (4,579     2,708     

Gains on debt buy-backs

                   1,130     

Gain/(loss) on disposal of investment in BlackRock, Inc

            227        (58)    

 

 

Total income net of insurance claims

     (344     (3,996     3,691     

Credit impairment (charge)/release and other provisions

     2        (6     (1)    

Impairment of investment in BlackRock Inc.

                   (1,800)    

 

 

Net operating (loss)/income

     (342     (4,002     1,890     

 

 

Operating expenses (excluding UK bank levy and cost to achieve Transform)

     (94     (165     (45)    

UK bank levy

     (15     (19     –     

Cost to achieve Transform

     (22            –     

 

 

Operating expenses

     (131     (184     (45)    

Other net income/(expense)

     5        23        (23)    

 

 

(Loss)/profit before tax

 

    

 

(468

 

 

   

 

(4,163

 

 

   

 

1,822  

 

  

 

 

 

Adjusted (loss)/profit before taxa

     (248     189        (135)    

Adjusted attributable lossa,b

     (344     (64     (165)    

Balance Sheet Information

      

 

 

Total assetsc

   £ 26.7bn      £ 41.3bn      £ 31.7bn     

Risk weighted assets – CRD IIIc

   £ 3.0bn      £ 5.3bn      £ 2.5bn     

Risk weighted assets – CRD IV fully loadedc

   £ 2.5bn       

Number of employees (full time equivalent)

     100        200        100     

 

 

 

 

 

Notes
a Adjusted (loss)/profit before tax excludes the impact of an own credit charge of £220m (2012: charge of £4,579m, 2011: gain of £2,708m), gains on debt buy-backs (retirement of non-qualifying Tier 1 Capital under Basel 3) of £nil (2012: £nil, 2011: £1,130m), gain/(loss) on disposal of the strategic investment in BlackRock Inc. of £nil (2012: gain of £227m, 2011: loss of £58m), impairment of investment in BlackRock Inc. of £nil (2012: £nil, 2011: £1,800m) and loss on disposals of £nil (2012: £nil; 2011: £23m).
b Adjusted attributable profit represents profit after tax excluding non-controlling interests’ share of those profits.
c 2013 total assets and risk weighted assets reflect a reduction in the liquidity pool and a reallocation to businesses of liquidity pool assets previously held centrally.

 

 

 

266 > Barclays PLC Annual Report 2013    barclays.com/annualreport


Table of Contents

Financial review >

Margins and balances

  

 

 

 

 

 

Margins Analysis

Basis of preparation

Customer assets represents loans and advances to customers and net interest income on customer assets represents interest received from customers less interest expense for funding those assets at the relevant internal funding rate. Customer liabilities represent customer deposits. Net interest income on customer liabilities represents the interest income from the funds generated from customer liabilities at the internal rate of funding less the interest paid to customers. Customer net interest income is the sum of customer asset and customer liability net interest income. Under this approach, customer net interest income reflects interest related to customer assets and liabilities only and does not include any interest on securities or other non-customer assets and liabilities.

Non-customer interest income principally reflects the impact of product and equity structural hedges, as well as certain other net interest income received on government bonds and other debt securities held for the purposes of interest rate hedging and liquidity for local banking activities. All reverse repurchase and repurchase agreements and related interest are recorded in the Investment Bank and are therefore not included in the Retail and Business Banking, Corporate Banking and Wealth and Investment Management customer margins data.

The customer asset margin is defined as net interest income earned on customer assets (excluding the impact of the product structural hedge relating to those assets), divided by total average customer assets. Similarly, the customer liability margin is net interest income earned on customer liabilities (excluding the impact of the product structural hedge relating to those liabilities), divided by total average customer liabilities.

The customer net interest margin is calculated as net interest income on both customer assets and liabilities (excluding the impact of product structural hedges) as a percentage of the sum of average customer assets and liabilities, consistent with the presentation of the net interest margin.

The non-customer generated margin is calculated as non-customer net interest income (principally comprising the impact of both the product and equity structural hedges) as a percentage of the sum of average customer assets and liabilities, consistent with the presentation of the net interest margin.

 

 

 

Analysis of net interest income

 

 

 
    

2013

£m

   

2012

£m

 

 

 

Retail, Corporate Banking and Wealth and Investment Management customer income

    

– Customer assets

     7,144        6,654   

– Customer liabilities

     3,221        3,185   

 

 

Total

     10,365        9,839   

Retail, Corporate Banking and Wealth and Investment Management non-customer income

    

– Product structural hedgea

     843        962   

– Equity structural hedgeb

     337        317   

– Other

     (129     (69

 

 

Retail, Corporate Banking and Wealth and Investment Management net interest income

     11,416        11,049   

Investment Bank

     349        530   

Head Office and Other Operations

     (165     75   

 

 

Group net interest income

     11,600        11,654   

 

 

Retail and Business Banking, Corporate Banking and Wealth and Investment Management net interest income

Barclays distinguishes the relative net interest contribution from customer assets and customer liabilities, and separates this from the contribution delivered by non-customer income, which principally arises from the Group hedging activities.

Customer net interest income

Customer net interest income increased to £10,365m (2012: £9,839m) driven by growth of 2% in average customer assets to £326bn and a 10bps increase in the customer asset margin to 2.19%. Customer liability interest income remained broadly constant; the result of a 14% increase in average liabilities to £322bn offset by a 12bps reduction to 100bps in the customer liability margin.

The customer asset margin increased to 2.19% (2012: 2.09%) primarily due to reduced funding costs.

The customer liability margin decreased to 1.00% (2012: 1.12%) driven by increased customer rates paid on deposits accounts in Corporate Banking, a change in product mix within Wealth towards lower margin products and reduced funding rates.

 

Notes

a Product structural hedges convert short term interest margin volatility on product balances (such as non-interest bearing current accounts and managed rate deposits) into a more stable medium term rate and are built on a monthly basis to achieve a targeted maturity profile.
b Equity structural hedges are in place to manage the volatility in net earnings generated by businesses on the Group’s equity, with the impact allocated to businesses in line with their economic capital usage.

 

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Financial review >

Margins and balances continued

  

 

 

 

 

Non-customer net interest income

Non-customer net interest income decreased to £1,051m (2012: £1,210m) reflecting a reduction in the non-customer generated margin of 5bps to 0.16%. Group hedging activities continue to utilise structural interest rate hedges to mitigate the impact of the low interest environment on customer liabilities and the Group’s equity.

Product structural hedges generated a lower contribution of £843m (2012: £962m), as hedges were maintained in this period of continued low interest rates. Based on the current interest rate curves and the ongoing hedging strategy, fixed rate returns on product structural hedges are expected to make a significant contribution in 2014.

The contribution from equity structural hedges RBB, Barclaycard, Corporate Banking and Wealth and Investment Management remained broadly constant at £337m (2012: £317m).

Other Group net interest income

Head office net interest income decreased £240m to a net expense of £165m reflecting the cost of funding surplus liquidity due to growth in customer deposits across the Group offset by an adjustment to the carrying value of subordinated liabilities.

Investment Bank net interest decreased to £349m (2012: £530m) primarily due to a reduction in interest income from Exit Quadrant assets.

Total contribution to Group net interest income from structural hedge income is down £140m to £1.6bn (2012: £1.7bn).

Net interest margin

The net interest margin for RBB, Corporate Banking and Wealth and Investment Management decreased 8bps to 1.76% (2012: 1.84%), reflecting the reduction in contribution from customer liabilities and Group hedging activities, combined with a reduced contribution from the higher margins in Africa RBB as the ZAR depreciated against GBP. The net interest margin is expressed as a percentage of the sum of average customer assets and liabilities, to reflect the impact of the margin generated on retail and commercial banking liabilities.

The net interest margin, expressed as a percentage of average customer assets increased from 3.47% to 3.50% in 2013.

Net interest margin and customer asset and liability margins reflect movements in the Group’s internal funding rates which are based on the cost to the Group of alternative funding in wholesale markets. The Group’s internal funding rate prices intra-group funding and liquidity to appropriately give credit to businesses with net surplus liquidity and charges those businesses in need of wholesale funding at a rate that is driven by prevailing market rates and includes a term premium. The objective is to price internal funding for assets and liabilities in line with the cost of alternative funding, which ensures there is a consistency between retail and wholesale source.

An analysis is provided on the following page for Retail and Business Banking, Corporate Banking and Wealth and Investment Management for each of the component parts of net interest income.

 

 

 
    

UK RBB

%

    

Europe
RBB

%

    

Africa
RBB

%

     Barclaycard
%
    Corporate
Banking
%
    

Wealth and
Investment
Management

%

    

Total  

%  

 

 

 

2013

                   

Customer asset margin

     1.22         0.43         3.10         9.39        1.33         0.86         2.19     

Customer liability margin

     0.89         0.40         2.73         (0.29     0.97         0.97         1.00     

Customer net interest margin

     1.06         0.43         2.95         8.48        1.12         0.94         1.60     

Non-customer generated margin

     0.23         0.36         0.21         (0.19     0.09         0.10         0.16     

Net interest margin

     1.29         0.79         3.16         8.29        1.21         1.04         1.76     

Average customer assets (Łm)

     134,297         39,387         27,330         36,276        66,724         22,418         326,432     

Average customer liabilities (Łm)

     128,310         13,887         18,093         3,741        97,558         60,596         322,185     

 

 

2012

                   

Customer asset margin

     1.07         0.46         3.10         9.56        1.17         0.65         2.09     

Customer liability margin

     0.97         0.38         2.75         (0.60     1.11         1.12         1.12     

Customer net interest margin

     1.02         0.44         2.97         9.18        1.14         0.99         1.63     

Non-customer generated margin

     0.33         0.34         0.22         (0.52     0.10         0.24         0.21     

Net interest margin

     1.35         0.78         3.19         8.66        1.24         1.23         1.84     

Average customer assets (£m)

     124,275         39,996         32,155         33,470        69,041         19,670         318,607     

Average customer liabilities (£m)

     111,753         14,824         19,610         1,286        85,620         50,083         283,176     

 

 

 

 

 

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Table of Contents

 

Financial statements >

Contents

     

 

 

 

 

Detailed analysis of our statutory accounts,

independently audited and providing in-depth disclosure

on the financial performance of the Group.

 

          Page      Note  

 

 
  

¡ Presentation of information

     270      
  

¡ Independent Auditors’ Report

     271      
  

¡ Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm’s report

     276      
  

¡ Consolidated income statement

     277      
  

¡ Consolidated statement of comprehensive income

     278      
  

¡ Consolidated balance sheet

     279      
  

¡ Consolidated statement of changes in equity

     280      
  

¡ Consolidated cash flow statement

     281      
  

¡ Parent Company accounts

     282      
  

¡ Notes to the financial statements

     284      
  

¡ Significant accounting policies

     284         1   

 

 
Performance/return   

¡ Segmental reporting

     288         2   
  

¡ Net interest income

     288         3   
  

¡ Net fee and commission income

     289         4   
  

¡ Net trading income

     290         5   
  

¡ Net investment income

     290         6   
  

¡ Credit impairment charges and other provisions

     291         7   
  

¡ Administration and general expenses

     293         8   
  

¡ Profit on disposal of subsidiaries, associates and joint ventures

     293         9   
  

¡  Tax

     294         10   
  

¡ Earnings per share

     297         11   
  

¡ Dividends on ordinary shares

     297         12   

 

 
Assets and liabilities held at fair value   

¡ Trading portfolio

     298         13   
  

¡ Financial assets designated at fair value

     298         14   
  

¡ Derivative financial instruments

     299         15   
  

¡ Available for sale financial investments

     303         16   
  

¡ Financial liabilities designated at fair value

     303         17   
  

¡ Fair value of assets and liabilities.

     304         18   
  

¡ Offsetting financial assets and financial liabilities

     322         19   

 

 
Financial instruments held at   

¡ Loans and advances to banks and customers

     324         20   
amortised cost   

¡ Finance leases

     324         21   
  

¡ Reclassification of financial assets held for trading

     325         22   
  

¡ Reverse repurchase and repurchase agreements including other

     325         23   
  

similar lending and borrowing

     

 

 
Fixed assets and investments   

¡ Property, plant and equipment

     326         24   
  

¡ Goodwill and intangible assets

     328         25   
  

¡ Operating leases

     330         26   

 

 
Accruals, provisions, and contingent   

¡ Accruals, deferred income and other liabilities

     331         27   
liabilities   

¡  Provisions

     332         28   
  

¡ Contingent liabilities and commitments

     334         29   
  

¡ Legal proceedings, competition and regulatory matters

     334         30   

 

 
Capital instruments, equity and reserves   

¡ Subordinated liabilities

     341         31   
  

¡ Ordinary shares, share premium, and other equity

     344         32   
  

¡  Reserves

     345         33   
  

¡ Non-controlling interests

     346         34   

 

 
Employee benefits   

¡ Staff costs

     348         35   
  

¡ Share based payments

     349         36   
  

¡ Pensions and post retirement benefits

     351         37   

 

 
Scope of consolidation   

¡ Principal subsidiaries

     356         38   
  

¡ Structured entities

     358         39   
  

¡ Investments in associates and joint ventures

     363         40   
  

¡  Securitisations

     363         41   
  

¡ Assets pledged

     365         42   

 

 
Other disclosure matters   

¡ Related party transactions and Directors’ remuneration

     366         43   
  

¡ Auditors’ remuneration

     368         44   
  

¡ Financial risks, liquidity and capital management

     369         45   
  

¡ Changes in accounting policies, comparability and other adjustments

     369         46   
  

¡ Barclays PLC (the Parent Company)

     376         47   

 

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Table of Contents
Presentation of information   

 

 

 

 

Barclays approach to disclosures

The Group aims to continually enhance its disclosures and their usefulness to the readers of the financial statements in light of developing market practice and areas of focus. Consequently Barclays disclosures go beyond the minimum standards required by accounting standards and other regulatory requirements.

During 2012, Barclays welcomed the recommendations made by the Enhanced Disclosure Taskforce (EDTF) and adopted the majority of the recommendations.

The EDTF was formed by the Financial Stability Board with a remit to broaden and deepen the risk disclosures of global banks in a number of areas, including liquidity and funding, credit risk and market risk.

For 2013 Barclays has sought to further enhance disclosures in order to meet the recommendations. In particular additional disclosures on the following have been made:

 

¡   Enhanced the encumbrance disclosure to improve reconciliation to the balance sheet and give increased information on unencumbered assets that cannot be pledged as collateral;

 

¡   Provided more granular information on RWAs;

 

¡   Increased information on impaired loans;

 

¡   Provided further information on our high risk wholesale and retail portfolios; and

 

¡   Expanded the market risk section providing better linkages between the balance sheet and value at risk (VaR).

In addition, the audit of the Barclays Africa Group Limited Group (which includes the Absa Retail and Business Banking component and certain other business activities) was concluded prior to our audit of the financial statements.

It is Barclays’ view that best in class disclosures will continue to evolve in light of ongoing market and stakeholder engagement with the banking sector. Barclays is committed to engaging and responding to this feedback in order to meet the information needs of stakeholders.

British Bankers’ Association (BBA) Code for Financial Reporting Disclosure

Barclays has adopted the BBA Code for Financial Reporting Disclosure and has prepared the 2013 Annual Report and Accounts in compliance with the Code. The BBA published a Code for Financial Reporting Disclosure (the Code). The Code sets out five disclosure principles together with supporting guidance. The principles are that UK banks will:

 

¡   provide high quality, meaningful and decision-useful disclosures;

 

¡   review and enhance their financial instrument disclosures for key areas of interest;

 

¡   assess the applicability and relevance of good practice recommendations to their disclosures, acknowledging the importance of such guidance;

 

¡   seek to enhance the comparability of financial statement disclosures across the uk banking sector; and

 

¡   clearly differentiate in their annual reports between information that is audited and information that is unaudited.

Statutory Accounts

The consolidated accounts of Barclays PLC and its subsidiaries are set out on pages 277 to 281 along with the accounts of Barclays PLC itself on pages 282 and 283. The accounting policies on pages 284 to 287 and the notes commencing on page 284 apply equally to both sets of accounts unless otherwise stated.

The comparatives in the financial statements and notes to the financial statements have been restated to reflect the implementation of IFRS 10 Consolidated Financial Statements and IAS 19 Employee Benefits (Revised 2011). For additional information refer to Note 46.

Capital Requirements Country-by-Country Reporting

HM Treasury has transposed the requirements set out under CRD IV and issued the Capital Requirements Country-by-Country Reporting Regulations 2013, effective 1 January 2014. The legislation will require Barclays PLC to publish additional information in respect of the year ended 31 December 2013, by 1 July 2014. This information will be available before this date on Barclays’ website, Barclays.com.

 

 

 

 

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Table of Contents
Independent Auditors’ report   

 

 

 

 

 

Independent Auditors’ Report to the members of Barclays PLC

Report on the financial statements

Our opinion

In our opinion, the financial statements, defined below:

 

¡   give a true and fair view of the state of the Group’s and of the Parent Company’s affairs as at 31 December 2013 and of the Group’s and Parent Company’s profit and cash flows for the year then ended;

 

¡   have been properly prepared in accordance with International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRSs) as adopted by the European Union; and

 

¡   have been prepared in accordance with the requirements of the Companies Act 2006 and, as regards the Group financial statements, Article 4 of the IAS Regulation.

This opinion is to be read in the context of what we say in the remainder of this report.

What we have audited

The Group financial statements and Parent Company financial statements (the financial statements) for the year ended 31 December 2013, which are prepared by Barclays PLC, comprise:

 

¡   the Consolidated and Parent balance sheets as at 31 December 2013;

 

¡   the Consolidated and Parent income statements and related Consolidated statement of comprehensive income for the year then ended;

 

¡   the Consolidated and Parent statements of changes in equity and statements of cash flows for the year then ended; and

 

¡   the related notes to the financial statements, which include a summary of significant accounting policies and other explanatory information.

The financial reporting framework that has been applied in their preparation comprises applicable law and IFRSs as adopted by the European Union.

Certain disclosures required by the financial reporting framework have been presented in the Risk review and Financial review sections of the Annual Report, rather than in the notes to the financial statements. These are cross-referenced from the financial statements and are identified as audited.

What an audit of financial statements involves

We conducted our audit in accordance with International Standards on Auditing (UK and Ireland) (ISAs (UK & Ireland)). An audit involves obtaining evidence about the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements sufficient to give reasonable assurance that the financial statements are free from material misstatement, whether caused by fraud or error. This includes an assessment of:

 

¡   whether the accounting policies are appropriate to the Group’s and Parent Company’s circumstances and have been consistently applied and adequately disclosed;

 

¡   the reasonableness of significant accounting estimates made by the directors; and

 

¡   the overall presentation of the financial statements.

In addition, we read all the financial and non-financial information in the Annual Report to identify material inconsistencies with the audited financial statements and to identify any information that is apparently materially incorrect based on, or materially inconsistent with, the knowledge acquired by us in the course of performing the audit. If we become aware of any apparent material misstatements or inconsistencies we consider the implications for our report.

Overview of our audit approach

Materiality

We set certain thresholds for materiality. These helped us to determine the nature, timing and extent of our audit procedures and to evaluate the effect of misstatements both individually and on the financial statements as a whole.

Based on our professional judgment, we determined overall materiality for the Group financial statements as a whole to be £310m. Overall materiality was determined through taking 5% of profit before taxation adjusted for own credit, the provision for payment protection insurance redress payments and claims management costs, the provision for interest rate hedging products redress and claims management costs, goodwill impairment and costs to achieve Transform. The removal of these items mitigates undue volatility in determining our materiality.

Although our audit was designed to identify material misstatements, we agreed with the Board Audit Committee that we would report to them uncorrected misstatements greater than £15m, as well as misstatements below that threshold that, in our view, warranted reporting for qualitative reasons.

Overview of the scope of our audit

When determining the scope of our audit we considered the internal organisation of the Group and we sought to determine a scope of audit work that optimised the coverage of risks, balances and transactions.

The Group has eight operating segments: UK Retail and Business Banking, Europe Retail and Business Banking, Africa Retail and Business Banking, Barclaycard, Investment Bank, Corporate Banking, Wealth and Investment Management and Head Office and Other Operations.

For the purposes of planning our audit, we identified eight separate components in the Group, being entities and business activities for which the Group prepares financial information. This component analysis was broadly consistent with the Group’s operating segments; except that we identified Barclaycard UK (which is part of the Barclaycard segment) and Absa Retail and Business Banking (which is part of the Africa Retail and Business Banking segment) as separate components. Therefore the components for the purposes of our audit were UK Retail and Business Banking, Europe Retail and Business Banking, Absa Retail and Business Banking, Barclaycard UK, Investment Bank, Corporate Banking, Wealth and Investment Management and Head Office & Other Functions (the components).

In establishing our overall approach to audit the Group, we considered the significance of these components to the financial statements. We also separately considered our assessment of risk within each component, the overall coverage of our procedures across the Group, as well as the risk associated with less significant components not brought into the normal scope of our audit.

We determined the type of work that needed to be performed for each component by us in relation to components within the UK, or by other PwC network firms operating under our instruction in relation to components outside the UK. Where the work was performed by other firms, we determined the level of involvement we needed to have in the audit work of those components to be able to conclude whether sufficient appropriate audit evidence had been obtained as a basis for our opinion on the Group financial statements as a whole.

Of the eight components, we performed an audit of the complete financial information of the Investment Bank, Barclaycard UK and Absa Retail and Business Banking either because that was required due to their size and their risk characteristics or due to the alignment of local reporting timetables with that of the Group. We also carried out specific audit procedures on certain financial statement line items in each of the remaining five components. In addition, the audit of the Barclays Africa Group Limited Group (which includes the ABSA Retail and Business Banking component and certain other business activities) was concluded prior to our audit of the financial statements.

 

 

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In aggregate these components, financial statement line items and the Barclays Africa Group Limited Group accounted for 83% of total income and 91% of total assets.

In addition, we carried out other more limited audit procedures in respect of those business activities of the Group which were not included in the eight components which we had identified.

This, together with additional procedures performed at the Group level, gave us the evidence we needed for our opinion on the Group financial statements as a whole.

Areas of particular audit focus

In preparing the financial statements, the directors made a number of subjective judgements, for example in respect of significant accounting estimates that involved them making assumptions and considering future events that are inherently uncertain. We primarily focused our work in these areas by assessing the directors’ judgements against available evidence, forming our own judgements, and evaluating the disclosures in the financial statements.

In our audit, we tested and examined information, using sampling and other auditing techniques, to the extent we considered necessary to provide a reasonable basis for us to draw conclusions. We obtained audit evidence through testing the effectiveness of controls, substantive procedures or a combination of both.

We consider the following areas of particular audit focus to be those areas that had the greatest effect on our overall audit strategy, the allocation of resources in our audit and directing the efforts of the audit team in the current year. This is not however a complete list of all the risks or areas of audit focus identified by our audit. We discussed these areas of focus with the Board Audit Committee. Their report on those matters that they considered to be significant issues in relation to the financial statements is set out on pages 63 and 64.

 

Areas of particular audit focus

Area of focus         How the scope of our audit addressed the area of focus

 

Valuation of complex or illiquid trading portfolio assets and liabilities, financial assets and liabilities and derivative financial instruments held at fair value   

We focused on this area because for some of these assets and liabilities the external evidence supporting the Group’s valuations is limited because of the lack of a liquid market and the directors’ judgement was required.

 

In particular we focussed on:

 

¡     the basis of valuation of the Education, Social Housing and Local Authority (ESHLA) loan portfolio which is held at fair value; and

 

¡     the derivative valuation adjustments made by management including those made to reflect the costs of funding of uncollateralised derivatives and counterparty credit risk.

 

See Notes 14 to 18 to the financial statements on page 298 to 322.

  

We assessed and tested the design and operating effectiveness of the controls over valuations and model approval.

 

In those cases where the external information supporting the Group’s valuations was limited and the directors’ judgement was required, we examined the Group’s internal price verification processes which test those judgemental valuations against other information which, while not directly comparable, may be indicative of the appropriate valuation. Where the Group used external pricing sources we examined the processes and controls operated by those sources.

 

We also made our own examination of collateral disputes, market auctions and gains and losses on disposals and other events which could provide evidence about the appropriateness of the Group’s valuations. In some cases we evaluated the Group’s valuation models or made our own valuations of some of the financial instruments and compared our valuations to those of the Group.

 

In relation to the particular areas of focus set out opposite;

 

¡    we assessed the methodology used to value the ESHLA portfolio and we examined potentially comparable transactions to determine the extent to which the inputs to the valuation methodology were observable;

 

¡     we assessed the methodology for the derivative valuation adjustments and compared it with our knowledge of current and emerging practice; and

 

¡    we examined relevant transactions to corroborate the methodology for the derivative valuation adjustments and the assumptions made.

 

 

 

 

 

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Table of Contents
  

 

 

 

 

Areas of particular audit focus

 

Area of focus         How the scope of our audit addressed the area of focus

 

Impairment of the carrying value of loans and advances to banks and to customers held at amortised cost   

We focused on this area because the directors make complex and subjective judgements over both timing of recognition of impairment and the estimation of the size of any such impairment.

 

In the Corporate Banking and Investment Bank components the material portion of impairment is individually calculated. In the UK, Europe and Absa Retail and Business Bank and the Barclaycard UK components the material portion of the impairment is calculated on a modelled basis for portfolios of loans and advances.

 

In particular we focussed on:

 

¡    the principal assumptions underlying the calculation of impairment for portfolios of loans and advances, the operation of the models to make those calculations and the application of adjustments to the results produced by those models; and

 

¡     how impairment events that have not yet resulted in a payment default are identified and measured, including the granting of forbearance.

 

See Notes 7 and 20 to the financial statements on pages 291 and 324 respectively and the relevant parts of the Risk review to which they are cross-referred.

 

  

We assessed and tested the design and operating effectiveness of the controls over impairment calculations.

 

Where impairment was individually calculated, we tested a sample of loans and advances to ascertain whether the impairment event had been identified in a timely manner, including how forbearance had been considered. For identified impairments, we examined the future cash flow forecasts prepared by management, challenging the assumptions made, and comparing the estimates to external evidence where available.

 

Where impairment was calculated on a modelled basis, we tested the basis and operation of those models and the data used.

 

In relation to the particular areas of focus set out

opposite:

 

¡    we compared the principal assumptions made with our own knowledge of other practices and actual experience;

 

¡    we tested the operation of the models used to calculate the impairment including, in some cases, rebuilding those models independently and comparing the results;

 

¡    we examined the basis for the further adjustments made to the results produced by those models; and

 

¡    we tested the operation of the Group’s controls to identify any potential additional impairment due to events that have not yet resulted in a payment default, including the granting of forbearance, and we specifically examined the individual judgements made for a sample of loans and advances.

     
     
     
     
     
     
     

 

Provisions for the cost of conduct remediation   

We focused on this area because the directors have made provisions that require significant judgement in relation to the amount of current and potential future claims from customers for losses or damages associated with inappropriate judgements in the execution of the Group’s business activities.

 

In particular, we focussed on the provisions in relation to Payment Protection Insurance redress (PPI) and Interest Rate Hedging Product redress (IRHP).

 

See Note 28 to the financial statements on pages 332 and 333.

 

  

We assessed and tested the design and operating effectiveness of the directors’ controls over the calculation of the provisions for the cost of conduct remediation.

 

In relation to the particular areas of focus set out opposite we examined the history of claim volumes and settlement amounts for PPI and IRHP and assessed whether the assumptions underpinning the provision calculations, including future claims volumes and settlement amounts, were appropriate. This assessment considered the latest information available including regulatory inspections and communications and our knowledge of other such redress settlements.

     
     

 

Litigation and regulatory claims   

We focussed on this area because the Group is subject to challenge in respect of many legal, regulatory and competition matters, many of which are beyond their control. Consequently, the directors make judgements about the incidence and quantum of such liabilities arising from litigation and regulatory or competition claims which are subject to the future outcome of legal or regulatory processes.

 

See Note 30 to the financial statements on pages 334 to 340.

  

We assessed and tested the design and operating effectiveness of the controls over the identification and reporting of legal regulatory or competition matters.

 

We considered the Group’s assessment of the nature and status of litigation, claims and assessments and discussed them with senior Group management including in-house counsel.

 

We examined the Group’s conclusions with respect to the provisions and disclosures made for significant cases, both considering the correspondence between the Group and its external legal counsel and independently communicating with certain of those external legal counsel.

 

 

 

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Independent Auditors’ report continued

 

  

 

 

 

 

Areas of particular audit focus

 

Area of focus        How the scope of our audit addressed the area of focus

 

Provision for uncertain tax positions    We focussed on this area because the Group is subject to taxation in many jurisdictions and, in many cases, the ultimate tax treatment is uncertain and is not determined until resolved with the relevant tax authority. Consequently, the directors make judgements about the incidence and quantum of tax liabilities which are subject to the future outcome of assessments by the relevant tax authorities and potentially associated legal processes.   We examined the correspondence between the Group and both the relevant tax authorities and the Group’s external advisers. We examined the matters in dispute and used our knowledge of the law of the relevant tax jurisdictions and other similar taxation matters to assess the available evidence and consider whether the provisions are appropriate.
  

See Note 10 to the financial statements on pages 294 and 297.

 

 

 

IT systems and controls    We focussed on this area because the Group’s financial accounting systems are heavily dependent on complex IT systems which are the subject of continuing development and improvement.  

We assessed and tested the design and operating effectiveness of the directors’ controls over the continued integrity of the IT systems that are relevant to financial reporting. We examined the governance framework for the Group’s IT organisation and the controls over program development and changes, access to programs and data and IT operations, including compensating controls where required. Where necessary we also carried out direct tests of certain aspects of the security of the Group’s IT systems including access and segregation of duties.

 

 

Risk of fraud in revenue recognition    We focussed on this area because ISAs (UK & Ireland) presume there is a risk of fraud in revenue recognition as a result of the potential for management bias in order to achieve planned results.  

We assessed and tested the design and operating effectiveness of the controls over the occurrence, accuracy and timing of revenue recognised in the financial statements. We also focused on the instances of material judgement by the directors and by management and on those parts of the accounting processes which require manual intervention. We incorporated unpredictability into our testing.

 

 

Risk of management override of internal controls    We focussed on this area because ISAs (UK & Ireland) require that we consider the risk of management override of internal controls.  

We tested key reconciliations and manual journal entries incorporating unpredictability into our approach.

 

We considered whether there was evidence of bias by the directors or by management in the significant accounting estimates and judgements relevant to the financial statements.

 

We also assessed the overall control environment of the Group, including the arrangements for staff to “whistle-blow” inappropriate actions, and interviewed senior management and the Group’s internal audit function.

 

    
    

 

 

 

 

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Going Concern

Under the Listing Rules we are required to review the directors’ statement in relation to going concern. We have nothing to report having performed our review.

As noted in the directors’ statement, the directors have concluded that it is appropriate to prepare the Group’s and Parent Company’s financial statements using the going concern basis of accounting. The going concern basis presumes that the Group and Parent Company have adequate resources to remain in operation, and that the directors intend them to do so, for at least one year from the date the financial statements were signed. In drawing this conclusion, the directors have considered the regulatory capital position of the Group as well as the funding and liquidity position of the Group.

As part of our audit we have concluded that the directors’ use of the going concern basis is appropriate. However, because not all future events or conditions can be predicted, these statements are not a guarantee as to the Group’s and the Parent Company’s ability to continue as a going concern.

Opinions on matters prescribed by the Companies Act 2006

In our opinion:

 

¡   the information given in the Strategic Report and the Directors’ Report for the financial year for which the financial statements are prepared is consistent with the financial statements; and

 

¡   the part of the Directors’ Remuneration Report to be audited has been properly prepared in accordance with the Companies Act 2006.

Other matters on which we are required to report by exception

Adequacy of accounting records and information and explanations received

Under the Companies Act 2006 we are required to report to you if, in our opinion:

 

¡   we have not received all the information and explanations we require for our audit;

 

¡   adequate accounting records have not been kept by the Parent Company, or returns adequate for our audit have not been received from branches not visited by us; or

 

¡   the Parent Company financial statements and the part of the Directors’ Remuneration Report to be audited are not in agreement with the accounting records and returns.

We have no exceptions to report arising from this responsibility.

Directors’ remuneration

Under the Companies Act 2006 we are required to report to you if, in our opinion, certain disclosures of directors’ remuneration specified by law have not been made, and under the Listing Rules we are required to review certain elements of the report to shareholders by the Board on directors’ remuneration. We have no exceptions to report arising from this responsibility.

Corporate Governance Statement

Under the Listing Rules we are required to review the part of the Corporate Governance Statement relating to the Company’s compliance with nine provisions of the UK Corporate Governance Code (the Code). We have nothing to report having performed our review.

On page 82 of the Annual Report, as required by the Code Provision C.1.1, the directors state that they consider the Annual Report taken as a whole to be fair, balanced and understandable and provides the information necessary for members to assess the Group’s performance, business model and strategy. On pages 63 and 64, as required by C.3.8 of the Code, the Board Audit Committee has set out the significant issues that it considered in relation to the financial statements, and how they were addressed. Under ISAs (UK & Ireland) we are required to report to you if, in our opinion:

 

¡   the statement given by the directors is materially inconsistent with our knowledge of the Group acquired in the course of performing our audit; or

 

¡   the section of the Annual Report describing the work of the Board Audit Committee does not appropriately address matters communicated by us to the Board Audit Committee.

We have no exceptions to report arising from this responsibility.

Other information in the Annual Report

Under ISAs (UK & Ireland), we are required to report to you if, in our opinion, information in the Annual Report is:

 

¡   materially inconsistent with the information in the audited financial statements; or

 

¡   apparently materially incorrect based on, or materially inconsistent with, our knowledge of the Group and Parent Company acquired in the course of performing our audit; or

 

¡   is otherwise misleading.

We have no exceptions to report arising from this responsibility.

Responsibilities for the financial statements and the audit

Our responsibilities and those of the directors

As explained more fully in the Directors’ Responsibilities Statement set out on page 82, the directors are responsible for the preparation of the Group and Parent Company financial statements and for being satisfied that they give a true and fair view.

Our responsibility is to audit and express an opinion on the Group and Parent Company financial statements in accordance with applicable law and ISAs (UK & Ireland). Those standards require us to comply with the Auditing Practices Board’s Ethical Standards for Auditors.

This report, including the opinions, has been prepared for and only for the Company’s members as a body in accordance with Chapter 3 of Part 16 of the Companies Act 2006 and for no other purpose. We do not, in giving these opinions, accept or assume responsibility for any other purpose or to any other person to whom this report is shown or into whose hands it may come save where expressly agreed by our prior consent in writing.

Andrew Ratcliffe (Senior Statutory Auditor)

for and on behalf of

PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP

Chartered Accountants and Statutory Auditors

London, United Kingdom

3 March 2014

 

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Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm’s report

 

 

 

 

Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm

To the Board of Directors and Shareholders of Barclays PLC

In our opinion, the accompanying consolidated balance sheets and the related consolidated income statements, consolidated statements of comprehensive income and consolidated statements of changes in equity, and consolidated cash flow statements present fairly, in all material respects, the financial position of Barclays PLC and its subsidiaries at 31 December 2013 and 1 January 2013, and the results of their operations and their cash flows for each of the three years in the period ended 31 December 2013 in conformity with International Financial Reporting Standards as issued by the International Accounting Standards Board. Also in our opinion, the Company maintained, in all material respects, effective internal control over financial reporting as of 31 December 2013, based on criteria established in Internal Control – Integrated Framework 1992 issued by the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission (COSO). The Company’s management is responsible for these financial statements, for maintaining effective internal control over financial reporting and for its assessment of the effectiveness of internal control over financial reporting, included in management’s report on internal control over financial reporting in the Directors’ Report appearing on page 81 of the Annual Report to Shareholders. Our responsibility is to express opinions on these financial statements and on the Company’s internal control over financial reporting based on our integrated audits. We conducted our audits in accordance with the standards of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States). Those standards require that we plan and perform the audits to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements are free of material misstatement and whether effective internal control over financial reporting was maintained in all material respects. Our audits of the financial statements included examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements, assessing the accounting principles used and significant estimates made by management, and evaluating the overall financial statement presentation. Our audit of internal control over financial reporting included obtaining an understanding of internal

control over financial reporting, assessing the risk that a material weakness exists, and testing and evaluating the design and operating effectiveness of internal control based on the assessed risk. Our audits also included performing such other procedures as we considered necessary in the circumstances. We believe that our audits provide a reasonable basis for our opinions.

As discussed in Notes 1 and 46, in 2013 the Company changed the manner in which it assesses consolidation, due to the implementation of IFRS 10: Consolidated Financial Statements; and the manner in which it accounts for its employee benefits due to the implementation of IAS 19 (revised): Employee Benefits, which resulted in the inclusion of the January 1, 2012 balance sheet.

A company’s internal control over financial reporting is a process designed to provide reasonable assurance regarding the reliability of financial reporting and the preparation of financial statements for external purposes in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles. A company’s internal control over financial reporting includes those policies and procedures that (i) pertain to the maintenance of records that, in reasonable detail, accurately and fairly reflect the transactions and dispositions of the assets of the company; (ii) provide reasonable assurance that transactions are recorded as necessary to permit preparation of financial statements in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles, and that receipts and expenditures of the company are being made only in accordance with authorizations of management and directors of the company; and (iii) provide reasonable assurance regarding prevention or timely detection of unauthorized acquisition, use, or disposition of the company’s assets that could have a material effect on the financial statements.

Because of its inherent limitations, internal control over financial reporting may not prevent or detect misstatements. Also, projections of any evaluation of effectiveness to future periods are subject to the risk that controls may become inadequate because of changes in conditions, or that the degree of compliance with the policies or procedures may deteriorate.

PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP

London, United Kingdon

3 March 2014

 

 

 

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Consolidated financial statements >

Consolidated income statement

 

 

 

 

 

 

 
            2013     2012     2011      

For the year ended 31 December

   Notes      £m     £m     £m      

 

 

Continuing operations

         

Interest income

     3         18,315        19,211        20,589      

Interest expense

     3         (6,715     (7,557     (8,388)     

 

 

Net interest income

        11,600        11,654        12,201      

 

 

Fee and commission income

     4         10,479        10,213        10,208      

Fee and commission expense

     4         (1,748     (1,677     (1,586)     

 

 

Net fee and commission income

        8,731        8,536        8,622      

 

 

Net trading income

     5         6,553        3,347        7,660      

Net investment income

     6         680        844        2,305      

Net premiums from insurance contracts

        732        896        1,076      

Gains on debt buy-backs and extinguishments

                      1,130      

Other income

        148        332        39      

 

 

Total income

        28,444        25,609        33,033      

Net claims and benefits incurred on insurance contracts

        (509     (600     (741)     

 

 

Total income net of insurance claims

        27,935        25,009        32,292      

Credit impairment charges and other provisions

     7         (3,071     (3,340     (5,602)     

Net operating income

        24,864        21,669        26,690      

 

 

Staff costs

     35         (12,155     (11,467     (12,353)     

Administration and general expenses

     8         (6,611     (5,991     (5,844)     

Depreciation of property, plant and equipment

     24         (647     (669     (673)     

Amortisation of intangible assets

     25         (480     (435     (419)     

Goodwill impairment

     25         (79            (597)     

Provision for PPI redress

     28         (1,350     (1,600     (1,000)     

Provision for interest rate hedging products redress

     28         (650     (850     –      

 

 

Operating expenses

        (21,972     (21,012     (20,886)     

 

 

Share of post-tax results of associates and joint ventures

        (56     110        60      

Profit/(loss) on disposal of subsidiaries, associates and joint ventures

     9         6        28        (94)     

Gain on acquisitions

        26        2        –      

 

 

Profit before tax

        2,868        797        5,770      

Taxation

     10         (1,571     (616     (1,902)     

 

 

Profit after tax

        1,297        181        3,868      

 

 

Attributable to:

         

 

 

Equity holders of the parent

        540        (624     2,924      

Non-controlling interests

     34         757        805        944      

 

 

Profit after tax

        1,297        181        3,868      

 

 
            p     p     p     

 

 

Earnings per share

         

Basic earnings/(loss) per share

     11         3.8        (4.8     22.9      

Diluted earnings/(loss) per share

     11         3.7        (4.8     21.9      

 

 

The Board of Directors approved the financial statements out on pages 277 to 376 on 3 March 2014.

 

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Consolidated financial statements >

Consolidated statement of comprehensive income

 

 

 

 

 

 

For the year ended 31 December

  

2013

£m

   

2012

£m

   

2011   

£m   

 

 

 

Profit after tax

     1,297        181        3,868     

 

 

Other comprehensive (loss)/income from continuing operations:

      

Currency translation reserve

      

Currency translation differences

     (1,767     (1,548     (1,607)    

Available for sale reserve

      

Net(losses)/gains from changes in fair value

     (2,734     1,237        2,742     

Net gains transferred to net profit on disposal

     (145     (703     (1,614)    

Net (gains)/losses transferred to net profit due to impairment

     (7     40        1,860     

Net losses/(gains) transferred to net profit due to fair value hedging

     2,376        474        (1,803)    

Changes in insurance liabilities

     28        (150     18     

Tax

     100        (352     171     

Cash flow hedging reserve

      

Net (losses)/gains from changes in fair value

     (1,914     1,499        2,407     

Net gains transferred to net profit

     (547     (695     (753)    

Tax

     571        (142     (391)    

Other

     (37     96        (74)    

 

 

Total comprehensive (loss)/income that may be recycled to profit or loss

     (4,076     (244     956     

Other comprehensive (loss)/income not recycled to profit or loss:

      

 

 

Retirement benefit remeasurements

     (512     (1,553     1,033     

Deferred tax

     (3     318        (202)    

 

 

Other comprehensive (loss)/income for the period

     (4,591     (1,479     1,787     

 

 

Total comprehensive (loss)/income for the year

     (3,294     (1,298     5,655     

 

 

Attributable to:

      

Equity holders of the parent

     (3,406     (1,894     5,324     

Non-controlling interests

     112        596        331     

 

 
     (3,294     (1,298     5,655     

 

 

 

 

 

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Consolidated financial statements >

Consolidated balance sheet

  

 

 

 

 

 

 

As at

   Notes     

31 December
2013

£m

    

31 December
2012

£m

    

1 January  
2012  

£m  

 

 

 

Assets

           

Cash and balances at central banks

        45,687         86,191         106,990     

Items in the course of collection from other banks

        1,282         1,473         1,812     

Trading portfolio assets

     13         133,069         146,352         153,508     

Financial assets designated at fair value

     14         38,968         46,629         37,767     

Derivative financial instruments

     15         324,335         469,156         538,977     

Available for sale investments

     16         91,756         75,109         68,495     

Loans and advances to banks

     20         37,853         40,462         47,422     

Loans and advances to customers

     20         430,411         423,906         429,559     

Reverse repurchase agreements and other similar secured lending

     23         186,779         176,522         153,030     

Prepayments, accrued income and other assets

        4,414         4,365         4,565     

Investments in associates and joint ventures

     40         653         633         487     

Property, plant and equipment

     24         4,216         5,754         7,166     

Goodwill and intangible assets

     25         7,685         7,915         7,846     

Current tax assets

     10         219         252         374     

Deferred tax assets

     10         4,807         3,563         3,611     

Retirement benefit assets

     37         133         53         41     

 

 

Total assets

        1,312,267         1,488,335         1,561,650     

 

 

Liabilities

           

Deposits from banks

        54,834         77,012         91,123     

Items in the course of collection due to other banks

        1,359         1,587         969     

Customer accounts

        427,902         385,411         365,527     

Repurchase agreements and other similar secured borrowing

     23         196,748         217,178         207,292     

Trading portfolio liabilities

     13         53,464         44,794         45,887     

Financial liabilities designated at fair value

     17         64,796         78,561         88,453     

Derivative financial instruments

     15         320,634         462,721         528,249     

Debt securities in issue

        86,693         119,525         129,678     

Subordinated liabilities

     31         21,695         24,018         24,870     

Accruals, deferred income and other liabilities

     27         12,934         12,532         12,854     

Provisions

     28         3,886         2,766         1,529     

Current tax liabilities

     10         1,042         621         1,396     

Deferred tax liabilities

     10         373         341         566     

Retirement benefit liabilities

     37         1,958         1,282         243     

 

 

Total liabilities

        1,248,318         1,428,349         1,498,636     

 

 

Total equity

           

Called up share capital and share premium

     32         19,887         12,477         12,380     

Other equity instruments

     32         2,063                 –     

Other reserves

     33         249         3,674         3,837     

Retained earnings

        33,186         34,464         37,190     

 

 

Total equity excluding non-controlling interests

        55,385         50,615         53,407     

Non-controlling interests

     34         8,564         9,371         9,607     

 

 

Total equity

        63,949         59,986         63,014     

 

 

Total liabilities and equity

        1,312,267         1,488,335         1,561,650     

 

 

Sir David Walker

Group Chairman

Antony Jenkins

Group Chief Executive

Tushar Morzaria

Group Finance Director

 

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Consolidated financial statements >

Consolidated statement of change in equity

 

 

 

 

 

 
   

Called up
share
capital
and share
premium
a

£m

   

Other

equity
instruments
a

£m

   

Available
for sale

reserveb

£m

   

Cash
flow
hedging
reserve
b

£m

   

Currency
translation
reserve
b

£m

   

Other
reserves
and
treasury
shares
b

£m

    Retained
earnings
£m
    Total
£m
    Non-
controlling
interests
£m
   

Total   
equity   

£m   

 

 

 

Balance as at 1 January 2013

    12,477               527        2,099        59        989        34,464        50,615        9,371        59,986      

Profit after tax

                                              540        540        757        1,297      

Currency translation movements

                                (1,201                   (1,201     (566     (1,767)     

Available for sale investments

                  (379                                 (379     (3     (382)     

Cash flow hedges

                         (1,826                          (1,826     (64     (1,890)     

Pension remeasurement

                                              (503     (503     (12     (515)     

Other

                                              (37     (37            (37)     

 

 

Total comprehensive (loss)/income for the year

                  (379     (1,826     (1,201                   (3,406     112        (3,294)     

 

 

Issue of new ordinary shares

    6,620                                                  6,620               6,620      

Issue of shares under employee share schemes

    790                                           689        1,479               1,479      

Issue of other equity instruments

           2,063                                           2,063               2,063      

Increase in treasury shares

                                       (1,066            (1,066            (1,066)     

Vesting of shares under employee share schemes

                                       1,047        (1,047                   –      

Dividends paid

                                              (859     (859     (813     (1,672)     

Other reserve movements

                                              (61     (61     (106     (167)     

 

 

Balance as at 31 December 2013

    19,887        2,063        148        273        (1,142     970        33,186        55,385        8,564        63,949      

 

 

 

 

Balance as at 31 December 2011 published

    12,380               25        1,442        1,348        1,022        39,372        55,589        9,607        65,196      

 

 

Effects of IFRS 10

                                              (945     (945            (945)     

Effects of IAS 19 Revised

                                              (1,237     (1,237            (1,237)     

 

 

Balance as at 1 January 2012 restated

    12,380               25        1,442        1,348        1,022        37,190        53,407        9,607        63,014      

Profit after tax

                                              (624     (624     805        181      

Currency translation movements

                                (1,289                   (1,289     (259     (1,548)     

Available for sale investments

                  502                                    502        44        546      

Cash flow hedges

                         657                             657        5        662      

Pension remeasurement

                                              (1,235     (1,235            (1,235)     

Other

                                              95        95        1        96      

 

 

Total comprehensive income for the year

                  502        657        (1,289            (1,764     (1,894     596        (1,298)     

 

 

Issue of shares under employee share schemes

    97                                           717        814               814      

Increase in treasury shares

                                       (979            (979            (979)     

Vesting of shares under employee share schemes

                                       946        (946                   –      

Dividends paid

                                              (733     (733     (694     (1,427)     

Redemption of Reserve Capital

                   

Instruments

                                                                   –      

Other reserve movements

                                                            (138     (138)     

 

 

Balance as at 31 December 2012

    12,477               527        2,099        59        989        34,464        50,615        9,371        59,986      

 

 
                   

Notes

a For further details refer to Note 32.

b For further details refer to Note 33.

  

  

  

 

 

 

 

 

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Consolidated financial statements >

Consolidated cash flow statement

  

 

 

 

 

 

 

For the year ended 31 December

  

2013

£m

   

2012

£m

   

2011  

£m  

 

 

 

Continuing operations

      

Reconciliation of profit before tax to net cash flows from operating activities:

      

Profit before tax

     2,868        797        5,770     

Adjustment for non-cash items:

      

Allowance for impairment

     3,071        3,340        5,602     

Depreciation, amortisation and impairment of property, plant, equipment and intangibles

     1,274        1,119        1,104     

Other provisions, including pensions

     3,674        3,080        1,787     

Net profit on disposal of investments and property, plant and equipment

     (145     (679     (1,645)    

Other non-cash movements

     (1,293     5,565        1,454     

Changes in operating assets and liabilities

      

Net (increase)/decrease in loans and advances to banks and customers

     (6,783     1,832        (13,836)    

Net (increase)/decrease in reverse repurchase agreements and other similar lending

     (10,264     (23,492     52,176     

Net (decrease)/increase in deposits and debt securities in issue

     (12,519     (4,388     6,712     

Net (decrease)/increase in repurchase agreements and other similar borrowing

     (20,430     9,886        (18,266)    

Net decrease in derivative financial instruments

     2,734        4,293        3,730     

Net decrease in trading assets

     13,443        6,896        21,360     

Net increase/(decrease) in trading liabilities

     8,670        (973     (26,899)    

Net (increase)/decrease in financial investments

     (6,114     (18,764     (4,255)    

Net decrease in other assets

     128        535        119     

Net (decrease) in other liabilities

     (1,930     (1,354     (4,148)    

Corporate income tax paid

     (1,558     (1,516     (1,686)    

 

 

Net cash from operating activities

     (25,174     (13,823     29,079     

 

 

Purchase of available for sale investments

     (92,015     (80,797     (67,525)    

Proceeds from sale or redemption of available for sale investments

     69,473        73,773        66,941     

Purchase of property, plant and equipment

     (736     (604     (1,454)    

Other cash flows associated with investing activities

     633        531        126     

 

 

Net cash from investing activities

     (22,645     (7,097     (1,912)    

 

 

Dividends paid

     (1,672     (1,427     (1,387)    

Proceeds of borrowings and issuance of subordinated debt

     700        2,258        880     

Repayments of borrowings and redemption of subordinated debt

     (1,425     (2,680     (4,003)    

Net issue of shares and other equity instruments

     9,473        97        41     

Net (purchase) of treasury shares

     (1,066     (979     (235)    

Net redemption of shares issued to non-controlling interests

     (100     (111     (1,257)    

 

 

Net cash from financing activities

     5,910        (2,842     (5,961)    

 

 

Effect of exchange rates on cash and cash equivalents

     198        (4,111     (2,933)    

 

 

Net (decrease)/increase in cash and cash equivalents

     (41,711     (27,873     18,273     

 

 

Effects of IFRS10 on opening balance

            96        –     

 

 

Cash and cash equivalents at beginning of year

     121,896        149,673        131,400     

 

 

Cash and cash equivalents at end of year

     80,185        121,896        149,673     

 

 

Cash and cash equivalents comprise:

      

Cash and balances at central banks

     45,687        86,191        106,894     

Loans and advances to banks with original maturity less than three months

     33,690        33,473        40,481     

Available for sale treasury and other eligible bills with original maturity less than three months

     644        2,228        2,209     

Trading portfolio assets with original maturity less than three months

     164        4        89     

 

 
     80,185        121,896        149,673     

 

 

Interest received in 2013 was £23,387m (2012: £24,390m, 2011: £28,673m) and interest paid in 2013 was £10,709m (2012: £16,701, 2011: £20,106m).

The Group is required to maintain balances with central banks and other regulatory authorities and these amounted to £4,722m at 31 December 2013 (2012: £5,169m, 2011: £4,364m).

For the purposes of the cash flow statement, cash comprises cash on hand and demand deposits, and cash equivalents comprise highly liquid investments that are convertible into cash with an insignificant risk of changes in value with original maturities of three months or less. Repurchase and reverse repurchase agreements are not considered to be part of cash equivalents.

 

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Financial statements of Barclays PLC >

Parent company accounts

  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Income statement

                         

 

 

For the year ended 31 December

   Notes      2013
£m
    2012
£m
    2011  
£m  
 

 

 

Dividends received from subsidiary

        734        696        643     

Net Interest income

        (6     4        5     

Other (expense)/income

     47         (137     16        –     

Management charge from subsidiary

        (6     (5     (5)    

 

 

Profit before tax

        585        711        643     

Tax

        35        (4     –     

 

 

Profit after tax

        620        707        643     

 

 

Profit after tax and total comprehensive income for the year was £620m (2012: £707m, 2011: £643m). There were no other components of total comprehensive income other than the profit after tax.

The Company had no staff during the year (2012: nil, 2011: nil).

 

 

 

Balance sheet

                    

 

 

As at 31 December

   Notes      2013
£m
    

2012  

£m  

 

 

 

Assets

        

Investments in subsidiary

     47         30,059         21,429     

Derivative financial instrument

     47         271         422     

Other assets

     47         812         86     

 

 

Total assets

        31,142         21,937     

 

 

Liabilities

        

Deposits from banks

        400         409     

Other liabilities

                3     

 

 

Total liabilities

        400         412     

 

 

Shareholders’ equity

        

Called up share capital

     33         4,028         3,061     

Share premium account

     33         15,859         9,416     

Other equity instruments

     33         2,063         –     

Capital redemption reserve

        394         394     

Retained earnings

        8,398         8,654     

 

 

Total shareholders’ equity

        30,742         21,525     

 

 

Total liabilities and shareholders’ equity

        31,142         21,937     

 

 

The financial statements on pages 282 to 376 were approved by the Board of Directors on 3 March 2014 and signed on its behalf by:

Sir David Walker

Group Chairman

Antony Jenkins

Group Chief Executive

Tushar Morzaria

Group Finance Director

 

 

 

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Statement of changes in equity

                                   

 

 
    Notes    

Called up
share capital
and share

premium a

£m

    Other equity
instruments
    Capital
reserves and
other equity
£m
    Retained
earnings
£m
    Total   
equity   
£m   
 

 

 

Balance as at 1 January 2013

      12,477               394        8,654        21,525     

Profit after tax and total comprehensive income

                           620        620     

Issue of new ordinary shares

      6,620                             6,620     

Issue of shares under employee share schemes

      790                             790     

Issue of other equity instruments

             2,063                      2,063     

Dividends

    12                             (859     (859)    

Other

                      (17     (17)    

 

 

Balance as at 31 December 2013

      19,887        2,063        394        8,398        30,742     

 

 

Balance as at 1 January 2012

      12,380               394        8,680        21,454     

Profit after tax and total comprehensive income

                           707        707     

Issue of shares under employee share schemes

      97                             97     

Dividends

    12                             (733     (733)    

 

 

Balance as at 31 December 2012

      12,477               394        8,654        21,525     

 

 

 

 

Cash flow statement

                                   

 

 

For the year ended 31 December

                   

2013

£m

   

2012

£m

   

2011  

£m  

 

 

 

Reconciliation of profit before tax to net cash flows from operating activities:

  

     

Profit before tax

          585        711        643     

Changes in operating assets and liabilities

          (546     (72     (14)    

Other non-cash movements

          (20     (4     –     

Corporate income tax paid

          (3            –     

 

 

Net cash from operating activities

          16        635        629     

 

 

Capital contribution to subsidiary

          (8,630            –     

 

 

Net cash used in investing activities

          (8,630            –     

 

 

Issue of shares and other equity instruments

          9,473        97        41     

Dividends paid

          (859     (733     (670)    

 

 

Net cash from financing activities

          8,614        (636     (629)    

 

 

Net decrease in cash and cash equivalents

                 (1     –     

 

 

Cash and cash equivalents at beginning of year

                 1        1     

 

 

Cash and cash equivalents at end of yearb

                        1     

 

 

Net cash from operating activities includes:

           

Dividends received

          734        696        643     

Interest (paid)/received

          (6     4        5     

 

 

The Parent Company’s principal activity is to hold the investment in its wholly-owned subsidiary, Barclays Bank PLC. Dividends received are treated as operating income.

The Company was not exposed at 31 December 2013 or 2012 to significant risks arising from the financial instruments it holds, which comprised cash, balances with central banks and other assets which had no market risk or material credit risk.

Notes

a  Details of share capital and share premium are shown in Note 32
b  Comprising cash and balances at central banks.

 

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Notes to the financial statements >

For the year ended 31 December 2013

  

 

 

 

 

 

                    

     LOGO  

This section describes Barclays significant accounting policies and critical accounting estimates that relate to the financial statements and notes as a whole. If an accounting policy or a critical accounting estimate relates to a specific note, the applicable accounting policy and/or critical accounting estimate is contained within the relevant note.

 

 

Note 1: Significant accounting policies

 

 

1. Reporting entity

These financial statements are prepared for Barclays PLC and its subsidiaries (the Barclays PLC Group or the Group) under Section 399 of the Companies Act 2006. The Group is a major global financial services provider engaged in retail banking, credit cards, wholesale banking, investment banking, wealth management and investment management services. In addition, individual financial statements have been presented for the holding company.

 

2. Compliance with International Financial Reporting Standards

The consolidated financial statements of the Group, and the individual financial statements of Barclays PLC, have been prepared in accordance with International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) and interpretations (IFRICs) issued by the Interpretations Committee, as published by the International Accounting Standards Board (IASB). They are also in accordance with IFRS and IFRIC interpretations endorsed by the European Union. The principal accounting policies applied in the preparation of the consolidated and individual financial statements are set out below, and in the relevant notes to the financial statements. These policies have been consistently applied.

 

3. Basis of preparation

The consolidated and individual financial statements have been prepared under the historical cost convention modified to include the fair valuation of investment property and particular financial instruments to the extent required or permitted under IFRS as set out in the relevant accounting policies. They are stated in millions of pounds Sterling (£m), the functional currency of Barclays PLC.

 

4. Accounting policies

The Group’s significant accounting policies relating to specific financial statement items, together with a description of the accounting estimates and judgements that were critical to preparing them, are set out under the relevant notes. Accounting policies that affect the financial statements as a whole are set out below.

 

(i) Consolidation

Barclays applies IFRS 10 Consolidated Financial Statements.

 

The consolidated financial statements combine the financial statements of Barclays PLC and all its subsidiaries. Subsidiaries are entities over which Barclays PLC has control. The Group has control over another entity when the Group has all of the following:

 

1) power over the relevant activities of the investee, for example through voting or other rights;

 

2) exposure to, or rights to, variable returns from its involvement with the investee; and

 

3) the ability to affect those returns through its power over the investee.

 

The assessment of control is based on the consideration of all facts and circumstances. The Group reassesses whether it controls an investee if facts and circumstances indicate that there are changes to one or more of the three elements of control.

 

Intra-group transactions and balances are eliminated on consolidation and consistent accounting policies are used throughout the Group for the purposes of the consolidation.

 

Changes in ownership interests in subsidiaries are accounted for as equity transactions if they occur after control has already been obtained and they do not result in loss of control.

 

Details of the principal subsidiaries are given in Note 38.

 

 

 

 

 

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Note 1: Significant accounting policies continued

(ii) Foreign currency translation

The Group applies IAS 21 The Effects of Changes in Foreign Exchange Rates. Transactions and balances in foreign currencies are translated into Sterling at the rate ruling on the date of the transaction. Foreign currency balances are translated into Sterling at the period end exchange rates. Exchange gains and losses on such balances are taken to the income statement.

 

The Group’s foreign operations (including subsidiaries, joint ventures, associates and branches) based mainly outside the UK may have different functional currencies. The functional currency of an operation is the currency of the main economy to which it is exposed.

 

Prior to consolidation (or equity accounting) the assets and liabilities of non-Sterling operations are translated at the closing rate and items of income, expense and other comprehensive income are translated into Sterling at the rate on the date of the transactions. Exchange differences arising on the translation of foreign operations are included in currency translation reserves within equity. These are transferred to the income statement when the Group loses control, joint control or significant influence over the foreign operation or on partial disposal of the operation.

 

As the consolidated financial statements include partnerships where the Group member is a partner, advantage has been taken of the exemption under Regulation 7 of the Partnership (Accounts) Regulations 2008 with regard to preparing and filing of individual partnership financial statements.

 

(iii) Financial assets and liabilities

The Group applies IAS 39 Financial Instruments: Recognition and Measurement for the recognition, classification and measurement and derecognition of financial assets and financial liabilities, for the impairment of financial assets, and for hedge accounting.

 

Recognition

The Group recognises financial assets and liabilities when it becomes a party to the terms of the contract, which is the trade date or the settlement date.

 

Classification and measurement

Financial assets and liabilities are initially recognised at fair value and may be held at fair value or amortised cost depending on the Group’s intention toward the assets and the nature of the assets and liabilities, mainly determined by their contractual terms.

 

The accounting policy for each type of financial asset or liability is included within the relevant note for the item. The Group’s policies for determining the fair values of the assets and liabilities are set out in Note 18.

 

Derecognition

The Group derecognises a financial asset, or a portion of a financial asset, from its balance sheet where the contractual rights to cash flows from the asset have expired, or have been transferred, usually by sale, and with them either substantially all the risks and rewards of the asset or significant risks and rewards, along with the unconditional ability to sell or pledge the asset.

 

Financial liabilities are derecognised when the liability has been settled, has expired or has been extinguished. An exchange of an existing financial liability for a new liability with the same lender on substantially different terms – generally a difference of 10% in the present value of the cash flows – is accounted for as an extinguishment of the original financial liability and the recognition of a new financial liability.

 

Critical accounting estimates and judgements

Transactions in which the Group transfers assets and liabilities, portions of them, or financial risks associated with them can be complex and it may not be obvious whether substantially all of the risks and rewards have been transferred. It is often necessary to perform a quantitative analysis. Such an analysis compares the Group’s exposure to variability in asset cash flows before the transfer with its retained exposure after the transfer.

 

A cash flow analysis of this nature may require judgement. In particular, it is necessary to estimate the asset’s expected future cash flows as well as potential variability around this expectation. The method of estimating expected future cash flows depends on the nature of the asset, with market and market-implied data used to the greatest extent possible. The potential variability around this expectation is typically determined by stressing underlying parameters to create reasonable alternative upside and downside scenarios. Probabilities are then assigned to each scenario. Stressed parameters may include default rates, loss severity or prepayment rates.

 

(iv) Issued debt and equity instruments

The Group applies IAS 32, Financial Instruments: Presentation, to determine whether funding is either a financial liability (debt) or equity.

 

Issued financial instruments or their components are classified as liabilities if the contractual arrangement results in the Group having a present obligation to either deliver cash or another financial asset, or a variable number of equity shares, to the holder of the instrument, if this is not the case, the instrument is generally an equity instrument and the proceeds included in equity, net of transaction costs. Dividends and other returns to equity holders are recognised when paid or declared by the members at the AGM and treated as a deduction from equity.

 

Where issued financial instruments contain both liability and equity components, these are accounted for separately. The fair value of the debt is estimated first and the balance of the proceeds is included within equity.

 

 

 

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Notes to the financial statements >

For the year ended 31 December 2013 continued

  

 

 

 

 

                    

Note 1: Significant accounting policies continued

5. New and amended standards and interpretations

The accounting policies adopted are consistent with those of the previous financial year, except where new standards and amendments to IFRS effective as of 1 January 2013 have resulted in changes in accounting policy. The new amended standards that have material impact on Barclays accounting policies are as follows:

 

IFRS 10

IFRS 10 replaced requirements in IAS 27 Consolidated and Separate Financial Statements and SIC 12 Consolidation – Special Purpose Entities. This introduced new criteria to determine whether entities in which the Group has interests should be consolidated. The implementation of IFRS 10 resulted in the Group consolidating some entities that were previously not consolidated and deconsolidating some entities that were previously consolidated, principally impacting the consolidation of entities in the Investment Bank with credit market exposures.

 

IAS 19

IAS 19 (Revised 2011), amongst other changes, requires actuarial gains and losses arising from defined benefit pension schemes to be recognised in full. Previously the Group deferred these over the remaining average service lives of the employees (known as the ‘corridor’ approach).

 

The effect of the adoption of these new or amended standards on the Group’s financial position, performance and cash flows is disclosed in Note 46.

 

IFRS 13 Fair Value Measurement

IFRS 13 provides comprehensive guidance on how to calculate the fair value of financial and non-financial assets. The adoption of IFRS 13 did not have a material financial impact on the Group.

 

IFRS 11 Joint Arrangements

IFRS 11 replaces IAS 31 Joint Ventures. The new rules change the definition of a joint operation, requiring the group to recognise its share of income and expenses, and assets and liabilities for certain entities that were previously accounted for under the equity method. The new standard also removed the option to proportionally consolidate joint arrangements, an option the Group did not use. The adoption of IFRS 11 did not have a material impact on the Group’s results or financial position.

 

IFRS 12 Disclosures of Interests in Other Entities

IFRS 12 specifies the required disclosures in respect of interests in, and risks arising from, subsidiaries, joint ventures, associates and structured entities whether consolidated or not. As a disclosure only standard it will have no financial impact on the Group.

 

Amendment to IAS 39: Novation of Derivatives and Continuation of Hedge Accounting

The amendment provides relief from discontinuing hedge accounting when novation of a hedging instrument to a central counterparty meets specified critera. The Group applied the amendment in the current year, although it did not have a material impact on the Group’s results or financial position.

 

6. Future accounting developments

There have been and are expected to be a number of significant changes to the Group’s financial reporting after 2013 as a result of amended or new accounting standards that have been or will be issued by the IASB. The most significant of these are as follows:

 

IAS 32 Amendments to Offsetting Financial Assets and Financial Liabilities, is effective from 1 January 2014. The circumstances in which netting is permitted have been clarified; in particular what constitutes a currently legally enforceable right of set-off and the circumstances in which gross settlement systems may be considered equivalent to net settlement. The amendments, based on current assumptions and applied to the 31 December 2013 balance sheet, are expected to gross up by approximately £35bn certain financial assets and financial liabilities in the balance sheet (mainly derivatives, settlement balances and repurchase agreements) that were previously reported net. There will be no impact on shareholders equity, profit or loss, other comprehensive income, or cash flows, and no significant impact on the Common equity Tier 1 ratio or the CRD IV leverage ratio. The actual impact could differ to our current estimate as certain industry-wide application issues have yet to be resolved.

 

IFRS 9 Financial Instruments will change the classification and therefore the measurement of the Group’s financial assets, the recognition of impairment and hedge accounting. In addition to these changes, the effect of changes in the Group’s own credit risk on the fair value of financial liabilities that the group designates at fair value through profit and loss will be included in other comprehensive income rather than the income statement. A number of the significant proposals have yet to be finalised and it is therefore not yet possible to estimate the financial effects. The effective date of IFRS 9 is still to be determined.

 

In addition, the IASB has indicated that it will issue a new standard on accounting for leases. Under the proposals, lessees would be required to recognise assets and liabilities arising from both operating and finance leases on the balance sheet. The IASB also plans to issue new standards on insurance contracts and revenue recognition. The Group will consider the financial impacts of these new standards as they are finalised.

                    

 

 

 

 

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Note 1: Significant accounting policies continued

Critical accounting estimates and judgements

The preparation of financial statements in accordance with IFRS requires the use of estimates. It also requires management to exercise judgement in applying the accounting policies. The key areas involving a higher degree of judgement or complexity, or areas where assumptions are significant to the consolidated and individual financial statements are highlighted under the relevant note. Critical accounting estimates and judgements are disclosed in:

  

  

  

     

 
    Page         Page      

Credit impairment charges and other provisions

    292     

Goodwill and intangible assets

    328     

Tax

    294     

Provisions

    332     

Available for sale investments

    303     

Pensions and post-retirement benefits

    351     

Fair value of assets and liabilities

    304         

7. Other disclosures

To improve transparency and ease of reference, by concentrating related information in one place, and to reduce duplication, certain disclosures required under IFRS have been included within the Risk and Financial review sections as follows:

 

¡  Credit risk, on pages 142 to 189, including exposures to Eurozone countries;

 

¡  Market risk, on pages 190 to 198;

 

¡ Funding risk – capital, on pages 199 to 207;

 

¡ Funding risk – liquidity, on pages 208 to 224; and

 

¡ Segmental reporting on page 288.

 

These are covered by the Audit opinion included on pages 271 to 275.

  

   

  

  

  

  

  

  

 
                         

 

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Notes to the financial statements

For the year ended 31 December 2013 continued

  

 

 

 

 

                    

  Performance

 

   LOGO

  

 

The notes included in this section focus on the results and performance of the Group. Information on the income generated, expenditure incurred, segmental performance, tax, earnings per share and dividends are included here.

 

 

Note 2: Segmental reporting

 

Presentation of segmental reporting

The Group’s segmental reporting is in accordance with IFRS 8 Operating Segments. Operating segments are reported in a manner consistent with the internal reporting provided to the Executive Committee, which is responsible for allocating resources and assessing performance of the operating segments and has been identified as the chief operating decision maker. All transactions between business segments are conducted on an arm’s length basis, with intra-segment revenue and costs being eliminated in Head Office. Income and expenses directly associated with each segment are included in determining business segment performance.

 

   LOGO    An analysis of the Group’s performance by business segment and income by geographic segment is included
on pages 249 and 250

 

Note 3: Net interest income

 

Accounting for interest income and expense

The Group applies IAS 39 Financial Instruments: Recognition and Measurement. Interest income on loans and advances at amortised cost, available for sale debt investments, and interest expense on financial liabilities held at amortised cost, are calculated using the effective interest method which allocates interest, and direct and incremental fees and costs, over the expected lives of the assets and liabilities.

 

The effective interest method requires the Group to estimate future cash flows, in some cases based on its experience of customers’ behaviour, considering all contractual terms of the financial instrument, as well as the expected lives of the assets and liabilities. Due to the large number of products and types (both assets and liabilities), in the normal course of business there are no individual estimates that are material to the results or financial position.

 

See also Note 14 Financial assets designated at fair value and Note 17 Financial liabilities designated at fair value for relevant accounting policies.

 

 

 
     2013
£m
    2012
£m
   

2011  

£m  

 

 

 

Cash and balances with central banks

     219        253        392      

Available for sale investments

     1,804        1,736        2,137      

Loans and advances to banks

     468        376        350      

Loans and advances to customers

     15,613        16,448        17,271     

Other

     211        399        439      

 

 

Interest income

     18,315        19,212        20,589     

 

 

Deposits from banks

     (201     (257     (366)    

Customer accounts

     (2,656     (2,485     (2,526)    

Debt securities in issue

     (2,176     (2,921     (3,524)    

Subordinated liabilities

     (1,572     (1,632     (1,813)    

Other

     (110     (263     (159)    

 

 

Interest expense

     (6,715     (7,558     (8,388)    

 

 

Net interest income

     11,600        11,654        12,201     

 

 

Interest income includes £179m (2012: £211m, 2011: £243m) accrued on impaired loans.

Other interest income principally includes interest income relating to reverse repurchase agreements and hedging activity. Similarly, other interest expense principally includes interest expense relating to repurchase agreements and hedging activity.

Included in net interest income is hedge ineffectiveness as detailed on page 302.

 

 

 

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Note 3: Net interest income continued

2013

Net interest income remained stable at £11,600m (2012: £11,654m). Interest income decreased by 5% to £18,315m driven by a reduction in income from loans and advances to customers which fell £835m to £15,613m. The decrease in interest income from loans and advances to customers is attributable primarily to a reduction of £661m in Africa RBB, driven by the adverse impact of the depreciation of the ZAR, and a reduction of £382m in the Investment Bank due to reduced average balances. These movements were partly offset by a £303m increase in UK RBB reflecting increased average loan balances due to organic growth and contribution from Barclays Direct. Interest expense reduced 11% to £ 6,715m, driven by a reduction in interest on debt securities in issue of £745m to £2,176m due to lower average balances and lower yields.

The net interest margin for Retail and Business Banking, Corporate Banking and Wealth and Investment Management decreased by 8bps to 1.76% (2012: 1.84%), reflecting the reduction in contribution from customer liabilities and Group hedging activities, combined with a reduced contribution from the higher margins in Africa RBB as ZAR depreciated against GBP.

2012

Net interest income declined by 4% to £11,654m. Interest income decreased by 7% to £19,212m, driven by a reduction in income from loans and advances to customers, which fell £823m to £16,448m, and interest income derived from available for sale investments, which fell £401m to £ 1,736m. The decrease in interest income from loans and advances to customers is attributable primarily to the Investment Bank and Africa RBB reflecting lower average loan balances. These movements were partly offset by a £110m increase in Barclaycard reflecting increased average loan balances due to the Egg acquisition. The fall in interest from available for sale investments primarily reflects lower average balances and yield in the Investment Bank and lower yields on government bonds held in the Liquidity Risk Appetite portfolio. Interest expense reduced by 10% to £7,557m, driven by a reduction in interest on debt securities in issue of £603m to £2,921m due to lower average balances and lower yields, and a reduction in interest on subordinated liabilities of £181m to £1,632m due to lower average balances.

The net interest margin for Retail and Business Banking, Barclaycard, Corporate Banking and Wealth and Investment Management decreased to 1.84% (2011: 2.03%), primarily reflecting the reduction in contribution from Group hedging activities.

Note 4: Net fee and commission income

 

Accounting for net fee and commission income

The Group applies IAS 18 Revenue. Fees and commissions charged for services provided or received by the Group are recognised as the services are provided, for example on completion of the underlying transaction.

 

 

 
    

2013

£m

   

2012

£m

   

2011

£m

 

 

 
Fee and commission income       
Banking, investment management and credit related fees and commissions      10,284        9,945        9,958      
Brokerage fees      27        92        87      
Foreign exchange commission      168        176        163      

 

 
Fee and commission income      10,479        10,213        10,208      
Fee and commission expense      (1,748     (1,677     (1,586)     

 

 
Net fee and commission income      8,731        8,536        8,622      

 

 

2013

Net fee and commission income remained stable with a £195m increase to £8,731m. Higher fees as a result of increased volumes within Barclaycard Business Payment and US portfolios and growth in equity underwriting activity and a strong equity capital market (ECM) deal calendar were offset by lower commissions mainly from syndicate and advisory business following concerns about potential slowing down of quantitative easing and the impact of adverse currency movements in Africa RBB.

2012

Net fee and commission income remained stable with an £86m decline to £8,536m. Higher fees as a result of increased volumes within the Barclaycard Business Payment and US portfolios and growth in debt and equity underwriting activity were offset by lower commissions mainly from Italy mortgage sales and the impact of adverse currency movements in Africa RBB.

 

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Notes to the financial statements >

For the year ended 31 December 2013 continued

 

 

 

 

Note 5: Net trading income

 

Accounting for net trading income

In accordance with IAS 39, trading positions are held at fair value and the resulting gains and losses are included in the income statement, together with interest and dividends arising from long and short positions and funding costs relating to trading activities.

 

Income arises from both the sale and purchase of trading positions, margins which are achieved through market-making and customer business and from changes in fair value caused by movements in interest and exchange rates, equity prices and other market variables.

 

Own credit gains/losses arise from the fair valuation of financial liabilities designated at fair value through profit or loss. See Note 17 Financial liabilities designated at fair value.

 

 

 

 

 
     2013
£m
    2012
£m
    2011   
£m   
 

 

 

Trading income

     6,773        7,926        4,952      

Own credit (losses)/gains

     (220     (4,579     2,708      

 

 

Net trading income

     6,553        3,347        7,660      

 

 

Included within net trading income were gains of £914m (2012: £656m gain; 2011: £16m loss) on financial assets designated at fair value and losses of £684m (2012: £3,980m loss, 2011: £3,850m gain) on financial liabilities designated at fair value.

2013

Net trading income increased 96% to £6,553m, primarily reflecting a £4,359m variance in own credit (2013: £220m charge; 2012: £4,579m charge) as a result of improved credit spreads on Barclays’ issued debt. This was offset partially by a £1,153m decrease in trading income, reflecting market uncertainty around central banks tapering of quantitative easing programmes across a number of product areas in FICC.

2012

Net trading income decreased 56% to £3,347m, primarily reflecting a £7,287m variance in own credit (2012: £4,579m charge; 2011: £2,708m gain) as a result of improved credit spreads on Barclays’ issued debt. This was offset partially by a £2,974m increase in underlying trading income, reflecting increased liquidity and higher client volumes across a number of product areas in FICC and an improved performance in cash equities and equity derivatives in Equities and Prime Services.

Note 6: Net investment income

 

Accounting for net investment income

Dividends are recognised when the right to receive the dividend has been established. Other accounting policies relating to net investment income are set out in Note 16 Available for sale investments, and Note 14 Financial assets designated at fair value.

 

 

 

 

 
     2013
£m
     2012
£m
    

2011   

£m   

 

 

 

Net gain from disposal of available for sale investments

     145         452         1,645      

Dividend income

     14         42         129      

Net gain from financial instruments designated at fair value

     203         233         287      

Other investment income

     318         117         244      

 

 

Net investment income

     680         844         2,305      

 

 

2013

Net investment income decreased by £164m to £680m. This was largely driven by lower gains on disposal of available for sale investments partially offset by increases in other investment income as a result of greater certainty regarding the recoverability of certain assets not yet received from the 2008 US Lehman acquisition.

2012

Net investment income decreased by £1,461m to £844m largely driven by the non-recurrence of gains on disposal of the economic structural hedge portfolio during 2011 and a reduction in dividends following the disposal of the Group’s stake in BlackRock, Inc. during the first half of 2012.

 

 

 

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Note 7: Credit impairment charges and other provisions

 

Accounting for the impairment of financial assets

Loans and other assets held at amortised cost

In accordance with IAS 39, the Group assesses at each balance sheet date whether there is objective evidence that loan assets or available for sale investments (debt or equity) will not be recovered in full and, wherever necessary, recognises an impairment loss in the income statement.

 

An impairment loss is recognised if there is objective evidence of impairment as a result of events that have occurred and these have adversely impacted the estimated future cash flows from the assets. These events include:

 

¡     Becoming aware of significant financial difficulty of the issuer or obligor;

 

¡     A breach of contract, such as a default or delinquency in interest or principal payments;

 

¡     The Group, for economic or legal reasons relating to the borrower’s financial difficulty, grants a concession that it would not otherwise consider;

 

¡    It becomes probable that the borrower will enter bankruptcy or other financial reorganisation;

 

¡    The disappearance of an active market for that financial asset because of financial difficulties; and

 

¡    Observable data at a portfolio level indicating that there is a measurable decrease in the estimated future cash flows, although the decrease cannot yet be ascribed to individual financial assets in the portfolio – such as adverse changes in the payment status of borrowers in the portfolio or national or local economic conditions that correlate with defaults on the assets in the portfolio.

 

Impairment assessments are conducted individually for significant assets, which comprise all wholesale customer loans and larger retail business loans and collectively for smaller loans and for portfolio level risks, such as country or sectoral risks. For the purposes of the assessment, loans with similar credit risk characteristics are grouped together, generally on the basis of their product type, industry, geographical location, collateral type, past due status and other factors relevant to the evaluation of expected future cash flows.

 

The impairment assessment includes estimating the expected future cash flows from the asset or the group of assets, which are then discounted using the original effective interest rate calculated for the asset. If this is lower than the carrying value of the asset or the portfolio, an impairment allowance is raised.

 

If, in a subsequent period, the amount of the impairment loss decreases and the decrease can be related objectively to an event occurring after the impairment was recognised, the previously recognised impairment loss is reversed by adjusting the allowance account. The amount of the reversal is recognised in the income statement.

 

Following impairment, interest income continues to be recognised at the original effective interest rate on the restated carrying amount, representing the unwind of the discount of the expected cash flows, including the principal due on non-accrual loans.

 

Uncollectable loans are written off against the related allowance for loan impairment on completion of the Group’s internal processes and all recoverable amounts have been collected. Subsequent recoveries of amounts previously written off are credited to the income statement.

 

Available for sale investments

Impairment of available for sale debt instruments

Debt instruments are assessed for impairment in the same way as loans. If impairment is deemed to have occurred, the cumulative decline in the fair value of the instrument that has previously been recognised in equity is removed from equity and recognised in the income statement. This may be reversed if there is evidence that the circumstances of the issuer have improved.

 

Impairment of available for sale equity instruments

Where there has been a prolonged or significant decline in the fair value of an equity instrument below its acquisition cost, it is deemed to be impaired. The cumulative net loss that has been previously recognised directly in equity is removed from equity and recognised in the income statement.

 

Increases in the fair value of equity instruments after impairment are recognised directly in other comprehensive income. Further declines in the fair value of equity instruments after impairment are recognised in the income statement.

 

 

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Notes to the financial statements >

For the year ended 31 December 2013 continued

  

 

 

 

 

Note 7: Credit impairment charges and other provisions continued

 

Critical accounting estimates and judgements

The calculation of the impairment allowance involves the use of judgement, based on the Group’s experience of managing credit risk.

 

Within the retail and small businesses portfolios, which comprise large numbers of small homogeneous assets with similar risk characteristics where credit scoring techniques are generally used, statistical techniques are used to calculate impairment allowances on a portfolio basis, based on historical recovery rates and assumed emergence periods. These statistical analyses use as primary inputs the extent to which accounts in the portfolio are in arrears and historical information on the eventual losses encountered from such delinquent portfolios. There are many such models in use, each tailored to a product, line of business or customer category. Judgement and knowledge is needed in selecting the statistical methods to use when the models are developed or revised. The impairment allowance reflected in the financial statements for these portfolios is therefore considered to be reasonable and supportable. The impairment charge reflected in the income statement for these retail portfolios is £2,161m (2012: £2,075m; 2011: £2,477m) and amounts to 71% (2012: 63%; 2011: 65%) of the total impairment charge on loans and advances.

 

For individually significant assets, impairment allowances are calculated on an individual basis and all relevant considerations that have a bearing on the expected future cash flows are taken into account (for example, the business prospects for the customer, the realisable value of collateral, the Group’s position relative to other claimants, the reliability of customer information and the likely cost and duration of the work-out process). The level of the impairment allowance is the difference between the value of the discounted expected future cash flows (discounted at the loan’s original effective interest rate), and its carrying amount. Subjective judgements are made in the calculation of future cash flows. Furthermore, judgements change with time as new information becomes available or as work-out strategies evolve, resulting in frequent revisions to the impairment allowance as individual decisions are taken. Changes in these estimates would result in a change in the allowances and have a direct impact on the impairment charge. The impairment charge reflected in the financial statements in relation to wholesale portfolios is £901m (2012: £1,228m; 2011: £1,313m) and amounts to 29% (2012: 37%; 2011: 35%) of the total impairment charge on loans and advances. Further information on impairment allowances and related credit information is set out within the Risk review.

 

 

 

 
    

2013

£m

    2012
£m
   

2011   

£m   

 

 

 

New and increased impairment allowances

           3,929        4,447        4,962      

Releases

     (683     (928     (931)    

Recoveries

     (201     (212     (265)    

 

 

Impairment charges on loans and advances

     3,045        3,307        3,766      

Charges/(releases) in respect of provision for undrawn contractually

committed facilities and guarantees provided

     17        (4     24      

 

 

Loan impairment

     3,062        3,303        3,790      

Available for sale investment (excluding BlackRock, Inc.)

     1        40        60      

Reverse repurchase agreements

     8        (3     (48)    

 

 

Credit impairment charges and other provisions

     3,071        3,340        3,802      

 

 

Impairment of investment in BlackRock, Inc.

                   1,800      

 

 

More information on the impairment assessment and the measurement of credit losses is included on pages 396 to 398. The movements on the impairment allowance and the charge for the year is shown on page 154.

2013

Loan impairment fell 7% to £3,062m, reflecting lower impairment in Africa RBB and Corporate Banking, partially offset by higher charges in Europe RBB, Barclaycard and UK RBB.

2012

Loan impairment fell 13% to £3,303m, reflecting lower impairment in UK RBB, Barclaycard and Corporate Banking, partially offset by higher charges in Europe and South Africa.

Further analysis of the Group’s impairment charges is presented on pages 154 to 156.

 

 

 

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Note 8: Administration and general expenses

 

 
     2013
£m
     2012
£m
    

2011

£m

 

 

 

Infrastructure costs

        

Property and equipment

     1,610         1,656         1,763      

Depreciation of property, plant and equipment

     647         669         673      

Operating lease rentals

     645         622         659      

Amortisation of intangible assets

     480         435         419      

Impairment of property, equipment and intangible assets

     149         17         12      

 

 

Total infrastructure costs

     3,531         3,399         3,526      

 

 

Other costs

        

Consultancy, legal and professional fees

     1,253         1,182         1,027      

Subscriptions, publications, stationery and communications

     869         727         740      

Marketing, advertising and sponsorship

     583         572         585      

Travel and accommodation

     307         324         328      

UK bank levy

     504         345         325      

Goodwill impairment

     79                 597      

Other administration and general expenses

     691         546         405      

 

 

Total other costs

     4,286         3,696         4,007      

 

 
        

 

 

Administration and general expensesa,b

     7,817         7,095         7,533      

 

 

2013

Administration and general expenses have increased 10% to £7,817m. This was driven by increased infrastructure costs due to the Transform programme, increased consultancy, legal and professional costs to meet new regulatory requirements such as the Dodd-Frank Act and CRD IV, an increase in the UK bank levy reflecting the increased rate and an increase in impairment in relation to premises restructuring in Europe. Within other administration and general expenses, increases in provisions for litigation and regulatory penalties were offset by the non-recurrence of the £290m penalty incurred in 2012 arising from the industry wide investigation into the setting of inter-bank offered rates.

2012

Administration and general expenses have fallen 6% to £7,095m, primarily due to £597m goodwill impairment in 2011 not recurring in 2012 and a reduction in the underlying cost base reflecting the impact of the Group-wide cost reduction initiative. This has been partly offset by the £290m penalty relating to the industry wide investigation into the setting of interbank offered rates and an increase in expenses relating to the Financial Services Compensation Scheme.

Note 9: Profit on disposal of subsidiaries, associates and joint ventures

There have been no material disposals during the year. The profit on disposal of subsidiaries, associates and joint ventures was £6m (2012: £28m), principally relating to accumulated foreign exchange gains (previously recognised directly in equity) recycled through the income statement within Head Office and Other Operations.

Notes

a Total administration and general expenses of £7,817m (2012: £7,095m; 2011: £7,533m) include depreciation of property, plant and equipment of £647m (2012: £669m; 2011: £673m), amortisation of intangible assets of £480m (2012: £435m; 2011: £419m), goodwill impairment of £79m (2012: £nil; 2011: £597m) and administration and other expenses of £6,611m (2012: £5,991m; 2011: £5,844m).
b The group has realigned outsourcing costs from administration and general expenses to staff costs in order to more appropriately reflect the nature and internal management of these costs. The net effect of these movements is to reduce administration and general expenses and, to increase staff costs by £1,084m in 2013 and £997m in 2012.

 

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Notes to the financial statements >

For the year ended 31 December 2013 continued

  

 

 

 

 

Note 10: Tax

 

Accounting for income taxes

Barclays applies IAS 12 Income Taxes in accounting for taxes on income. Income tax payable on taxable profits (‘Current Tax’) is recognised as an expense in the period in which the profits arise. Withholding taxes are also treated as income taxes. Income tax recoverable on tax allowable losses is recognised as a current tax asset only to the extent that it is regarded as recoverable by offset against taxable profits arising in the current or prior period. Current tax is measured using tax rates and tax laws that have been enacted or substantively enacted at the balance sheet date.

 

Deferred tax is provided in full, using the liability method, on temporary differences arising from the differences between the tax bases of assets and liabilities and their carrying amounts in the consolidated financial statements. Deferred tax is determined using tax rates and legislation enacted or substantively enacted by the balance sheet date which are expected to apply when the deferred tax asset is realised or the deferred tax liability is settled. Deferred tax assets and liabilities are only offset when there is both a legal right to set-off and an intention to settle on a net basis.

 

 

 

 
     2013
£m
    2012
£m
   

2011   

£m   

 

 

 

Current tax charge

      

Current year

     1,997        568        2,690      

Adjustment for prior years

     156        207        (61)    

 

 
     2,153        775        2,629      

 

 

Deferred tax (credit)

      

Current year

     (68     (72     (657)    

Adjustment for prior years

     (514     (87     (70)    

 

 
     (582     (159     (727)    

 

 

Tax charge

     1,571        616        1,902      

 

 

Tax relating to each component of other comprehensive income can be found in the consolidated statement of comprehensive income, which includes within Other a tax charge of £37m (2012: £96m credit; 2011: £74m charge), principally relating to the UK tax rate change in 2013 and share based payments in 2012 and 2011.

The table below shows the reconciliation between the actual tax charge and the tax charge that would result from applying the standard UK corporation tax rate to the Group’s profit before tax.

 

 

 
     2013
£m
    2012
£m
    2011   
£m   
 

 

 

Profit before tax from continuing operations

     2,868        797        5,770      

 

 

Tax charge based on the standard UK corporation tax rate of 23.25% (2012: 24.5%, 2011: 26.5%)

     667        195        1,529      

Effect of non-UK profits/losses at statutory tax rates different from the UK statutory tax rate

     267        401        193      

Non-creditable taxes

     559        563        567      

Non-taxable gains and income

     (234     (642     (494)     

Share based payments

     (13     (63     147      

Deferred tax assets not recognised/(previously not recognised)

     409        (135     (816)     

Change in tax rates

     (159     (75     17      

Non-deductible impairment charges, loss on disposals and UK bank levy

     118        84        770      

Other items including non-deductible expenses

     315        168        120      

Adjustments in respect of prior years

     (358     120        (131)    

 

 

Tax charge

     1,571        616        1,902      

Effective tax rate

     54.8%        77.3%        33.0%   

 

 

The tax charge of £1,571m (2012: £616m) represented an effective tax rate of 54.8% (2012: 77.3%) on profit before tax of £2,868m (2012: £797m). The effective tax rate decreased mainly due to the non-recurrence of the factors that increased the rate in 2012, principally the combination of significant losses in the UK (with relief at the UK statutory rate of 24.5%) and profits outside the UK taxed at higher rates.

The effective tax rate is higher than the UK statutory tax rate of 23.25% (2012: 24.5%) due to the items represented in the tax rate reconciliation above.

The tax charge for 2013 included a credit of £358m relating to adjustments in respect of prior years which comprises of £337m relating to the reassessment of items with uncertain tax treatment resulting from audit settlements with non-UK tax authorities and £21m relating to differences between the final tax charge in prior period tax returns for entities in the consolidated Group and the estimated tax charge included in the consolidated financial statements. These adjustments in respect of prior years are not considered to be indicative of future trends.

 

 

 

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Note 10: Tax continued

Current tax assets and liabilities

Movements on current tax assets and liabilities were as follows:

 

 

 
     2013
£m
    2012   
£m   
 

 

 

Assets

     252        374      

Liabilities

     (621     (1,397)    

 

 

As at 1 January

     (369     (1,023)    

Income statement

     (2,153     (775)    

Other comprehensive income

     (2     (172)    

Corporate income tax paid

     1,558        1,516      

Other movements

     143        85      

 

 
     (823     (369)    

 

 

Assets

     219        252      

Liabilities

     (1,042     (621)    

 

 

As at 31 December

     (823     (369)    

 

 

Other movements include current tax amounts relating to acquisitions, disposals and exchange gains and losses.

Deferred tax assets and liabilities

The deferred tax amounts on the balance sheet were as follows:

 

 

 
     2013
£m
    2012   
£m   
 

 

 

Barclays Group US Inc. tax group (BGUS)

     1,449        1,160      

US Branch of Barclays Bank PLC (US Branch)

     1,362        953      

UK Group relief group

     1,171        532      

Spanish tax group

     353        611      

Other

     472        307      

 

 

Deferred tax asset

     4,807        3,563      

Deferred tax liability

     (373     (341)    

 

 

Net deferred tax

     4,434        3,222      

 

 

US deferred tax assets in BGUS and the US Branch

The deferred tax asset in BGUS of £1,449m (2012: £1,160m) and the US Branch of £1,362m (2012: £953m) includes amounts relating to tax losses of £156m (2012: £135m) and £408m (2012: £834m) respectively, which first arose in 2007. In accordance with US tax rules tax losses can be carried forward and offset against profits for a period of 20 years and therefore any unused tax losses may begin to expire in 2028. The remaining balance primarily relates to temporary differences which are not time limited. The US Branch deferred tax asset is stated net of a measurement for UK tax because Barclays Bank PLC is subject to UK tax on the profits of its non-UK branches.

BGUS returned to profitability in 2012, primarily driven by Barclays Capital Inc., its US broker dealer, with tax losses expected to be fully utilised by 2015. A 20% reduction in forecasted profit would not extend the recovery period. The assumptions used in the profit forecasts do not include any incremental tax planning strategies.

The tax losses in the US Branch are projected to be fully utilised by 2017, based on profit forecasts covering the period from 2014 to 2018. A 20% reduction in forecasted profit would extend the recovery period by 1 year to 2018. The assumptions used in the profit forecasts do not include any incremental tax planning strategies.

UK Group relief group deferred tax asset

The deferred tax asset in the UK Group relief group of £1,171m (2012: £532m) includes £499m (2012: £342m) relating to tax losses. Tax losses can be carried forward indefinitely in the UK. The remaining balance relates to other temporary differences. Based on profit forecasts, it is probable that there will be sufficient future taxable profits available against which the temporary differences and losses will be utilised.

Spain deferred tax asset

A change in Spanish law in December 2013 resulted in the protection of certain deferred tax assets, mainly relating to pensions and impairments, whilst the remaining deferred tax assets (that are not protected by the change in law) continue to be reliant on future profits. Based on the current assessment of business forecasts there is insufficient evidence that future profits will be available to recover unprotected deferred tax assets for accounting purposes. As such only the protected deferred tax assets continue to be recognised resulting in a write down of £440m.

Other deferred tax assets

The deferred tax asset of £472m (2012: £307m) in other entities includes £157m (2012: £55m) relating to tax losses carried forward. Entities which have suffered a loss in either the current or prior year have a total deferred tax asset of £114m (2012: £135m) relating to tax losses carried forward and temporary differences. Recognition is based on profit forecasts which indicate that it is probable that the entities will have future taxable profits against which the losses and temporary differences can be utilised.

 

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Notes to the financial statements >

For the year ended 31 December 2013 continued

  

 

 

 

 

Note 10: Tax continued

 

 

 
    Fixed asset
timing
differences
£m
    Available
for sale
investments
£m
    Cash
flow
hedges
£m
    Retirement
benefit
obligations
£m
    Loan
impairment
allowance
£m
    Other
provisions
£m
    Tax
losses
carried
forward
£m
    Share based
payments and
deferred
compensation
£m
    Other
£m
    Total   
£m   
 

 

 

Assets

    158        61        53        542        457        105        1,636        858        1,190        5,060      

Liabilities

    (225     (67     (714     (1                                 (831     (1,838)    

 

 

At 1 January 2013

    (67     (6     (661     541        457        105        1,636        858        359        3,222      

Income statement

    904        (12            (65     (74     270        (400     (45     4        582      

Other comprehensive income

           (17     571        (5                   122        (33     (1     637      

Other movements

    (73     27        8        10        (7     (15     (123     (18     184        (7)    

 

 
    764        (8     (82     481        376        360        1,235        762        546        4,434      

 

 

Assets

    1,525        53        5        490        376        360        1,235        762        1,078        5,884      

Liabilities

    (761     (61     (87     (9                                 (532     (1,450)    

 

 

At 31 December 2013

    764        (8     (82     481        376        360        1,235        762        546        4,434      

 

 
                   

 

 

Assets

    254        186               403        431        261        1,493        506        1,285        4,819      

Liabilities

    (404     (65     (489     (3                                 (1,096     (2,057)    

Effect of the adoption of IFRS 10 on assets

                                                            282        282      

 

 

At 1 January 2012

    (150     121        (489     400        431        261        1,493        506        471        3,044      

Income statement

    60        (49     (30     (185     86        (134     130        401        (120     159      

Other comprehensive income

           (67     (146     321                             (12     (6     90      

Other movements

    23        (11     4        5        (60     (22     13        (37     14        (71)    

 

 
    (67     (6     (661     541        457        105        1,636        858        359        3,222      

 

 

Assets

    158        61        53        542        457        105        1,636        858        1,190        5,060      

Liabilities

    (225     (67     (714     (1                                 (831     (1,838)    

 

 

At 31 December 2012

    (67     (6     (661     541        457        105        1,636        858        359        3,222      

 

 

The table above shows movements on deferred tax assets and liabilities during the year. The amounts are different from those disclosed on the balance sheet as they are presented before offsetting asset and liability balances where there is a legal right to set-off and an intention to settle on a net basis.

The increase in the net deferred tax asset in respect of fixed asset timing differences was primarily due to an election for US tax purposes to capitalise costs associated with certain fixed assets. Other movements include deferred tax amounts relating to acquisitions, disposals and exchange gains and losses.

The amount of deferred tax liability expected to be settled after more than 12 months is £916m (2012: £1,337m). The amount of deferred tax asset expected to be recovered after more than 12 months is £4,943m (2012: £3,537m). These amounts are before offsetting asset and liability balances where there is a legal right to set-off and an intention to settle on a net basis.

Unrecognised deferred tax

Deferred tax assets have not been recognised in respect of gross deductible temporary differences of £1,096m (2012: £28m), gross tax losses of £10,897m (2012: £7,295m) which includes capital losses of £3,465m (2012: £3,358m), and unused tax credits of £245m (2012: £155m). Tax losses of £245m (2012: £3m) expire within 5 years, £93m (2012: £83m) expire within 6 to 10 years, £1,043m (2012: £5m) expire within 11 to 20 years and £9,516m (2012: £7,204m) can be carried forward indefinitely. Deferred tax assets have not been recognised in respect of these items because it is not probable that future taxable profits and gains will be available against which the Group can utilise benefits.

Deferred tax is not recognised in respect of the Group’s investments in subsidiaries and branches where remittance is not contemplated and for those associates and interests in joint ventures where it has been determined that no additional tax will arise. The aggregate amount of temporary differences for which deferred tax liabilities have not been recognised is £534m (2012: £836m).

 

 

 

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Note 10: Tax continued

Critical accounting estimates and judgements

The Group is subject to income taxes in numerous jurisdictions and the calculation of the Group’s tax charge and worldwide provisions for income taxes necessarily involves a degree of estimation and judgement. There are many transactions and calculations for which the ultimate tax treatment is uncertain and cannot be determined until resolution has been reached with the relevant tax authority. The Group has a number of open tax returns with various tax authorities to whom we are in active dialogue. Liabilities relating to these open and judgemental matters are based on estimates of whether additional taxes will be due after taking into account external advice where appropriate. Where the final tax outcome of these matters is different from the amounts that were initially recorded, such differences will impact the current and deferred income tax assets and liabilities in the period in which such determination is made. These risks are managed in accordance with the Group’s Tax Risk Framework.

 

LOGO   Deferred tax assets have been recognised based on business profit forecasts. Further detail on the recognition of deferred tax assets is provided on page 295 in the deferred tax assets and liabilities section of this tax note.  

Note 11: Earnings per share

 

 
     2013
£m
     2012
£m
    2011   
£m   
 

 

 

Profit/(loss) attributable to equity holders of parent from continuing operations

     540         (624     2,924      

Dilutive impact of convertible options

     1                –      

 

 

Profit/(loss) attributable to equity holders of parent from continuing operations including dilutive impact of convertible options

     541         (624     2,924      

 

 
       

 

 
     2013
million
     2012
million
    2011   
million   
 

 

 

Basic weighted average number of shares in issuea

     14,308         13,045        12,792      

Number of potential ordinary shares

     360         389        538      

 

 

Diluted weighted average number of shares

     14,668         13,434        13,330      

 

 

 

 

 
     Basic earnings per share      Diluted earnings per shareb     
  

 

 

 
     2013
p
     2012
p
    2011
p
     2013
p
     2012
p
    2011   
p   
 

 

 

Earnings/(loss) per ordinary share from continuing operations

     3.8         (4.8     22.9         3.7         (4.8     21.9      

 

 

The calculation of basic earnings per share is based on the profit attributable to equity holders of the parent and the number of basic weighted average number of shares excluding treasury shares held in employee benefit trusts or held for trading. When calculating the diluted earnings per share, the weighted average number of shares in issue is adjusted for the effects of all dilutive potential ordinary shares held in respect of Barclays PLC, totalling 360 million (2012: 389 million) shares. In addition, the profit attributable to equity holders of the parent is adjusted for the dilutive impact of the potential conversion of outstanding options held in respect of Barclays Africa Group Limited. The decrease in the number of potential ordinary shares is primarily driven by the impact of the increase in the average share price to £2.73 (2012: £2.14) on the 756 million (2012: 820 million) outstanding options granted under employee share schemes, which have strike prices ranging from £1.30 to £4.59 with an average of £2.60 (2012: £3.28).

Of the total number of employee share options and share awards at 31 December 2013, 16 million were anti-dilutive (2012: 145 million).

Note 12: Dividends on ordinary shares

The Directors have approved a final dividend in respect of 2013 of 3.5p per ordinary share of 25p each which will be paid on 28 March 2014 to shareholders on the Share Register on 21 February 2014. At this date ordinary shares in issue were 16,351m (2012: 12,624m). The financial statements for the year ended 31 December 2013 do not reflect this dividend, which will be accounted for in shareholders’ equity as an appropriation of retained profits in the year ending 31 December 2014. The 2013 financial statements include the 2013 interim dividends of £418m (2012: £367m) and final dividend declared in relation to 2012 of £441m (2011: £366m).

Notes

a The basic weighted average number of shares excludes Treasury shares held in employee benefit trusts or held for trading. The rights issue in October 2013 resulted in the issue of an additional 3,219m shares. In accordance with IAS 33, a retrospective adjustment has been applied to the basic weighted average number of shares in issue for the prior periods which has resulted in a movement from a loss per share of 5.1p to a loss per share of 4.8p in 2012 and from an earnings per share of 24.4p to an earnings per share of 22.9p in 2011.
b Potential ordinary shares shall be treated as dilutive when, and only when, their conversion to ordinary shares would increase loss per share.

 

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Notes to the financial statements >

For the year ended 31 December 2013 continued

  

 

 

 

 

Assets and liabilities held at fair value

    

LOGO

 

The notes included in this section focus on assets and liabilities the Group holds and recognises at fair value. Fair value refers to the price that would be received to sell an asset or the price that would be paid to transfer a liability in an arms length transaction with a willing counterparty, which may be an observable market price or, where there is no quoted price for the instrument, may be an estimated price based on available market data. Detail regarding the Group’s approach to managing market risk can be found on pages 405 to 414.

 

 

Note 13: Trading portfolio

 

Accounting for trading portfolio assets and liabilities

In accordance with IAS 39, all assets and liabilities held for trading purposes are held at fair value with gains and losses from changes in fair value taken to the income statement net trading income (Note 5).

 

 

 

 

 
     Trading portfolio assets      Trading portfolio liabilities  
  

 

 

 
    

2013

£m

    

2012

£m

    

2013

£m

   

2012

£m

 

 

 

Debt securities and other eligible bills

     84,560         116,307         (40,445     (36,742)    

Equity securities

     42,659         24,519         (12,947     (7,979)    

Traded loans

     1,647         2,410                –      

Commodities

     4,203         3,116         (72     (73)    

 

 

Trading portfolio assets/(liabilities)

     133,069         146,352         (53,464     (44,794)    

 

 

Note 14: Financial assets designated at fair value

 

 

Accounting for financial assets designated at fair value

In accordance with IAS 39, financial assets may be designated at fair value, with gains and losses taken to the income statement in net trading income (Note 5) and net investment income (Note 6). The Group has the ability to make the fair value designation when holding the instruments at fair value reduces an accounting mismatch (caused by an offsetting liability or asset being held at fair value), is managed by the Group on the basis of its fair value, or includes terms that have substantive derivative characteristics (Note 15).

 

 

 

 
     2013
£m
     2012   
£m   
 

 

 

Loans and advances

     18,695         21,996      

Debt securities

     842         6,975      

Equity securities

     11,824         9,017      

Reverse repurchase agreements

     5,323         6,034      

Customers’ assets held under investment contracts

     1,606         1,378      

Other financial assets

     678         1,229      

 

 

Financial assets designated at fair value

     38,968         46,629      

 

 

The total portfolio of linked liabilities to customers under investment contracts also includes £0.1bn (2012: £0.2bn) reported within cash and balances at central banks. The carrying value of the total portfolio assets equals the carrying value of liabilities to customers under investment contracts shown in Note 17. Any change in the value of assets results in an equal but opposite change in the value of amounts due to the policyholders. Therefore, the Group is not exposed to the financial risks inherent in the investments.

Credit risk of loans and advances designated at fair value and related credit derivatives

The following table shows the maximum exposure to credit risk, the changes in fair value attributable to changes in credit risk and the cumulative changes in fair value since initial recognition together with the amount by which related credit derivatives mitigate this risk:

 

 

 
     Maximum exposure
as at 31 December
     Changes in fair value
during the year ended
    Cumulative changes in
fair value from inception
 
  

 

 

 
    

2013

£m

    

2012

£m

    

2013

£m

    

2012

£m

   

2013

£m

   

2012

£m

 

 

 

Loans and advances designated at fair value, attributable to credit risk

     18,695         21,996         95         178        (4,797     (4,892

Value mitigated by related credit derivatives

     914         1,342         49         (6     444        395   

 

 

 

 

 

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Note 15: Derivative financial instruments

Derivative instruments are contracts whose value is derived from one or more underlying financial instruments or indices defined in the contract. They include swaps, forward rate agreements, futures, options and combinations of these instruments and primarily affect the Group’s net interest income, net trading income, net fee and commission income and derivative assets and liabilities. Notional amounts of the contracts are not recorded on the balance sheet. The Group’s objectives and policies on managing the risks that arise in connection with derivatives, including the policies for hedging, are discussed in the Risk management section on pages 402 and 403. Trading derivatives are managed within the Group’s Market risk management policies, which are outlined on pages 405 to 414.

 

LOGO

  The Group’s exposure to credit risk arising from derivative contracts are outlined in the Credit risk section on pages 179 and 180

 

Accounting for derivatives

The Group applies IAS 39. All derivative instruments are held at fair value through profit or loss, except for derivatives held for risk management purposes in an effective hedge relationship (see hedge accounting below). This includes terms included in a contract or other financial asset or liability (the host), which, had it been a standalone contract, would have had met the definition of a derivative. These are separated from the host and accounted for in the same way as a derivative.

Hedge accounting

The Group applies hedge accounting to represent, to the maximum possible extent permitted under accounting standards, the economic effects of its interest and currency risk management strategies. Derivatives are used to hedge interest rate, exchange rate, commodity, and equity exposures and exposures to certain indices such as house price indices and retail price indices related to non-trading positions. Where derivatives are held for risk management purposes, and when transactions meet the required criteria for documentation and hedge effectiveness, the Group applies fair value hedge accounting, cash flow hedge accounting, or hedging of a net investment in a foreign operation, as appropriate to the risks being hedged.

Fair value hedge accounting

Changes in fair value of derivatives that qualify and are designated as fair value hedges are recorded in the income statement, together with changes in the fair value of the hedged asset or liability that are attributable to the hedged risk. The fair value changes adjust the carrying value of the hedged asset or liability held at amortised cost.

If hedge relationships no longer meet the criteria for hedge accounting, hedge accounting is discontinued. For fair value hedges of interest rate risk, the fair value adjustment to the hedged item is amortised to the income statement over the period to maturity of the previously designated hedge relationship using the effective interest method. If the hedged item is sold or repaid, the unamortised fair value adjustment is recognised immediately in the income statement.

Cash flow hedge accounting

For qualifying cash flow hedges, the fair value gain or loss associated with the effective portion of the cash flow hedge is recognised initially in other comprehensive income, and then recycled to the income statement in the periods when the hedged item will affect profit or loss. Any ineffective portion of the gain or loss on the hedging instrument is recognised in the income statement immediately.

When a hedging instrument expires or is sold, or when a hedge no longer meets the criteria for hedge accounting, any cumulative gain or loss existing in equity at that time remains in equity and is recognised when the hedged item is ultimately recognised in the income statement. When a forecast transaction is no longer expected to occur, the cumulative gain or loss that was recognised in equity is immediately transferred to the income statement.

Hedges of net investments

The Group’s net investments in foreign operations, including monetary items accounted for as part of the net investment, are hedged for foreign currency risks using both derivatives and foreign currency borrowings. Hedges of net investments are accounted for similarly to cash flow hedges; the effective portion of the gain or loss on the hedging instrument is being recognised directly in other comprehensive income and the ineffective portion being recognised immediately in the income statement. The cumulative gain or loss recognised in other comprehensive income is recognised in the income statement on the disposal or partial disposal of the foreign operation, or other reductions in the Group’s investment in the operation.

Types of derivatives held

Foreign exchange derivatives

The Group’s principal exchange rate-related contracts are forward foreign exchange contracts, currency swaps and currency options. Forward foreign exchange contracts are agreements to buy or sell a specified quantity of foreign currency, usually on a specified future date at an agreed rate. A currency swap generally involves the exchange, or notional exchange, of equivalent amounts of two currencies and a commitment to exchange interest periodically until the principal amounts are re-exchanged on a future date.

Currency options provide the buyer with the right, but not the obligation, either to purchase or sell a fixed amount of a currency at a specified exchange rate on or before a future date. As compensation for assuming the option risk, the option writer generally receives a premium at the start of the option period.

Currency derivatives are primarily designated as hedges of the foreign currency risk of net investments in foreign operations.

 

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Notes to the financial statements >

For the year ended 31 December 2013 continued

  

 

 

 

 

Note 15: Derivative financial instruments continued

Interest rate derivatives

The Group’s principal interest rate related contracts are interest rate swaps, forward rate agreements, basis swaps, caps, floors and swaptions. Included in this product category are transactions that include combinations of these features. An interest rate swap is an agreement between two parties to exchange fixed rate and floating rate interest by means of periodic payments based upon a notional principal amount and the interest rates defined in the contract. Certain agreements combine interest rate and foreign currency swap transactions, which may or may not include the exchange of principal amounts. A basis swap is a form of interest rate swap, in which both parties exchange interest payments based on floating rates, where the floating rates are based upon different underlying reference indices. In a forward rate agreement, two parties agree a future settlement of the difference between an agreed rate and a future interest rate, applied to a notional principal amount. The settlement, which generally occurs at the start of the contract period, is the discounted present value of the payment that would otherwise be made at the end of that period.

Interest rate derivatives, designated as cash flow hedges, primarily hedge the exposure to cash flow variability from interest rates of variable rate loans to banks and customers, variable rate debt securities held and highly probable forecast financing transactions and reinvestments.

Interest rate derivatives designated as fair value hedges primarily hedge the interest rate risk of fixed rate borrowings in issue, fixed rate loans to banks and customers and investments in fixed rate debt securities held.

Credit derivatives

The Group’s principal credit derivative-related contracts include credit default swaps and total return swaps. A credit derivative is an arrangement whereby the credit risk of an asset (the reference asset) is transferred to the seller of protection. A credit default swap is a contract where the protection seller receives premium or interest-related payments in return for contracting to make payments to the protection buyer upon a defined credit event. Credit events normally include bankruptcy, payment default on a reference asset or assets, or downgrades by a rating agency. A total return swap is an instrument whereby the seller of protection receives the full return of the asset, including both the income and change in the capital value of the asset. The buyer of the protection in return receives a predetermined amount.

Equity derivatives

The Group’s principal equity-related contracts are equity and stock index swaps and options (including warrants, which are equity options listed on an exchange). An equity swap is an agreement between two parties to exchange periodic payments, based upon a notional principal amount, with one side paying fixed or floating interest and the other side paying based on the actual return of the stock or stock index. An equity option provides the buyer with the right, but not the obligation, either to purchase or sell a specified stock, basket of stocks or stock index at a specified price or level on or before a specified date. The Group also enters into fund-linked derivatives, being swaps and options whose underlyings include mutual funds, hedge funds, indices and multi-asset portfolios.

Commodity derivatives

The Group’s principal commodity-related derivative contracts are swaps, options, forwards and futures. The main commodities transacted are base metals, precious metals, oil and oil-related products, power and natural gas.

The Group’s total derivative asset and liability position as reported on the balance sheet is as follows:

 

 

Total derivatives

                                     

 

     2013    2012
  

 

 

     Notional      Fair value    Notional      Fair value
     contract           contract              
     amount      Asset      Liabilities     amount      Assets      Liabilities 
     £m      £m      £m     £m      £m      £m 

 

Total derivative assets/(liabilities) held for trading

     41,494,363         321,590       (319,361)      40,193,114         465,357       (459,587)

Total derivative assets/(liabilities) held for risk management

     303,645         2,745       (1,273)      302,822         3,799       (3,134)

 

Derivative assets/(liabilities)

     41,798,008         324,335       (320,634)      40,495,936         469,156       (462,721)

 

The fair value of gross derivative assets decreased by 31% to £324bn reflecting increases in the major interest rate forward curves and the impact of optimisation initiatives to reduce gross derivative exposures. Further information on netting of derivative financial instruments is included within Note 19 Offsetting financial assets and financial liabilities.

 

 

 

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Note 15: Derivative financial instruments continued

The fair values and notional amounts of derivative instruments held for trading are set out in the following table:

 

 

 

Derivatives held for trading

                                         

 

 
     2013      2012  
  

 

 

 
     Notional      Fair value      Notional      Fair value  
     contract             contract                
     amount      Asset      Liabilities      amount      Assets      Liabilities  
     £m      £m      £m      £m      £m      £m  

 

 

Foreign exchange derivatives

                 

Forward foreign exchange

     2,482,144         25,504         (29,825)         2,421,109         25,670         (26,665)   

Currency swaps

     1,287,911         27,138         (27,855)         1,277,523         28,007         (31,456)   

OTC options bought and sold

     815,742         6,858         (6,977)         604,777         5,581         (5,663)   

 

 

OTC derivatives

     4,585,797         59,500         (64,657)         4,303,409         59,258         (63,784)   

Foreign exchange derivatives cleared by central counterparty

     3,368                 –          9,139         41         (37)   

Exchange traded futures and options – bought and sold

     44,295                 –          111,189         –          –    

 

 

Foreign exchange derivatives

     4,633,460         59,500         (64,657)         4,423,737         59,299         (63,821)   

 

 

Interest rate derivatives

                 

Interest rate swaps

     7,497,699         164,532         (151,499)         6,676,588         264,838         (249,566)   

Forward rate agreements

     601,123         750         (719)         3,757,855         1,521         (1,483)   

OTC options bought and sold

     3,909,340         49,827         (50,087)         4,378,143         84,844         (85,517)   

 

 

OTC derivatives

     12,008,162         215,109         (202,305)         14,812,586         351,203         (336,566)   

Interest rate derivatives cleared by central counterparty

     21,377,621         1,069         (955)         17,103,792         172         (58)   

Exchange traded futures and options – bought and sold

     962,133                 –          1,079,453         6         (1)   

 

 

Interest rate derivatives

     34,347,916         216,178         (203,260)         32,995,831         351,381         (336,625)   

 

 

Credit derivatives

                 

OTC swaps

     1,270,020         21,922         (21,633)         1,529,984         29,788         (29,198)   

Credit derivatives cleared by central counterparty

     306,164         1         (1)         238,196         9         (10)   

 

 

Credit derivatives

     1,576,184         21,923         (21,634)         1,768,180         29,797         (29,208)   

 

 

Equity and stock index derivatives

                 

OTC options bought and sold

     76,145         7,880         (11,227)         88,317         6,133         (9,403)   

Equity swaps and forwards

     86,497         2,046         (3,455)         74,098         1,762         (2,420)   

 

 

OTC derivatives

     162,642         9,926         (14,682)         162,415         7,895         (11,823)   

Exchange traded futures and options – bought and sold

     332,438         3,423         (4,265)         347,965         3,092         (3,192)   

 

 

Equity and stock index derivatives

     495,080         13,349         (18,947)         510,380         10,987         (15,015)   

 

 

Commodity derivatives

                 

OTC options bought and sold

     62,564         1,527         (1,369)         81,787         1,786         (1,987)   

Commodity swaps and forwards

     141,287         8,570         (8,813)         164,771         11,441         (12,315)   

 

 

OTC derivatives

     203,851         10,097         (10,182)         246,558         13,227         (14,302)   

Exchange traded futures and options – bought and sold

     237,872         543         (681)         248,428         666         (616)   

 

 

Commodity derivatives

     441,723         10,640         (10,863)         494,986         13,893         (14,918)   

 

 

Derivative assets/(liabilities) held for trading

     41,494,363         321,590         (319,361)         40,193,114         465,357         (459,587)   

 

 

Total OTC derivatives held for trading

     18,230,472         316,554         (313,459)         21,054,952         461,371         (455,673)   

Total derivatives cleared by central counterparty held for trading

     21,687,153         1,070         (956)         17,351,127         222         (105)   

Total Exchange Traded derivatives held for trading

     1,576,738         3,966         (4,946)         1,787,035         3,764         (3,809)   

 

 

Derivative assets/(liabilities) held for trading

     41,494,363         321,590         (319,361)         40,193,114         465,357         (459,587)   

 

 

 

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Notes to the financial statements >

For the year ended 31 December 2013 continued

  

 

 

 

 

Note 15: Derivative financial instruments continued

The fair values and notional amounts of derivative instruments held for risk management are set out in the following table:

 

 

 

Derivatives held for risk management

                                       

 

 
     2013    2012  
  

 

 

 
     Notional      Fair value    Notional      Fair value  
     contract           contract                
     amount      Asset      Liabilities     amount      Assets      Liabilities  
     £m      £m      £m     £m      £m      £m  

 

 

Derivatives designated as cash flow hedges

                 

Interest rate swaps

     74,854         844       (484)      97,935         2,043         (1,094)   

Forward foreign exchange

     851         55       (16)      148         –          (3)   

Interest rate derivatives cleared by central counterparty

     85,104               –       79,039         –          –    

 

 

Derivatives designated as cash flow hedges

     160,809         899       (500)      177,122         2,043         (1,097)   

 

 

Derivatives designated as fair value hedges

                 

Interest rate swaps

     39,964         1,278       (752)      44,031         1,576         (1,984)   

Interest rate derivatives cleared by central counterparty

     83,495               –       64,209         –          –    

 

 

Derivatives designated as fair value hedges

     123,459         1,278       (752)      108,240         1,576         (1,984)   

 

 

Derivatives designated as hedges of net investments

                 

Forward foreign exchange

     19,377         568       (21)      17,460         180         (53)   

 

 

Derivatives designated as hedges of net investments

     19,377         568       (21)      17,460         180         (53)   

 

 

Derivative assets/(liabilities) held for risk management

     303,645         2,745       (1,273)      302,822         3,799         (3,134)   

 

 

Total OTC derivatives held for risk management

     135,046         2,745       (1,273)      159,574         3,799         (3,134)   

Total derivatives cleared by central counterparty held for risk management

     168,599               –       143,248         –          –    

 

 

Derivative assets/(liabilities) held for risk management

     303,645         2,745       (1,273)      302,822         3,799         (3,134)   

 

 

The Group has hedged the following forecast cash flows, which primarily vary with interest rates. These cash flows are expected to impact the income statement in the following periods, excluding any hedge adjustments that may be applied:

 

 

                   Between      Between      Between      Between       
            Up to      one to      two to      three to      four to      More than  
     Total      one year      two years      three years      four years      five years      five years  
     £m      £m      £m      £m      £m      £m      £m  

 

2013

                    

Forecast receivable cash flows

     6,438         367         500         904         1,126         1,135       2,406  

Forecast payable cash flows

     1,095         231         128         701         12         14       9  

 

2012

                    

Forecast receivable cash flows

     2,417         345         333         353         354         350       682  

Forecast payable cash flows

     54         31         18         4                 1       –  

 

Forecast receivable cash flows on floating rate assets have increased year on year due to significant increases in forward interest rate curves.

The maximum length of time over which the Group hedges exposure to the variability in future cash flows for forecast transactions, excluding those forecast transactions related to the payment of variable interest on existing financial instruments is 10 years (2012: 9 years).

 

 

 

Amounts recognised in net interest income

           

 

 
     2013     2012  
     £m     £m  

 

 

Losses on the hedged items attributable to the hedged risk

   (591)      (74)   

Gains on the hedging instruments

   773       114    

 

 

Fair value ineffectiveness

   182       40    

Cash flow hedging ineffectiveness

   (76)      30    

 

 

All gains and losses on hedging derivatives relating to forecast transactions which are no longer expected to occur have been recycled to the income statement.

Gains and losses transferred from the cash flow hedging reserve in the current year to interest income was a £66m gain (2012: £97m gain); interest expense a £554m gain (2012: £571m gain); net trading income a £44m loss (2012: £48m loss); administration and general expenses a £5m loss (2012: £1m gain); and taxation a £62m loss (2012: nil).

 

 

 

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Note 16: Available for sale financial assets

 

 

Accounting for available for sale investments

Available for sale investments are held at fair value with gains and losses being included in other comprehensive income. The Group uses this classification for assets that are not derivatives and are not held for trading purposes or otherwise designated at fair value through profit or loss, or at amortised cost. Dividends and interest (calculated using the effective interest method) are recognised in the income statement in net interest income (Note 3) or, net investment income (Note 6). On disposal, the cumulative gain or loss recognised in other comprehensive income is also included in net investment income.

 

 

 

 
     2013      2012  
     £m      £m  

 

 

Debt securities and other eligible bills

     91,298         74,671   

Equity securities

     458         438   

 

 

Available for sale investments

     91,756         75,109   

 

 

Critical accounting estimates and judgements

Approximately $4.3bn (£2.6bn) of the assets acquired as part of the 2008 acquisition of the North American business of Lehman Brothers had not been received by 31 December 2013. Approximately $2.7bn (£1.6bn) of this amount was recognised as part of the acquisition accounting and is included as an available for sale investment on the balance sheet. As discussed in Note 30, Barclays entitlement to these assets is the subject of legal proceedings between the SIPA Trustee for Lehman Brothers Inc. and Barclays. As such, there continues to be significant judgement involved in the valuation of this asset and uncertainty relating to the outcome of ongoing appeals. The Group takes the view that the effective provision of $1.6bn (£1.0bn) that is reflected in its estimate of fair value is appropriate. The valuation of this asset will be kept under review as legal proceedings progress.

Note 17: Financial liabilities designated at fair value

 

 

Accounting for liabilities designated at fair value through profit and loss

In accordance with IAS 39, financial liabilities may be designated at fair value, with gains and losses taken to the income statement within net trading income (Note 5) and net investment income (Note 6). The Group has the ability to do this when holding the instruments at fair value reduces an accounting mismatch (caused by an offsetting liability or asset being held at fair value), is managed by the Group on the basis of its fair value, or includes terms that have substantive derivative characteristics (Note 15).

 

 

 

 
     2013      2012  
  

 

 

 
            Contractual             Contractual  
            amount due             amount due  
     Fair value      on maturity      Fair value      on maturity  
     £m      £m      £m      £m  

 

 

Debt securities

     49,244         52,306         57,878         59,754   

Deposits

     8,071         9,161         11,411         13,064   

Liabilities to customers under investment contracts

     1,705         –          1,542         –    

Repurchase agreements

     5,306         5,331         6,020         6,038   

Other financial liabilities

     470         470         1,710         1,710   

 

 

Financial liabilities designated at fair value

     64,796         67,268         78,561         80,566   

 

 

The cumulative own credit net loss recognised is £1,199m at 31 December 2013 (2012: £979m loss).

 

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Notes to the financial statements >

For the year ended 31 December 2013 continued

  

 

 

 

 

Note 18: Fair value of assets and liabilities

 

Accounting for financial assets and liabilities – fair values

The Group applies IAS 39 – Financial Instruments: Recognition and Measurement. All financial instruments are initially recognised at fair value on the date of recognition and, depending on the classification of the asset, may continue to be held at fair value either through profit or loss or other comprehensive income. The fair value of a financial instrument is the price that would be received to sell an asset or paid to transfer a liability in an orderly transaction between market participants at the measurement date.

Wherever possible, fair value is determined by reference to a quoted market price for that instrument. For many of the Group’s financial assets and liabilities, especially derivatives, quoted prices are not available, and valuation models are used to estimate fair value. The models calculate the expected cash flows under the terms of each specific contract and then discount these values back to a present value. These models use as their basis independently sourced market parameters including, for example, interest rate yield curves, equities and commodities prices, option volatilities and currency rates.

For financial liabilities held at fair value, the carrying amount reflects the effect on fair value of changes in own credit spreads derived from observable market data, such as spreads on Barclays issued bonds or credit default swaps. Most market parameters are either directly observable or are implied from instrument prices. The model may perform numerical procedures in the pricing such as interpolation when input values do not directly correspond to the most actively traded market trade parameters.

On initial recognition, it is presumed that the transaction price is the fair value unless there is observable information available in an active market to the contrary. The best evidence of an instrument’s fair value on initial recognition is typically the transaction price. However, if fair value can be evidenced by comparison with other observable current market transactions in the same instrument, or is based on a valuation technique whose inputs include only data from observable markets then the instrument should be recognised at the fair value derived from such observable market data.

For valuations that have made use of unobservable inputs, the difference between the model valuation and the initial transaction price (‘Day One profit’) is recognised in profit or loss either: on a straight-line basis over the term of the transaction; or over the period until all model inputs will become observable where appropriate; or released in full when previously unobservable inputs become observable.

Various factors influence the availability of observable inputs and these may vary from product to product and change over time. Factors include the depth of activity in the relevant market, the type of product, whether the product is new and not widely traded in the marketplace, the maturity of market modelling and the nature of the transaction (bespoke or generic). To the extent that valuation is based on models or inputs that are not observable in the market, the determination of fair value can be more subjective, dependant on the significance of the unobservable input to the overall valuation. Unobservable inputs are determined based on the best information available, for example by reference to similar assets, similar maturities or other analytical techniques.

The sensitivity of valuations used in the financial statements to reasonably possible changes in significant unobservable inputs is shown on page 315.

Valuation

IFRS 13 Fair Value Measurement requires an entity to classify its assets and liabilities according to a hierarchy that reflects the observability of significant market inputs. The three levels of the fair value hierarchy are defined below.

Quoted market prices – Level 1

Assets and liabilities are classified as Level 1 if their value is observable in an active market. Such instruments are valued by reference to unadjusted quoted prices for identical assets or liabilities in active markets where the quoted price is readily available, and the price represents actual and regularly occurring market transactions. An active market is one in which transactions occur with sufficient volume and frequency to provide pricing information on an ongoing basis.

Valuation technique using observable inputs – Level 2

Assets and liabilities classified as Level 2 have been valued using models whose inputs are observable in an active market. Valuations based on observable inputs include assets and liabilities such as swaps and forwards which are valued using market standard pricing techniques, and options that are commonly traded in markets where all the inputs to the market standard pricing models are observable.

Valuation technique using significant unobservable inputs – Level 3

Assets and liabilities are classified as Level 3 if their valuation incorporates significant inputs that are not based on observable market data (unobservable inputs). A valuation input is considered observable if it can be directly observed from transactions in an active market, or if there is compelling external evidence demonstrating an executable exit price.

Unobservable input levels are generally determined via reference to observable inputs, historical observations or using other analytical techniques.

 

 

 

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Note 18: Fair value of assets and liabilities continued

The following table shows the Group’s assets and liabilities that are held at fair value disaggregated by valuation technique (fair value hierarchy) and balance sheet classification:

 

 

     Valuation technique using
     Quoted             Significant       
     market      Observable      unobservable       
     prices      inputs      inputs       
     (Level 1)      (Level 2)      (Level 3)      Total  
     £m      £m      £m      £m  

 

As at 31 December 2013

           

Trading portfolio assets

     54,363         72,285         6,421       133,069  

Financial assets designated at fair value

     11,188         9,010         18,770       38,968  

Derivative financial assets

     3,353         315,969         5,013       324,335  

Available for sale investments

     36,050         53,561         2,145       91,756  

Investment property

     –          –          451       451  

Non current assets held for sale

     –          –          114       114  

 

Total assets

     104,954         450,825         32,914       588,693  

 

Trading portfolio liabilities

     (29,450)         (24,014)         –        (53,464) 

Financial liabilities designated at fair value

     (98)         (63,058)         (1,640)       (64,796) 

Derivative financial liabilities

     (3,952)         (312,363)         (4,319)       (320,634) 

 

Total Liabilities

     (33,500)         (399,435)         (5,959)       (438,894) 

 

As at 31 December 2012

           

Trading portfolio assets

     51,639         86,199         8,514       146,352  

Financial assets designated at fair value

     14,518         26,025         6,086       46,629  

Derivative financial assets

     2,863         460,076         6,217       469,156  

Available for sale investments

     28,949         43,280         2,880       75,109  

Investment property

     –          –          1,686       1,686  

Non current assets held for sale

     –          –          –        – 

 

Total assets

     97,969         615,580         25,383       738,932 

 

Trading portfolio liabilities

     (20,294)         (24,498)         (2)       (44,794) 

Financial liabilities designated at fair value

     (182)         (76,024)         (2,355)       (78,561) 

Derivative financial liabilities

     (2,666)         (455,068)         (4,987)       (462,721) 

 

Total Liabilities

     (23,142)         (555,590)         (7,344)       (586,076) 

 

There are no assets or liabilities measured at fair value on a non-recurring basis.

Included in financial assets designated at fair value is the Education, Social Housing and Local Authority (ESHLA) loan portfolio of £15.6bn (2012: £17.6bn). This was transferred from Level 2 to Level 3 following reassessment of the significance of unobservable loan spreads on valuation. The valuation of the ESHLA portfolio continues to be based on internally modelled spreads. Valuation uncertainty arises mainly from the long dated nature of the portfolio, the lack of active secondary market in the loans and the lack of observable loan spreads.

 

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Notes to the financial statements >

For the year ended 31 December 2013 continued

  

 

 

 

 

Note 18: Fair value of assets and liabilities continued

The following table shows the Group’s assets and liabilities that are held at fair value disaggregated by valuation technique (fair value hierarchy) and product type:

 

 

Assets and liabilities held at fair value by product type

                       

 

          Assets                 Liabilities      
    Valuation technique using     Valuation technique using

 

    Quoted           Significant     Quoted           Significant  
    market     Observable     unobservable     market     Observable     unobservable  
    prices     inputs     inputs     prices     inputs     inputs  
    (Level 1)     (Level 2)     (Level 3)     (Level 1)     (Level 2)     (Level 3)  
    £m     £m     £m     £m     £m     £m  

 

As at 31 December 2013

           

Interest rate derivatives

           217,324        1,031        –         (203,466)      (1,046) 

Foreign exchange derivatives

           59,951        117        –         (64,592)      (86) 

Credit derivativesa

           19,723        2,200        (26)        (20,828)      (780) 

Equity derivatives

    3,353        8,730        1,266        (3,926)        (13,154)      (1,867) 

Commodity derivatives

           10,241        399        –         (10,323)      (540) 

Government and government sponsored debt

    53,518        63,627        220        (17,833)        (17,758)      – 

Corporate debt

    1,005        34,247        3,040        (63)        (5,247)      (12) 

Certificates of deposit, commercial paper and other money market instruments

           1,493               (96)        (5,303)      (409) 

Reverse repurchase and repurchase agreements

           5,323               –         (5,306)      – 

Non asset backed loans

           2,493        16,132        –         –       – 

Asset backed securities

           15,141        2,112        –         (105)      – 

Commercial real estate loans

                  1,198        –         –       – 

Issued debt

           54        1        –         (48,734)      (1,164) 

Equity cash products

    45,547        397        168        (11,554)        (704)      – 

Funds and fund-linked products

           8,509        550        –         (3,369)      (54) 

Physical commodities

    1,155        3,048               –         (72)      – 

Investment properties

                  451        –         –       – 

Otherb

    376        524        4,029        (2)        (474)      (1) 

 

Total

    104,954        450,825        32,914        (33,500)        (399,435)      (5,959) 

 

As at 31 December 2012

           

Interest rate derivatives

           353,647        1,353        –         (338,502)      (1,204) 

Foreign exchange derivatives

    1        59,275        203        –         (63,630)      (244) 

Credit derivativesa

           26,758        3,039        –         (28,002)      (1,206) 

Equity derivatives

    2,851        6,281        1,092        (2,626)        (10,425)      (1,702) 

Commodity derivatives

    12        13,984        660        (5)        (14,632)      (543) 

Government and government sponsored debt

    65,598        60,336        367        (13,098)        (20,185)      – 

Corporate debt

    844        28,640        3,339        (130)        (3,312)      (36) 

Certificates of deposit, commercial paper and other money market instruments

    203        5,443               (5)        (7,840)      (760) 

Reverse repurchase and repurchase agreements

           6,034               –         (6,020)      – 

Non asset backed loans

    21        19,666        2,365        (2)        (3)      – 

Asset backed securities

    17        26,787        4,106        (2)        (831)      – 

Commercial real estate loans

                  1,798        –         –       – 

Issued debt

                         –         (57,303)      (1,439) 

Equity cash products

    26,992        2,855        145        (7,236)        (1,111)      – 

Funds and fund-linked products

    737        2,447        754        (38)        (2,000)      (122) 

Physical commodities

    678        2,438               –         (73)      – 

Investment properties

                  1,686        –         –       – 

Otherb

    15        989        4,476        –         (1,721)      (88) 

 

Total

    97,969        615,580        25,383        (23,142)        (555,590)      (7,344) 

 

 

Notes
a Credit derivatives includes derivative exposure to Monoline insurers.
b Other primarily includes receivables resulting from the acquisition of the North American businesses of Lehman Brothers, asset-backed loans, private equity investments and non current assets held for sale.

 

 

 

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Note 18: Fair value of assets and liabilities continued

Assets and liabilities reclassified between Level 1 and Level 2

US Treasuries and new issuances of certain G7 government bonds are actively quoted and traded through electronic trading platforms, supporting classification as Level 1. When there is a new issuance of those G7 government bonds, any previous issuances held on the balance sheet as Level 1 will be transferred into Level 2 to reflect a decrease in trading activity. As a result of new issuances during the year, £19.6m of government and government-sponsored debt were transferred from Level 1 into Level 2. Remaining transfers from level 1 to level 2 relate to the transfer of £14.1m of corporate debt as a result of a reassessment of available pricing information causing the classification to be reconsidered as level 2.

Transfers have been reflected as if they had taken place at the beginning of the year.

Level 3 movement analysis

The following table summarises the movements in the Level 3 balance during the year. The table shows gains and losses and includes amounts for all assets and liabilities transferred to and from Level 3 during the year. Transfers have been reflected as if they had taken place at the beginning of the year.

 

 

Analysis of movements in level 3 assets and liabilities

                 

 

                                  Total gains and losses in                        
                                  the period recognised in     Total gains     Transfers      
    As at                             the income statement     or losses                 As at 31  
    1 January                             Trading     Other     recognised                 December  
    2013     Purchases     Sales     Issues     Settlements     income     income     in OCI     In     Out     2013  
    £m     £m     £m     £m     £m     £m     £m     £m     £m     £m     £m  

 

Government and government sponsored debt

    321        135        (199)        82        (23)        (3)        (11                   (141   161  

Corporate debt

    3,136        84        (83)               –         (46)        –                       (52   3,039  

Asset backed securities

    3,614        2,773        (4,729)               (389)        831         –                50        (39   2,111  

Non asset backed loans

    344        91        (281)        35        (37)        16         –                8        –       176  

Funds and fund-linked

products

    685               (64)               –         (95)        –                       (32   494  

Other

    414        46        (42)               (44)        44         –                34        (12   440  

 

Trading portfolio assets

    8,514        3,129        (5,398)        117        (493)        747         (11            92        (276   6,421  

Commercial real estate loans

    1,798        1,542        (1,717)               (526)        156         2               2        (59   1,198  

Non asset backed loans

    2,021        390        (1)               (208)        (1,441)        (107            15,317        (15   15,956  

Asset backed loans

    564        595        (748)               (23)        106         –                       (119   375  

Private equity investments

    1,350        161        (134)               (87)        50         (139            18        (51   1,168  

Other

    353        11        (237)               (28)        (36)        (1            105        (94   73  

 

Financial assets designated at fair value

    6,086        2,699        (2,837)               (872)        (1,165)        (245            15,442        (338   18,770  

Asset backed securities

    492               (521)               (29)        (1)        30        30               –       1  

Government and government sponsored debt

    46        13        –                (1)        –         1                      –       59  

Other

    2,342        25        (77)               (471)               255        2        36        (28   2,085  

 

Available for sale investments

    2,880        38        (598)               (501)        –         286        32        36        (28   2,145  

 

                     

 

Investment property

    1,686        151        (1,210)               –         17         (31                   (162   451  

 

                     

 

Non current assets held for sale

                  –                –         –         –                114        –       114  

 

 

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Table of Contents

Notes to the financial statements >

For the year ended 31 December 2013 continued

 

 

 

 

 

Note 18: Fair value of assets and liabilities continued

           

 

Analysis of movements in level 3 assets and liabilities continued

           

 

                                  Total gains and losses in                        
                                  the period recognised in     Total gains     Transfers      
    As at                             the income statement     or losses                 As at 31  
    1 January                             Trading     Other     recognised                 December  
    2013     Purchases     Sales     Issues     Settlements     income     income     in OCI     In     Out     2013  
    £m     £m     £m     £m     £m     £m     £m     £m     £m     £m     £m  

 

Trading portfolio liabilities

    (2)        (1)        –         –         –                –         –         –              – 

Certificates of deposit, commercial paper and other money market instruments

    (760)        –         –         –                204         93         –         –         47       (409) 

Issued debt

    (1,439)        –                (67)        319         60                –         (205)        153       (1,164) 

Other

    (156)        (2)               –         (2)        (3)               –         –         92       (67) 

 

Financial liabilities designated at fair value

    (2,355)        (2)        10         (67)        324         261         102         –         (205)        292       (1,640) 

Interest rate derivatives

    149         (26)        (1)        –         31         262                –         (26)        (406)      (15) 

Credit derivatives

    1,776         95        (66)        (2)        54         (488)        (81)        –         (74)        206       1,420  

Equity derivatives

    (608)        301        (1)        (394)        (48)        151                –         (85)        81       (601) 

Commodity derivatives

    117         (57)        –         (44)        42         66                –         (146)        (120)      (141) 

Foreign exchange derivatives

    (40)        –         –         –         145         (44)               –         (10)        (21)      31  

Other

    (164)        –         –         –         –         –         –         –         –         164       – 

 

Net derivative financial instrumentsa

    1,230         313         (68)        (440)        224         (53)        (75)        –         (341)        (96)      694  

 

                     

 

Total

    18,039         6,327         (10,101)        (390)        (1,318)        (192)        26         32         15,138         (606)      26,955  

 

 

 

Analysis of movements in level 3 assets and liabilities

 

                            Total gains and losses in                
        Effects                   the period recognised in   Total gains  

Transfers

   
   

As at

  of the                  

the income statement

  or losses           As at 31  
   

1 January

  adoption                   Trading   Other   recognised           December  
   

2013

  of IFRS 10   Purchases   Sales   Issues   Settlements   income   income   in OCI   In   Out   2012  
   

£m

  £m   £m   £m   £m   £m   £m   £m   £m   £m   £m   £m  

 

Trading portfolio assets

  9,204    1,093    3,443    (4,445)   –    (986)   476    (7)   –    242    (506)   8,514  

Financial assets designated at fair value

  8,679    143    2,972    (3,837)   –    (915)   (236)   (5)   –    167    (882)   6,086  

Available for sale investments

  2,873    –    50    (226)   –    (57)   (17)   –    (19)   461    (185)   2,880  

Investment property

  2,925    –    70    (1,289)   –    –    35    (55)     –    –    1,686  

Trading portfolio liabilities

  (6)   –    (1)     –    1   –    –    –    –      (2) 

Financial liabilities designated at fair value

  (3,136)   (136)   (8)   29    (289)   450    87    52    –    (295)   891    (2,355) 

Net derivative financial instrumentsa

  2,686    (9)   434    (138)   (354)     (1,438)   (109)   –    (189)   342    1,230  

 

Total

  23,225    1,091    6,960    (9,905)   (643)   (1,502)   (1,093)   (124)   (19)   386    (337)   18,039  

 

Notes

a The derivative financial instruments are represented on a net basis. On a gross basis derivative financial assets as at 31 December 2013 totalled £5,013m (2012: £6,217m) and derivative financial liabilities totalled £4,319m (2012: £4,987m).

 

 

 

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Note 18: Fair value of assets and liabilities continued

Assets and liabilities move between Level 2 and Level 3 primarily due to i) an increase or decrease in observable market activity related to an input or ii) a change in the significance of the unobservable input, with assets and liabilities classified as Level 3 if an unobservable input is deemed significant.

During 2013, transfers into Level 3 totalled £15.1bn primarily due to the remainder of the ESHLA loan portfolio amounting to £15.3bn, which was transferred from Level 2 to Level 3 following reassessment of the significance of unobservable loan spreads on valuation. Liabilities of £205m were also transferred from Level 2 to Level 3 mainly representing issued debt classified as financial liabilities designated at fair value. A further £(146)m of commodity derivatives were also transferred into level 3 in line with observable market activity.

Transfers out of Level 3 totalled £606m. This was primarily due to £141m of government and government sponsored debt held as trading portfolio assets and £119m of asset backed loans held as financial assets designated at fair value through profit and loss. Liabilities transferred out included £153m of issued debt and £47m of certificates of deposit, commercial paper and other money market instruments both designated as held at fair value through profit and loss. There were also transfers of £(406)m in interest rate derivatives offset by £206m in credit derivatives as a result of more observable valuation inputs.

Unrealised gains and losses on Level 3 financial assets and liabilities

The following table discloses the unrealised gains and losses recognised in the year arising on Level 3 assets and liabilities held at year end.

 

 

 

Unrealised gains and losses recognised during the period on Level 3 assets and liabilities held at period end

 

 

 
     2013      2012  
     Income statement      Other             Income statement      Other         
     Trading      Other      compre-             Trading      Other      compre-         
     income      income      hensive      Total      income      income      hensive      Total  

As at 31 December

   £m      £m      £m      £m      £m      £m      £m      £m  

 

 

Trading portfolio assets

     222          –          –          222          186          (7)         –          179    

Financial assets designated at fair value

     (1,276)         10          –          (1,266)         (174)         (2)         –          (176)   

Available for sale assets

     –          (5)         27          22          (3)         (11)         67          53    

Investment property

     (27)         (31)         –          (58)         14          (28)         –          (14)   

Trading portfolio liabilities

     –          –          –          –          (1)         –          –          (1)   

Financial liabilities designated at fair value

     74          –          –          74          39          63          –          102    

Net derivative financial instruments

     (411)         (75)         –          (486)         (1,747)         (61)         –          (1,808)   

 

 

Total

     (1,418)         (101)         27          (1,492)         (1,686)         (46)         67          (1.665)   

 

 

The decrease in trading income of £1,102m within financial assets designated at fair value is primarily driven by a trading loss on the ESHLA loan portfolio due to losses incurred on fixed rate loan portfolios as a result of an increase in interest rate forward curves. Trading income on net derivative financial instruments increased by £1,336m over the year mainly driven by more favourable returns on derivatives. Credit and monoline derivatives within the Structured Capital Portfolio Markets business resulted in an increase in trading income of £461m compared to prior year. Additionally, within rates trading, interest rate derivates drove a £247m increase in trading income; whilst equity derivatives also had a positive variance of £235m over prior year.

Valuation techniques and sensitivity analysis

Sensitivity analysis is performed on products with significant unobservable inputs (Level 3) to generate a range of reasonably possible alternative valuations. The sensitivity methodologies applied take account of the nature of valuation techniques used, as well as the availability and reliability of observable proxy and historical data and the impact of using alternative models.

Sensitivities are dynamically calculated on a monthly basis. The calculation is based on range or spread data of a reliable reference source or a scenario based on relevant market analysis alongside the impact of using alternative models. Sensitivities are calculated without reflecting the impact of any diversification in the portfolio.

The valuation techniques used for the main products that are not determined by reference to unadjusted quoted prices (Level 1), observability and sensitivity analysis for Level 3 are described below.

 

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For the year ended 31 December 2013 continued

  

 

 

 

 

Note 18: Fair value of assets and liabilities continued

Interest rate derivatives

Description: These are derivatives linked to interest rates or inflation indices. This category includes futures, interest rate and inflation swaps, swaptions, caps, floors, inflation options, balance guaranteed swaps and other exotic interest rate derivatives.

Valuation: Interest rate derivative cash flows are valued using interest rate yield curves whereby observable market data is used to construct the term structure of forward rates. This is then used to project and discount future cash flows based on the parameters of the trade. Assets and liabilities with optionality are valued using volatilities implied from market observable inputs. Exotic interest rate derivatives are valued using industry standard and bespoke models based on observable and unobservable market parameter inputs. Input parameters include interest rates, volatilities, correlations and others as appropriate. Where unobservable, a parameter will be set with reference to an observable proxy. Inflation forward curves and interest rate yield curves are extrapolated beyond observable tenors.

Balance guaranteed swaps are valued using cash flow models that calculate fair value based on loss projections, prepayment, recovery and discount rates. These parameters are determined by reference to underlying asset performance, independent research, ABX indices, broker quotes, observable trades on similar securities and third party pricing sources. Prepayment is projected based on observing historic prepayment rates.

Observability: In general, input parameters are deemed observable up to liquid maturities which are determined separately for each parameter and underlying. Certain correlation, convexity, long dated forwards and volatilities exposures are unobservable beyond liquid maturities. Unobservable model inputs are set by referencing liquid market instruments and applying extrapolation techniques to match the appropriate risk profile.

Level 3 sensitivity: Sensitivity relating to unobservable valuation inputs is based on the dispersion of consensus data services where available, otherwise stress scenarios or historic data are used.

Foreign exchange derivatives

Description: These are derivatives linked to the foreign exchange (FX) market. This category includes FX forward contracts, FX swaps and FX options. The vast majority are traded as OTC derivatives.

Valuation: Derivatives are valued using industry standard and bespoke models. Input parameters include FX rates, interest rates, FX volatilities, interest rate volatilities, FX interest rate correlations and others as appropriate. Unobservable model inputs are set by referencing liquid market instruments and applying extrapolation techniques to match the appropriate risk profile.

Observability: Certain correlations, long dated forwards and volatilities are unobservable beyond liquid maturities.

Level 3 sensitivity: Sensitivity relating to unobservable valuation inputs is primarily based on the dispersion of consensus data services.

Credit derivatives

Description: These are derivatives linked to the credit spread of a referenced entity, index or basket of referenced entities or a pool of referenced assets via securitisation. This category includes single name and index Credit Default Swaps (CDS), asset backed CDS, synthetic Collateralised Debt Obligations (CDOs), and Nth-to-default basket swaps.

Valuation: CDS are valued using a market standard model that incorporates the credit curve as its principal input. Credit spreads are observed directly from broker data, third party vendors or priced to proxies. Where credit spreads are unobservable, they are determined with reference to recent transactions or proxied from bond spreads on observable trades of the same issuer or other similar entities. Synthetic CDOs are valued using a model that calculates fair value based on credit spreads, recovery rates, correlations and interest rates and is calibrated to the index tranche market.

Observability: CDS contracts referencing entities that are not actively traded are considered unobservable. The correlation input to synthetic CDO valuation is considered unobservable as it is proxied from the observable index tranche market. Where an asset-backed credit derivative does not have an observable market price and the valuation is determined using a model, an instrument is considered unobservable.

Level 3 sensitivity: The sensitivity of valuations of the illiquid CDS portfolio is determined by applying a shift to each spread curve. The shift is based on the average range of pricing observed in the market for similar CDS.

Synthetic CDO sensitivity is calculated using correlation levels derived from the range of contributors to a consensus bespoke service.

Commodity derivatives

Description: These products are exchange traded and OTC derivatives based on underlying commodities such as metals, crude oil and refined products, agricultural products, power and natural gas.

Valuation: The valuations of commodity swaps and options are determined using models incorporating discounting of cash flows and other industry standard modelling techniques. Valuation inputs include forward curves, volatilities implied from market observable inputs and correlations. Unobservable inputs are set with reference to similar observable products or by applying extrapolation techniques from the observable market.

Observability: Certain correlations, forward curves and volatilities for longer dated exposures are unobservable.

Level 3 sensitivity: Sensitivity is determined primarily by measuring historical variability over two years. Where historical data is unavailable or uncertainty is due to volumetric risk, sensitivity is measured by applying appropriate stress scenarios or using proxy bid-offer spread levels.

 

 

 

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Equity derivatives

Description: These are derivatives linked to equity indices and single names. This category includes exchange traded and OTC equity derivatives including vanilla and exotic options.

Valuation: The valuations of OTC equity derivatives are determined using industry standard models. Input parameters include stock prices, dividends, volatilities, interest rates, equity repo curves and, for multi-asset products, correlations. Unobservable model inputs are determined by reference to liquid market instruments and applying extrapolation techniques to match the appropriate risk profile.

Observability: In general, input parameters are deemed observable up to liquid maturities which are determined separately for each parameter and underlying.

Level 3 sensitivity: Sensitivity is estimated based on the dispersion of consensus data services either directly or through proxies.

Derivative exposure to monoline insurers

Description: These products are derivatives through which credit protection has been purchased on structured debt instruments (primarily CLOs) from monoline insurers.

Valuation: Given the bespoke nature of the CDS, the primary valuation input is the price of the cash instrument it protects.

Observability: Whilst the market value of the cash instrument underlying the CDS contract may be observable, its use in the valuation of CDS is considered unobservable due to the bespoke nature of the monoline CDS contracts.

Level 3 sensitivity: Due to the high degree of uncertainty, the sensitivity reflects the impact of writing down the credit protection element of fair value to zero.

Government and Government sponsored debt

Description: These are government bonds, supra sovereign bonds and agency bonds.

Valuation: Liquid government bonds actively traded through an exchange or clearing house are marked to the closing levels observed in these markets. Less liquid bonds are valued using observable market prices which are sourced from broker quotes, inter-dealer prices or other reliable pricing services. Where there are no observable market prices, fair value is determined by reference to either issuances or CDS spreads of the same issuer as proxy inputs to obtain discounted cash flow amounts.

Observability: Where an observable market price is not available, the bond is considered Level 3.

Level 3 sensitivity: Sensitivity is calculated by using the range of observable proxy prices.

Corporate debt

Description: This primarily contains corporate bonds.

Valuation: Corporate bonds are valued using observable market prices which are sourced from broker quotes, inter-dealer prices or other reliable pricing services. Where there are no observable market prices, fair value is determined by reference to either issuances or CDS spreads of the same issuer as proxy inputs to obtain discounted cash flow amounts. In the absence of observable bond or CDS spreads for the respective issuer, similar reference assets or sector averages are applied as a proxy (the appropriateness of proxies being assessed based on issuer, coupon, maturity and industry).

Observability: Where an observable market price is not available, the security is considered Level 3.

Level 3 sensitivity: The sensitivity for the corporate bonds portfolio is determined by applying a shift to each underlying position driven by average ranges of external levels observed in the market for similar bonds.

Certificates of Deposit, Commercial Paper and other money market instruments

Description: These are certificates of deposit, commercial paper and other money market instruments.

Valuation: Certificates of deposit and commercial paper are valued using observable market prices which are sourced from broker quotes, inter-dealer prices or other reliable pricing services. Where there are no observable market prices, fair value is determined by reference to either issuances or CDS spreads of the same issuer as proxy inputs to obtain discounted cash flow amounts. In the absence of observable bond or CDS spreads for the respective issuer, similar reference assets or sector averages are applied as a proxy (the appropriateness of proxies being assessed based on issuer, coupon, maturity and industry).

Observability: Where an observable market price is not available, the instrument is considered Level 3.

Level 3 sensitivity: Sensitivity is calculated by using the range of observable proxy prices.

Repurchase agreements

Description: This product type is primarily made up of repurchase agreements that are held at fair value.

Valuation: Repurchase agreements are generally valued using industry standard modelling techniques including discounting of cash flows. The key valuation inputs are forward curves.

 

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Note 18: Fair value of assets and liabilities continued

Observability: Repurchase agreement pricing is generally observable.

Level 3 sensitivity: There is no Level 3 sensitivity associated with repurchase agreements as inputs to valuation are observable.

Non asset backed loans

Description: This category is largely made up of fixed rate loans, such as the ESHLA portfolio, which are valued using models that discount expected future cash flows.

Valuation: Fixed rate loans are valued using models that calculate fair value based on observable interest rates and unobservable loan spreads. Unobservable loan spreads are modelled according to issuer credit quality.

Observability: Within this population, the unobservable input is the loan spread.

Level 3 sensitivity: The sensitivity for fixed rate loans is calculated by applying a shift to loan spreads.

Asset backed securities

Description: These are securities that are linked to the cash flows of a pool of referenced assets via securitisation. This category includes residential mortgage backed securities, commercial mortgage backed securities, asset backed securities, CDOs and CLOs.

Valuation: Where available, valuations are based on observable market prices which are sourced from broker quotes and inter-dealer prices. Otherwise, valuations are determined using industry standard discounted cash flow analysis that calculates the fair value based on valuation inputs such as constant default rate, conditional prepayment rate, loss given default and yield. These inputs are determined by reference to a number of sources including proxying to observed transactions, market indices or market research, and by assessing underlying collateral performance.

Proxying to observed transactions, indices or research requires an assessment and comparison of the relevant securities’ underlying attributes including collateral, tranche, vintage, underlying asset composition (historical losses, borrower characteristics, and loan attributes such as loan-to-value ratio and geographic concentration) and credit ratings (original and current).

Observability: Where an asset backed product does not have an observable market price and the valuation is determined using a model, an instrument is considered unobservable.

Level 3 sensitivity: The sensitivity analysis for asset backed products is based on externally sourced pricing dispersion, defined at the position level.

Asset backed loans

Description: These are loans made to individual borrowers or originators in return for the expectation of repayment of both principal and interest in the future. This category includes loans backed by residential whole loans and residential real estate (property).

Valuation: Valuations are determined using industry standard discounted cash flow analysis that calculates the fair value based on inputs such constant default rate, conditional prepayment rate, loss given default and yield. Valuations inputs are determined by reference to a number of sources including proxying to observed transactions, market indices or market research, and by assessing underlying collateral performance.

Observability: Where an asset backed loan does not have an observable market price and the valuation is determined using a model, an instrument is considered unobservable.

Level 3 sensitivity: The sensitivity analysis for asset backed loans is based on stressing the inputs to the discounted cash flow analysis.

Commercial Real Estate loans

Description: This portfolio includes loans that are secured by a range of commercial property types including retail, hotel, office, multi-family and industrial properties.

Valuation: Performing loans are valued using discounted cash flow analysis which considers the characteristics of the loan such as property type, geographic location, credit quality and property performance reviews in order to determine an appropriate credit spread. Where there is significant uncertainty regarding loan performance, valuation is based on independent third party appraisals or bids for the underlying properties. Independent third party appraisals are determined by discounted cash flow analysis. The key valuation inputs are yield and loss given default.

Observability: Since each commercial real estate loan is unique in nature and the secondary market for them is relatively illiquid, valuation inputs are generally considered unobservable.

Level 3 sensitivity: For performing loans, sensitivity is determined by stressing the credit spread for each loan. For loans which have significant uncertainty regarding loan performance, sensitivity is determined by either a range of bids or by stressing the inputs to independent third party appraisals.

 

 

 

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Issued debt

Description: This category contains Barclays issued notes.

Valuation: Fair valued Barclays issued notes are valued using discounted cash flow techniques and industry standard models incorporating various observable input parameters depending on the terms of the instrument.

Observability: Barclays issued notes are generally observable. Structured notes are debt instruments containing embedded derivatives. Where either an input to the embedded derivative or the debt instrument is deemed unobservable and significant to the overall valuation of the note, the structured note is classified as Level 3.

Level 3 sensitivity: Sensitivity to the unobservable input in the embedded derivative is calculated in line with the method used for the derivative instrument concerned and incorporated within the derivative lines.

Equity cash products

Description: This category includes listed equities, Exchange Traded Funds (ETF) and preference shares.

Valuation: Valuation of equity cash products is primarily determined through market observable prices.

Observability: Prices are generally observed in the market. Where a price for an equity security is not available, the instrument is considered unobservable.

Level 3 sensitivity: Sensitivity relating to unobservable market prices is based on the dispersion of observable proxy prices.

Funds and fund linked products

Description: This category includes holdings in hedge funds, and funds of funds.

Valuation: In general, fund holdings are valued based on the latest available valuation received from the fund administrator. In the case of illiquid fund holdings the valuation will take account of all available information in relation to the underlying fund or collection of funds and may be adjusted relative to the performance of relevant index benchmarks.

Observability: Funds are deemed unobservable where the fund is either suspended, in wind-down, has a redemption restriction that severely affects liquidity, or where the latest net asset value from the fund administrators is older than the frequency dictated by the fund offering documents.

Level 3 sensitivity: Sensitivity is calculated on an individual fund basis using a loss based scenario approach which factors in the underlying assets of the specific fund and assumed recovery rates.

Private equity investments

Description: This category includes private equity investments.

Valuation: Private equity investments are valued in accordance with the ‘International Private Equity and Venture Capital Valuation Guidelines’. This requires the use of a number of individual pricing benchmarks such as the prices of recent transactions in the same or similar entities, discounted cash flow analysis, and comparison with the earnings multiples of listed comparative companies. Full valuations are generally performed at least bi-annually, with the positions reviewed periodically for material events that might impact upon fair value. The valuation of unquoted equity instruments is subjective by nature. However, the relevant methodologies are commonly applied by other market participants and have been consistently applied over time.

Observability: Unobservable inputs include earnings estimates, multiples of comparative companies, marketability discounts and discount rates.

Level 3 sensitivity: The relevant valuation models are each sensitive to a number of key assumptions, such as projected future earnings, comparator multiples, marketability discounts and discount rates. Valuation sensitivity is estimated by flexing such assumptions to reasonable alternative levels and determining the impact on the resulting valuation.

Physical commodities

Description: This category includes physical commodities such as metals and crude oil.

Valuation: The fair values of physical commodities are primarily determined through market observable prices.

Observability: Physical commodities are generally observable.

Level 3 sensitivity: There is no Level 3 sensitivity associated with physical commodities as inputs to valuation are observable.

 

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Investment Property

Description: Investment property consists of commercial real estate property including most of the major property types retail, office, industrial and multi-family properties.

Valuation: Investment property is valued using competitive asset specific market bids. When bids are unavailable, valuations are determined by independent third party appraiser through a discounted cash flow analysis. The key inputs to the discounted cash flow valuation are capitalisation rates, yields, growth rate, and loss given default.

Observability: Since each investment property is unique in nature and the commercial real estate market is illiquid, valuation inputs are largely unobservable.

Level 3 sensitivity: For investment property, sensitivity is determined by a range of asset specific market bids or by stressing the inputs to the discounted cash flow analysis.

Other

Description: The receivables resulting from the acquisition of the North American businesses of Lehman Brothers is also included within ‘Other’. For more details, refer to Note 30 Legal, competition and regulatory matters.

Level 3 sensitivity: No stress has been applied to the receivables relating to the Lehman acquisition (Note 16). The sensitivity inherent in the measurement of the receivables is akin to a litigation provision. Due to this, an upside and downside stress on a basis comparable with the other assets cannot be applied.

Complex Derivative Instruments

Valuation estimates made by counterparties with respect to complex derivative instruments, for the purpose of determining the amount of collateral to be posted, often differ, sometimes significantly, from Barclays own estimates. In almost all cases, Barclays has been able to successfully resolve such differences or otherwise reach an accommodation with respect to collateral posting levels, including in certain cases by entering into compromise collateral arrangements. Due to the ongoing nature of collateral calls, Barclays will often be engaged in discussion with one or more counterparties in respect of such differences at any given time. Valuation estimates made by counterparties for collateral purposes are, like any other third-party valuation, considered when determining Barclays fair value estimates.

 

 

 

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Sensitivity analysis of valuations using

unobservable inputs

                                

 

     Fair value      Favourable changes      Unfavourable changes    
  

 

 

     Total       Total      Income              Income       
     assets       liabilities      statement       Equity      statement      Equity  
     £m       £m      £m       £m      £m      £m  

 

As at 31 December 2013

                 

Interest rate derivatives

     1,031          (1,046)         246                  (251)       –  

Foreign exchange derivatives

     117          (86)         32                  (32)       –  

Credit derivatives

     2,200          (780)         145                  (287)       –  

Equity derivatives

     1,266          (1,867)         234                  (234)       –  

Commodity derivatives

     399          (540)         41                  (41)       –  

Government and government sponsored debt

     220          –                          (1)       –  

Corporate debt

     3,040          (12)         10                  (4)       –  

Certificates of deposit, commercial paper and other money market instruments

     –          (409)         –                  –        –  

Non asset backed loans

     16,132          –          151                  (1,177)       –  

Asset backed securities

     2,112          –          104          1         (74)       (1) 

Commercial real estate loans

     1,198          –          61                  (29)       –  

Issued debt

             (1,164)         –                  –        –  

Equity cash products

     168          –          –          12         –        (12) 

Funds and fund linked products

     550          (54)         25                  (25)       –  

Investment property

     451          –          22                  (21)       –  

Other

     4,029          (1)         186          58         (182)       (47) 

 

Total

     32,914          (5,959)         1,258          71         (2,358)       (60) 

 

As at 31 December 2012

                 

Interest rate derivatives

     1,353          (1,204)         109                  (109)       –  

Foreign exchange derivatives

     203          (244)         44                  (44)       –  

Credit derivatives

     3,039          (1,206)         410                  (512)       –  

Equity derivatives

     1,092          (1,702)         220                  (214)       (1) 

Commodity derivatives

     660          (543)         70                  (70)       –  

Government and government sponsored debt

     367          –          –                  –        –  

Corporate debt

     3,339          (36)         15                  (11)       –  

Certificates of deposit, commercial paper and other money market instruments

     –          (760)         –                  –        –  

Non asset backed loans

     2,365          –          59          12         (58)       (12) 

Asset backed securities

     4,106          –          390          7         (305)       (7) 

Commercial real estate loans

     1,798          –          64                  (47)       –  

Issued debt

     –          (1,439)         –                  –        –  

Equity cash products

     145          –          –          13         –        (13) 

Funds and fund linked products

     754          (122)         112                  (112)       –  

Investment property

     1,686          –          116                  (104)       –  

Other

     4,476          (88)         312          64         (281)       (60) 

 

Total

     25,383          (7,344)         1,921          96         (1,867)       (93) 

 

The effect of stressing unobservable inputs to a range of reasonably possible alternatives alongside considering the impact of using alternative models would be to increase fair values by up to £1.3bn (2012: £2.0bna) or to decrease fair values by up to £2.4bn (2012: £2.0bna). The ESHLA transfer contributed £1.0bn to the decrease with substantially all the potential effect impacting profit and loss rather than other comprehensive income.

The effect of stressing unobservable inputs has become less symmetric for 2013 following reassessment of the significance of unobservable loan spreads on the valuation of the ESHLA portfolio (included in non asset backed loans). The stress related to this portfolio is considered to be asymmetric as it is felt that alternative choices of loan spreads could lead to a lower valuation.

Note

a The sensitivity analysis for 2012 has been revised to reflect the inclusion of investment property. This amounted to £0.1bn.

 

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Notes to the financial statements >

For the year ended 31 December 2013 continued

  

 

 

 

 

Note 18: Fair value of assets and liabilities continued

Significant unobservable inputs

The following table discloses the valuation techniques and significant unobservable inputs for assets and liabilities recognised at fair value and classified as Level 3 along with the range of values used for those significant unobservable inputs:

 

 

    

Total

assets

£m

    

Total

liabilities

£m

    

Valuation

technique(s)

  

Significant 

unobservable 

inputs 

   Range     

Weighted 

averagea

     Unitsb 
               Min      Max        

 

Derivative financial instrumentsc

                       

Interest rate derivatives

     1,031          (1,046)       Discounted cash flows    Inflation forwards       (0.1)                 
         Option model    Inflation volatility                       
            IR – IR correlation       (34)         100          
            FX – IR correlation       14          90          
            Interest Rate Volatility               52          

 

Credit derivatives

     2,200          (780)       Discounted cash flows    Credit spread       138          1,530           bps 
         Correlation model    Credit correlation       22          81          
            Credit spread       206          934           bps 
         Comparable pricing    Price       –          100           points 

 

Equity derivatives

     1,266          (1,867)       Option Model    Equity volatility       13          97          
           

Equity – equity

correlation 

     25          96          
            Equity – FX correlation       (91)         55          

 

Non derivative financial instruments

                       

Corporate debt

     3,040          (12)       Discounted cash flows    Credit spread       138         540          208        bps 
         Comparable pricing    Price               120          21        points 

 

            Conditional             

Asset backed securities

     2,112          –        Discounted cash flows    prepayment rate       –          54               
            Constant default rate       –          15               
            Loss given default       –          100          87       
            Yield       –          52               
            Credit spread       13          5,305          711        bps 
         Comparable pricing    Price       –          201          55        points 

 

Commercial real estate loans

     1,198          –        Discounted Cash Flows    Loss given default       –          100               
            Yield               26               
            Credit spread       134          294          155        bps 

 

Issued debte

             (1,164)                     

 

Non asset backed loans

     16,132          –        Discounted Cash Flows    Loan spread       –          1,124          34        bps 

 

            Conditional             

Otherf

     4,029          (1)       Discounted cash flows    prepayment rate       –          19               
            Constant default rate               10               
            Loss given default       33          95          75       
            Yield               35               
         Comparable pricing    Price       –          102          73        points 
         Net asset valued    Net asset value             

 

Notes

a Weighted averages have been provided for non-derivative financial instruments and have been calculated by weighting inputs by the relative fair value. A weighted average has not been provided for derivatives as weighting by fair value would not give a comparable metric.
b The units used to disclose ranges for significant unobservable inputs are percentages, points and basis points. Points are a percentage of par; for example, 100 points equals 100% of par. A basis point equals 1/100th of 1%; for example, 150 basis points equals 1.5%.
c Certain derivative instruments are classified as L3 due to a significant unobservable credit spread input into the calculation of the Credit Valuation Adjustment (CVA) for the instruments. The range of unobservable credit spreads is between 29-1,065bps.
d A range has not been provided for Net Asset Value as there would be a wide range reflecting the diverse nature of the positions.
e Issued debt includes structured notes issued by Barclays containing embedded derivatives. Where an unobservable input is significant to the fair value of the note, it is likely to relate to the embedded derivative. In such cases, the unobservable inputs are broadly consistent with those presented for derivatives.
f ‘Other’ primarily includes receivables resulting from the acquisition of the North American businesses of Lehman Brothers, asset-backed loans, private equity investments and non current assets held for sale.

 

 

 

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Note 18: Fair value of assets and liabilities continued

The following section describes the significant unobservable inputs identified in the table above, and the sensitivity of fair value measurement of the instruments categorised as Level 3 assets or liabilities to increases in significant unobservable inputs. Where sensitivities are described the inverse relationship will also generally apply.

Where reliable interrelationships can be identified between significant unobservable inputs used in fair value measurement a description of those interrelationships is included below.

Comparable Price

Comparable instrument prices are used in valuation by calculating an implied yield (or spread over a liquid benchmark) from the price of a comparable observable bond, then adjusting that yield (or spread) to derive a value for the unobservable bond. The adjustment to yield (or spread) should account for relevant differences in the bonds such as maturity or credit quality. Alternatively, a price-to-price basis can be assumed between the comparable instrument and bond being valued in order to establish the value of the bond.

In general a significant increase in comparable price in isolation will result in a movement in fair value that is favourable for the holder of a cash instrument.

For a derivative instrument, a significant increase in an input derived from a comparable price in isolation can result in a movement in fair value that is favourable or unfavourable depending on the specific terms of the instrument.

Conditional Prepayment Rate

Conditional prepayment rate is the proportion of voluntary, unscheduled repayments of loan principal by a borrower. Prepayment rates affect the weighted average life of securities by altering the timing of future projected cashflows.

A significant increase in a conditional prepayment rate in isolation can result in a movement in fair value that is favourable or unfavourable depending on the specific terms of the instrument.

Conditional prepayment rates are typically inversely correlated to credit spread. i.e. Securities with high borrower credit spread typically experience lower prepayment rates, and also tend to experience higher default rates.

Constant Default Rate

The Constant Default Rate represents an annualised rate of default of the loan principal by the borrower.

A significant increase in a constant default rate in isolation can result in a movement in fair value that is favourable or unfavourable depending on the specific terms of the instrument.

Constant Default Rate and Conditional Prepayment Rates are typically inversely correlated, less defaults on loans typically will mean higher credit quality and therefore more prepayments.

Correlation

Correlation is a measure of the relationship between the movements of two variables (i.e. how the change in one variable influences a change in the other variable). Correlation is a key input into valuation of derivative contracts with more than one underlying instrument. For example, where an option contract is written on a basket of underlying names the volatility of the basket, and hence the fair value of the option, will depend on the correlation between the basket components. Credit correlation generally refers to the correlation between default processes for the separate names that make up the reference pool of a collateralised debt obligation structure.

A significant increase in correlation in isolation can result in a movement in fair value that is favourable or unfavourable depending on the specific terms of the instrument.

Credit Spread / Loan Spread

Credit spreads typically represent the difference in yield between an instrument and a benchmark security or reference rate. Credit spreads reflect the additional yield that a market participant would demand for taking exposure to the credit risk of an instrument. The credit spread for an instrument forms part of the yield used in a discounted cashflow calculation.

In general a significant increase in credit spread or Loan Spread in isolation will result in a movement in fair value that is unfavourable for the holder of a cash asset.

For a derivative instrument, a significant increase in credit spread in isolation can result in a movement in fair value that is favourable or unfavourable depending on the specific terms of the instrument.

Forwards

A price or rate that is applicable to a financial transaction that will take place in the future. A forward is generally based on the spot price or rate, adjusted for the cost of carry, and defines the price or rate that will be used to deliver a currency, bond, commodity or some other underlying instrument at a point in the future. A forward may also refer to the rate fixed for a future financial obligation, such as the interest rate on a loan payment. In general a significant increase in a forward in isolation will result in a movement in fair value that is favourable for the contracted receiver of the underlying (currency, bond, commodity etc.), but the sensitivity is dependent on the specific terms of the instrument.

 

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Note 18: Fair value of assets and liabilities continued

Loss Given Default (LGD)

Loss Given Default represents the expected loss upon liquidation of the collateral as a percentage of the balance outstanding.

In general a significant increase in the LGD in isolation will translate to lower recovery and lower projected cashflows to pay to the securitisation, resulting in a movement in fair value that is unfavourable for the holder of the securitised product.

Net Asset Value

Net asset value represents the total value of a fund’s assets and liabilities.

In general a significant increase in net asset value in isolation will result in a movement in fair value that is favourable for a fund.

Volatility

Volatility is a key input in the valuation of derivative products containing optionality. Volatility is a measure of the variability or uncertainty in returns for a given derivative underlying. It represents an estimate of how much a particular underlying instrument, parameter or index will change in value over time. In general, volatilities will be implied from observed option prices. For unobservable options the implied volatility may reflect additional assumptions about the nature of the underlying risk, as well as reflecting the given strike/maturity profile of a specific option contract.

In general a significant increase in volatility in isolation will result in a movement in fair value that is favourable for the holder of a simple option, but the sensitivity is dependent on the specific terms of the instrument.

There may be interrelationships between unobservable volatilities and other unobservable inputs that can be implied from observation (e.g. when equity prices fall, implied equity volatilities generally rise) but these are specific to individual markets and may vary over time.

Yield

The rate used to discount projected cashflows in a discounted future cashflow analysis.

In general a significant increase in yield in isolation will result in a movement in fair value that is unfavourable for the holder of a cash instrument.

Fair value adjustments

Key balance sheet valuation adjustments that may be of interest from a financial statement user perspective are quantified below:

 

 

 
       2013     2012   
       £m     £m   

 

 
Bid-offer valuation adjustments      (406)      (452)   
Other exit adjustments      (208)      (294)   
Uncollateralised derivative funding      (67)      (101)   
Derivative credit valuation adjustments:        
– Monolines      (62)      (235)   
– Other derivative credit valuation adjustments      (322)      (693)   
Derivative debit valuation adjustments      310       442    

 

 

Bid-offer valuation adjustments

The Group uses mid-market pricing where it is a market-maker and has the ability to transact at, or better than, mid price (which is the case for certain equity, bond and vanilla derivative markets). For other financial assets and liabilities, bid-offer adjustments are recorded to reflect the price for the expected close out strategy. The methodology for determining the bid-offer adjustment for a derivative portfolio involves calculating the net risk exposure by offsetting long and short positions by strike and term in accordance with the risk management and hedging strategy. Bid-offer levels are derived from market sources, such as broker data. The bid offer adjustments have reduced by £46m to £406m during 2013 as a result of movements in market bid offer spreads.

Other exit adjustments

Market data input for exotic derivatives may not have a directly observable bid offer spread. In such instances, an exit adjustment is applied as a proxy for the bid-offer adjustment. An example of this is correlation risk where an adjustment is required to reflect the possible range of values that market participants apply. The uncertainty adjustment may be determined by calibrating to derivative prices, or by scenario analysis or historical analysis. The other exit adjustments have reduced by £86m to £208m respectively as a result of movements in market bid offer spreads.

Discounting approaches for derivative instruments

Collateralised

In line with market practice, the methodology for discounting collateralised derivatives takes into account the nature and currency of the collateral that can be posted within the relevant Credit Support Annex (CSA). The CSA-aware discounting approach recognises the ‘cheapest to deliver’ option that reflects the ability of the party posting collateral to change the currency of the collateral.

Uncollateralised

A fair value adjustment of £67m is applied to account for the impact of incorporating the cost of funding into the valuation of uncollateralised derivatives accounted for at fair value across all asset classes and businesses within Barclays Corporate Banking and Investment Bank. This is called the ‘funding fair value adjustment (FFVA).

 

 

 

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FFVA is calculated as the valuation impact of changing from LIBOR-based discounting to using a discount rate that reflects the market cost of funding. Barclays internal Treasury lending rates are used as an estimate of this rate, although Barclays continues to assess viable alternatives and evolving market practice. Expected trade cash flows are consolidated at portfolio and currency level. The FFVA impact is applied symmetrically per currency to positive and negative cash flows.

The discounting period applied takes into account the probability of default of each counterparty, as well as any mandatory break clauses. Cash flows from partially funded trades (where this could be due to a contractual or non contractual collateral gap) are taken into account.

The FFVA incorporates a scaling factor which is an estimate of the extent to which the cost of funding is incorporated into observed traded levels. On calibrating the scaling factor, it is with the assumption that Credit Valuation Adjustments (CVAs) and Debit Valuation Adjustments (DVAs) are retained as valuation components incorporated into such levels. The effect of this scaling factor at 31 December 2013 was £200m (2012:£303m).

Uncollateralised interest rate derivatives traded by the Fixed Income Rates desk are used to determine this scaling factor, as the impact from this portfolio contributes the majority of the FFVA, where the trading history analysed includes new trades, terminations and novations. The FFVA balance and movement is driven by the Barclays own cost of funding spread over LIBOR, counterparty default probabilities and recovery rates, as well as the market value of those derivatives in scope. Movements in the market value of the portfolio in scope for FFVA are driven by interest rates.

Barclays continues to monitor market practices and activity to ensure the approach to discounting in derivative valuation remains appropriate. The above approach has been in use since 2012 with no significant changes.

Uncollateralised derivative funding adjustments have reduced by £34m to £67m as a result of reductions in Barclays funding costs and a reduction in exposure.

Derivative credit and debit valuation adjustments

Credit valuation adjustments (CVAs) and debit valuation adjustments (DVAs) are incorporated into derivative valuations to reflect the impact on fair value of counterparty credit risk and Barclays own credit quality respectively. These adjustments are modelled for OTC derivatives across all asset classes. Calculations are derived from estimates of exposure at default, probability of default and recovery rates, on a counterparty basis. Counterparties include (but are not limited to) corporates, monolines, sovereigns and sovereign agencies, supranationals, and special-purpose vehicles.

Exposure at default for CVA and DVA is generally based on expected exposure, estimated through the simulation of underlying risk factors. For some complex products, where this approach is not feasible, simplifying assumptions are made, either through proxying with a more vanilla structure, or using current or scenario-based mark-to-market as an estimate of future exposure. Where strong collateralisation agreement exists as a mitigant to counterparty risk, the exposure is set to zero.

Probability of default and recovery rate information is generally sourced from the CDS markets. For counterparties where this information is not available, or considered unreliable due to the nature of the exposure, alternative approaches are taken based on mapping internal counterparty ratings onto historical or market-based default and recovery information. In particular, this applies to sovereign related names where the effect of using the recovery assumptions implied in CDS levels would imply a £105m (2012: £200m) increase in CVA.

Correlation between counterparty credit and underlying derivative risk factors may lead to a systematic bias in the valuation of counterparty credit risk, termed ‘wrong-way’ or ‘right-way’ risk. This is not incorporated into the CVA calculation, but risk of wrong-way exposure is controlled at the trade origination stage.

Derivative credit valuation adjustments reduced by £544m to £384m primarily as a result of a reduction in monoline exposure and improvements in counterparty credit. Derivative debit valuation adjustments have reduced by £132m to £310m primarily as a result of improvements in Barclays credit.

Portfolio exemptions

The Group uses the portfolio exemption in IFRS 13 Fair Value Measurement to measure the fair value of the group financial assets and financial liabilities. Assets and liabilities are measured using the price that would be received to sell a net long position (i.e. an asset) for a particular risk exposure or to transfer a net short position (i.e. a liability) for a particular risk exposure in an orderly transaction between market participants at the balance sheet date under current market conditions.

Unrecognised gains as a result of the use of valuation models using unobservable inputs

The amount that has yet to be recognised in income that relates to the difference between the transaction price (the fair value at initial recognition) and the amount that would have arisen had valuation models using unobservable inputs been used on initial recognition, less amounts subsequently recognised, is as follows:

 

 

 
     2013     2012  
     £m     £m  

 

 

As at 1 January

   148       117    

Additions

   53       78    

Amortisation and releases

   (64)      (47)   

 

 

As at 31 December

   137       148    

 

 

The reserve held for unrecognised gains is predominantly related to derivative financial instruments.

 

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Notes to the financial statements >

For the year ended 31 December 2013 continued

 

 

 

 

Note 18: Fair value of assets and liabilities continued

Third-party credit enhancements

Structured and brokered certificates of deposit issued by Barclays Group are insured up to $250,000 per depositor, by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) in the United States of America. The FDIC is funded by premiums that Barclays and other banks pay for deposit insurance coverage. The carrying value of these issued certificates of deposit that are designated under the IAS 39 fair value option includes this third party credit enhancement. The on-balance sheet value of these brokered certificates of deposit amounted to £3.1bn at 31 December 2013.

Valuation control framework

The Finance-Product Control-Valuations function is responsible for independent price verification, oversight of fair value adjustments and escalation of valuation issues. This process covers all fair value positions and is a key control in ensuring the material accuracy of valuations. Governance over the valuation process is the responsibility of the Valuation Committee. This Committee meets monthly and is responsible for overseeing valuation and fair value adjustment policy within Corporate Banking and Investment Banking and this is the forum to which valuation issues are escalated.

Price verification uses independently sourced data that is deemed most representative of the market. The characteristics against which the data source is assessed are independence, reliability, consistency with other sources and evidence that the data represents an executable price. The most current data available at balance sheet date is used. Where significant variances are noted in the independent price verification process, an adjustment is taken to the fair value position. Additional fair value adjustments may be taken to reflect such factors as bid-offer spreads, market data uncertainty, model limitations and counterparty risk – further detail on these fair value adjustments is disclosed on pages 318 and 319.

Comparison of carrying amounts and fair values for assets and liabilities not held at fair value

The following table summarises the fair value of financial assets and liabilities measured at amortised cost on the Group’s balance sheet where the carrying amount is not a reasonable approximation of fair value:

 

 

 
     2013    2012  
     Carrying           Carrying         
     amount      Fair value     amount      Fair value  
     £m      £m     £m      £m  

 

 
Financial assets            
Loans and advances to banks      37,853        37,839       40,462          40,462    
Loans and advances to customers:            
– Home loans      179,527        170,793       174,988          164,608    
– Credit cards, unsecured and other retail lending      64,551        63,944       59,577          58,494    
– Finance lease receivables      5,827        5,759       6,837          6,863    
– Corporate loans      180,506        176,673       182,504          176,727    
Reverse repurchase agreements and other similar secured lending      186,779        186,756       176,522          176,461    
Financial liabilities            
Deposits from banks      (54,834)       (54,865)      (77,012)         (77,025)   
Customer accounts:            
– Current and demand accounts      (134,849)       (134,849)      (127,786)         (127,786)   
– Savings accounts      (123,824)       (123,886)      (99,875)         (99,875)   
– Other time deposits      (169,229)       (168,959)      (157,750)         (157,752)   
Debt securities in issue      (86,693)       (87,022)      (119,525)         (119,669)   
Repurchase agreements and other similar secured borrowing      (196,748)       (196,748)      (217,178)         (217,178)   
Subordinated liabilities      (21,695)       (22,193)      (24,018)         (23,467)   

 

 

The fair value is an estimate of the price that would be received to sell an asset or paid to transfer a liability in an orderly transaction between market participants at the measurement date. As a wide range of valuation techniques are available, it may not be appropriate to directly compare the Barclays fair value information to independent market or other financial institutions. Different valuation methodologies and assumptions can have a significant impact on fair values which are based on unobservable inputs.

Financial assets

The carrying value of financial assets held at amortised cost (including loans and advances to banks and customers, and other lending such as reverse repurchase agreements and cash collateral on securities borrowed) is determined in accordance with the relevant accounting policy noted on pages 324 and 325.

Loans and advances to banks

The fair value of loans and advances, for the purpose of this disclosure, is derived from discounting expected cashflows in a way that reflects the current market price for lending to issuers of similar credit quality. Where market data or credit information on the underlying borrowers is unavailable, a number of proxy / extrapolation techniques are employed to determine the appropriate discount rates.

There is minimal difference between the fair value and carrying amount due to the short term nature of the lending (i.e. predominantly overnight deposits) and the high credit quality of counterparties.

 

 

 

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Loans and advances to customers

The fair value of loans and advances to customers, for the purpose of this disclosure, is derived from discounting expected cash flows in a way that reflects the current market price for lending to issuers of similar credit quality.

For retail lending (i.e. Home loans and Credit cards) tailored discounted cash flow models are used to estimate the fair value of different product types. For example for home loans different models are used to estimate fair values of tracker, offset and fixed rate mortgage products. Key inputs to these models are the differentials between historic and current product margins and estimated prepayment rates.

The discount of fair value to carrying amount for home loans has reduced to 5% (2012:6%) due to changes in product mix across the loan portfolio and movements in product margins.

The fair value of Corporate loans calculated by the use of discounted cash flow techniques where the gross loan values are discounted at a rate of difference between contractual margins and hurdle rates or spreads where Barclays charges a margin over LIBOR depending on credit quality and loss given default and years to maturity. The discount between the carrying and fair value has marginally decreased to 2.1% (2012: 3.2%).

Reverse repurchase agreements

The fair value of reverse repurchase agreements approximates carrying amount as these balances are generally short dated.

Financial liabilities

The carrying value of financial liabilities held at amortised cost (including customer accounts and other deposits such as repurchase agreements and cash collateral on securities lent, debt securities in issue and subordinated liabilities) is determined in accordance with the accounting policy noted on pages 325 and 341.

Deposits from banks and customer accounts

In many cases, the fair value disclosed approximates carrying value because the instruments are short term in nature or have interest rates that re-price frequently such as customer accounts and other deposits and short term debt securities.

The fair value for deposits with longer term maturities such as time deposits, are estimated using discounted cash flows applying either market rates or current rates for deposits of similar remaining maturities. Consequently the fair value discount is minimal.

Debt securities in issue

Fair values of other debt securities in issue are either based on quoted prices or where the instruments are short dated, carrying amount approximates fair value. The fair value difference remained relatively flat at 0.4% (2012: 0.1%).

Repurchase agreements

The fair value of repurchase agreements approximates carrying amounts as these balances are generally short dated.

Subordinated liabilities

Fair values for dated and undated convertible and non-convertible loan capital are based on quoted market rates for the issue concerned or issues with similar terms and conditions.

 

 

As at December 2013

   Fair Value
£m
    

Quoted
market prices
(Level 1)

£m

    

Observable
inputs
(Level 2)

£m

    

Significant  
unobservable  
inputs  

(Level 3)  

£m  

 

Financial assets

           

Loans and advances to banks

     37,839          3,849          30,003        3,987  

Loans and advances to customers:

           

– Home loans

     170,793          –          –        170,793  

– Credit cards, unsecured and other retail lending

     63,944          2,790          1,659        59,495  

– Corporate loans

     176,673          635          115,923        60,115  

Reverse repurchase agreements and other similar secured lending

     186,756          –          186,756        –  

Financial liabilities

           

Deposits from banks

     (54,865)         (4,886)         (49,697)       (282) 

Customer accounts:

           

– Current and demand accounts

     (134,849)         (129,369)         (3,254)       (2,226) 

– Savings accounts

     (123,886)         (106,964)         (15,876)       (1,046) 

– Other time deposits

     (168,959)         (41,815)         (115,976)       (11,168) 

Debt securities in issue

     (87,022)         (872)         (85,471)       (679) 

Repurchase agreements and other similar secured borrowing

     (196,748)         –          (196,748)       –  

Subordinated liabilities

     (22,193)         –          (22,158)       (35) 

 

 

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Notes to the financial statements >

For the year ended 31 December 2013 continued

  

 

 

 

 

Note 18: Fair value of assets and liabilities continued

Fair Value hierarchy

Financial assets

Loans and advances

The Fair Value hierarchy for loans and advances is determined by reference to the observability of inputs into the fair value models:

 

¡   Balances considered as readily accessible cash are classified as level 1;

 

¡   Where significant inputs into the fair value models are considered observable, for example LIBOR or the Bank of England base rate, the balances are classified as level 2. Settlement balances and cash collateral are also classified as level 2; and

 

¡   Where unobservable inputs, such as Barclays historic and current product margins, are deemed significant, the related balances are classified as level 3

Loans and advances to banks are mainly classified as level 2. Home loans, Credit cards, unsecured and other retail lending are generally classified as level 3 as significant inputs used in the valuation models are unobservable. Corporate loans are mainly classified as level 2 or 3 depending on the observability of inputs into the fair value models.

Reverse repurchase agreements

The fair value for repurchase agreements is obtained using fair value models with observable inputs. These balances are therefore classified as level 2.

Financial liabilities

Deposits from banks

The majority of the deposits from banks balance is classified as level 2 where they represent cash collateral, settlements and other deposits. Readily accessible cash is classified as level 1.

Customer accounts

The majority of customer account balances are classified as level 1 where the balances represent readily accessible cash, and level 2 where they represent settlements and other deposits. The level 3 balances are largely comprised of other deposits where models with significant unobservable inputs, such as internal margins, are being used.

Debt securities in issue

These are mainly classified as level 2 as the inputs into the fair value models used for these balances are observable.

Repurchase agreements

The fair value for repurchase agreements is obtained using fair value models with observable inputs. These balances are therefore classified as level 2.

Subordinated liabilities

The majority of these balances are classified as level 2 as the inputs used to determine fair value are largely observable in an active market.

Critical accounting estimates and judgements

Quoted market prices are not available for many of the financial assets and liabilities that are held at fair value and the Group uses a variety of techniques to estimate the fair value. The above note describes the more judgemental aspects of valuation in the period, including: credit valuation adjustments on monoline exposures, commercial real estate loans, private equity investments, and fair value loans to government and business and other services.

Note 19: Offsetting financial assets and financial liabilities

In accordance with IAS 32 Financial Instruments: Presentation, the group reports financial assets and financial liabilities on a net basis on the balance sheet only if there is a legally enforceable right to set off the recognised amounts and there is intention to settle on a net basis, or to realise the asset and settle the liability simultaneously. The following table shows the impact of netting arrangements on:

 

¡   all financial assets and liabilities that are reported net on the balance sheet; and

 

¡   all derivative financial instruments and reverse repurchase and repurchase agreements and other similar secured lending and borrowing agreements that are subject to enforceable master netting arrangements or similar agreements, but do not qualify for balance sheet netting.

 

 

 

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Note 19: Offsetting financial assets and financial liabilities continued

The table identifies the amounts that have been offset in the balance sheet and also those amounts that are covered by enforceable netting arrangements (offsetting arrangements and financial collateral) but do not qualify for netting under the requirements of IAS 32 described above.

The ‘Net amounts’ presented below are not intended to represent the Group’s actual exposure to credit risk, as a variety of credit mitigation strategies are employed in addition to netting and collateral arrangements.

 

 

    Amounts subject to enforceable netting arrangements            
 

 

 

     
    Effects of offsetting on balance sheet     Related amounts not offsetc     Amounts not       
 

 

 

     
                                        subject to       
                Net amounts                        enforceable      Balance  
                reported on                        netting     
    Gross     Amounts      the balance      Financial     Financial           arrange-      sheet  
As at 31 December   amounts     offseta     sheetb     instruments     collateral     Net amount     mentsd     totale 
  £m     £m      £m      £m     £m     £m     £m      £m  

 

Derivative financial assets

    608,696        (295,793     312,903        (258,528     (41,397     12,978        11,432      324,335  

Reverse repurchase agreements and other similar secured lending

    246,281        (93,508     152,773               (151,833     940        34,006      186,779  

 

Total Assets

    854,977        (389,301     465,676        (258,528     (193,230     13,918        45,438      511,114  

Derivative financial liabilities

    (603,580     296,273        (307,307     258,528        36,754        (12,025     (13,327   (320,634) 

Repurchase agreements and other similar secured borrowing

    (253,966     93,508        (160,458            159,686        (772     (36,290   (196,748) 

 

Total Liabilities

    (857,546     389,781        (467,765     258,528        196,440        (12,797     (49,617   (517,382) 

 

As at 31 December 2012

               

Derivative financial assets

    879,082        (420,741     458,341        (387,672     (53,183     17,486        10,815      469,156  

Reverse repurchase agreements and other similar secured lendingf

    244,272        (100,989     143,283               (142,009     1,274        33,239      176,522  

 

Total Assets

    1,123,354        (521,730     601,624        (387,672     (195,192     18,760        44,054      645,678  

Derivative financial liabilities

    (869,514     419,192        (450,322     387,672        52,163        (10,487     (12,399   (462,721) 

Repurchase agreements and other similar secured borrowingf

    (259,078     100,989        (158,089            157,254        (835     (59,089   (217,178) 

 

Total Liabilities

    (1,128,592     520,181        (608,411     387,672        209,417        (11,322     (71,488   (679,899) 

 

Derivative assets and liabilities

The ‘Financial instruments’ column identifies financial assets and liabilities that are subject to set off under netting agreements, such as the ISDA Master Agreement or derivative exchange or clearing counterparty agreements, whereby all outstanding transactions with the same counterparty can be offset and close-out netting applied across all outstanding transaction covered by the agreements if an event of default or other predetermined events occur.

Financial collateral refers to cash and non-cash collateral obtained, typically daily or weekly, to cover the net exposure between counterparties by enabling the collateral to be realised in an event of default or if other predetermined events occur.

Repurchase and reverse repurchase agreements and other similar secured lending and borrowing

The ‘Financial instruments’ column identifies financial assets and liabilities that are subject to set off under netting agreements, such as global master repurchase agreements and global master securities lending agreements, whereby all outstanding transactions with the same counterparty can be offset and close-out netting applied across all outstanding transaction covered by the agreements if an event of default or other predetermined events occur.

Financial collateral typically comprises highly liquid securities wh ich are legally transferred and can be liquidated in the event of counterparty default.

These offsetting and collateral arrangements and other credit risk mitigation strategies used by the Group are further explained in the Credit risk mitigation section on pages 398 to 400.

Notes

a Amounts offset for derivative financial assets includes cash collateral netted of £1,965m (2012: £6,506m). Amounts offset for derivative liabilities includes cash collateral netted of £2,445m (2012: £4,957m). Settlements assets and liabilities have been offset amounting to £6,967m (2012: £9,879m). No other significant recognised financial assets and liabilities were offset in the balance sheet. Therefore, the only balance sheet categories necessary for inclusion in the table are those shown above.
b The table excludes reverse repurchase agreements designated at fair value which are subject to enforceable master netting arrangements of £2bn (2012: £3bn).
c Financial collateral is reflected at its fair value, but has been limited to the net balance sheet exposure so as not to include any over-collateralisation.
d This column includes contractual rights of set-off that are subject to uncertainty under the laws of the relevant jurisdiction.
e The balance sheet total is the sum of ‘Net amounts reported on the balance sheet’ that are subject to enforceable netting arrangements and ‘Amounts not subject to enforceable netting arrangements’.
f Comparative figures have been restated to accurately reflect the identification of contracts with enforceable netting arrangements. Net Amounts reported on the balance sheet have increased £12,795m and £27,049m for reverse repurchase agreements and repurchase agreements respectively. A corresponding decrease was noted within amounts not subject to enforceable netting arrangements amounts. Financial collateral increased £12,293m for reverse repurchase agreements and £26,810m for repurchase agreements. Net amount increased £502m for reverse repurchase agreements and £239m for repurchase agreements.

 

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Notes to the financial statements >

For the year ended 31 December 2013 continued

  

 

 

 

 

Financial instruments held at amortised cost

 

 

 

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The notes included in this section focus on assets that are held at amortised cost arising from the Group’s retail and wholesale lending including loans and advances, finance leases, repurchase and reverse repurchase agreements and similar secured lending. Detail regarding the Group’s capital and liquidity position can be found on pages 199 to 224.

 

Note 20: Loans and advances to banks and customers

 

Accounting for financial instruments held at amortised cost

Loans and advances to customers and banks, customer accounts, debt securities and most financial liabilities, are held at amortised cost. That is, the initial fair value (which is normally the amount advanced or borrowed) is adjusted for repayments and the amortisation of coupon, fees and expenses to represent the effective interest rate of the asset or liability.

 

 

 

 
     2013         2012     

As at 31 December 2013

   £m      £m    

 

 

Gross loans and advances to banks

     37,863          40,503     

Less: allowance for impairment

     (10)         (41)    

 

 

Loans and advances to banks

     37,853          40,462     

 

 

Gross loans and advances to customers

     437,659          431,664     

Less: allowance for impairment

     (7,248)         (7,758)    

 

 

Loans and advances to customers

     430,411          423,906     

 

 

Further information on the Group’s loans and advances to banks and customers and impairment allowances are included on pages 142 to 189.

Note 21: Finance leases

 

Accounting for finance leases

The Group applies IAS 17 Leases in accounting for finance leases, both where it is the lessor or the lessee. A finance lease is a lease which confers substantially all the risks and rewards of the leased assets on the lessee. Where the Group is the lessor, the leased asset is not held on the balance sheet; instead a finance lease receivable is recognised representing the minimum lease payments receivable under the terms of the lease, discounted at the rate of interest implicit in the lease. Where the Group is the lessee, the leased asset is recognised in property, plant and equipment and a finance lease liability is recognised, representing the minimum lease payments payable under the lease, discounted at the rate of interest implicit in the lease.

 

Interest income or expense is recognised in interest receivable or payable, allocated to accounting periods to reflect a constant periodic rate of return.

Finance lease receivables

Finance lease receivables are included within loans and advances to customers. The Group specialises in asset-based lending and works with a broad range of international technology, industrial equipment and commercial companies to provide customised finance programmes to assist manufacturers, dealers and distributors of assets.

 

 

 
            2013           2012               
  

 

 

 
     Gross            Present                        Present         
              value of           Gross            value of         
     investment            minimum      Un-    investment            minimum      Un-    
     in finance      Future     lease      guaranteed    in finance      Future     lease      guaranteed    
     lease      finance     payments      residual    lease      finance     payments      residual    
     receivables      income     receivable      values    receivables      income     receivable      values    
     £m      £m     £m      £m    £m      £m     £m      £m    

 

 

Not more than one year

     2,004         (286     1,718       93      2,363         (329     2,034         80     

Over one year but not more than five years

     4,308         (662     3,646       268      5,055         (749     4,306         105     

Over five years

     539         (76     463       85      617         (120     497         318     

 

 

Total

     6,851         (1,024     5,827       446      8,035         (1,198     6,837         503     

 

 

The impairment allowance for uncollectable finance lease receivables amounted to £129m at 31 December 2013 (2012: £140m).

 

 

 

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Note 21: Finance leases continued

Finance lease liabilities

The Group leases items of property, plant and equipment on terms that meet the definition of finance leases. Finance lease liabilities are included within accruals, deferred income and other liabilities (see Note 27).

As at 31 December 2013, the total future minimum payments under finance leases were £19m (2012: £35m), of which £5m (2012: £5m) was due within one year. As at 31 December 2013, the carrying amount of assets held under finance leases was £16m (2012: £22m).

 

Note 22: Reclassification of financial assets held for trading

 

Accounting for the reclassification of financial assets held for trading

In accordance with IAS 39, where the Group no longer intends to trade in financial assets it may transfer them out of the held for trading classification and measure them at amortised cost if they meet the definition of a loan. The initial value used for the purposes of establishing amortised cost is fair value on the date of the transfer.

Prior to 2010, the Group reclassified certain financial assets, originally classified as held for trading that were deemed to be not held for trading purposes to loans and receivables.

The carrying value of the securities reclassified into loans and receivables has decreased from £5,188m to £2,812m primarily as a result of sales and paydowns of the underlying securities during the period.

Sales of securities from the 16 December 2008 reclassification totalled £18m (2012: £151m) and sales of securities from the 25 November 2009 reclassification totalled £1,573m (2012: £1,316m).

The following table provides a summary of the assets reclassified from held for trading to loans and receivables.

 

 

 
     2013      2012  
  

 

 

 
     Carrying      Fair      Carrying      Fair  
     value      value      value      value  
     £m      £m      £m      £m  

 

 

As at 31 December

           

Trading assets reclassified to loans and receivables

           

Reclassification 25 November 2009

     2,791         2,718         5,140         4,996   

Reclassification 16 December 2008

     21         9         48         50   

 

 

Total financial assets reclassified to loans and receivables

     2,812         2,727         5,188         5,046   

 

 

If the reclassifications had not been made, the Group’s income statements for 2013 would have included a net gain on the reclassified trading assets of £57m (2012: gain of £247m).

Note 23: Reverse repurchase and repurchase agreements including other similar lending and borrowing

Reverse repurchase agreements (and stock borrowing or similar transaction) are a form of secured lending whereby the Group provides a loan or cash collateral in exchange for the transfer of collateral, generally in the form of marketable securities subject to an agreement to transfer the securities back at a fixed price in the future. Repurchase agreements are where the Group obtains such loans or cash collateral, in exchange for the transfer of collateral.

 

Accounting for reverse repurchase and repurchase agreements including other similar lending and borrowing

The Group purchases (a reverse repurchase agreement) or borrows securities subject to a commitment to resell or return them. The securities are not included in the balance sheet as the Group does not acquire the risks and rewards of ownership. Consideration paid (or cash collateral provided) is accounted for as a loan asset at amortised cost.

 

The Group may also sell (a repurchase agreement) or lend securities subject to a commitment to repurchase or redeem them. The securities are retained on the balance sheet as the Group retains substantially all the risks and rewards of ownership. Consideration received (or cash collateral provided) is accounted for as a financial liability at amortised cost.

 

 

 
     2013      2012  
     £m      £m  

 

 

Assets

     

Banks

     67,889         64,616   

Customers

     118,890         111,906   

 

 

Reverse repurchase agreements and other similar secured lending

     186,779         176,522   

 

 

Liabilities

     

Banks

     66,896         87,815   

Customers

     129,852         129,363   

 

 

Repurchase agreements and other similar secured borrowing

     196,748         217,178   

 

 

 

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Notes to the financial statements >

For the year ended 31 December 2013 continued

 

 

 

 

 

Non-current assets and other investments

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   The notes included in this section focus on the Group’s non-current tangible and intangible assets and property plant and equipment, which provide long-term future economic benefits.

 

 

Note 24: Property, plant and equipment

 

Accounting for property, plant and equipment

The Group applies IAS 16 Property Plant and Equipment and IAS 40 Investment Properties.

Property, plant and equipment is stated at cost, which includes direct and incremental acquisition costs less accumulated depreciation and provisions for impairment, if required. Subsequent costs are capitalised if these result in an enhancement to the asset.

Depreciation is provided on the depreciable amount of items of property, plant and equipment on a straight-line basis over their estimated useful economic lives. Depreciation rates, methods and the residual values underlying the calculation of depreciation of items of property, plant and equipment are kept under review to take account of any change in circumstances. The Group uses the following annual rates in calculating depreciation:

 

 

  Annual rates in calculating depreciation    Depreciation rate

 

Freehold land

   Not depreciated

Freehold buildings and long-leasehold property (more than 50 years to run)

   2-3.3%

Leasehold property over the remaining life of the lease (less than 50 years to run)

   Over the remaining life of the lease

Costs of adaptation of freehold and leasehold property

   6-10%

Equipment installed in freehold and leasehold property

   6-10%

Computers and similar equipment

   17-33%

Fixtures and fittings and other equipment

   9-20%

 

Where a leasehold property has a remaining useful life of less than 15 years, costs of adaptation and installed equipment are depreciated over the remaining life of the lease.

Investment property

The Group initially recognises investment property at cost, and subsequently at fair value at each balance sheet date reflecting market conditions at the reporting date. Gains and losses on re-measurement are included in the income statement.

 

 

 

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Note 24: Property, plant and equipment continued

 

 
     Investment
property
£m
    Property
£m
    Equipment
£m
    Leased
assets
£m
   

Total 

£m 

 

 

 
 Cost           
 As at 1 January 2013      1,686        4,030        4,794        14        10,524    

 Acquisitions and disposals of subsidiaries

                                 –    

 Additions and disposals

     (1,052     21        88        (4     (947)   

 Change in fair value of investment properties

     41                             41    

 Exchange and other movements

     (224     (127     (330            (681)   

 

 
 As at 31 December 2013      451        3,924        4,552        10        8,937    

 

 
 Accumulated depreciation and impairment           
 As at 1 January 2013             (1,414     (3,350     (6     (4,770)   

 Depreciation charge

            (220     (426     (1     (647)   

 Disposals

            113        282               395    

 Exchange and other movements

            8        293               301    

 

 
 As at 31 December 2013             (1,513     (3,201     (7     (4,721)   

 

 
 Net book value      451        2,411        1,351        3        4,216    

 

 
 Cost           
 As at 1 January 2012      2,928        3,959        4,755        20        11,662    

 Acquisitions and disposals of subsidiaries

     (16     6        1               (9)   

 Additions and disposals

     (191     177        211        (6     191    

 Change in fair value of investment properties

     23                             23    

 Exchange and other movements

     (1,058     (112     (173            (1,343)   

 

 
 As at 31 December 2012      1,686        4,030        4,794        14        10,524    

 

 
 Accumulated depreciation and impairment           
 As at 1 January 2012             (1,245     (3,244     (7     (4,496)   

 Depreciation charge

            (212     (456     (1     (669)   

 Disposals

            18        204        2        224    

 Exchange and other movements

            25        146               171    

 

 
 As at 31 December 2012             (1,414     (3,350     (6     (4,770)   

 

 
 Net book value      1,686        2,616        1,444        8        5,754    

 

 

Property rentals of £70m (2012: £105m) and £38m (2012: £52m) have been included in net investment income and other income respectively. Impairment of £86m (2012: £6m) was charged during the year in relation to premises restructuring in Europe. Investment property disposals of £1bn relate to real estate investments within Crescent Real Estate Holdings LLC, an investment company controlled by Barclays until December 2013.

The fair value of investment property is determined by reference to current market prices for similar properties, adjusted as necessary for condition and location, or by reference to recent transactions updated to reflect current economic conditions. Discounted cash flow techniques may be employed to calculate fair value where there have been no recent transactions, using current external market inputs such as market rents and interest rates. Valuations are carried out by management with the support of appropriately qualified independent valuers. Refer to Note 18 Fair value of assets and liabilities for further detail.

 

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Notes to the financial statements >

For the year ended 31 December 2013 continued

  

 

 

 

 

Note 25: Goodwill and intangible assets

 

Accounting for goodwill and other intangible assets

Goodwill

The carrying value of goodwill is determined in accordance with IFRS 3 Business Combinations and IAS 36 Impairment of Assets.

 

Goodwill arises on the acquisition of subsidiaries, associates and joint ventures, and represents the excess of the fair value of the purchase consideration over the fair value of the Group’s share of the assets acquired and the liabilities and contingent liabilities assumed on the date of the acquisition.

 

Goodwill is reviewed annually for impairment, or more frequently when there are indications that impairment may have occurred. The test involves comparing the carrying value of goodwill with the present value of the pre tax cash flows, discounted at a rate of interest that reflects the inherent risks, of the cash generating unit (CGU) to which the goodwill relates, or the CGU’s fair value if this is higher.

 

Intangible assets

The accounting standard that the Group applies in accounting for intangible assets other than goodwill is IAS 38 Intangible Assets.

 

Intangible assets include brands, customer lists, internally generated software, other software, licences and other contracts and core deposit intangibles. They are initially recognised when they are separable or arise from contractual or other legal rights, the cost can be measured reliably and, in the case of intangible assets not acquired in a business combination, where it is probable that future economic benefits attributable to the assets will flow from their use.

 

Intangible assets are stated at cost (which is, in the case of assets acquired in a business combination, the acquisition date fair value) less amortisation and provisions for impairment, if any, and are amortised over their useful lives in a manner that reflects the pattern to which they contribute to future cash flows, generally over 4-25 years.

 

Intangible assets are reviewed for impairment when there are indications that impairment may have occurred.

 

 

 
     Goodwill
£m
    Internally
generated
software
£m
    Other
software
£m
    Core
deposit
intangibles
£m
    Brands
£m
   

Customer
lists

£m

    Licences
and other
£m
   

Total

£m

 

 

 
 2013                 
 Cost                 
 As at 1 January 2013      6,585        1,844        478        243        149        1,638        476        11,413    
 Additions and disposals             617        79                      36        6        738    
 Exchange and other movements      (239     (50     (1     (49     (33     (131     (45     (548)   

 

 
 As at 31 December 2013      6,346        2,411        556        194        116        1,543        437        11,603    

 

 
 Accumulated amortisation and impairment                 
 As at 1 January 2013      (1,379     (809     (158     (96     (111     (717     (228     (3,498)   
 Disposals             52                                    3        55    
 Amortisation charge             (241     (38     (9     (13     (144     (35     (480)   
 Impairment charge      (79     (38     (19                          (3     (139)   
 Exchange and other movements      (10     37        (2     20        27        62        10        144    

 

 
 As at 31 December 2013      (1,468     (999     (217     (85     (97     (799     (253     (3,918)   

 

 
 Net book value      4,878        1,412        339        109        19        744        184        7,685    

 

 
 2012                 
 Cost                 
 As at 1 January 2012      6,697        1,437        328        287        166        1,724        444        11,083    
 Additions and disposals      29        446        115        (21     (1     19        34        621    
 Exchange and other movements      (141     (39     35        (23     (16     (105     (2     (291)   

 

 
 As at 31 December 2012      6,585        1,844        478        243        149        1,638        476        11,413    

 

 
 Accumulated amortisation and  impairment                 
 As at 1 January 2012      (1,392     (694     (114     (114     (106     (615     (202     (3,237)   
 Disposals             32        5        21        1        1        5        65    
 Amortisation charge             (162     (52     (11     (18     (152     (40     (435)   
 Impairment charge             (8                                 (2     (10)   
 Exchange and other movements      13        23        3        8        12        49        11        119    

 

 
 As at 31 December 2012      (1,379     (809     (158     (96     (111     (717     (228     (3,498)   

 

 
 Net book value      5,206        1,035        320        147        38        921        248        7,915    

 

 

 

 

 

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Note 25: Goodwill and intangible assets continued

Goodwill

Goodwill is allocated to business operations according to business segments as follows:

 

 

 
     2013        2012    
     £m        £m    

 

 

UK RBB

     3,142           3,144     

Europe RBB

     63           62     

Africa RBB

     690           863     

Barclaycard

     482           514     

Investment Bank

     77           93     

Corporate Banking

     112           139     

Wealth and Investment Management

     312           391     

 

 

Total net book value of goodwill

     4,878           5,206     

 

 

Critical accounting estimates and judgements

Goodwill

Testing goodwill for impairment involves a significant amount of estimation. This includes the identification of independent cash generating units and the allocation of goodwill to these units based on which units are expected to benefit from the acquisition. The allocation is reviewed following business reorganisation. Cash flow projections necessarily take into account changes in the market in which a business operates including the level of growth, competitive activity and, the impacts of regulatory change. Determining both the expected pre-tax cash flows and the risk adjusted interest rate appropriate to the operating unit requires the exercise of judgement. The estimation of pre-tax cash flows is sensitive to the periods for which detailed forecasts are available and to assumptions regarding the long-term sustainable cash flows.

Other intangible assets

Determining the estimated useful lives of intangible assets (such as those arising from contractual relationships) requires an analysis of circumstances and judgement. The assessment of whether an asset is exhibiting indicators of impairment as well as the calculation of impairment, which requires the estimate of future cash flows and fair values less costs to sell, also requires the preparation of cash flow forecasts and fair values for assets that may not be regularly bought and sold.

Impairment testing of goodwill

During 2013, the Group recognised an impairment charge of £79m (2012: nil) in respect of goodwill attributable to businesses acquired in a previous period by Wealth and Investment Management. Following a streamlining of operations within Wealth and Investment Management, the forecast future cashflows from these businesses have been revised and no longer support the carrying value of the goodwill. As a result the attributable goodwill balances have been fully impaired.

Key assumptions

The key assumptions used for impairment testing are set out below for each significant goodwill balance. Other goodwill of £1,091m (2012: £1,247m) was allocated to multiple cash-generating units which are not considered individually significant.

UK RBB

At 31 December 2013, goodwill relating to Woolwich was £3,130m (2012: £3,130m) of the total UK RBB balance. The carrying value of the cash generating unit (CGU) is determined using an allocation of total group shareholder funds excluding goodwill based on the CGU’s share of risk weighted assets before goodwill balances are added back. The recoverable amount of the CGU has been determined using cash flow predictions based on financial budgets approved by management and covering a five-year period, with a terminal growth rate of 2.1% (2012: 2.4%) applied thereafter. The forecast cash flows have been discounted at a pre-tax rate of 11.8% (2012: 12.4%). Based on these assumptions, the recoverable amount exceeded the carrying amount including goodwill by £8,628m (2012: £9,334m). A one percentage point change in the discount rate or the terminal growth rate would increase or decrease the recoverable amount by £1,757m (2012: £1,637m) and £1,210m (2012: £1,115m) respectively. A reduction in the forecast cash flows of 10% per annum would reduce the recoverable amount by £1,795m (2012: £1,767m).

Africa RBB

At 31 December 2013, goodwill relating to the Absa RBB CGU was £657m (2012: £829m) of the total Africa RBB balance. The carrying value of the CGU has been determined by using net asset value. The recoverable amount of Absa RBB has been determined using cash flow predictions based on financial budgets approved by management and covering a five year period, with a terminal growth rate of 6% (2012: 6%) applied thereafter. The forecast cash flows have been discounted at a pre-tax rate of 13.5% (2012: 13%). The recoverable amount calculated based on value in use exceeded the carrying amount including goodwill by £4,217m (2012: £3,133m). A one percentage point change in the discount rate or the terminal growth rate would increase or decrease the recoverable amount by £800m (2012: £813m) and £603m (2012: £623m) respectively. A reduction in the forecast cash flows of 10% p.a. would reduce the recoverable amount by £664m (2012: £643m).

 

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Notes to the financial statements >

For the year ended 31 December 2013 continued

 

 

 

 

Note 26: Operating leases

 

 

Accounting for operating leases

The Group applies IAS 17 Leases, for operating leases. An operating lease is a lease where substantially all of the risks and rewards of the leased assets remain with the lessor. Where the Group is the lessor, lease income is recognised on a straight-line basis over the period of the lease unless another systematic basis is more appropriate. The Group holds the leased assets on balance sheet within property, plant and equipment.

 

Where the Group is the lessee, rentals payable are recognised as an expense in the income statement on a straight-line basis over the lease term unless another systematic basis is more appropriate.

 

Operating lease receivables

The Group acts as lessor, whereby items of plant and equipment are purchased and then leased to third parties under arrangements qualifying as operating leases. The future minimum lease payments expected to be received under non-cancellable operating leases as at 31 December 2013 was £3m (2012: £4m).

Operating lease commitments

The Group leases various offices, branches and other premises under non-cancellable operating lease arrangements. With such operating lease arrangements, the asset is kept on the lessor’s balance sheet and the Group reports the future minimum lease payments as an expense over the lease term. The leases have various terms, escalation and renewal rights. There are no contingent rents payable.

Operating lease rentals of £645m (2012: £622m) have been included in administration and general expenses.

The future minimum lease payments by the Group under non-cancellable operating leases are as follows:

 

 

 
     2013      2012  
     Property      Equipment      Property      Equipment    
     £m      £m      £m      £m    

 

 

Not more than one year

     567         34         695         13     

Over one year but not more than five years

     1,220         124         1,290         3     

Over five years

     2,441         8         2,768         –     

 

 

Total

     4,228         166         4,753         16     

 

 

Total future minimum sublease payments to be received under non-cancellable subleases as at 31 December 2013 was £108m (2012: £22m).

 

 

 

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Accruals, provisions, contingent liabilities and legal proceedings

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The notes included in this section focus on the Group’s accruals, provisions and contingent liabilities. Provisions are recognised for present obligations arising as consequences of past events where it is probable that a transfer of economic benefit will be necessary to settle the obligation, and it can be reliably estimated. Contingent liabilities reflect potential liabilities that are not recognised on the balance sheet.

 

Note 27: Accruals, deferred income and other liabilities

 

Accounting for insurance contracts

The Group applies IFRS 4 Insurance Contracts to its insurance contracts. An insurance contract is a contract that compensates a third party against a loss from non-financial risk. Some wealth management and other products, such as life assurance contracts, combine investment and insurance features; these are treated as insurance contracts when they pay benefits that are at least 5% more than they would pay if the insured event does not occur.

 

Insurance liabilities include current best estimates of future contractual cash flows, claims handling, and administration costs in respect of claims. Liability adequacy tests are performed at each balance sheet date to ensure the adequacy of contract liabilities. Where a deficiency is highlighted by the tests, insurance liabilities are increased, any deficiency being recognised in the income statement.

 

Insurance premium revenue is recognised in the income statement in the period earned, net of reinsurance premiums payable, in net premiums from insurance contracts. Increases and decreases in insurance liabilities are recognised in the income statement in net claims and benefits on insurance contracts.

 

 

 

 
     2013
£m
       2012  
£m  
 

 

 
 Accruals and deferred income      5,179           4,874     
 Other creditors      4,937           4,934     
 Obligations under finance leases (see Note 22)      19           35     
 Insurance contract liabilities, including unit-linked liabilities      2,799           2,689     

 

 
 Accruals, deferred income and other liabilities      12,934           12,532     

 

 

Insurance liabilities relate principally to the Group’s long term business. Insurance contract liabilities associated with the Group’s short term non-life business are £108m (2012: £126m). The maximum amounts payable under all of the Group’s insurance products, ignoring the probability of insured events occurring and the contribution from investments backing the insurance policies, were £78bn (2012: £102bn) or £75bn (2012: £98bn) after reinsurance. Of this insured risk, £65bn (2012: £87bn) or £63bn (2012: £86bn)a after reinsurances was concentrated in short-term insurance contracts in Africa.

The impact to the income statement and equity under a reasonably possible change in the assumptions used to calculate the insurance liabilities would be £7m (2012: £7m).

 

Note

a 2012 amounts have been revised following a review of processes used to calculate the amount of risk ceded to reinsurers

 

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Notes to the financial statements >

For the year ended 31 December 2013 continued

  

 

 

 

 

Note 28: Provisions

 

 

Accounting for provisions

The Group applies IAS 37 Provisions, Contingent Liabilities and Contingent Assets in accounting for non-financial liabilities.

 

Provisions are recognised for present obligations arising as consequences of past events where it is more likely than not that a transfer of economic benefit will be necessary to settle the obligation, which can be reliably estimated. Provision is made for the anticipated cost of restructuring, including redundancy costs when an obligation exists; for example, when the Group has a detailed formal plan for restructuring a business and has raised valid expectations in those affected by the restructuring by announcing its main features or starting to implement the plan. Provision is made for undrawn loan commitments if it is probable that the facility will be drawn and result in the recognition of an asset at an amount less than the amount advanced.

 

 

 

 
    

Onerous

contracts

£m

   

Redundancy

and

restructuring

£m

   

Undrawn

contractually

committed

facilities and

guarantees

provided

£m

    Conduct remediation    

Other

conduct

£m

   

Litigation

£m

   

Sundry

provisions

£m

   

Total  

£m  

 
        

Payment

Protection

Insurance

redress

£m

   

Interest rate

hedging

product

redress

£m

         

 

 
As at 1 January 2013      104        71        159        986        814        213        200        219        2,766     
Additions      55        784        116        1,350        650        310        371        82        3,718     
Amounts utilised      (63     (332     (14     (1,365     (295     (130     (70     (11     (2,280)    
Unused amounts reversed      (5     (143     (98                   (5     (12     (65     (328)    
Exchange and other movements      9        8        2                             (4     (5     10     

 

 
As at 31 December 2013      100        388        165        971        1,169        388        485        220        3,886     

 

 

Provisions expected to be recovered or settled within no more than 12 months after 31 December 2013 were £3,577m (2012: £1,700m).

Conduct remediation

Conduct provisions comprise the estimated cost of making redress payments to customers, clients and counterparties for losses or damages associated with inappropriate judgement in the execution of our business activities. Conduct remediation largely relates to payment protection insurance and interest rate hedging products but also includes other smaller provisions across the retail and corporate businesses which are likely to be utilised within the next 18 months.

Critical accounting estimates and judgements

Payment Protection Insurance Redress

Following the conclusion of the 2011 Judicial Review, Barclays has raised provisions totalling £3.95bn against the cost of PPI redress and complaint handling costs. As at 31 December 2013, £2.98bn of the provision had been utilised, leaving a residual provision of £0.97bn.

Through to 31 December 2013, 1.0m (2012: 0.6m) customer initiated claimsa had been received and processed. The monthly volume of claims received has declined by 59% since the peak in May 2012, although the rate of decline has been less than previously expected. As a result an additional provision of £1.35bn was recognised in June 2013 to reflect this increased expectation of claims, a corresponding increase in cases referred to the Financial Ombudsman Service (FOS) and associated operational costs.

In August 2012, in accordance with regulatory standards, Barclays commenced a proactive mailing of the holders of approximately 750,000 policies. Of this population approximately 660,000 (2012: 100,000) had been contacted by 31 December 2013 and it is anticipated that the remainder will be contacted by 31 March 2014.

To date Barclays has upheld 74% (2012: 70%) of all claims receivedb, excluding payment of gestures of goodwill and claims for which no PPI policy exists. The average redress per valid policyc to date is £1,763 (2012: £1,705), comprising, where applicable, the refund of premium, compound interest charged and compensatory interest of 8%.

The current provision is calculated using a number of key assumptions which continue to involve significant management judgement:

 

¡

  Customer initiated claim volumes – claims received but not yet processed as at 31 December 2013 and an estimate of future
  claims initiated by customers where the volume is anticipated to decline over time

¡

  Proactive response rate – volume of claims in response to proactive mailing

¡

  Uphold rate – the percentage of claims that are upheld as being valid upon review

¡

  Average claim redress – the expected average payment to customers for upheld claims based on the type and age of the
  policy/policies

Notes

a Total claims received to date excluding those for which no PPI policy exists and excluding responses to proactive mailing. The volume for 31 December 2012 has been restated to exclude cases where there was no PPI policy: previously 1.1m.
b Average uphold rate per claim excluding those for which no PPI policy exists. The average uphold rate for 31 December 2012 has been restated to exclude cases where there was no PPI policy: previously 39%.
c Average redress stated on a per policy basis. The average redress for December 2012 has been restated on a policy basis: previously £2,750 (per valid claim basis).

 

 

 

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Note 28: Provisions continued

These assumptions remain subjective; in particular due to the uncertainty associated with future claims levels. The resulting provision represents Barclays’ best estimate of all future expected costs of PPI redress. However, it is possible the eventual outcome may differ from the current estimate and if this were to be material and adverse a further provision will be made, otherwise it is expected that any residual costs will be handled as part of normal operations. The provision also includes an estimate of our claims handling costs and those costs associated with claims that are subsequently referred to the FOS.

The following table details, by key assumption, actual data through to 31 December 2013, forecast assumptions used in the provision calculation and a sensitivity analysis illustrating the impact on the provision if the future expected assumptions prove too high or too low.

 

      Cumulative              Sensitivity Analysis      Cumulative    

Assumption

   actual      Future      increase/decrease      actual    
   to 31.12.13      Expected      in provision      to 31.12.12    

 

 

Customer initiated claims received and processeda

     970K         190K         50K = £90m         570K     

Proactive mailing

     660K         90K            100K     

Response rate to proactive mailing

     26%         25%         1% = £1m         27%     

Average uphold rate per claimb

     74%         73%         1% = £4m         70%     

Average redress per valid claimc

     £1,763         £1,726         £100 = £23m         £1,705     

 

 

During 2013, 45% (2012: 44%) of monthly average complaints received had no PPI associated with them. Furthermore, of the complaints received in 2013, 54% (2012: 43%) were from Claims Management Companies (CMC’s), with this proportion rising to 70% in December 2013.

Interest Rate Hedging Product Redress

On 29 June 2012, the FSA announced that a number of UK banks, including Barclays, would conduct a review and redress exercise in respect of interest rate hedging products sold on or after 1 December 2001 to retail clients or private customers categorised as being ‘non-sophisticated’ under the terms of the agreement. Barclays sold interest rate hedging products to approximately 4,000 retail clients or private customers within the relevant timeframe, of which approximately 2,900 have been categorised as non-sophisticated.

As at 31 December 2012, a provision of £850m had been recognised, reflecting management’s best estimate of future redress to customers categorised as non-sophisticated and related costs. The estimate was based on an extrapolation of the results of an initial pilot exercise across the population. The provision recognised in the balance sheet as at 31 December 2012 was £814m, after utilisation of £36m, primarily related to administrative costs.

During 2013, additional cases have been reviewed and further guidance has been provided by the FCA providing additional information upon which to estimate the provision. As a result, an additional provision of £650m was recognised in June 2013, bringing the cumulative expense to £1,500m. The provision recognised as at 31 December 2013 was £1,169m, after cumulative utilisation of £331m, primarily relating to administrative costs and £87m of redress costs incurred. An initial redress outcome had been communicated to nearly 30% of customers categorised as non-sophisticated that are being covered by the review. It is intended that redress outcomes will have been communicated to all customers that have opted into the review by June 2014. The timing of resulting payments will depend on customer acceptances and response times.

The form of redress for each non-sophisticated customer is uncertain. It may result in a full refund, as though the product had never been purchased, or an alternative product such as a cap. In addition, not all customers will be entitled to redress because some sales will have complied with relevant regulatory requirements at the time of sale.

The ultimate redress cost is also dependent on:

¡   The fair value of the underlying product and is therefore variable if interest rates move significantly;
¡   The administrative costs of completing the review and redress exercise;
¡   The length of time taken to complete the exercise, since an 8% p.a. interest charge is payable on product refund amounts.

No provision has been recognised in relation to claims from customers categorised as sophisticated, which are not covered by the redress exercise, or incremental consequential loss claims (above the 8% p.a. interest charge) from customers categorised as non-sophisticated. As at 31 December 2013, no significant incremental consequential loss claims from customers categorised as non-sophisticated had been agreed. These items will be monitored and future provisions will be recognised to the extent an obligation resulting in a probable outflow is identified.

While the Group expects that the provision as at 31 December 2013 will be sufficient to cover the full cost of completing the redress, the appropriate provision level will be kept under review and it is possible that the eventual costs could materially differ to the extent experience is not in line with current estimates.

Litigation

The Group is engaged in various legal proceedings, both in the UK and a number of other overseas jurisdictions, including the US. For further information in relation to legal proceedings and discussion of the associated uncertainties, please see Note 30 Legal, competition and regulatory matters.

Redundancy and Restructuring

The provision relates to major restructuring initiatives across the Group. The increase in the provision during 2013 is largely due to the Transform Programme and will likely be utilised within the next 12 months.

Notes

a Total claims received to date excluding those for which no PPI policy exists and excluding responses to proactive mailing. The volume for 31 December 2012 has been restated to exclude cases where there was no PPI policy: previously 1.1m.
b Average uphold rate per claim excluding those for which no PPI policy exists. The average uphold rate for 31 December 2012 has been restated to exclude cases where there was no PPI policy: previously 39%.
c Average redress stated on a per policy basis. The average redress for December 2012 has been restated on a policy basis: previously £2,750 (per valid claim basis)

 

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Notes to the financial statements >

For the year ended 31 December 2013 continued

 

 

 

 

Note 29: Contingent liabilities and commitments

 

 

Accounting for contingent liabilities

Contingent liabilities are possible obligations whose existence will be confirmed only by uncertain future events, and present obligations where the transfer of economic resources is uncertain or cannot be reliably measured. Contingent liabilities are not recognised on the balance sheet but are disclosed unless the outflow of economic resources is remote.

 

The following table summarises the nominal principal amount of contingent liabilities and commitments which are not recorded on balance sheet:

 

      2013      2012    
     £m      £m    

 

 

Guarantees and letters of credit pledged as collateral security

     15,226         15,855     

Performance guarantees, acceptances and endorsements

     5,958         6,406     

 

 

Contingent liabilities

     21,184         22,261     

 

 

Documentary credits and other short-term trade related transactions

     780         1,027     

 

 

Forward starting reverse repurchase agreementsa

     19,936         23,549     

 

 

Standby facilities, credit lines and other commitments

     254,855         247,816     

 

 

The Financial Services Compensation Scheme

The Financial Services Compensation Scheme (the FSCS) is the UK’s Government backed compensation scheme for customers of authorised institutions that are unable to pay claims. It provides compensation to depositors in the event that UK licensed deposit taking institutions are unable to meet their claims. The FSCS raises levies on UK licensed deposit taking institutions to meet such claims based on their share of UK deposits on 31 December of the year preceding the scheme year (which runs from 1 April to 31 March).

Compensation has previously been paid out by the FSCS funded by loan facilities totalling approximately £18bn provided by HM Treasury to FSCS in support of FSCS’s obligations to the depositors of banks declared in default. The interest rate chargeable on the loan and levied to the industry is subject to a floor equal to the HM Treasury’s own cost of borrowing, based on the relevant gilt rate (FSCS advises financial institutions to apply the 2024 UK Gilt rate published by the Debt Management Office to the Bradford & Bingley portion of the loan). The majority of the facility is expected to be recovered, with the exception of an estimated shortfall of £1bn which the FSCS intends to recover by levying the industry in three instalments across 2013, 2014 and 2015. In November 2013, HM Treasury communicated via the FSCS an additional expected shortfall in recoveries from Dunfermline Building Society, to be collected starting with an interim levy of £100m in 2014. Barclays has included an accrual of £148m in other liabilities (2012: £156m) in respect of the Barclays’ portion of the total levies raised by the FSCS.

Further details on contingent liabilities relating to legal and competition and regulatory matters can be found in Note 30.

Note 30: Legal, competition and regulatory matters

Barclays PLC (BPLC), Barclays Bank PLC (BBPLC) and the Group face legal, competition and regulatory challenges, many of which are beyond our control. The extent of the impact on BPLC, BBPLC and the Group of the legal, competition and regulatory matters in which BPLC, BBPLC and the Group are or may in the future become involved, cannot always be predicted but may materially impact our operations, financial results and condition and prospects.

Lehman Brothers

Background Information

In September 2009, motions were filed in the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of New York (Bankruptcy Court) by Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. (LBHI), the SIPA Trustee for Lehman Brothers Inc. (Trustee) and the Official Committee of Unsecured Creditors of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. (Committee). All three motions challenged certain aspects of the transaction pursuant to which Barclays Capital Inc. (BCI) and other companies in the Group acquired most of the assets of Lehman Brothers Inc. (LBI) in September 2008, as well as the court order approving the sale (Sale). The claimants sought an order voiding the transfer of certain assets to BCI, requiring BCI to return to the LBI estate any excess value BCI allegedly received, and declaring that BCI is not entitled to certain assets that it claims pursuant to the Sale documents and order approving the Sale (Rule 60 Claims). In January 2010, BCI filed its response to the motions and also filed a motion seeking delivery of certain assets that LBHI and LBI had failed to deliver as required by the Sale documents and the court order approving the Sale (together with the Trustee’s competing claims to those assets, Contract Claims).

Status

In February 2011, the Bankruptcy Court issued an Opinion rejecting the Rule 60 Claims and deciding some of the Contract Claims in the Trustee’s favour and some in favour of the Group. In July 2011, the Bankruptcy Court entered final Orders implementing its Opinion. The Group and the Trustee each appealed the Bankruptcy Court’s adverse rulings on the Contract Claims to the US District Court for the Southern District of New York (SDNY). LBHI and the Committee did not appeal the Bankruptcy Court’s ruling on the Rule 60 Claims. After briefing and argument, the SDNY issued an Opinion in June 2012, reversing one of the Bankruptcy Court’s rulings on the Contract Claims that had been adverse to the Group and affirming the Bankruptcy Court’s other rulings on the Contract Claims. In July 2012, the SDNY issued an amended Opinion, correcting certain errors but not otherwise modifying the rulings, along with an agreed judgement implementing the rulings in the Opinion (Judgement). Under the Judgement, the Group is entitled to receive: (i) $1.1bn (£0.7bn) from the Trustee in respect of ‘clearance box’ assets (Clearance Box Assets); and (ii) property held at various institutions in respect of the exchange traded derivatives accounts transferred to BCI in the Sale (ETD Margin). The Trustee has appealed the SDNY’s adverse rulings to the US Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit (Second Circuit). The current Judgement is stayed pending resolution of the Trustee’s appeal.

Note

a Loan commitments have been revised to incorporate forward starting reverse repurchase agreements.

 

 

 

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Note 30: Legal, competition and regulatory matters continued

Approximately $4.3bn (£2.6bn) of the assets to which the Group is entitled as part of the acquisition had not been received by 31 December 2013, approximately $2.7bn (£1.6bn) of which have been recognised as a receivable on the balance sheet as at that date. The unrecognised amount, approximately $1.6bn (£1.0bn) as of 31 December 2013 effectively represents a provision against the uncertainty inherent in the litigation and potential post-appeal proceedings and issues relating to the recovery of certain assets held by an institution outside the US. To the extent the Group ultimately receives in the future assets with a value in excess of the approximately $2.7bn (£1.6bn) recognised on the balance sheet as of 31 December 2013, it would result in a gain in income equal to such excess. It appears that the Trustee may dispute the Group’s entitlement to certain of the ETD Margin even in the event the Group prevails in the pending Second Circuit appeal proceedings. Moreover, there is uncertainty regarding recoverability of a portion of the ETD Margin not yet delivered to the Group that is held by an institution outside the US. Thus, the Group cannot reliably estimate how much of the ETD Margin the Group is ultimately likely to receive. Nonetheless, if the SDNY’s rulings are unaffected by future proceedings, but conservatively assuming the Group does not receive any ETD Margin that the Group believes may be subject to a post-appeal challenge by the Trustee or to uncertainty regarding recoverability, the Group will receive assets in excess of the $2.7bn (£1.6bn) recognised as a receivable on the Group’s balance sheet as at 31 December 2013. In a worst case scenario in which the Second Circuit reverses the SDNY’s rulings and determines that the Group is not entitled to any of the Clearance Box Assets or ETD Margin, the Group estimates that, after taking into account its effective provision, its total losses would be approximately $6bn (£3.6bn). Approximately $3.3bn (£2bn) of that loss would relate to Clearance Box Assets and ETD Margin previously received by the Group and prejudgement and post-judgement interest on such Clearance Box Assets and ETD Margin that would have to be returned or paid to the Trustee. In this context, the Group is satisfied with the valuation of the asset recognised on its balance sheet and the resulting level of effective provision.

Other

In May 2013 Citibank N.A. (Citi) filed an action against BBPLC in the SDNY alleging breach of an indemnity contract. In November 2008, BBPLC provided an indemnity to Citi in respect of losses incurred by Citi between 17 and 19 September 2008 in performing foreign exchange settlement services for LBI as LBI’s designated settlement member with CLS Bank International. Citi did not make a demand for payment under this indemnity until 1 February 2013 when it submitted a demand that included amounts which Barclays concluded it was not obligated to pay. Citi proceeded to file the action in May 2013, in which it claimed that Barclays was responsible for a ‘principal loss’ of $90.7m, but also claimed that BBPLC was obligated to pay Citi for certain alleged ‘funding losses’ from September 2008 to December 2012. In a June 2013 filing with the Court, Citi claimed that, in addition to the $90.7m principal loss claim, it was also claiming funding losses in an amount of at least $93.5m, consisting of alleged interest losses of over $55m and alleged capital charges of $38.5m. Both parties filed motions for partial summary judgement, and in November 2013 the SDNY ruled that: (i) Citi may only claim statutory prejudgment interest from 1 February 2013, the date upon which it made its indemnification demand on BBPLC; (ii) to the extent that Citi can prove it incurred actual funding losses in the form of interest and capital charges between September 2008 and December 2012, it is entitled to recover these losses under the indemnity provided by BBPLC; and (iii) BBPLC is entitled under the contract to demonstrate, as a defence to the funding loss claim, that Citi had no funding losses between September 2008 and December 2012 due to the fact that it held LBI deposits during that period in an amount greater than the principal amount Citi claims it lost in performing CLS services for LBI between 17 and 19 September 2008. Citi and BBPLC have reached an agreement in principle to settle this action (subject to negotiation and execution of definitive documentation).

American Depositary Shares

Background Information

BPLC, BBPLC and various current and former members of BPLC’s Board of Directors have been named as defendants in five proposed securities class actions consolidated in the SDNY. The consolidated amended complaint, filed in February 2010, asserted claims under Sections 11, 12(a)(2) and 15 of the Securities Act of 1933, alleging that registration statements relating to American Depositary Shares representing preferred stock, series 2, 3, 4 and 5 (Preferred Stock ADS) offered by BBPLC at various times between 2006 and 2008 contained misstatements and omissions concerning (amongst other things) BBPLC’s portfolio of mortgage-related (including US subprime-related) securities, BBPLC’s exposure to mortgage and credit market risk, and BBPLC’s financial condition.

Status

In January 2011, the SDNY granted the defendants’ motion to dismiss the complaint in its entirety, closing the case. In February 2011, the plaintiffs filed a motion asking the SDNY to reconsider in part its dismissal order, and, in May 2011, the SDNY denied in full the plaintiffs’ motion for reconsideration. The plaintiffs appealed both the dismissal and the denial of the motion for reconsideration to the Second Circuit.

In August 2013, the Second Circuit upheld the dismissal of the plaintiffs’ claims related to the series 2, 3 and 4 offerings, finding that they were time barred. However, the Second Circuit ruled that the plaintiffs should have been permitted to file a second amended complaint in relation to the series 5 offering claims, and remanded the action to the SDNY for further proceedings consistent with the Second Circuit’s decision. In September 2013, the plaintiffs filed a second amended complaint, which purports to assert claims concerning the series 5 offering as well as dismissed claims concerning the series 2, 3 and 4 offerings, and the defendants have moved to dismiss.

BBPLC considers that these Preferred Stock ADS-related claims against it are without merit and is defending them vigorously.

Mortgage-Related Activity and Litigation

The Group’s activities within the US residential mortgage sector during the period of 2005 through 2008 included sponsoring and underwriting approximately $39bn of private-label securitisations; economic underwriting exposure of approximately $34bn for other private-label securitisations; sales of approximately $0.2bn of loans to government sponsored enterprises (GSEs); and sales of approximately $3bn of loans to others. In addition, during this time period, approximately $19.4bn of loans (net of approximately $500m of loans sold during this period and subsequently repurchased) were also originated and sold to third parties by mortgage originator affiliates of an entity that the Group acquired in 2007 (Acquired Subsidiary).

 

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In connection with the Group’s loan sales and sponsored private-label securitisations, the Group provided certain loan level representations and warranties (R&Ws) generally relating to the underlying mortgages, the property, mortgage documentation and/or compliance with law. The Group was the sole provider of R&Ws with respect to approximately $5bn of Group sponsored securitizations, approximately $0.2bn of sales of loans to GSEs, and approximately $3bn of loans sold to others. In addition, the Acquired Subsidiary was the sole provider of R&Ws on all of the loans it sold to third parties. Other than approximately $1bn of loans sold to others for which R&Ws expired prior to 2012, there are no stated expiration provisions applicable to the R&Ws made by the Group or the Acquired Subsidiary. The Group’s R&Ws with respect to the $3bn of loans sold to others are related to loans that were generally sold at significant discounts and contained more limited R&Ws than loans sold to GSEs, the loans sold by the Acquired Subsidiary or those provided by the Group on approximately $5bn of the Group’s sponsored securitisations discussed above. R&Ws on the remaining approximately $34bn of the Group’s sponsored securitisations were primarily provided by third party originators directly to the securitisation trusts with a Group subsidiary, as depositor to the securitisation trusts, providing more limited R&Ws. Under certain circumstances, the Group and/or the Acquired Subsidiary may be required to repurchase the related loans or make other payments related to such loans if the R&Ws are breached. The unresolved repurchase requests received on or before 31 December 2013 associated with all R&Ws made by the Group or the Acquired Subsidiary on loans sold to GSEs and others and private-label activities had an original unpaid principal balance of approximately $1.7bn at the time of such sale.

Repurchase Claims

Substantially all of the unresolved repurchase requests discussed above relate to civil actions that have been commenced by the trustees for certain residential mortgage-backed securities (RMBS) securitisations, in which the trustees allege that the Group and/or the Acquired Subsidiary must repurchase loans that violated the operative R&Ws. The trustees in these actions have alleged that the operative R&Ws may have been violated with respect to a greater (but unspecified) amount of loans than the amount of loans previously stated in specific repurchase requests made by such trustees.

Residential Mortgage-Backed Securities Claims

The US Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA), acting for two US government-sponsored enterprises, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, filed lawsuits against 17 financial institutions in connection with Fannie Mae’s and Freddie Mac’s purchases of RMBS. The lawsuits allege, amongst other things, that the RMBS offering materials contained materially false and misleading statements and/or omissions. BBPLC and/or certain of its affiliates or former employees are named in two of these lawsuits, relating to sales between 2005 and 2007 of RMBS in which a Group subsidiary was lead or co-lead underwriter.

Both complaints demand, amongst other things: rescission and recovery of the consideration paid for the RMBS; and recovery for Fannie Mae’s and Freddie Mac’s alleged monetary losses arising out of their ownership of the RMBS. The complaints are similar to a number of other civil actions filed against BBPLC and/or certain of its affiliates by a number of other plaintiffs relating to purchases of RMBS. The Group considers that the claims against it are without merit and intends to defend them vigorously.

The original face amount of RMBS related to the claims against the Group in the FHFA actions and the other civil actions referred to above against the Group totalled approximately $9bn, of which approximately $2.6bn was outstanding as at 31 December 2013. Cumulative losses reported on these RMBS as at 31 December 2013 were approximately $0.5bn. If the Group were to lose these actions the Group believes it could incur a loss of up to the outstanding amount of the RMBS at the time of judgement (taking into account further principal payments after 31 December 2013), plus any cumulative losses on the RMBS at such time and any interest, fees and costs, less the market value of the RMBS at such time and less any reserves taken to date. The Group has estimated the total market value of these RMBS as at 31 December 2013 to be approximately $1.6bn. The Group may be entitled to indemnification for a portion of such losses.

Regulatory Inquiries

The Group has received inquiries, including subpoenas, from various regulatory and governmental authorities regarding its mortgage-related activities, and is cooperating with such inquiries.

Devonshire Trust

Background Information

In January 2009, BBPLC commenced an action in the Ontario Superior Court seeking an order that its early terminations of two credit default swaps under an ISDA Master Agreement with the Devonshire Trust (Devonshire), an asset-backed commercial paper conduit trust, were valid. On the same day that Barclays terminated the swaps, Devonshire purported to terminate the swaps on the ground that BBPLC had failed to provide liquidity support to Devonshire’s commercial paper when required to do so.

Status

In September 2011, the Ontario Superior Court ruled that BBPLC’s early terminations were invalid, Devonshire’s early terminations were valid and, consequently, Devonshire was entitled to receive back from BBPLC cash collateral of approximately C$533m together with accrued interest. BBPLC appealed the Ontario Superior Court’s decision to the Court of Appeal for Ontario. In July 2013, the Court of Appeal delivered its decision dismissing BBPLC’s appeal. In September 2013, BBPLC sought leave to appeal the decision to the Supreme Court of Canada. In January 2014, the Supreme Court of Canada denied BBPLC’s application for leave to appeal the decision of the Court of Appeal. BBPLC is considering its continuing options with respect to this matter. If the Court of Appeal’s decision is unaffected by any future proceedings, BBPLC estimates that its loss would be approximately C$500m, less any impairment provisions recognised to date. These provisions take full account of the Court of Appeal’s decision.

 

 

 

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LIBOR and other Benchmarks Civil Actions

Following the settlements of the investigations referred to below in “Investigations into LIBOR, ISDAfix, other benchmarks and foreign exchange rates”, a number of individuals and corporates in a range of jurisdictions have threatened or brought civil actions against the Group in relation to LIBOR and/or other benchmarks. The majority of the USD LIBOR cases, which have been filed in various US jurisdictions, have been consolidated for pre-trial purposes in the US District Court for the Southern District of New York (MDL Court). The complaints are substantially similar and allege, amongst other things, that BBPLC and the other banks individually and collectively violated provisions of the US Sherman Act, the US Commodity Exchange Act (CEA), the US Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (RICO) and various state laws by manipulating USD LIBOR rates. The lawsuits seek unspecified damages with the exception of three lawsuits, in which the plaintiffs are seeking a combined total of approximately $910m in actual damages against all defendants, including BBPLC, plus punitive damages. Some of the lawsuits seek trebling of damages under the US Sherman Act and RICO. Certain of the civil actions are proposed class actions that purport to be brought on behalf of (amongst others) plaintiffs that (i) engaged in USD LIBOR-linked over-the-counter transactions (OTC Class); (ii) purchased USD LIBOR-linked financial instruments on an exchange (Exchange-Based Class); (iii) purchased USD LIBOR-linked debt securities (Debt Securities Class); (iv) purchased adjustable-rate mortgages linked to USD LIBOR; or (v) issued loans linked to USD LIBOR.

In March 2013, the MDL Court issued a decision dismissing the majority of claims against BBPLC and the other banks in three lead proposed class actions (Lead Class Actions) and three lead individual actions (Lead Individual Actions). Following the decision, plaintiffs in the Lead Class Actions sought permission to either file an amended complaint or appeal an aspect of the March 2013 decision. In August 2013, the MDL Court denied the majority of the motions presented in the Lead Class Actions. As a result, the Debt Securities Class has been dismissed entirely; the claims of the Exchange-Based Class have been limited to claims under the CEA; and the claims of the OTC Class have been limited to claims for unjust enrichment and breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing. Subsequent to the MDL Court’s March 2013 decision, the plaintiffs in the Lead Individual Actions filed a new action in California state court (since moved to the MDL Court) based on the same allegations as those initially alleged in the proposed class action cases discussed above. Various plaintiffs may attempt to bring appeals of some or all of the MDL Court’s decisions in the future.

Additionally, a number of other actions before the MDL Court remain stayed, pending further proceedings in the Lead Class Actions.

Until there are further decisions, the ultimate impact of the MDL Court’s decisions will be unclear, although it is possible that the decisions will be interpreted by courts to affect other litigation, including the actions described below, some of which concern different benchmark interest rates.

BBPLC and other banks also have been named as defendants in other individual and proposed class actions filed in other US District Courts in which plaintiffs allege, similar to the plaintiffs in the USD LIBOR cases referenced above, that in various periods defendants either individually or collectively manipulated the USD LIBOR, Yen LIBOR, Euroyen TIBOR and/or EURIBOR rates. Plaintiffs generally allege that they transacted in loans, derivatives and/or other financial instruments whose values are affected by changes in USD LIBOR, Yen LIBOR, Euroyen TIBOR and/or EURIBOR, and assert claims under federal and state law. In October 2012, the US District Court for the Central District of California dismissed a proposed class action on behalf of holders of adjustable rate mortgages linked to USD LIBOR. Plaintiffs have appealed, and briefing of the appeal is complete.

In addition, BPLC has been granted conditional leniency from the Antitrust Division of the US Department of Justice (DOJ-AD) in connection with potential US antitrust law violations with respect to financial instruments that reference EURIBOR. As a result of that grant of conditional leniency, BPLC is eligible for (i) a limit on liability to actual rather than treble damages if damages were to be awarded in any civil antitrust action under US antitrust law based on conduct covered by the conditional leniency and (ii) relief from potential joint-and-several liability in connection with such civil antitrust action, subject to BPLC satisfying the DOJ-AD and the court presiding over the civil litigation of its satisfaction of its cooperation obligations.

BPLC, BBPLC and BCI have also been named as defendants along with four former officers and directors of BBPLC in a proposed securities class action pending in the SDNY in connection with BBPLC’s role as a contributor panel bank to LIBOR. The complaint asserts claims under Sections 10(b) and 20(a) of the US Securities Exchange Act 1934, principally alleging that BBPLC’s Annual Reports for the years 2006 to 2011 contained misstatements and omissions concerning (amongst other things) BBPLC’s compliance with its operational risk management processes and certain laws and regulations. The complaint also alleges that BBPLC’s daily USD LIBOR submissions constituted false statements in violation of US securities law. The complaint was brought on behalf of a proposed class consisting of all persons or entities that purchased BPLC-sponsored American Depositary Receipts on a US securities exchange between 10 July 2007 and 27 June 2012. In May 2013, the court granted BBPLC’s motion to dismiss the complaint in its entirety. Plaintiffs have appealed, and briefing of the appeal is complete.

In addition to US actions, legal proceedings have been brought or threatened against the Group in connection with alleged manipulation of LIBOR and EURIBOR, in a number of jurisdictions. The first of which in England and Wales, brought by Graiseley Properties Limited, is set down for trial in the High Court of Justice in April 2014. The number of such proceedings, the benchmarks to which they relate, and the jurisdictions in which they may be brought are anticipated to increase over time.

Civil Actions in Respect of Foreign Exchange Trading

Since November 2013, a number of civil actions have been filed in the SDNY on behalf of proposed classes of plaintiffs alleging manipulation of foreign exchange markets under the US Sherman Antitrust Act and New York state law and naming several international banks as defendants, including BBPLC.

Please see below ‘Investigations into LIBOR, ISDAfix, other benchmarks and foreign exchange rates’ for a discussion of competition and regulatory matters connected to “LIBOR and other Benchmark Civil Actions”.

 

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Investigations into LIBOR, ISDAfix, other Benchmarks and Foreign Exchange Rates

The Financial Conduct Authority (FCA), the US Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), the US Department of Justice (DOJ) Fraud Section (DOJ-FS) and Antitrust Division (DOJ-AD), the European Commission (Commission), the United Kingdom (UK) Serious Fraud Office (SFO), the Monetary Authority of Singapore, the Japan Financial Services Agency, the prosecutors’ office in Trani, Italy and various US state attorneys general are amongst various authorities conducting investigations (Investigations) into submissions made by BBPLC and other financial institutions to the bodies that set or compile various financial benchmarks, such as LIBOR and EURIBOR.

On 27 June 2012, BBPLC announced that it had reached settlements with the Financial Services Authority (FSA) (as predecessor to the FCA), the CFTC and the DOJ-FS in relation to their Investigations and BBPLC agreed to pay total penalties of £290m, which were reflected in operating expenses for 2012. The settlements were made by entry into a Settlement Agreement with the FSA, a Non-Prosecution Agreement (NPA) with the DOJ-FS and a Settlement Order Agreement with the CFTC (CFTC Order). In addition, BBPLC was granted conditional leniency from the DOJ-AD in connection with potential US antitrust law violations with respect to financial instruments that reference EURIBOR.

The terms of the Settlement Agreement with the FSA are confidential. However, the Final Notice of the FSA, which imposed a financial penalty of £59.5m, is publicly available on the website of the FCA. This sets out the FSA’s reasoning for the penalty, references the settlement principles and sets out the factual context and justification for the terms imposed. Summaries of the NPA and the CFTC Order are set out below. The full text of the NPA and the CFTC Order are publicly available on the websites of the DOJ and the CFTC, respectively.

In addition to a $200m civil monetary penalty, the CFTC Order requires BBPLC to cease and desist from further violations of specified provisions of the US Commodity Exchange Act and take specified steps to ensure the integrity and reliability of its benchmark interest rate submissions, including LIBOR and EURIBOR, and improve related internal controls. Amongst other things, the CFTC Order requires BBPLC to:

 

¡   make its submissions based on certain specified factors, with BBPLC’s transactions being given the greatest weight, subject to certain specified adjustments and considerations;

 

¡   implement firewalls to prevent improper communications including between traders and submitters;

 

¡   prepare and retain certain documents concerning submissions and retain relevant communications;

 

¡   implement auditing, monitoring and training measures concerning its submissions and related processes;

 

¡   make regular reports to the CFTC concerning compliance with the terms of the CFTC Order;

 

¡   use best efforts to encourage the development of rigorous standards for benchmark interest rates; and

 

¡   continue to cooperate with the CFTC’s ongoing investigation of benchmark interest rates.

As part of the NPA, BBPLC agreed to pay a $160m penalty. In addition, the DOJ agreed not to prosecute BBPLC for any crimes (except for criminal tax violations, as to which the DOJ cannot and does not make any agreement) related to BBPLC’s submissions of benchmark interest rates, including LIBOR and EURIBOR, contingent upon BBPLC’s satisfaction of specified obligations under the NPA. In particular, under the NPA, BBPLC agreed for a period of two years from 26 June 2012, amongst other things, to:

 

¡   commit no US crime whatsoever;

 

¡   truthfully and completely disclose non-privileged information with respect to the activities of BBPLC, its officers and employees, and others concerning all matters about which the DOJ inquires of it, which information can be used for any purpose, except as otherwise limited in the NPA;

 

¡   bring to the DOJ’s attention all potentially criminal conduct by BBPLC or any of its employees that relates to fraud or violations of the laws governing securities and commodities markets; and

 

¡   bring to the DOJ’s attention all criminal or regulatory investigations, administrative proceedings or civil actions brought by any governmental authority in the US by or against BBPLC or its employees that alleges fraud or violations of the laws governing securities and commodities markets.

BBPLC also agreed to cooperate with the DOJ and other government authorities in the US in connection with any investigation or prosecution arising out of the conduct described in the NPA, which commitment shall remain in force until all such investigations and prosecutions are concluded. BBPLC also continues to cooperate with the other ongoing investigations.

Following the settlements announced in June 2012, 31 US state attorneys general commenced their own investigations into LIBOR, EURIBOR and the Tokyo Interbank Offered Rate. The New York Attorney General, on behalf of this coalition of attorneys general, issued a subpoena in July 2012 to BBPLC (and subpoenas to a number of other banks) to produce wide-ranging information and has since issued additional information requests to BBPLC for both documents and transactional data. BBPLC is responding to these requests on a rolling basis. In addition, following the settlements the SFO announced in July 2012 that it had decided to investigate the LIBOR matter, in respect of which BBPLC has received and continues to respond to requests for information.

The Commission has also been conducting investigations into the manipulation of, among other things, EURIBOR. On 4 December 2013, the Commission announced that it has reached a settlement with the Group and a number of other banks in relation to anti-competitive conduct concerning EURIBOR. The Group had voluntarily reported the EURIBOR conduct to the Commission and cooperated fully with the Commission’s investigation. In recognition of this cooperation, the Group was granted full immunity from the financial penalties that would otherwise have applied.

The CFTC and the FCA are also conducting separate investigations into historical practices with respect to ISDAfix, amongst other benchmarks. BBPLC has received and continues to respond to subpoenas and requests for information.

 

 

 

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Various regulatory and enforcement authorities, including the FCA in the UK, the CFTC, the DOJ, the SEC and the New York State Department of Financial Services in the US, and the Hong Kong Monetary Authority are investigating foreign exchange trading, including possible attempts to manipulate certain benchmark currency exchange rates or engage in other activities that would benefit their trading positions. Certain of these investigations involve multiple market participants in various countries. BBPLC has received enquiries from certain of these authorities related to their particular investigations, and from other regulators interested in foreign exchange issues. The Group is reviewing its foreign exchange trading covering a several year period through October 2013 and is cooperating with the relevant authorities in their investigations.

For a discussion of litigation arising in connection with these investigations see “LIBOR and other Benchmarks Civil Actions” and “Civil Actions in Respect of Foreign Exchange Trading” above.

FERC

Background Information

The US Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) Office of Enforcement investigated the Group’s power trading in the western US with respect to the period from late 2006 through 2008. In October 2012, FERC issued an Order to Show Cause and Notice of Proposed Penalties (Order and Notice) against BBPLC and four of its former traders in relation to this matter. In the Order and Notice, FERC asserted that BBPLC and its former traders violated FERC’s Anti-Manipulation Rule by manipulating the electricity markets in and around California from November 2006 to December 2008, and proposed civil penalties and profit disgorgement to be paid by BBPLC. In July 2013, FERC issued an Order Assessing Civil Penalties in which it assessed a $435m civil penalty against BBPLC and ordered BBPLC to disgorge an additional $34.9m of profits plus interest (both of which are consistent with the amounts proposed in the Order and Notice).

Status

In October 2013, FERC filed a civil action against BBPLC and its former traders in the US District Court in California seeking to collect the penalty and disgorgement amount. FERC’s complaint in the civil action reiterates the allegations previously made by FERC in its October 2012 Order and Notice and its July 2013 Order Assessing Civil Penalties. BBPLC is vigorously defending this action. BBPLC and its former traders have filed a motion to dismiss the action for improper venue or, in the alternative, to transfer it to the SDNY, and a motion to dismiss the complaint for failure to state a claim. In September 2013, BBPLC was contacted by the criminal division of the US Attorney’s Office in the Southern District of New York and advised that such office is looking at the same conduct at issue in the FERC matter.

BDC Finance L.L.C.

Background Information

In October 2008, BDC Finance L.L.C. (BDC) filed a complaint in the Supreme Court of the State of New York (NY Supreme Court) alleging that BBPLC breached an ISDA Master Agreement and a Total Return Loan Swap Master Confirmation (Agreement) governing a total return swap transaction when it failed to transfer approximately $40m of alleged excess collateral in response to BDC’s October 2008 demand (Demand). BDC asserts that under the Agreement BBPLC was not entitled to dispute the Demand before transferring the alleged excess collateral and that even if BBPLC was entitled to do so, it failed to dispute the Demand. BDC demands damages totalling $297m plus attorneys’ fees, expenses, and prejudgement interest.

Status

In August 2012, the NY Supreme Court granted partial summary judgement for BBPLC, ruling that BBPLC was entitled to dispute the Demand, before transferring the alleged excess collateral, but determining that a trial was required to determine whether BBPLC actually did so. The parties cross-appealed to the Appellate Division of the NY Supreme Court (Appellate Division). In October 2013, the Appellate Division reversed the NY Supreme Court’s grant of partial summary judgement to BBPLC, and instead granted BDC’s motion for partial summary judgement, holding that BBPLC breached the Agreement. The Appellate Division did not rule on the amount of BDC’s damages, which has not yet been determined by the NY Supreme Court. On 25 November 2013, BBPLC filed a motion with the Appellate Division for reargument or, in the alternative, for leave to appeal to the New York Court of Appeals. In January 2014, the Appellate Division issued an order denying the motion for reargument and granting the motion for leave to appeal to the New York Court of Appeals. In September 2011, BDC’s investment advisor, BDCM Fund Adviser, L.L.C. and its parent company, Black Diamond Capital Holdings, L.L.C. also sued BBPLC and BCI in Connecticut state court for unspecified damages allegedly resulting from BBPLC’s conduct relating to the Agreement, asserting claims for violation of the Connecticut Unfair Trade Practices Act and tortious interference with business and prospective business relations. The parties have agreed to a stay of that case.

Interchange Investigations

The Office of Fair Trading, as well as other competition authorities elsewhere in Europe, continues to investigate Visa and MasterCard credit and debit interchange rates. BPLC receives interchange fees, as a card issuer, from providers of card acquiring services to merchants. The key risks arising from the investigations comprise the potential for fines imposed by competition authorities, litigation and proposals for new legislation. BPLC may be required to pay fines or damages and could be affected by legislation amending interchange rules.

Interest Rate Hedging Products

See Note 28 Provisions.

Credit Default Swap (CDS) Antitrust Investigations

Both the Commission and the DOJ-AD have commenced investigations in the CDS market (in 2011 and 2009, respectively). In July 2013 the Commission addressed a Statement of Objections to BBPLC and 12 other banks, Markit and ISDA. The case relates to concerns that certain banks took collective action to delay and prevent the emergence of exchange traded credit derivative products. If the Commission does reach a decision in this matter it has indicated that it intends to impose sanctions. The Commission’s sanctions can include fines. The DOJ-AD’s investigation is a civil investigation and relates to similar issues. Proposed class actions alleging similar issues have also been filed in the US. The timing of these cases is uncertain.

 

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Swiss/US Tax Programme

In August 2013, the DOJ and the Swiss Federal Department of Finance announced the Programme for Non-Prosecution Agreements or Non-Targeted letters for Swiss Banks (Programme). This agreement is the consequence of a long-running dispute between the US and Switzerland regarding tax obligations of US Related Accounts held in Swiss banks.

Barclays Bank (Suisse) SA and Barclays Bank plc Geneva Branch are participating in the Programme, which requires a structured review of US accounts. This review is ongoing and the outcome of the review will determine whether any agreement will be entered into or sanction applied to Barclays Bank (Suisse) SA and Barclays Bank plc Geneva Branch. The deadline for completion of the review is 30 April 2014.

Investigations into Certain Agreements

The FCA has investigated certain agreements, including two advisory services agreements entered into by BBPLC with Qatar Holding LLC (Qatar Holding) in June and October 2008 respectively, and whether these may have related to BPLC’s capital raisings in June and November 2008.

The FCA issued warning notices (Warning Notices) against BPLC and BBPLC in September 2013. The existence of the advisory services agreement entered into in June 2008 was disclosed but the entry into the advisory services agreement in October 2008 and the fees payable under both agreements, which amount to a total of £322m payable over a period of five years, were not disclosed in the announcements or public documents relating to the capital raisings in June and November 2008. While the Warning Notices consider that BPLC and BBPLC believed at the time that there should be at least some unspecified and undetermined value to be derived from the agreements, they state that the primary purpose of the agreements was not to obtain advisory services but to make additional payments, which would not be disclosed, for the Qatari participation in the capital raisings. The Warning Notices conclude that BPLC and BBPLC were in breach of certain disclosure-related listing rules and BPLC was also in breach of Listing Principle 3 (the requirement to act with integrity towards holders and potential holders of the company’s shares). In this regard, the FCA considers that BPLC and BBPLC acted recklessly. The financial penalty in the Warning Notices against the group is £50m. BPLC and BBPLC continue to contest the findings.

The FCA proceedings are now subject to a stay pending progress in an investigation by the SFO’s Fraud Office into the same agreements. The SFO’s investigation is at an earlier stage and the Group has received and has continued to respond to requests for further information.

The DOJ and the SEC are undertaking an investigation into whether the Group’s relationships with third parties who assist BPLC to win or retain business are compliant with the United States Foreign Corrupt Practices Act. They are also investigating the agreements referred to above including the two advisory services agreements. The US Federal Reserve has requested to be kept informed.

General

The outcomes of the matters disclosed in this note are difficult to predict. The Group has not disclosed an estimate of the potential financial effect on the Group of contingent liabilities arising from these matters where it is not practicable to do so or, in cases where it is practicable, where disclosure could prejudice conduct of the matters. Provisions have been recognised for those cases where the Group is able reliably to estimate probable losses. The Group may incur significant expense in connection with these matters, regardless of the ultimate outcome; furthermore these matters could expose the Group to any of the following: substantial monetary damages and fines; other penalties and injunctive relief; potential for additional civil or private litigation; potential for criminal prosecution in certain circumstances; potential regulatory restrictions on the Group’s business; and/or a negative effect on the Group’s reputation. There is also a risk that such investigations or proceedings may give rise to changes in law or regulation as part of a wider response by relevant law makers and regulators. Any of these risks, should they materialise, could have an adverse impact on the Group’s operations, financial results and condition and prospects.

As mentioned above, the Group is subject to a NPA entered into with the DOJ in connection with the LIBOR investigations. Under the NPA, the Group has agreed that, for a period of two years from 26 June 2012, it will, amongst other things, commit no US crime whatsoever and will comply with certain obligations to provide information to and co-operate with US authorities. A breach of any of the NPA provisions could lead to prosecutions in relation to the Group’s benchmark interest rate submissions and could have significant consequences for the Group’s current and future business operations in the US.

The Group is engaged in various other legal, competition and regulatory matters both in the UK and a number of overseas jurisdictions. It is subject to legal proceedings by and against the Group which arise in the ordinary course of business from time to time, including (but not limited to) disputes in relation to contracts, securities, debt collection, consumer credit, fraud, trusts, client assets, competition, data protection, money laundering, employment, environmental and other statutory and common law issues.

The Group is also subject to enquiries and examinations, requests for information, audits, investigations and legal and other proceedings by regulators, governmental and other public bodies in connection with (but not limited to) consumer protection measures, compliance with legislation and regulation, wholesale trading activity and other areas of banking and business activities in which the Group is or has been engaged.

At the present time, the Group does not expect the ultimate resolution of any of these other matters not disclosed in this note to which it is a party to have a material adverse effect on its financial position. The Group has not disclosed an estimate of the potential financial effect on the Group of contingent liabilities where it is not practicable to do so or, in cases where it is practicable, where disclosure could prejudice conduct of matters. However, in light of the uncertainties involved in such matters, there can be no assurance that the outcome of a particular matter or matters will not be material to the Group’s results of operations or cash flow for a particular period, depending on, among other things, the amount of the loss resulting from the matter(s) and the amount of income otherwise reported for the reporting period.

 

 

 

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  Capital instruments, equity and reserves

 

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The notes included in this section focus on the Group’s loan capital and shareholders equity including issued share capital, retained earnings, other equity balances and interests of minority shareholders in our subsidiary entities (non-controlling interests). For more information on capital management and how the Group maintains sufficient capital to meet our regulatory requirements see pages 199 to 207.

 

Note 31: Subordinated liabilities

 

 

Accounting for subordinated debt

Subordinated debt is measured at amortised cost using the effective interest method under IAS 39.

 

Subordinated liabilities include accrued interest and comprise undated and dated loan capital as follows:

 

 
     2013         2012     
     £m      £m    

 

 

Undated subordinated liabilities

     6,127         6,740     

Dated subordinated liabilities

     15,568         17,278     

 

 

Total subordinated liabilities

     21,695         24,018     

 

 

None of the Group’s loan capital is secured. Regulatory capital differs from the amounts recorded in the balance sheet due to PRA requirements relating to: capital eligibility criteria; amortisation of principal in the final five years to maturity; and the exclusion of the impact of fair value hedging.

 

 

 

Undated subordinated liabilities

                                  

 

 
            Subordinated liability                
            per balance sheet      Regulatory capital  
  

 

 

 
            2013      2012      2013      2012    
     Initial call date      £m      £m      £m      £m    

 

 

Barclays Bank PLC issued

              

Tier One Notes (TONs)

              

6% Callable Perpetual Core Tier One Notes

     2032         105         116         89         89     

6.86% Callable Perpetual Core Tier One Notes (US$681m)

     2032         613         720         411         420     

Reserve Capital Instruments (RCIs)

              

5.926% Step-up Callable Perpetual Reserve Capital Instruments (US$533m)

     2016         368         393         319         327     

7.434% Step-up Callable Perpetual Reserve Capital Instruments (US$347m)

     2017         244         261         209         213     

6.3688% Step-up Callable Perpetual Reserve Capital Instruments

     2019         114         117         95         95     

14% Step-up Callable Perpetual Reserve Capital Instruments

     2019         2,951         3,298         2,154         2,150     

5.3304% Step-up Callable Perpetual Reserve Capital Instruments

     2036         107         113         81         81     

 

 

Total Tier 1 capital instruments included in subordinated liabilities

        4,502         5,018         3,358         3,375     

Undated Notes

              

6.875% Undated Subordinated Notes

     2015         145         152         135         135     

6.375% Undated Subordinated Notes

     2017         146         153         133         133     

7.7% Undated Subordinated Notes (US$99m)

     2018         67         72         61         62     

8.25% Undated Subordinated Notes

     2018         151         165         139         140     

7.125% Undated Subordinated Notes

     2020         198         215         158         158     

6.125% Undated Subordinated Notes

     2027         223         233         196         196     

Junior Undated Floating Rate Notes (US$121m)

     Any interest payment date         66         75         66         133     

Undated Floating Rate Primary Capital Notes Series 3

     Any interest payment date         145         146         145         145     

Bonds

              

9.25% Perpetual Subordinated Bonds (ex-Woolwich PLC)

     2021         91         99         75         75     

9% Permanent Interest Bearing Capital Bonds

     At any time         42         47         40         40     

Loans

              

5.03% Reverse Dual Currency Undated Subordinated Loan (Yen 8,000m)

     2028         39         47         46         57     

5% Reverse Dual Currency Undated Subordinated Loan (Yen 12,000m)

     2028         58         72         69         86     

Barclays SLCSM Funding B.V. guaranteed by the Bank

              

6.140% Fixed Rate Guaranteed Perpetual Subordinated Notes

     2015         254         246         259         265     

 

 

Total undated subordinated liabilities

        6,127         6,740         4,880         5,000     

 

 

 

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Notes to the financial statements >

For the year ended 31 December 2013 continued

 

 

 

 

Note 31: Subordinated liabilities continued

Undated loan capital

Undated loan capital is issued by the Bank and its subsidiaries for the development and expansion of their business and to strengthen their capital bases. The principal terms of the undated loan capital are described below:

Subordination

All undated loan capital ranks behind the claims against the bank of depositors and other unsecured unsubordinated creditors and holders of dated loan capital in the following order: Junior Undated Floating Rate Notes; other issues of Undated Notes, Bonds and Loans-ranking pari passu with each other; followed by TONs and RCIs-ranking pari passu with each other.

Interest

All undated loan capital bears a fixed rate of interest until the initial call date, with the exception of the 9% Bonds which are fixed for the life of the issue, and the Junior and Series 3 Undated Notes which are floating rate.

After the initial call date, in the event that they are not redeemed, the 6.875%, 6.375%, 7.125%, 6.125% Undated Notes, the 9.25% Bonds and the 6.140% Perpetual Notes will bear interest at rates fixed periodically in advance for five year periods based on market rates. All other undated loan capital except the two floating rate Undated Notes will bear interest, and the two floating rate Undated Notes currently bear interest, at rates fixed periodically in advance based on London interbank rates.

Payment of interest

Barclays Bank PLC is not obliged to make a payment of interest on its Undated Notes, Bonds and Loans excluding the 7.7% Undated Notes, 8.25% Undated Notes, 9.25% Bonds and 6.140% Perpetual Notes if, in the preceding six months, a dividend has not been declared or paid on any class of shares of Barclays PLC or, in certain cases, any class of preference shares of the Bank. The Bank is not obliged to make a payment of interest on its 9.25% Perpetual Subordinated Bonds if, in the immediately preceding 12 months’ interest period, a dividend has not been paid on any class of its share capital. Interest not so paid becomes payable in each case if such a dividend is subsequently paid or in certain other circumstances. During the year, the Bank declared and paid dividends on its ordinary shares and on all classes of preference shares.

No payment of principal or any interest may be made unless the Bank satisfies a specified solvency test.

The Bank may elect to defer any payment of interest on the 7.7% Undated Notes and 8.25% Undated Notes. Until such time as any deferred interest has been paid in full, neither the Bank nor Barclays PLC may declare or pay a dividend, subject to certain exceptions, on any of its ordinary shares, preference shares, or other share capital or satisfy any payments of interest or coupons on certain other junior obligations.

The Issuer and the Bank may elect to defer any payment of interest on the 6.140% Perpetual Notes. However, any deferred interest will automatically become immediately due and payable on the earlier of: (i) the date on which any dividend or other distribution or interest or other payment is made in respect of any pari passu or any junior obligations or on which any pari passu or any junior obligations are purchased, (ii) the date of redemption or purchase of the 6.140% Perpetual Notes and (iii) certain other events including bankruptcy, liquidation or winding up of the Issuer or the Bank.

The Bank may elect to defer any payment of interest on the RCIs. Any such deferred payment of interest must be paid on the earlier of: (i) the date of redemption of the RCIs, (ii) the coupon payment date falling on or nearest to the tenth anniversary of the date of deferral of such payment, and (iii) in respect of the 14% RCIs only, substitution. Whilst such deferral is continuing, neither the Bank nor Barclays PLC may declare or pay a dividend, subject to certain exceptions, on any of its ordinary shares or preference shares.

The Bank may elect to defer any payment of interest on the TONs if it determines that it is, or such payment would result in it being, in non-compliance with capital adequacy requirements and policies of the PRA. Any such deferred payment of interest will only be payable on a redemption of the TONs. Until such time as the Bank next makes a payment of interest on the TONs, neither the Bank nor Barclays PLC may (i) declare or pay a dividend, subject to certain exceptions, on any of their respective ordinary shares or Preference Shares, or make payments of interest in respect of the Bank’s Reserve Capital Instruments and (ii) certain restrictions on the redemption, purchase or reduction of their respective share capital and certain other securities also apply.

Repayment

All undated loan capital is repayable, at the option of the Bank generally in whole at the initial call date and on any subsequent coupon or interest payment date or in the case of the 6.875%, 6.375%, 7.125%, 6.125% Undated Notes, the 9.25% Bonds and the 6.140% Perpetual Notes on any fifth anniversary after the initial call date. In addition, each issue of undated loan capital is repayable, at the option of the Bank, in whole for certain tax reasons, either at any time, or on an interest payment date. There are no events of default except non-payment of principal or mandatory interest. Any repayments require the prior approval of the PRA.

Other

All issues of undated loan capital have been made in the Euro currency market and/or under Rule 144A, and no issues have been registered under the US Securities Act of 1933.

All issues of undated subordinated liabilities are non-convertible.

 

 

 

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Note 31: Subordinated liabilities continued

 

 

Dated subordinated liabilities

                 

 

 
                   Subordinated liabilities per                
                   balance sheet      Regulatory capital  
  

 

 

 
     Initial                                     
     call      Maturity      2013      2012      2013      2012   
     date      date      £m      £m      £m      £m   

 

 

Barclays Bank PLC issued

                 

5.015% Subordinated Notes (US$150m)

        2013                 96                 19    

4.875% Subordinated Notes (750m)

        2013                 636                 122    

Callable Fixed/Floating Rate Subordinated Notes (1,000m)

     2014         2019         866         861         833         815    

4.38% Fixed Rate Subordinated Notes (US$75m)

        2015         49         52         18         27    

4.75% Fixed Rate Subordinated Notes (US$150m)

        2015         97         103         36         56    

5.14% Lower Tier 2 Notes (US$1,094m)

     2015         2020         706         885         662         773    

6.05% Fixed Rate Subordinated Notes (US$2,250m)

        2017         1,073         1,635         740         1,391    

Floating Rate Subordinated Notes (40m)

        2018         33         33         33         33    

6% Fixed Rate Subordinated Notes (1,750m)

        2018         1,554         1,519         1,459         1,427    

CMS-Linked Subordinated Notes (100m)

        2018         87         85         83         82    

CMS-Linked Subordinated Notes (135m)

        2018         116         114         113         110    

Fixed/Floating Rate Subordinated Callable Notes

     2018         2023         570         608         500         500    

7.75% Contingent Capital Notes (US$1,000m)

     2018         2023         603                 606         –    

Floating Rate Subordinated Notes (50m)

        2019         41         40         42         41    

6% Fixed Rate Subordinated Notes (1,500m)

        2021         1,356         1,333         1,251         1,223    

9.5% Subordinated Bonds (ex–Woolwich plc)

        2021         306         338         199         200    

Subordinated Floating Rate Notes (100m)

        2021         82         80         80         82    

10% Fixed Rate Subordinated Notes

        2021         2,265         2,446         1,962         1,962    

10.179% Fixed Rate Subordinated Notes (US$1,521m)

        2021         991         1,133         921         940    

Subordinated Floating Rate Notes (50m)

        2022         42         41         42         41    

6.625% Fixed Rate Subordinated Notes (1,000m)

        2022         957         954         834         815    

7.625% Contingent Capital Notes (US$3,000m)

        2022         1,649         1,848         1,815         1,855    

Subordinated Floating Rate Notes (50m)

        2023         42         41         41         41    

5.75% Fixed Rate Subordinated Notes

        2026         742         810         600         600    

5.4% Reverse Dual Currency Subordinated Loan (Yen 15,000m)

        2027         74         90         87         108    

6.33% Subordinated Notes

        2032         55         62         50         50    

Subordinated Floating Rate Notes (100m)

        2040         83         82         83         82    

Absa Bank Limited issued

                 

6.25% CPI-linked Subordinated Callable Notes (ZAR 1,886m)

     2013         2018                 169                 –    

8.8% Subordinated Fixed Rate Callable Notes (ZAR 1,725m)

     2014         2019         102         136         102         129    

6.00% CPI-linked Subordinated Callable Notes (ZAR 3,000m)

     2014         2019         228         275                 –    

8.1% Subordinated Callable Notes (ZAR 2,000m)

     2015         2020         121         156         118         149    

10.28% Subordinated Callable Notes (ZAR 600m)

     2017         2022         35         44                 –    

Subordinated Callable Notes (ZAR 400m)

     2017         2022         23         29                 –    

Subordinated Callable Notes (ZAR 1,805m)

     2017         2022         105         132         105         132    

Subordinated Callable Notes (ZAR 2,007m)

     2018         2023         116         147         116         147    

8.295% Subordinated Callable Notes (ZAR 1,188m)

     2018         2023         69         87         69         87    

5.50% CPI-linked Subordinated Callable Notes (ZAR 1,500m)

     2023         2028         107         129                 –    

Other capital issued by Barclays Africa and Japan

        2013-2018         223         49         26         27    

 

 

Total dated subordinated liabilities

           15,568         17,278         13,626         14,066    

 

 

 

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Notes to the financial statements >

For the year ended 31 December 2013 continued

 

 

 

 

Note 31: Subordinated liabilities continued

Dated loan capital

Dated loan capital is issued by the Bank and respective subsidiaries for the development and expansion of their business and to strengthen their respective capital bases. The principal terms of the dated loan capital are described below:

Subordination

All dated loan capital ranks behind the claims against the bank of depositors and other unsecured unsubordinated creditors but before the claims of the undated loan capital and the holders of their equity. The dated loan capital issued by subsidiaries, are similarly subordinated.

Interest

Interest on the Floating Rate Notes are fixed periodically in advance, based on the related interbank or local central bank rates.

Interest on the 7.75% Contingent Capital Notes is fixed until the call date. After the call date, in the event that it is not redeemed, the interest rate will be re-set and fixed until maturity based on a market rate.

Repayment

Those Notes with a call date are repayable at the option of the issuer, on conditions governing the respective debt obligations, some in whole or in part, and some only in whole. The remaining dated loan capital outstanding at 31 December 2013 is redeemable only on maturity, subject in particular cases, to provisions allowing an early redemption in the event of certain changes in tax law or, to certain changes in legislation or regulations.

Any repayments prior to maturity require, in the case of the Bank, the prior approval of the PRA, or in the case of the overseas issues, the approval of the local regulator for that jurisdiction.

There are no committed facilities in existence at the balance sheet date which permit the refinancing of debt beyond the date of maturity.

The other capital issued by Barclays Kenya, Botswana and Zambia includes amounts of £14m (2012: £15m) issued by Barclays Botswana that are convertible. These are repayable at the option of the issuer, prior to maturity, on conditions governing the respective debt obligations, some in whole or in part and some only in whole.

Other

The 7.625% Contingent Capital Notes will be automatically transferred from investors to Barclays PLC (or another entity within the Group) for nil consideration should the Core Tier 1 or Common Equity Tier 1 capital of the Group (as relevant at the time) fall below 7.0% on certain dates as specified in the terms.

The 7.75% Contingent Capital Notes will be automatically written-down and investors will lose their entire investment in the notes should the Core Tier 1 or Common Equity Tier 1 capital of the Group (as relevant at the time) fall below 7.0% on certain dates as specified in the terms.

The 5.14% Lower Tier 2 Notes and the 7.625% Contingent Capital Notes and the 7.75% Contingent Capital Notes were registered under the US Securities Act of 1933. All other issues of dated loan capital have been made in the Euro currency market, local markets and/or under Rule 144A.

Note 32: Ordinary shares, share premium, and other equity

 

 

Called up share capital, allotted and fully paid

 

                          Total share       
                          capital and       
     Number of      Ordinary      Share      share      Other equity  
     shares      shares      premium      premium      instruments  
     m      £m      £m      £m      £m  

 

As at 1 January 2013

     12,243         3,061         9,416         12,477       –  

Issued to staff under share incentive plans

     257         63         727         790       –  

Warrants exercised

     379         95         655         750       –  

Rights issue

     3,219         805         5,025         5,830       –  

AT1 equity issuance

                                   2,063  

Other issuances

     15         4         36         40       –  

 

As at 31 December 2013

     16,113         4,028         15,859         19,887       2,063  

 

As at 1 January 2012

     12,199         3,050         9,330         12,380       –  

Issued to staff under share incentive plans

     44         11         86         97       –  

 

As at 31 December 2012

     12,243         3,061         9,416         12,477       –  

 

 

 

 

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Note 32: Ordinary shares, share premium, and other equity continued

Called Up Share Capital

Called up share capital comprises 16,113m (2012: 12,243m) ordinary shares of 25p each. The increase was primarily due to the Barclays PLC rights issue, announced on 30 July 2013. The rights issue of one new ordinary share for every four existing ordinary shares at an issue price of 185 pence per new ordinary share took place in Q4 2013, under which 3,219m new shares were issued.

Warrants

On 31 October 2008, Barclays PLC issued warrants to subscribe for up to 1,516.9m new ordinary shares at a price of £1.97775, in conjunction with a simultaneous issue by Barclays Bank PLC of Reserve Capital Instruments.

On 13 February 2013, Barclays PLC and Barclays Bank PLC entered into an agreement with Deutsche Bank AG and Goldman Sachs International (the warrantholders) pursuant to which the warrantholders agreed to exercise in aggregate 379m outstanding warrants, constituted by a warrant deed poll dated 31 October 2008 (the warrants), to subscribe for an equivalent number of new ordinary shares in Barclays PLC. No other warrants to subscribe for shares remain outstanding (2012: 379.2m).

Conditional upon receipt of this amount, Barclays PLC agreed to contribute such amount to the capital of Barclays Bank PLC. As a result, Barclays Bank PLC received a net £743.7m of Core Tier 1 equity capital. The transaction involved the payment of an aggregate £6.3m warrant exercise payment by Barclays Bank PLC to the warrant holders, in respect of the early exercise of the warrants.

As at 31 December 2013, there were no unexercised warrants (2012: 379.2m).

Share repurchase

At the 2013 AGM on 25 April 2013, Barclays PLC was authorised to repurchase 1,286m of its ordinary shares of 25p. The authorisation is effective until the AGM in 2014 or the close of business on 30 June 2014, whichever is the earlier. No share repurchases were made during either 2013 or 2012.

Other equity instruments

Other equity instruments include Additional Tier 1 (AT1) securities, which consisted of Fixed Rate Resetting Perpetual Subordinated Contingent Convertible Securities with principal amounts of $2bn and 1bn. The AT1 securities are perpetual securities with no fixed maturity or redemption date.

The AT1 securities were issued by Barclays Plc for general corporate purposes and to strengthen further its regulatory capital base, which may include investments in, or capital contributions to, its subsidiaries. The principal terms of the AT1 securities are described below:

 

¡   AT1 securities rank behind the claims against Barclays Plc of (i) unsubordinated creditors; (ii) claims which are expressed to be subordinated to the claims of unsubordinated creditors of Barclays Plc but not further or otherwise; or (iii) claims which are, or are expressed to be, junior to the claims of other creditors of Barclays Plc, whether subordinated or unsubordinated, other than claims which rank, or are expressed to rank, pari passu with, or junior to, the claims of holders of the AT1 securities.

 

¡   AT1 securities bear a fixed rate of interest until the initial call date. After the initial call date, in the event that they are not redeemed, the AT1 securities will bear interest at rates fixed periodically in advance for five year periods based on market rates.

 

¡   Interest on the AT1 securities will be due and payable only at the sole discretion of Barclays Plc, and Barclays Plc has sole and absolute discretion at all times and for any reason to cancel (in whole or in part) any interest payment that would otherwise be payable on any interest payment date. There are also certain restrictions on the payment of interest as specified in the terms.

 

¡   AT1 securities are undated and are repayable, at the option of Barclays Plc, in whole at the initial call date, or on any fifth anniversary after the initial call date. In addition, the AT1 securities are repayable, at the option of Barclays Plc, in whole for certain regulatory or tax reasons. Any repayments require the prior consent of the PRA.

All AT1 securities will be converted into ordinary shares of Barclays Plc, at a pre-determined price, should the fully loaded CET1 ratio of the Barclays Plc Group fall below 7.0% on certain dates as specified in the terms.

Note 33: Reserves

Currency translation reserve

The currency translation reserve represents the cumulative gains and losses on the retranslation of the Group’s net investment in foreign operations, net of the effects of hedging.

As at 31 December 2013 there was a debit balance of £1,142m in the currency translation reserve (2012: £59m credit). The decrease of £1,201m (2012: £1,289m) principally reflected the depreciation of ZAR and USD against GBP. The currency translation reserves associated with non-controlling interests decreased by £566m (2012: £259m) due to the depreciation of ZAR against GBP.

The impact of the currency translation reserve recognised in the income statement during the year was a £5m net gain (2012: £24m).

Available for sale reserve

The available for sale reserve represents the unrealised change in the fair value of available for sale investments since initial recognition.

As at 31 December 2013 there was a credit balance of £148m in the available for sale reserve (2012: £527m credit). The decrease of £379m (2012: £502m increase) principally reflected the £2.7bn losses from changes in fair value on Government Bonds offset by £2.4bn gains transferred from the income statement due to fair value hedging.

 

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Notes to the financial statements >

For the year ended 31 December 2013 continued

 

 

 

 

Note 33: Reserves continued

Cash flow hedging reserve

The cash flow hedging reserve represents the cumulative gains and losses on effective cash flow hedging instruments that will be recycled to the income statement when the hedged transactions affect profit or loss.

As at 31 December 2013 there was a credit balance of £273m (2012: £2,099m credit) in the cash flow hedging reserve. The decrease of £1,826m (2012: £657m increase) principally reflected a £1,881m decrease in the fair value of interest rate swaps held for hedging purposes as interest rate forward curves increased, and £509m gains transferred to net profit, partly offset by a deferred tax credit of £553m.

Other reserves and treasury shares

Other reserves represent the excess of the repurchase price over the nominal of redeemed ordinary and preference shares issues by the Group.

Treasury shares are deducted from shareholders’ equity within other reserves. A transfer is made to retained earnings in line with the vesting of treasury shares held for the purposes of share based payments.

The treasury shares primarily relate to Barclays PLC shares held in relation to the Group’s various share schemes. These schemes are described in Note 36 Share Based Payments.

As at 31 December 2013 there was a debit balance of £41m (2012: £22m debit) in other reserves relating to treasury shares. The increase principally reflected £1,066m (2012: £979m) of net purchases of treasury shares held for the purposes of employee share schemes, partially offset by £1,047m (2012: £946m) transferred to retained earnings reflecting the vesting of deferred share based payments.

Note 34: Non-controlling interests

 

 
     Profit attributable to      Equity attributable to      Dividends paid to  
     Non-Controlling interest      Non-Controlling interest      Non-Controlling interest  
  

 

 

 
     2013      2012      2013      2012      2013      2012    
     £m      £m      £m      £m      £m      £m    

 

 

Barclays Bank PLC issued:

                 

– Preference shares

     410         462         5,868         5,927         471         465     

– Upper Tier 2 instruments

     2         4         485         591                 –     

Barclays Africa Group Limiteda

     343         304         2,204         2,737         342         229     

Other non-controlling interests

     2         35         7         116                 –     

 

 

Total

     757         805         8,564         9,371         813         694     

 

 

Subsidiaries of the Group that give rise to significant non-controlling interests are Barclays Bank PLC and Barclays Africa Group Limited.

Barclays Bank PLC

Barclays PLC holds 100% of the voting rights of Barclays Bank PLC. As at 31 December 2013, Barclays Bank PLC has in issue preference shares and Upper Tier 2 instruments, representing 12% of its equity in its separate financial statements (2012: 15%). Preference share dividends and redemptions are typically at the discretion of Barclays Bank PLC. The payment of Upper Tier 2 instrument coupons and principal are typically at the discretion of Barclays Bank PLC, except for coupon payments that became compulsory where Barclays PLC has declared or paid a dividend on ordinary shares in the preceding six month period. Preference share and Upper Tier 2 instrument holders typically only have rights to redeem in the event of insolvency.

 

Instrument

                 

 

 
     2013      2012    
     £m      £m    

 

 

Preference Shares:

     

6.00% non cumulative callable preference shares

     744         746     

6.278% non cumulative callable preference shares

     548         550     

4.875% non cumulative callable preference shares

     687         689     

4.75% non cumulative callable preference shares

     967         1,010     

6.625% non cumulative callable preference shares

     406         407     

7.1% non cumulative callable preference shares

     657         660     

7.75% non cumulative callable preference shares

     550         552     

8.125% non cumulative callable preference shares

     1,309         1,313     

 

 

Total Barclays Bank PLC Preference Shares

     5,868         5,927     

Barclays Africa Group Limiteda

     267         338     

 

 

Total

     6,135         6,265     

 

 

Upper Tier 2 Instruments:

     

Undated Floating Rate Primary Capital Notes Series 1

     222         276     

Undated Floating Rate Primary Capital Notes Series 2

     263         315     

 

 

Total Upper Tier 2 Instruments

     485         591     

 

 

Note

a Barclays Africa Group Limited was created following restructuring of Barclays African entities. The preference shares are issued by Absa Bank Limited. Some other non-controlling interests in 2012 are now included into Barclays Africa Group Limited.

 

 

 

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Note 34: Non-controlling interests continued

Changes in ownership interest

During the year, the Group disposed of its shares in Barclays Africa Limiteda, which at that time included Barclays interests in a number of African businesses and Absa Group Limited in exchange for an additional 6.7% of Barclays Africa Group Limited, increasing its ownership interests in that entity from 55.6% to 62.3%. Non-controlling interests hold 37.7% of the voting capital of Barclays Africa Group Limited, representing 37.7% of that company’s equity on 31 December 2013. The minority shareholders in Absa Group Limited, were offered shares in Barclays Africa Group Limited in exchange for their shares. At 31 December 2012, non-controlling interests held 44.4% of the voting capital of Absa Group Limited, which was 44.4% of that company’s equity.

Following this disposal, the Group retained control of both Barclays Africa Limited and Absa Group Limited, through its shareholding in Barclays Africa Group Limited and continues to consolidate these businesses. Accordingly, the transaction was recorded entirely in shareholders’ equity.

The effects of the transaction on the equity attributable to shareholders of the parent was as follows:

 

 

          £m  

 

Proceeds received – additional shares in Barclays Africa Group Limited at fair value

      282  

Share of net assets in Barclays Africa Limited transferred to non-controlling interests

      (188)

 

Increase in equity attributable to the shareholders of the parent

      94  

 

Summarised financial information for Barclays Africa Group Limited (2012: Absa Group Limited)

Summarised financial information for Barclays Africa Group Limited, before intercompany eliminations, is set out below:

 

 

     Barclays     
     Africa Group    Absa Group  
     Limited    Limited  
     2013    2012  
     £m    £m  

 

Income statement information

     

Total income net of insurance claims

   3,356     3,560  

Profit after tax

   807     649  

Total other comprehensive income for the year, after tax

   (71)    56  

 

Total comprehensive income for the year

   736     705  

 

Statement of Cashflows information

     

Net cash inflows

   109     120  

 

Balance sheet information

     

Total assets

   55,616     59,297  

Total liabilities

   50,500     53,637  

 

Shareholder equity

   5,116     5,660  

 

Full financial statements for Barclays Africa Group Limited can be obtained at www.barclaysafrica.com/barclaysafrica/Investor-Relations.

Protective rights of non-controlling interests

Barclays Africa Group Limited

Barclays owns 62.3% of the share capital of Barclays Africa Group Limited. Certain resolutions of Barclays Africa require a 75% approval which restricts Barclays PLC’s rights to access the assets of Barclays Africa and its group companies. 75% approval would be required to dispose of all or the greater part of the Barclays Africa Group Limited’s assets or to complete the voluntary winding up of the entity.

Barclays Bank PLC

Barclays Bank PLC also has in issue preference shares and Upper Tier 2 instruments which are non-controlling interests to the Group. Under the terms of these instruments, Barclays PLC may not pay dividends on ordinary shares until a dividend is next paid on these instruments or the instruments are redeemed or purchased by Barclays Bank PLC. There are no restrictions on the ability of Barclays Bank PLC’s ability to remit capital to the Parent as a result of these issued instruments.

Note

a Removed the Barclays Africa business in Botswana, Ghana, Mauritius, Seychelles, Tanzania, Uganda, Kenya, Zambia and the Barclays Africa regional office.

 

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Notes to the financial statements >

For the year ended 31 December 2013 continued

 

 

 

 

 

 

  Employee benefits

 

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The notes included in this section focus on the costs and commitments associated with employing our staff.

 

Note 35: Staff costs

 

Accounting for staff costs

The Group applies IAS 19 Employee benefits (revised 2011) in its accounting for most of the components of staff costs.

Short-term employee benefits – salaries, and accrued performance costs, social security and the Bonus Payroll Tax are recognised over the period in which the employees provide the services to which the payments relate.

Performance costs – recognised to the extent that the Group has a present obligation to its employees that can be measured reliably and are recognised over the period of service that employees are required to work to qualify for the services.

Deferred cash bonus awards and deferred share bonus awards are made to employees to incentivise performance over the vesting period. To receive payment under an award, employees must provide service over the vesting period, typically three years from the grant date. The period over which the expense for deferred cash and share bonus awards is recognised is based upon the common understanding between the employee and the Group and the terms and conditions of the award. The Group considers that it is appropriate to recognise the awards over the period from the date of grant to the date that the awards vest as this is the period over which the employees understand that they must provide service in order to receive awards. The table on page 99 details the relevant award dates, payment dates and the period in which the income statement charge arises for bonuses. No expense has been recognised in 2013 for the deferred bonuses granted in March 2014, as they are dependent upon future performance rather than performance during 2013.

The accounting policies for share based payments and pensions and other post retirement benefits are under Note 36 and Note 37 respectively.

 

 

 
     2013      2012      2011    
     £m      £m      £m    

 

 

Current year bonus accrual

     957         867         955     

Deferred bonus charge

     1,147         1,223         995     

Commissions, commitments and other incentives

     450         335         577     

 

 

Performance costs

     2,554         2,425         2,527     

Salaries

     4,981         5,254         5,498     

Social security costs

     715         685         716     

Post retirement benefits

     688         612         836     

Allowances and trading incentives

     211         262         302     

Other compensation costs

     467         521         616     

 

 

Total compensation costsa

     9,616         9,759         10,495     

 

 

Other resourcing costs

        

 

 

Outsourcing

     1,084         999         842     

Redundancy and restructuring

     687         68         301     

Temporary staff costs

     551         481         477     

Other

     217         160         238     

 

 

Total other resourcing costs

 

    

 

2,539

 

  

 

    

 

1,708

 

  

 

    

 

1,858  

 

  

 

 

 

Total staff costs

     12,155         11,467         12,353     

 

 

2013

Total staff costs increased 6% to £12,155m, principally reflecting a £619m increase in redundancy and restructuring charges, a 5% increase in performance costs and a 9% increase in outsourcing. Redundancy and restructuring charges increased £619m to £687m, due to a number of Transform initiatives.

Performance costs increased 5% to £2,554m, reflecting a 10% increase to £957m in charges for current year cash and share bonuses and a 34% increase in commissions, commitments and other incentives to £450m. This was offset by a 6% decrease in the charge for deferred bonuses to £1,147m.

The average total number of persons employed by the Group was 140,300 (2012: 143,700).

Note

a In addition, £346m of Group compensation (2012: £44m; 2011: £35m) was capitalised as internally generated software.

 

 

 

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Note 35: Staff costs continued

2012

Total staff costs reduced 7% to £11,467m, principally reflecting a 4% reduction in salaries, a 27% reduction in post-retirement benefits and reduction in redundancy and retirement costs. Salaries reduced by 4% to £5,254m reflecting a moderately declining average headcount. The post-retirement benefits charge decreased 27% to £612m, primarily reflecting scheme closures and benefit changes in the US and Spain, and lower interest cost for the UK Retirement Fund. The post-retirement benefits charge includes £311m (2011: £318m; 2010: £297m) in respect of defined contribution schemes and £301m (2011: £518m; 2010: £297m) in respect of defined benefit schemes.

Performance costs reduced 4% to £2,425m, reflecting a 22% reduction in charges for current year cash and share bonuses and sales commissions, commitments and other incentives of £1,202m, partially offset by a 23% increase in the charge for deferred bonuses from prior years to £1,223m.

The Group incentive awards granted (which exclude charges relating to prior year deferrals but include current year awards vesting in future years) were down 16% to £2.2bn. Investment Bank incentive awards were down 20% to £1.4bn. Redundancy and restructuring cost decreased 77% to £68m due to significant restructuring in 2011.

The UK Government applied a bank payroll tax of 50% to all discretionary bonuses over £25,000 awarded to UK bank employees between 9 December 2009 and 5 April 2010. The total bank payroll tax paid was £437m, of which £397m was recognised between 2009 and 2011. For 2012, a charge of £34m has been recognised in relation to prior year deferrals, with the remaining £6m recognised in 2013.

The average total number of persons employed by the Group was 143,700 (2011: 149,700).

Note 36: Share based payments

 

Accounting for share based payments

The Group applies IFRS 2 Share Based Payments in accounting for employee remuneration in the form of shares.

Employee incentives include awards in the form of shares and share options, as well as offering employees the opportunity to purchase shares on favourable terms. The cost of the employee services received in respect of the shares or share options granted is recognised in the income statement over the period that employees provide services, generally the period in which the award is granted or notified and the vesting date of the shares or options. The overall cost of the award is calculated using the number of shares and options expected to vest and the fair value of the shares or options at the date of grant.

The number of shares and options expected to vest takes into account the likelihood that performance and service conditions included in the terms of the awards will be met. Failure to meet the non-vesting condition is treated as a cancellation, resulting in an acceleration of recognition of the cost of the employee services.

The fair value of shares is the market price ruling on the grant date, in some cases adjusted to reflect restrictions on transferability. The fair value of options granted is determined using option pricing models to estimate the numbers of shares likely to vest. These take into account the exercise price of the option, the current share price, the risk-free interest rate, the expected volatility of the share price over the life of the option and other relevant factors. Market conditions that must be met in order for the award to vest are also reflected in the fair value of the award, as are any other non-vesting conditions – such as continuing to make payments into a share based savings scheme.

The charge for the year arising from share based payment schemes was as follows:

 

      Charge for the year  
     

2013

£m

    

2012

£m

    

2011

£m

 
 Share Value Plan      576         610         634   
 Executive Share Award Scheme      72         115         101   
 Others      54         58         137   
 Total equity settled      702         783         872   
 Cash settled      25         35         34   

 Total share based payments

     727         818         906   

The terms of the main current plans are as follows:

Share Value Plan (SVP)

The SVP was introduced in March 2010 and approved by shareholders (for Executive Director participation and use of new issue shares) at the AGM in April 2011. SVP awards are granted to participants in the form of a conditional right to receive Barclays PLC shares or provisional allocations of Barclays PLC shares which vest or are considered for release over a period of three years in equal annual tranches. Participants do not pay to receive an award or to receive a release of shares. The grantor may also make a dividend equivalent payment to participants on release of a SVP award. SVP awards are also made to eligible employees for recruitment purposes under schedule 1 to the SVP. All awards are subject to potential forfeiture in certain leaver scenarios.

 

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Notes to the financial statements >

For the year ended 31 December 2013 continued

 

 

 

 

Note 36: Share based payments continued

Executive Share Award Scheme (ESAS)

ESAS awards were granted to participants in the form of a provisional allocation of Barclays PLC shares. The total value of the ESAS award made to the employee was dependent upon the business unit, Group and individual employee performance. The ESAS award must normally be held for at least three years. Additional bonus shares are subsequently awarded to recipients of the provisional allocation and are considered for release upon achieving continued service for three and five years from the date of award. ESAS awards were also made to eligible employees for recruitment purposes under JSAP (Joiners Share Award Plan). All awards are subject to potential forfeiture if the individual resigns and commences work with a competitor business.

Other schemes

In addition to the above schemes, the Group operates a number of other schemes including schemes operated by and settled in the shares of subsidiary undertakings, none of which are individually or in aggregate material in relation to the charge for the year or the dilutive effect of outstanding share options. Included within other schemes are Sharesave (both UK and overseas), and the Barclays Long Term Incentive Plan; the latter was introduced and approved at the AGM in April 2011.

Share option and award plans

The weighted average fair value per award granted and weighted average share price at the date of exercise/release of shares during the year was:

 

     

Weighted average

fair value per award
granted in year

     Weighted average share
price at exercise/release
during year
 
     

2013

£m

    

2012

£m

    

2013

£m

    

2012

£m

 
 SVPa,b      3.04         2.41         3.04         2.39   
 ESASa,c      3.04         1.69         3.04         2.38   
 Othersa      0.81-3.08         0.63-2.45         2.64-3.22         2.14-2.45   

SVP and ESAS are nil cost awards and nil cost options respectively on which the performance conditions are substantially completed at the date of grant. Consequently the fair value of these awards/options is based on the market value at that date.

Movements in options and awards

The movement in the number of options and awards for the major schemes and the weighted average exercise price of options was:

 

      SVPa,b     ESASa,c     Othersa,d  
     Number (000s)     Number (000s)     Number (000s)    

Weighted average

ex. price (£)

 
      2013     2012     2013     2012     2013     2012     2013      2012  

 Outstanding at beginning of

 year/acquisition date

     540,872        392,638        77,867        252,028        200,976        214,363        1.70         1.93   
 Granted in the year      233,513        345,165        5,051        3,571        37,128        114,305        2.28         1.44   
 Rights issue adjustments      40,684               1,622               18,008               1.58           
 Exercised/released in the year      (265,082     (170,672     (60,385     (153,425     (17,367     (60,150     2.19         1.47   
 Less: forfeited in the year      (25,727     (26,259     (7,352     (24,307     (15,031     (48,970     1.61         1.76   
 Less: expired in the year                                  (8,528     (18,572     3.03         2.79   
 Outstanding at end of year      524,260        540,872        16,803        77,867        215,186        200,976        1.55         1.70   

 Of which exercisable:

     60        29        4,764        20,178        16,213        20,302        2.52         3.21   

Certain of the Group’s share option plans enable certain directors and employees to subscribe for new ordinary shares of Barclays PLC. For accounting for treasury shares see Note 33 Reserves.

Notes

a Options/award granted over Barclays PLC shares.
b Nil cost award and therefore the weighted average exercise price was nil.
c Nil cost options and therefore there was no weighted average exercise price.
d The number of awards within others at the end of the year principally relates to Sharesave (number of awards exercisable at end of year was 2,789,460). The weighted average exercise price relates to Sharesave.

 

 

 

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Note 36: Share based payments continued

The weighted average contractual remaining life and number of options and awards outstanding (including those exercisable) at the balance sheet date are as follows:

 

      2013      2012  
      Weighted
average
remaining
contractual
life in years
     Number of
options/
awards
outstanding
(000s)
     Weighted
average
remaining
contractual
life in years
     Number
of options/
awards
outstanding
(000s)
 

SVPa,b

     1         524,260         1         540,872   

ESASa,c

             16,803                 77,867   

Othersa

     0-3         215,186         0-4         200,976   

There were no significant modifications to the share based payments arrangements in the years 2013, 2012 and 2011.

As at 31 December 2013, the total liability arising from cash-settled share based payments transactions was £26m (2012: £47m).

Holdings of Barclays PLC Shares

Various employee benefit trusts established by the Group, hold shares in Barclays PLC to meet obligations under the Barclays share based payment schemes. The total number of Barclays shares held in these employee benefit trusts at 31 December 2013 was 3.2 million (2012: 6.8 million). Dividend rights have been waived on all of these shares. The total market value of the shares held in trust based on the year end share price of £2.72 (2012: £2.62) was £8.7m (2012: £17.8m).

Note 37: Pensions and post retirement benefits

 

Accounting for pensions and post retirement benefits

The Group operates a number of pension schemes including defined contribution, defined benefit and post-employment benefit schemes.

Defined contribution schemes – the Group recognises contributions due in respect of the accounting period in the income statement. Any contributions unpaid at the balance sheet date are included as a liability.

Defined benefit schemes – the Group recognises its obligation to members of the scheme at the period end, less the fair value of the scheme assets after applying the asset ceiling test. Actuarial gains and losses are recognised in other comprehensive income in the reporting period in which they occur. Each scheme’s obligations are calculated using the projected unit credit method on the assumptions set out in the note below. Scheme assets are stated at fair value as at the period end.

IAS 19 (revised) has been adopted by the Group from the mandatory effective date of 1 January 2013 and application is retrospective. The main change is that the Group recognises the liabilities (or assets) arising from its defined benefit pension schemes in full. The deferral of actuarial gains and losses, which was an option applied by Barclays under the previous standard, is no longer permitted. The expected return on assets assumption has also been replaced by an assumed return on assets in line with the discount rate.

Changes in pension scheme liabilities or assets (remeasurements) that do not arise from regular pension cost, interest on net defined benefit liabilities or assets, past service costs, settlements or contributions to the plan, are recognised in other comprehensive income. For further details on the impacts of IAS 19 (Revised) restatements please refer to Note 46.

Remeasurements comprise experience adjustments (differences between previous actuarial assumptions and what has actually occurred) and the effects of changes in actuarial assumptions.

Post-employment benefits – the cost of providing health care benefits to retired employees is accrued as a liability in the financial statements over the period that the employees provide services to the Group, using a methodology similar to that for defined benefit pension schemes.

Notes

a Options/award granted over Barclays PLC shares.
b Nil cost award and therefore the weighted average exercise price was nil.
c Nil cost options and therefore there was no weighted average exercise price.

 

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Notes to the financial statements >

For the year ended 31 December 2013 continued

 

 

 

 

Note 37: Pensions and post retirement benefits continued

Pension schemes

UK Retirement Fund (UKRF)

The UKRF is the Group’s main scheme, representing 91% of the Group’s total retirement benefit obligations. The UKRF was closed to new entrants on 1 October 2012, and comprises ten sections, the most significant of which are:

 

¡   Afterwork, which comprises a contributory cash balance defined benefit element, and a voluntary defined contribution element. The cash balance element is accrued each year and revalued until Normal Retirement Age in line with the increase in Retail Price Index (RPI) (up to a maximum of 5% pa). An investment related increase of up to 2% a year may also be added at Barclays discretion. Between 1 October 2003 and 1 October 2012 the majority of new employees outside of Investment Bank were eligible to join this section. The costs of ill-health retirements and death in service benefits for Afterwork members are borne by the UKRF. The main risks that Barclays runs in relation to Afterwork are more limited than in traditional final salary pension plans, being the risk of needing to make additional contributions if pre-retirement investment returns are not sufficient to provide for the benefits. The discretionary element of the benefit provides a partial buffer against this risk.

 

¡   The Pension Investment Plan (PIP): a defined contribution section providing benefits for Investment Bank employees from 1 July 2001 to 1 October 2012.

 

¡   The 1964 Pension Scheme: most employees recruited before July 1997 built up benefits in this non-contributory defined benefit scheme in respect of service up to 31 March 2010. Pensions were calculated by reference to service and pensionable salary. From 1 April 2010 members became eligible to accrue future service benefits in either Afterwork or PIP. The risks that Barclays runs in relation to the 1964 pension section are typical of final salary pension plans. Principally that investment returns fall short of expectations, that inflation exceeds expectations, and that retirees live longer than expected.

Barclays Pension Savings Plan (BPSP)

¡   From 1 October 2012 a new UK pension scheme, the BPSP was established to satisfy Auto Enrolment legislation. The BPSP is a defined contribution scheme (Group Personal Pension) providing benefits for all new Barclays UK hires from 1 October 2012, Investment Bank UK employees who were in PIP as at 1 October 2012, and also all UK employees who were not members of a pension scheme as at that date. As a defined contribution plan, BPSP is not subject to the same investment return, inflation or longevity risks that defined benefit plans face. Members’ benefits reflect contributions paid and the level of investment returns achieved.

Apart from the UKRF and the BPSP, Barclays operates a number of smaller pension and long-term employee benefits and post-retirement healthcare plans globally, the largest of which are the US and South African defined benefit schemes. Many of the plans are funded, with assets backing the obligations held in separate legal vehicles such as trusts. Others are operated on an unfunded basis. The benefits provided the approach to funding and the legal basis of the plans reflect their local environments.

Governance

The UKRF operates under trust law and is managed and administered on behalf of the members in accordance with the terms of the Trust Deed and Rules and all relevant legislation. The Corporate Trustee is Barclays Pension Funds Trustees Limited, a private limited company and a wholly owned subsidiary of Barclays Bank PLC. The Trustee is the legal owner of the assets of the UKRF which are held separately from the assets of the Group.

The Trustee Board comprises six Management Directors selected by Barclays, of whom three are independent Directors with no relationship with Barclays or the UKRF, plus three Member Nominated Directors selected from eligible active staff and pensioner members who apply for the role.

The BPSP is a Group Personal Pension arrangement which operates as a collection of personal pension plans. Each personal pension plan is a direct contract between the employee and the BPSP provider (Legal & General Assurance Society Limited), and is regulated by the FCA.

Similar principles of pension governance apply to the Group’s other pension schemes, although different legislation covers overseas schemes where, in most cases, the Group has the power to determine the funding rate.

Amounts recognised

The following tables include: amounts recognised in the income statement and an analysis of benefit obligations and scheme assets for all Group schemes. The net position is reconciled to the assets and liabilities recognised on the balance sheet. The tables include funded and unfunded post-retirement benefits.

 

Income statement charge

                     
     

2013

£m

   

2012

£m

   

2011

£m

 

Current service costa

     371        410        414   

Net finance cost/(income)

     55        (10     143   

Past service costb

     4        (33     23   

Settlements

     (3     (12       

Total

     427        355        580   

Notes

a Current service cost for the year ended 31 December 2012 and 31 December 2011 has been restated to bring the DC costs for active members of the South Africa pension plan within defined benefit accounting.
b The past service cost relates to additional benefits provided in Spain during restructuring, offset by savings from restructuring programs in France and Portugal and scheme closure in Ireland.

 

 

 

 

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Note 37: Pensions and post retirement benefits continued

 

Balance sheet reconciliation

                            
     2013     2012a  
     

Total

£m

   

Of which
relates to
UKRF

£m

   

Total

£m

   

Of which
relates to
UKRF

£m

 

Benefit obligation at beginning of the year

     (26,304     (23,643     (23,901     (21,263

Current service cost

     (371     (280     (410     (309

Interest costs on scheme liabilities

     (1,145     (1,003     (1,164     (991

Past service cost

     (4            33          

Settlements

     44               53          

Remeasurement loss – financial

     (989     (997     (1,946     (1,797

Remeasurement loss – demographic

     4               5          

Remeasurement loss – experience

     (39     31        22        29   

Employee contributions

     (39     (1     (44       

Benefits paid

     905        799        865        690   

Exchange and other movements

     370        1        183        (2

Benefit obligation at end of the year

     (27,568     (25,093     (26,304     (23,643

Fair value of scheme assets at beginning of the year

     25,075        22,845        23,701        21,541   

Interest income on scheme assets

     1,090        974        1,174        1,027   

Employer contribution

     364        238        898        742   

Settlements

     (41            (41       

Remeasurement – return on plan assets greater than discount rate

     575        400        304        221   

Employee contributions

     39        1        44          

Benefits paid

     (905     (799     (865     (690

Exchange and other movements

     (454     2        (140     4   

Fair value of scheme assets at the end of the year

     25,743        23,661        25,075        22,845   

Net (deficit)/surplus

     (1,825     (1,432     (1,229     (798

Retirement Benefit Assets

     133               53          

Retirement Benefit Liabilities

     (1,958     (1,432     (1,282     (798

Net retirement benefit (liabilities)/assets

     (1,825     (1,432     (1,229     (798

Included within the benefit obligation was £2,314m (2012: £1,585m) relating to overseas pensions and £161m (2012:£164m) relating to other post-retirement benefits. Of the total benefit obligation of £27,568m (2012: £26,304m), £298m (2012: £326m) was wholly unfunded.

As at 31 December 2013, the UKRF’s IAS 19R scheme assets were in deficit versus obligations by £1,432m (2012: deficit of £798m). The most significant driver for this change was an increase in long term RPI inflation which was partially offset by higher corporate bond yields and asset out performance.

Critical accounting estimates and judgements

Actuarial valuation of the schemes’ obligation is dependent upon a series of assumptions, below is a summary of the main financial and demographic assumptions adopted for UKRF.

 

UKRF financial assumptions

               
      2013 %
p.a.
     2012 %
p.a.
 

Discount rate

     4.46         4.31   

Inflation rate

     3.42         2.93   

Rate of increase in salaries

     2.92         3.43   

Rate of increase for pensions in payment

     3.32         2.88   

Rate of increase for pensions in deferment

     3.32         2.88   

Afterwork revaluation rate

     3.70         3.40   

The UKRF discount rate assumption for 2013 is taken based on the single equivalent discount rate implied by the Towers Watson RATE Link model. In 2012, an average rate derived from a Barclays AA corporate bond yield curve and the Towers Watson RATE link model was used. The impact of this change on the UKRF Defined Benefit Obligation was a £0.4bn decrease with no impact on current year profit. The change will affect future years’ profits and on an IAS 19 Revised basis will result in a £19m reduced charge to the 2014 income statement. It is not possible to estimate the effects on profits after 2014.

Note

a The scheme assets and benefit obligation for 31 December 2012 have been restated to bring the DC assets and obligations for active members of the South Africa pension plan within defined benefit accounting.

 

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For the year ended 31 December 2013 continued

 

 

 

 

Note 37: Pensions and post retirement benefits continued

The UKRF’s post-retirement mortality assumptions are based on a best estimate assumption derived from an analysis in 2011 of Barclays own post-retirement mortality experience which was carried out at the time of the latest completed triennial funding valuation, and taking account of the recent evidence from published mortality surveys. An allowance has been made for future mortality improvements based on the 2010 core projection model published by the Continuous Mortality Investigation Bureau subject to a long term trend of 1% pa on future improvements. The table below shows how the assumed life expectancy at 60, for members of the UKRF, has varied over the last three years:

 

Assumed life expectancy

                       
      2013      2012      2011  

Life expectancy at 60 for current pensioners (years)

        

– Males

     27.9         27.8         27.7   

– Females

     29.0         28.9         28.8   

Life expectancy at 60 for future pensioners currently aged 40 (years)

        

– Males

     29.3         29.2         29.1   

– Females

     30.6         30.5         30.4   

Sensitivity analysis on actuarial assumptions

The sensitivity analysis has been calculated by valuing the UKRF liabilities using the amended assumptions shown in the table below and keeping the remaining assumptions the same as disclosed in the UKRF assumptions table above, except in the case of the inflation sensitivity where other assumptions that depend on assumed inflation have also been amended correspondingly. The difference between the recalculated liability figure and that stated in the balance sheet reconciliation table above is the figure shown.

 

Change in key assumptions

              
     Impact on UKRF defined
benefit obligation
 
      (Decrease)/
increase
%
    (Decrease)/
increase
£bn
 

0.5% increase in discount rate

     (9.2     (2.3

0.5% increase in assumed price inflation

     7.8        2.0   

1 year increase to life expectancy at 60

     3.0        0.8   

The weighted average duration of the benefit payments reflected in the defined benefit obligation for the UKRF is 20 years.

Assets

A long term investment strategy has been set for the UKRF, with its asset allocation comprising a mixture of equities, bonds, property and other appropriate assets. This recognises that different asset classes are likely to produce different long term returns and some asset classes may be more volatile than others. The long term investment strategy ensures, amongst other aims, that investments are adequately diversified. Asset managers are permitted some flexibility to vary the asset allocation from the long term investment strategy within control ranges agreed with the Trustee from time to time.

The UKRF also employs derivative instruments, where appropriate, to achieve a desired exposure or return, or to match assets more closely to liabilities. The value of assets shown reflects the actual physical assets held by the scheme, with any derivative holdings reflected on a mark to market basis.

 

 

 

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Note 37: Pensions and post retirement benefits continued

The value of the assets of the schemes and their percentage in relation to total scheme assets were as follows:

 

Analysis of scheme assets

                               
      Total      Of which relates to UKRF  
     

Value

£m

    

% of total
fair value of

scheme
assets

%

    

Value

£m

    

% of total
fair value of
scheme
assets

%

 

As at 31 December 2013

           

Equities – Quoted

     3,420         13.3         2,355         10.0   

Equities – Non Quoted

     1,299         5.0         1,270         5.4   

Bonds – Fixed Governmenta

     1,342         5.2         888         3.8   

Bonds – Index–Linked Governmenta

     6,356         24.8         6,365         26.8   

Bonds – Corporate and othera

     3,715         14.5         3,533         14.9   

Property – Commercialb

     1,376         5.3         1,320         5.6   

Derivativesb

     1,425         5.5         1,425         6.0   

Cashb

     4,202         16.3         3,903         16.5   

Pooled fundsc

     2,342         9.1         2,342         9.9   

Otherb

     266         1.0         260         1.1   

Fair value of scheme assets

     25,743         100.0         23,661         100.0   

 

As at 31 December 2012

           

Equities – Quoted

     2,999         12.0         1,917         8.4   

Equities – Non Quoted

     1,226         4.9         1,204         5.3   

Bonds – Fixed Governmenta

     1,266         5.0         815         3.6   

Bonds – Index–Linked Governmenta

     6,405         25.6         6,405         28.0   

Bonds – Corporate and othera

     3,452         13.8         3,280         14.3   

Property – Commercialb

     1,289         5.1         1,228         5.4   

Derivativesb

     1,637         6.5         1,637         7.2   

Cashb

     4,196         16.7         3,843         16.8   

Pooled fundsc

     2,288         9.1         2,281         10.0   

Otherb

     317         1.3         235         1.0   

Fair value of scheme assets

     25,075         100.0         22,845         100.0   

Included within the fair value of scheme assets were: £5m (2012: £7m) relating to shares in Barclays PLC, £31m (2012: £3m) relating to bonds issued by the Barclays Group, and £7m (2012: £1m) relating to property occupied by Group companies. The UKRF also invests in investment vehicles which may hold shares or debt issued by the Barclays Group.

Approximately a third of the UKRF assets are invested in liability driven investment strategies; primarily UK gilts as well as interest rate and inflation swaps. These are used to better match the assets to its liabilities. The swaps are used to reduce the scheme’s inflation and duration risks against its liabilities.

Funding

The triennial funding valuation of the UKRF is currently underway with an effective date of 30 September 2013. Contribution requirements, including any deficit recovery plans, will be agreed between the Bank and Trustee by the end of 2014. The previous triennial funding valuation at 30 September 2010 showed a deficit of £5.0bn. Under the agreed recovery plan, deficit contributions of £1.8bn were paid to the fund in December 2011 and a further £0.5bn paid in April 2012. Further deficit contributions are payable from 2017 to 2021 starting at £0.7bn in 2017 and increasing by approximately 3.5% per annum until 2021. These deficit contributions are in addition to the regular contributions to meet the Group’s share of the cost of benefits accruing over each year.

In non-valuation years the Scheme Actuary prepares an annual update of the funding position. The latest annual update was carried out as at 30 September 2012 and showed a deficit of £3.6bn. The contributions paid to the UKRF are agreed between Barclays and the Trustee every three years.

Contributions paid with respect to the UKRF were as follows:

 

Contributions paid

       
      £m  

2013

     238   

2012

     742   

2011

     2,128   

The Group’s expected contribution to the UKRF in 2014 is £218m. In addition the expected contributions to UK defined contribution schemes is £46m to the UKRF and £103m to the BPSP. For non-UK schemes the expected contributions in 2014 are £107m.

Notes

a Assets held are predominately quoted.
b Assets held are predominantly non quoted.
c Pooled funds relate to a variety of investments which are predominantly non-quoted.

 

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For the year ended 31 December 2013 continued

 

 

 

 

 

  Performance

 

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This section presents information on the Group’s investments in subsidiaries, joint ventures and associates and its interests in structured entities. Detail is also given on securitisation transactions the Group has entered into and arrangements that are held off-balance sheet.

 

Note 38: Principal Subsidiaries

 

Barclays applies IFRS 10 Consolidated Financial Statements. The consolidated financial statements combine the financial statements of Barclays PLC and all of its subsidiaries. Subsidiaries are entities over which the Group has control. Under IFRS 10, this is when the Group is exposed or has rights to variable returns from its involvement in the entity and has the ability to affect those returns through its power over the entity.

The Group reassesses whether it controls an entity if facts and circumstances indicate that there have been changes to its power, its rights to variable returns or its ability to use its power to affect the amount of its returns.

Intra-group transactions and balances are eliminated on consolidation and consistent accounting policies are used throughout the Group for the purposes of the consolidation. Changes in ownership interests in subsidiaries are accounted for as equity transactions if they occur after control has been obtained and they do not result in loss of control.

Barclays adopted IFRS 10 from 1 January 2013. The financial effects of the adoption are set out in Note 46 to these financial statements.

The significant judgements used in applying this policy are set out below.

Accounting for investment in subsidiaries

In the individual financial statements of Barclays PLC, investments in subsidiaries are stated at cost less impairment. Cost includes any directly attributable costs of the investment.

Principal subsidiaries for the Group are set out below. This includes those subsidiaries that are most significant in the context of the Group’s business, results or financial position.

 

Company Name

  

Principal place of business        

or incorporation

   Nature of business    Percentage
of Voting
rights held
%
   

Non-
controlling
interests –
proportion of
ownership
interests

%

    

Non-
controlling
interests –
proportion

of voting
interests
%

 

Barclays Bank PLC

   England    Banking, holding company          100        12           

Barclays Capital Securities Limited

   England    Securities dealing      100                  

Barclays Private Clients International Limited

   Isle of Man    Banking      100               

Barclays Securities Japan Limited

   Japan    Securities dealing      100                  

Absa Bank Limited

   South Africa    Banking      62        38         38   

Barclays Bank of Kenya Limited

   Kenya    Banking      43        57         57   

Barclays Bank S.A.U.

   Spain    Banking      100               

Barclays Capital Inc.

   United States    Securities dealing      100                  

Barclays Bank Delaware

   United States    Credit card issuer      100                  

The country of registration or incorporation is also the principal area of operation of each of the above subsidiaries. Investments in subsidiaries held directly by Barclays Bank PLC are marked *. Information on the Groups subsidiaries, as required by the Companies Act, will be included in the Annual Return to be filed at the UK Companies House.

Ownership interests are in some cases different to voting interests due to the existence of non-voting equity interests, such as preference shares. See Note 34, non-controlling interests for more information. The 43% effective voting interest in Barclays Bank of Kenya Limited is derived from the Group’s 62% interest in Barclays Africa Group Limited which holds a 69% interest in Barclays Bank of Kenya Limited.

 

 

 

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Note 38: Principal Subsidiaries continued

Significant judgements and assumptions used to determine the scope of the consolidation

Determining whether the Group has control of an entity is generally straightforward based on ownership of the majority of the voting capital. However, in certain instances this determination will involve significant judgment, particularly in the case of structured entities where voting rights are often not the determining factor in decisions over the relevant activities. This judgment may involve assessing the purpose and design of the entity. It will also often be necessary to consider whether the Group, or another involved party with power over the relevant activities, is acting as a principal in its own right or as an agent on behalf of others.

There is also often considerable judgment involved in the ongoing assessment of control over structured entities. In this regard, where market conditions have deteriorated such that the other investors’ exposures to the structure’s variable returns have been substantively eliminated, the Group may conclude that the managers of the structured entity are acting as its agent and therefore will consolidate the structured entity.

An interest in equity voting rights exceeding 50% would typically indicate that the Group has control of an entity. However certain entities are excluded from consolidation because the Group does not have exposure to their variable returns. These entities are managed by external counterparties and consequently are not controlled by the Group. Where appropriate, interests relating to these entities are included in Note 39 Structured Entities.

 

Country of registration or incorporation

   Company Name    Percentage of voting
rights held
(%)
     Equity shareholder’s
funds
(£m)
     Retained profit for
the year
(£m)
 

UK

   Fitzroy Finance Limited              100                   

Cayman Islands

   Palomino Limited      100         1           

Significant restrictions

As is typical for a Group of its size and international scope, there are restrictions on the ability of Barclays PLC to obtain distributions of capital, access the assets or repay the liabilities of members of its group due to the statutory, regulatory and contractual requirements of its subsidiaries and due to the protective rights of non-controlling interests. These are considered below.

Regulatory requirements

Subsidiary companies with assets and liabilities before intercompany eliminations of £1,797bn (2012: £1,963bn) and £1,727bn (2012: £1,900bn) respectively are subject to prudential regulation and regulatory capital requirements in the countries in which they are regulated. These require entities to maintain minimum capital, leverage and exposure ratios restricting the ability of these entities to make distributions of cash or other assets to the parent company, Barclays PLC.

In order to meet capital requirements, subsidiaries may hold certain equity accounted and debt accounted issued financial instruments and non-equity instruments such as Tier 1 and Tier 2 capital instruments and other forms of subordinated liabilities. See the non-controlling interests Note 34 and the subordinated liabilities Note 31 for particulars of these instruments. These instruments may be subject to cancellation clauses or preference share restrictions that would limit the ability of the entity to repatriate the capital on a timely basis.

Liquidity requirements

Regulated subsidiaries of the Group are required to maintain liquidity pools to meet PRA and local regulatory requirements. The main subsidiaries affected are Barclays Bank PLC, Absa Bank Limited and Barclays Capital Inc. which must maintain daily compliance with the regulatory minimum.

See pages 208 to 224 for further details of liquidity requirements, including those of our significant subsidiaries.

Statutory requirements

The Group’s subsidiaries are subject to statutory requirements not to make distributions of capital and unrealised profits and generally to maintain solvency. These requirements restrict the ability of subsidiaries to make remittances of dividends to Barclays PLC, the ultimate parent, except in the event of a legal capital reduction or liquidation. In most cases the regulatory restrictions referred to above exceed the statutory restrictions.

As at 31 December 2013, the non-distributable reserves of Barclays Bank PLC, including share capital and other equity instruments were £23,571m (2012: £18,608m).

Contractual requirements

Asset encumbrance

The Group uses its financial assets to raise finance in the form of securitisations and through the liquidity schemes of central banks. Once encumbered, the assets are not available for transfer around the Group. The assets typically affected are disclosed in Note 42 Assets Pledged.

Assets held by consolidated structured entities

£690m of assets included in the Group’s balance sheet relate to consolidated investment funds and are held to pay return and principal to the holders of units in the funds. The assets held in these funds cannot be transferred to other members of the Group.

Other restrictions

The Group is required to maintain balances with central banks and other regulatory authorities and these amounted to £4,722m as at 31 December 2013 (2012: £5,169m).

Barclays Africa Group Limited assets are subject to exchange control regulation determined by the South African Reserve Bank (SARB). Special dividends and loans in lieu of dividends cannot be transferred without SARB approval.

 

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Notes to the financial statements >

For the year ended 31 December 2013 continued

 

 

 

 

Note 39: Structured Entities

A structured entity is an entity in which voting or similar rights are not the dominant factor in deciding control. Structured entities are generally created to achieve a narrow and well defined objective with restrictions around their ongoing activities.

Depending on the Group’s power over the activities of the entity and its exposure to and ability to influence its own returns, it may consolidate the entity. In other cases it may sponsor or have exposure to such an entity but not consolidate it.

Consolidated Structured Entities

The Group has contractual arrangements which may require it to provide financial support to the following types of consolidated structured entities:

Securitisation vehicles

The Group uses securitisation as a source of financing and a means of risk transfer. Refer to Note 41 for further detail.

The Group provides liquidity facilities to entities and provides interest rate and foreign currency swaps to enable the entities to make certain payments when due. At 31 December 2013, there were outstanding loan commitments to these entities totalling £195m.

Commercial paper (CP) and medium term note conduits

The Group provided £8.1bn in undrawn contractual backstop liquidity facilities to its own sponsored CP conduits.

Fund management entities

Barclays has contractually guaranteed the performance of certain cash investments in a number of managed investment funds which have resulted in their consolidation. As at 31 December 2013, the notional value of the guarantee was £991m.

Covered bonds

During the reporting period, the Group provided non-contractual capital contributions totalling £1.3bn to Barclays Covered Bonds Limited Liability Partnership as a result of regulatory requirements to pre fund upcoming contractual covered bond redemptions. It will continue to provide such support in 2014.

Employee benefit trusts

The Group provides capital contributions to employee share trusts to enable them to meet their obligations to employees under share-based payment plans.

Unconsolidated Structured Entities in which the Group has an interest

The business activities within the Group where structured entities are used principally include multi-seller conduit programmes, asset securitisations, and asset management. The later sections provide quantitative information on the Group’s involvements. For a description of these activities see the Glossary.

An interest in a structured entity is any form of contractual or non-contractual involvement which creates variability in returns arising from the performance of the entity for the Group. Such interests include holdings of debt or equity securities, derivatives that transfer financial risks from the entity to the Group, lending, loan commitments, financial guarantees and investment management agreements.

Interest rate swaps, foreign exchange derivatives that are not complex and which expose the Group to insignificant credit risk by being senior in the payment waterfall of a securitisation and derivatives that are determined to introduce risk or variability to a structured entity are not considered to be an interest in an entity and have been excluded from the disclosures below.

The nature and extent of the Group’s interests in structured entities is summarised below:

 

Summary of interests in unconsolidated structured entities

                                       

Assets

   Secured
financing
£m
     Short term
traded
interests
£m
     Traded
derivatives
£m
     Other
interests
£m
    

Total

£m

 

Trading portfolio assets

             11,272                 5,111         16,383   

Financial assets designated at fair value

                             1,035         1,035   

Derivative financial instruments

                     3,758         1,464         5,222   

Available for sale investments

                             2,073         2,073   

Loans and advances to banks

                             4,143         4,143   

Loans and advances to customers

                             24,971         24,971   

Reverse repurchase agreements and other similar secured lending

     51,112                                 51,112   

Other assets

                             35         35   

Total assets

     51,112         11,272         3,758         38,832         104,974   

Liabilities

              

Derivative financial instruments

                     4,895         1,457         6,352   

Secured financing arrangements, short term traded interests and traded derivatives are typically managed under market risk described in page 190 which includes an indication on the change of risk measures compared to last year. For this reason, the total assets of these entities are not considered meaningful for the purposes of understanding the related risks and so have not been presented. Other interest materially includes a portfolio under exit quadrant which is being managed down and conduits and corporate lending where the interest is driven by normal customer demand.

 

 

 

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Note 39: Structured Entities continued

Secured financing

The Group routinely enters into reverse repurchase contracts, stock borrowing and similar arrangements on normal commercial terms where the counterparty to the arrangement is a structured entity. Due to the nature of these arrangements, especially the transfer of collateral and on-going margining, the Group is minimally exposed to the performance of the structured entity counterparty. A description of these transactions is included in Note 23.

Short term traded interests

The Group buys and sells interests in structured entities as part of its trading activities, for example, retail mortgage backed securities, collateralised debt obligations and similar interests. Such interests are typically held individually or as part of a larger portfolio for no more than 90 days. In such cases, the Group typically has no other involvement with the structured entity other than the securities it holds as part of trading activities and its maximum exposure to loss is restricted to the carrying value of the asset. Description of these transactions is included in Note 13.

As at 31 December 2013, the fair value of the Group’s interests in structured entities in the trading portfolio, included in trading portfolio assets in the Group balance sheet, were as follows:

 

Type of security and nature of entity

                       
      Asset
securitisations
£m
     Other
£m
     Total
£m
 

Debt securities

     10,177         345         10,522   

Equity securities

     5         87         92   

Traded loans

             538         538   

Other assets

             120         120   

Total

     10,182         1,090         11,272   

Traded derivatives

The Group enters into a variety of derivative contracts with structured entities which reference market risk variables such as interest rates, foreign exchange rates and credit indices amongst other things. Description of the type of derivatives and the risk management practices are detailed in Note 15. The risk of loss may be mitigated through on-going margining requirements as well as a right to cash flows from entity which are senior in the payment waterfall. Such margining requirements are consistent with market practice for many derivative arrangements and in line with the Group’s normal credit policies.

The main derivative types which are considered interests in structured entities are as follows. Notional amounts of the derivative arrangements have been provided as a better indication of the risks associated with these instruments rather than the size of the structured entities to which the Group has exposure:

 

Fair value and notional amount

                                                                
    Asset management     Asset securitisations     Others     Total  

Type of derivative

and nature of entity

  Notional
contract
amount
£m
    Assets
£m
    Liabilities
£m
    Notional
contract
amount
£m
    Assets
£m
    Liabilities
£m
    Notional
contract
amount
£m
    Assets
£m
    Liabilities
£m
    Notional
contract
amount
£m
    Assets
£m
    Liabilities
£m
 

Credit default swaps

                       

Index based

    54,519        1,075        (1,353     1,286        160        (328                          55,805        1,235        (1,681

Entity specific

    18,448        408        (203     11        18        (28                          18,459        426        (231

Total

    72,967        1,483        (1,556     1,297        178        (356                          74,264        1,661        (1,912

Balance guaranteed swaps

                         38,349        231        (493                          38,349        231        (493

Total return swaps

    8,044        241        (470                          2                      8,046        241        (470

Commodity

    10,341        518        (892                          3,698        47        (335     14,039        565        (1,227

Equity swaps

    28,523        962        (792                                 98               28,523        1,060        (792

Other derivative products

                         606               (1                          606               (1

Total

    119,875        3,204        (3,710     40,252        409        (850     3,700        145        (335     163,827        3,758        (4,895

Derivative transactions require the counterparty to provide cash or other collateral under margining agreements to mitigate counterparty credit risk. Included above are, £752m derivative assets and £(1,271)m derivative liability with a notional value of £41,716m which are ‘cleared derivative’ type arrangements. These are transactions where the Group enters into a contract with an exchange on behalf of a structured entity client and holds an opposite position with it. The Group is exposed to settlement risk only on these derivatives which is mitigated through daily margining.

Except for credit default swaps where the maximum exposure to loss is the swap notional amount, it is not possible to estimate the maximum exposure to loss in respect of derivative positions as the fair value of derivatives is subject to changes in market rates of interest, exchange rates and credit indices which by their nature are uncertain. In addition, the Group’s losses would be subject to mitigating action under its traded market risk and credit risk policies that require the counterparty provide collateral in cash or other assets on a daily basis in most cases.

 

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Notes to the financial statements >

For the year ended 31 December 2013 continued

 

 

 

 

Note 39: Structured Entities continued

The contracts that most expose the Group to the risk of loss arising from the performance of the structured entity are as follows:

Credit default swaps – entity specific

In addition to index based credit default swaps, the Group provides tailored credit risk protection to structured entities where its loss exposure is based on the actual performance of the structured entity counterparty and the assets that it holds. The underlying for these exposures are mainly related to corporate and commercial loans, corporate bonds and retail mortgages.

Balance guaranteed swaps

These are single or cross-currency swaps where the notional amount of the arrangement is not defined at trade inception and instead tracks the balance of a reference pool of collateral or securities. The swap exchanges the cash flows of the referenced collateral into those of the issued debt securities which pay a different coupon and in a different currency. Swaps may be super-senior in the capital structure or pari-passu with the issued notes. The Group holds debt securities issued by the entities as a hedge against the credit risk of the balance guaranteed swaps. At 31 December 2013 £1,457m of such bonds were held within the trading portfolio asset.

Other interests in unconsolidated structured entities

The Group’s interests in structured entities not held for the purposes of short term trading activities are set out below, summarised by the purpose of the entities and limited to significant categories, based on maximum exposure to loss.

 

Nature of interest

                                                       
      Structured
credit
portfolio
£m
    

Multi-seller
conduit
programmes

£m

    

Lending

£m

    

Mortgage
backed

securities
£m

    

Investment
funds and
trusts

£m

    

Others

£m

    

Total

£m

 

Trading portfolio assets

                    

– Debt securities

     4,944                 50                         106         5,100   

– Equity securities

                                             11         11   

Financial assets designated at fair value

                    

– Loans and advances to customers

                     935                         34         969   

– Debt securities

                                             32         32   

– Equity securities

                                             34         34   

Derivative financial instruments

                     7                         1,457         1,464   

Available for sale investments

                    

– Debt securities

     1         564         2         1,476                 30         2,073   

Loans and advances to customers

     3,115         7,927         13,183                         746         24,971   

Loans and advances to banks

                     4,066                         77         4,143   

Other assets

             1         1                 25         8         35   

Total on balance sheet exposures

     8,060         8,492         18,244         1,476         25         2,535         38,832   

Total notional amounts of off balance sheet amounts

     1,411         8,400         2,186                         54         12,051   

Maximum exposure to loss

     9,471         16,892         20,430         1,476         25         2,589         50,883   

Total assets of the entity

     80,565         138,199         138,980         246,062         44,679         11,098         659,583   

Maximum exposure to loss

Unless specified otherwise below, the Group’s maximum exposure to loss is the total of its on-balance sheet positions and its off-balance sheet arrangements, being loan commitments and financial guarantees. Exposure to loss is mitigated through collateral, financial guarantees, the availability of netting and credit protection held.

Structured Credit Portfolio

The portfolio forms a subset of the exit quadrant disclosed on page 181 which are being managed down. It comprises interests in debt securities issued by securitisation vehicles, mainly Collateralised Loan Obligations (CLOs), Collateralised Debt Obligations (CDOs), Retail and Commercial Mortgage Backed Securitisation structures (RMBSs and CMBSs), and drawn and undrawn loan facilities to these entities. In some cases, the securities are ‘wrapped’ with credit protection from a monoline insurer, which transfers the credit risk to the monoline. The entities are wholly debt financed through the issuance of tranches of debt securities or through direct funding, such as the loan facilities provided by the Group. As the underlying assets of the entities amortise and pay down, the debt securities issued by the entities are repaid in order of seniority. Where the entities experience significant credit deterioration, debt securities may be written off or cancelled in reverse order of seniority.

The creditworthiness of the Group’s funded exposures within structured credit portfolio is presented below along with the Group’s unfunded commitments. Funded exposures are classified as either debt securities or loans and advances. Refer to Note 20 for an additional description of the loans and advances.

 

     

Non-
monoline
CLOs

£m

     Monoline
wrapped
CLOs
£m
     RMBS
£m
     Monoline
wrapped
CDOs
£m
     CMBS
£m
     Non-
monoline
CDOs
£m
     Others
£m
     Total
£m
 

Investment grade

     3,175         2,947         137         16         38         122         141         6,576   

Non investment grade

                     46         502         175         191                 914   

Non rated

     353         123         17                 24         47         6         570   

Total on balance sheet

     3,528         3,070         200         518         237         360         147         8,060   

Undrawn liquidity commitments

     117         2         1,074                 174                 44         1,411   

Maximum exposure to loss

     3,645         3,072         1,274         518         411         360         191         9,471   

 

 

 

 

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Note 39: Structured Entities continued

 

On balance sheet amounts

                                                               
     

Non-
monoline
CLOs

£m

     Monoline
wrapped
CLOs
£m
     RMBS
£m
     Monoline
wrapped
CDOs
£m
     CMBS
£m
     Non-
monoline
CDOs
£m
     Others
£m
     Total
£m
 

Debt securities at fair value

     740         3,070         21         518         237         360                 4,946   

Loans and advances

     2,788                 179                                 147         3,114   

Total on balance sheet exposure

     3,528         3,070         200         518         237         360         147         8,060   

The majority of these interests are held at fair value through profit or loss as part of the Trading Portfolio, however direct lending and certain CLO positions are held at amortised cost, as disclosed in the above table.

The Group’s exposure to loss depends on the level of subordination of the interest which indicates the extent to which other parties are obliged to absorb credit losses before the Group. This is summarised in the table below.

 

     

Non-
monoline
CLOs

£m

     Monoline
wrapped
CLOs
£m
     RMBS
£m
     Monoline
wrapped
CDOs
£m
     CMBS
£m
     Non-
monoline
CDOs
£m
     Others
£m
     Total
£m
 

Senior

     3,520         3,072         1,092         518         367         322         191         9,082   

Mezzanine

     125                 181                 44         36                 386   

Subordinated

                     1                         2                 3   

Total

     3,645         3,072         1,274         518         411         360         191         9,471   

Due to decreases in the fair value of the underlying collateral, the interests that are subordinate to the Group’s certain senior and mezzanine interests may currently have minimal or no value.

The Group’s income from these entities comprises trading income (largely gains and losses on changes in the fair value and interest earned on bonds) on items classified as held for trading and interest income on interests classified as loans and receivables.

During the period, the Group recorded an overall fair value gain of £639m on debt securities. Impairment losses recorded on loans and advances were immaterial during the period.

The fair value of the Group’s interests in monoline wrapped CLOs and CDOs is influenced by the protection directly provided to the structured entities by monoline insurers in addition to the value of the collateral held by the entities. The protection provided to the entities by the monoline insurers is in the form of a CDS, however the ability of the monolines to make payments is uncertain, which is reflected in the valuation of the Group’s interests in the monoline wrapped CLOs and CDOs.

Multi-seller conduit programmes

The conduits engage in providing financing to various clients and hold whole or partial interests in pools of receivables or similar obligations. These instruments are protected from loss through over-collateralization, seller guarantees, or other credit enhancements provided to the conduits. The Group’s off-balance sheet exposure included in the table above represents liquidity facilities that are provided to the conduits for the benefit of the holders of the commercial paper issued by the conduits and will only be drawn where the conduits are unable to access the commercial paper market. If these facilities are drawn, the Group is protected from loss through over-collateralization, seller guarantees, or other credit enhancements provided to the conduits. The Group earns income from fees received on the liquidity facility and the letter of credit provided to the conduits. There were no impairment losses on this lending in the year.

Lending

The portfolio includes lending provided by the Group to unconsolidated structured entities in the normal course of its lending business to earn income in the form of interest and lending fees. All loans are subject to the Group’s credit sanctioning process. Collateral arrangements are specific to the circumstances of each loan. During the period the Group incurred an impairment of £20m against such facilities. The main types of lending are as follows.

Property loans

The Group has provided £4bn of funding loans to bankruptcy remote structured entities to either invest or develop properties. The loans are typically secured against the properties. Depending upon the circumstances the Group may require the sponsors of the entities to provide additional funding which is subordinate to the Group’s. Additional guarantees and collateral may be sought from the sponsor on a case-by-case basis.

Facilities to financial institutions

The Group has provided loans to structured entities owned by third party financial institutions to facilitate their funding requirements. There is credit mitigation in place which significantly reduces the credit exposure faced by the Group against these entities.

Structured lending to individuals

The Group has provided £2bn of loans to structured entities which have been created by an individual to hold one or more assets. The Group is the sole lender to these entities and has full recourse to the assets of the structured entity, and is usually further collateralised by guarantees from the sponsor or equity holders of the structured entity.

 

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Notes to the financial statements >

For the year ended 31 December 2013 continued

 

 

 

 

Note 39: Structured Entities continued

Project finance transactions

The Group has provided £2bn to entities whose operations are limited to financing or funding the acquisition of specific assets such as schools, hospitals, roads and renewable energy projects under the Private Finance Initiative (PFI). Equity contributions are typically required from the sponsor or parent at inception of the arrangement which are required to absorb losses before the Group. The Group may also require the sponsor to provide liquid collateral where there is no recourse or reliance upon the parent or sponsor beyond its initial equity contribution. The Group typically obtains fixed and floating charges over assets, charges over shares in the structured entity, assignment rights over key contracts, step-in rights, and performance guarantees.

Capital equipment loans

The Group has provided £1bn of funding loans to bankruptcy remote structured entities to enable them to purchase capital equipment for parent companies and are supported by government export guarantees. The loans are also fully collateralised by the underlying assets and repayments of principal and interest are met through lease contracts with the operating company parent of the entity for its use of the purchased assets. Due to these guarantees and the availability of collateral, the loans are considered low risk. During the period, Barclays incurred no credit losses on such facilities.

Mortgage backed securities

This represents a portfolio of floating rate notes mainly mortgage backed security positions used as an economic hedge of interest rate risk under the Group’s structural hedging programme. All notes are investment grade.

Investment funds and trusts

In the course of its fund management activities, the Group establishes pooled investment funds that comprise portfolio of investments of various kinds, tailored to meet certain investors’ requirements. The Group’s interest in funds is generally restricted to a fund management fee, the value of which is generally based on the performance of the fund.

The Group acts as trustee to a number of trusts established by or on behalf of its clients. The purpose of the trusts, which meet the definition of structured entities, is to hold assets on behalf of beneficiaries. The Group’s interest in trusts is generally restricted to unpaid fees which, depending on the trust, may be fixed or based on the value of the trust assets. During the year ended 31 December 2013, fees earned were £206m and unpaid fees were £21m. Barclays has no other risk exposure to the trusts.

Other

This includes £1,457m of derivative transactions with structured entities where the market risk is materially hedged with corresponding derivative contracts.

Financial support provided or to be provided to unconsolidated structured entities

The Group has not provided any non-contractual financial support during the period and does not anticipate providing non-contractual support to unconsolidated structured entities in the future.

Sponsored unconsolidated structured entities

In addition to the unconsolidated structured entities in which the Group has an interest, it also sponsors structured entities in which it has no interest. For the purposes of these disclosures, the Group sponsors an entity when:

 

¡   It is the majority user of the entity;

 

¡   Its name appears in the name of the entity or on the products issued by the entity;

 

¡   It provides implicit or explicit guarantees of the entity’s performances; or

 

¡   It led the formation of the entity.

Income from sponsored unconsolidated structured entities comprised of a £4m interest earned from bonds recognised within trading income.

Assets transferred to unconsolidated sponsored structured entities

Assets transferred by all parties, not just those transferred by the Group, to sponsored entities during the period were as follows:

 

Nature of activities

       
     

2013

£m

 

Asset securitisations

     1,515   

Other

     5   

Total

     1,520   

 

 

 

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Table of Contents
  

 

 

 

 

Note 40: Investments in associates and joint ventures

 

Accounting for associates and joint ventures

Barclays applies IAS 28 Investments in Associates and IFRS 11 Joint Arrangements. Associates are entities in which the Group has significant influence, but not control, over the operating and financial policies. Generally the Group holds more than 20%, but less than 50%, of their voting shares. Joint ventures are joint arrangements which have joint control and have rights to the net assets of the entity.

The Group’s investments in associates and joint ventures are initially recorded at cost and increased (or decreased) each year by the Group’s share of the post acquisition profit (or loss). The Group ceases to recognise its share of the losses of equity accounted associates when its share of the net assets and amounts due from the entity have been written off in full, unless it has a contractual or constructive obligation to make good its share of the losses. In some cases, investments in these entities may be held at fair value through profit or loss, for example, those held by private equity businesses.

There are no individually significant investments in joint ventures or associates held by Barclays. There are certain entities that are considered strategic to the banking operations of the Group supporting payment services.

 

      2013      2012  
      Associates
£m
     Joint
ventures
£m
     Total £m      Associates
£m
     Joint
ventures
£m
     Total £m  

Equity accounted

     275         378         653         324         309         633   

Held at fair value through profit or loss

     610         400         1,010         634         315         949   

Total

     885         778         1,663         958         624         1,582   

Summarised financial information for the Group’s equity accounted associates and joint ventures is set out below. The amounts shown are the net income of the investees, not just the Group’s share for the year ended 31 December 2013 with the exception of certain undertakings for which the amounts are based on accounts made up to dates not earlier than three months before the balance sheet date.

 

      Associates      Joint ventures  
     

2013

£m

   

2012

£m

    

2013

£m

   

2012

£m

 

Profit or loss from continuing operations

     (51     137         144        168   

Other comprehensive income/(loss)

     3        14         (20     (2

Total comprehensive (loss)/income

     (48     151         124        166   

Unrecognised shares of the losses of individually immaterial associates and joint ventures were nil (2012: £6m).

The Group’s associates and joint ventures are subject to statutory requirements such that they cannot make remittances of dividends or make loan repayments to Barclays PLC without agreement from the external parties.

The Group’s share of commitments and contingencies of its associates and joint ventures comprised unutilised credit facilities provided to customers of £2,156m (2012: £2,711m). In addition, the Group has made commitments to finance or otherwise provide resources to its joint ventures and associates of £74m (2012: £87m).

Note 41: Securitisations

 

Accounting for securitisations

The Group uses securitisations as a source of finance and a means of risk transfer. Such transactions generally result in the transfer of contractual cash flows from portfolios of financial assets to holders of issued debt securities.

Securitisations may, depending on the individual arrangement, result in continued recognition of the securitised assets and the recognition of the debt securities issued in the transaction; lead to partial continued recognition of the assets to the extent of the Group’s continuing involvement in those assets or to derecognition of the assets and the separate recognition, as assets or liabilities, of any rights and obligations created or retained in the transfer. Full derecognition only occurs when the Group transfers both its contractual right to receive cash flows from the financial assets, or retains the contractual rights to receive the cash flows, but assumes a contractual obligation to pay the cash flows to another party without material delay or reinvestment, and also transfers substantially all the risks and rewards of ownership, including credit risk, prepayment risk and interest rate risk.

In the course of its normal banking activities, the Group makes transfers of financial assets, either legally (where legal rights to the cash flows from the asset are passed to the counterparty) or beneficial (where the Group retains the rights to the cash flows but assumes a responsibility to transfer them to the counterparty). Depending on the nature of the transaction, this may result in derecognition of the assets in their entirety, partial derecognition or no derecognition of the assets subject to the transfer.

Full derecognition only occurs when the Group transfers both its contractual right to receive cash flows from the financial assets (or retains the contractual rights to receive the cash flows, but assumes a contractual obligation to pay the cash flows to another party without material delay or reinvestment) and substantially all the risks and rewards of ownership, including credit risk, prepayment risk and interest rate risk. When an asset is transferred, in some circumstances, the Group may retain an interest in it (continuing involvement) requiring the Group to repurchase it in certain circumstances for other than its fair value on that date.

 

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For the year ended 31 December 2013 continued

 

 

 

 

Note 41: Securitisations continued

A summary of the main transactions, and the assets and liabilities and the financial risks arising from these transactions, is set out below:

Transfers of financial assets that do not result in derecognition

Securitisations

The Group was party to securitisation transactions involving its residential mortgage loans, business loans and credit card balances. In addition, the Group acts as a conduit for commercial paper, whereby it acquires static pools of residential mortgage loans from other lending institutions for securitisation transactions.

In these transactions, the assets, interests in the assets, or beneficial interests in the cash flows arising from the assets, are transferred to a special purpose entity, which then issues interest bearing debt securities to third-party investors.

Securitisations may, depending on the individual arrangement, result in continued recognition of the securitised assets and the recognition of the debt securities issued in the transaction. Partial continued recognition of the assets to the extent of the Group’s continuing involvement in those assets can also occur or derecognition of the assets and the separate recognition, as assets or liabilities, of any rights and obligations created or retained in the transfer.

The following table shows the carrying amount of securitised assets that have not resulted in full derecognition, together with the associated liabilities, for each category of asset on the balance sheet:

 

      2013     2012  
      Assets
Carrying
amount
£m
    

Fair
Value

£m

     Liabilities
Carrying
amount
£m
   

Fair

Value

£m

    Assets
Carrying
amount
£m
     Liabilities
Carrying
amount
£m
 

Loans and advances to customers

               

Residential mortgage loans

     3,930         3,658         (3,545     (3,335     5,545         (5,066

Credit cards, unsecured and other retail lending

     6,563         6,639         (5,017     (5,038     6,944         (5,519

Corporate loans

     331         285         (294     (286     944         (809

Total

     10,824         10,582         (8,856     (8,659     13,433         (11,394

Assets designated at fair value through profit or loss

               

Retained interest in residential mortgage loans

     68         n/a                n/a        12           

Balances included within loans and advances to customers represent securitisations where substantially all the risks and rewards of the asset have been retained by the Group.

The relationship between the transferred assets and the associated liabilities is that holders of notes may only look to cash flows from the securitised assets for payments of principal and interest due to them under the terms of their notes, although the contractual terms of their notes may be different to the maturity and interest of the transferred assets.

Retained interests in residential mortgage loans are securities which represent a continuing exposure to the prepayment and credit risk in the underlying securitised assets. The carrying amount of the loans before transfer was £124m (2012: £16m). The retained interest is initially recorded as an allocation of the original carrying amount based on the relative fair values of the portion derecognised and the portion retained.

For transfers of assets in relation to repurchase agreements, see Notes 23 and 42.

Continuing involvement in financial assets that have been derecognised

In some cases, the Group may have transferred a financial asset in its entirety but may have continuing involvement in it. This arises in asset securitisations where loans and asset backed securities were derecognised as a result of the Group’s involvement with CLOs, CDOs, RMBS and CMBS. Continuing involvement largely arises from providing financing into these structures in the form of retained notes, which do not bear first losses.

The table below shows the potential financial implications of such continuing involvement:

 

     

Continuing involvement as at

31 December 2013

    

Gain/(loss) from

continuing involvement

 
  Type of transfer   

Carrying

amount

£m

    

Fair value

£m

    

Maximum

exposure to

loss

£m

    

For the

year ended

31 December

2013

£m

    

Cumulative

to

31 December

2013

£m

 

CLO and other assets

     1,911         1,883         1,911         46         (712

ABS CDO Super Senior

                                       

US sub-prime and Alt-A

     398         377         398         3         (1,221

Commercial mortgage backed securities

     241         241         241         3         (33

Total

     2,550         2,501         2,550         52         (1,966

 

 

 

 

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Note 41: Securitisations continued

 

     

Continuing involvement as at

31 December 2012

    

Gain/(loss) from

continuing involvement

 
  

 

 

 

Type of transfer

   Carrying
amount
£m
     Fair value
£m
    

Maximum
exposure to
loss

£m

    

For the
year ended
31 December
2012

£m

    

Cumulative
to
31 December
2012

£m

 

CLO and other assets

     2,546         2,495         2,556         126         (839

ABS CDO Super Senior

     922         922         922         209         (2,204

US sub-prime and Alt-A

     781         781         781         8         (1,336

Commercial mortgage backed securities

     239         239         239         1         (41

Total

     4,488         4,437         4,498         344         (4,420

Assets which represent the Group’s continuing involvement in derecognised assets are recorded in the following line items:

 

  

Type of transfer

  

Loans and
advances

£m

    

Trading
portfolio
assets

£m

    

Derivatives

£m

    

Available
for sale
investments

£m

    

Total

£m

 

As at 31 December 2013

              

CLO and other assets

     1,130         778         2         1         1,911   

US sub-prime and Alt-A

     321         77                         398   

Commercial mortgage backed securities

             241                         241   

Total

     1,451         1,096         2         1         2,550   

As at 31 December 2012

              

CLO and other assets

     1,624         899         7         16         2,546   

ABS CDO Super Senior

             922                         922   

US sub-prime and Alt-A

     703         78                         781   

Commercial mortgage backed securities

             239                         239   

Total

     2,327         2,138         7         16         4,488   

Note 42: Assets pledged

Assets are pledged as collateral to secure liabilities under repurchase agreements, securitisations and stock lending agreements or as security deposits relating to derivatives. The following table summarises the nature and carrying amount of the assets pledged as security against these liabilities:

 

     

2013

£m

    

2012

£m

 

Trading portfolio assets

     65,271         85,334   

Loans and advances

     62,607         72,918   

Other

     8,755         20,816   

Assets pledged

     136,633         179,068   

Barclays has an additional £11bn (2012: £15bn) of loans and advances within its asset backed funding programmes that can readily be used to raise additional secured funding and available to support future issuance.

Collateral held as security for assets

Under certain transactions, including reverse repurchase agreements and stock borrowing transactions, the Group is allowed to resell or re-pledge the collateral held. The fair value at the balance sheet date of collateral accepted and re-pledged to others was as follows:

 

     

2013

£m

    

2012

£m

 

 

 

Fair value of securities accepted as collateral

     390,530         361,067   

Of which fair value of securities re-pledged/transferred to others

     321,115         309,466   

The full disclosure as per IFRS7 has been included in collateral and other credit enhancements (page 142).

 

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Notes to the financial statements>

For the year ended 31 December 2013 continued

     

 

 

 

 

 

 

  Other disclosure matters

 

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The notes included in this section focuses on related party transactions, auditors’ remuneration and directors’ remuneration. Related parties include any subsidiaries, associates, joint ventures, entities under common directorships and Key Management Personnel.

 

Note 43: Related party transactions and Directors’ remuneration

a) Related party transactions

Parties are considered to be related if one party has the ability to control the other party or exercise significant influence over the other party in making financial or operation decisions, or one other party controls both. The definition includes subsidiaries, associates, joint ventures and the Group’s pension schemes.

Subsidiaries

Transactions between Barclays PLC and subsidiaries also meet the definition of related party transactions. Where these are eliminated on consolidation, they are not disclosed in the Group financial statements. Transactions between Barclays PLC and its subsidiary, Barclays Bank PLC are fully disclosed in its balance sheet and income statement. A list of the Group’s principal subsidiaries is shown in Note 38.

Associates, joint ventures and other entities

The Group provides banking services to its associates, joint ventures, the Group pension funds (principally the UK Retirement Fund) and to entities under common directorships, providing loans, overdrafts, interest and non-interest bearing deposits and current accounts and other such banking services. Group companies also provide investment management and custodian services to the Group pension schemes. All of these transactions are conducted on the same terms as third-party transactions. Summarised financial information for the Group’s associates and joint ventures is set out in Note 40.

Entities under common directorships

The Group enters into normal commercial relationships with entities for which members of the Group’s Board also serve as Directors. The amounts included in the Group’s financial statements relating to such entities that are not publicly listed are shown in the table below under Entities under common directorships.

Amounts included in the Group’s financial statements, in aggregate, by category of related party entity are as follows:

 

      Associates
£m
    Joint
ventures
£m
   

Entities
under
common

directorships
£m

    

Pension
funds, unit
trusts and
investment

funds

£m

 

 

 
For the year ended and as at 31 December 2013          
Income      (10     24        1         3   
Impairment      (3     (4               
Total assets      116        1,521        33         5   
Total liabilities      278        185        73         207   

 

 
For the year ended and as at 31 December 2012          
Income      (3     38        1         20   
Impairment             (5               
Total assets      137        1,657        198           
Total liabilities      18        585        94         152   

 

 
For the year ended and as at 31 December 2011          
Income      (40     20        1         17   
Impairment      (2     (6               
Total assets      176        1,529        364           

 

 
Total liabilities      26        454        70         182   

 

 

No guarantees, pledges or commitments have been given or received in respect of these transactions in 2013 or 2012. Derivatives transacted on behalf of the Pensions Funds Unit Trusts and Investment Funds were £612.7m (2012: £661.1m).

Key Management Personnel

The Group’s Key Management Personnel, and persons connected with them, are also considered to be related parties for disclosure purposes. Key Management Personnel are defined as those persons having authority and responsibility for planning, directing and controlling the activities of Barclays PLC (directly or indirectly) and comprise the Directors of Barclays PLC and the Officers of the Group (listed on page 427), certain direct reports of the Chief Executive and the heads of major business units and functions.

There were no material related party transactions with entities under common directorship where a Director or other member of Key Management Personnel (or any connected person) is also a Director or other member of Key Management Personnel (or any connected person) of Barclays.

 

 

 

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Note 43: Related party transactions and Directors’ remuneration continued

The Group provides banking services to Directors and other Key Management Personnel and persons connected to them. Transactions during the year and the balances outstanding at 31 December were as follows:

 

Loans outstanding

              
     

2013

£m

   

2012

£m

 

As at 1 January

     5.9        5.9   

Loans issued during the year

     14.0        0.6   

Loan repayments during the year

     (6.5     (0.6

As at 31 December

     13.4        5.9   

No allowances for impairment were recognised in respect of loans to Directors or other members of Key Management Personnel (or any connected person). Fully collateralised open derivative positions relating to Directors or other Key Management Personnel amounted to £0.1m (2012: £nil).

 

Deposits outstanding

              
     

2013

£m

   

2012

£m

 

As at 1 January

     37.3        39.1   

Deposits received during the year

     156.4        141.8   

Deposits repaid during the year

     (93.5     (143.6

As at 31 December

     100.2        37.3   

Total commitments outstanding

Total commitments outstanding refers to the total of any undrawn amounts on credit cards and/or overdraft facilities provided to Key Management Personnel. Total commitments outstanding were £2.6m (2012: £2.3m).

All loans to Directors and other Key Management Personnel (and persons connected to them), (a) were made in the ordinary course of business, (b) were made on substantially the same terms, including interest rates and collateral, as those prevailing at the same time for comparable transactions with other persons and (c) did not involve more than a normal risk of collectability or present other unfavourable features.

Remuneration of Directors and other Key Management Personnel

Total remuneration awarded to Directors and other Key Management Personnel below represents the awards made to individuals that have been approved by the Board Remuneration Committee as part of the latest remuneration decisions and is consistent with the approach adopted for disclosures set out on pages 89 to 125. Costs recognised in the income statement reflect the accounting charge for the year included within operating expenses. The difference between the values awarded and the recognised income statement charge principally relates to the recognition of deferred costs for prior year awards. Figures are provided for the period that individuals met the definition of Directors and other Key Management Personnel.

 

     

2013

£m

   

2012

£m

 

Salaries and other short-term benefits

     22.3        20.2   

Pension costs

     0.6        0.4   

Other long-term benefits

     11.5        17.9   

Share-based payments

     29.7        24.6   

Employer social security charges on emoluments

     6.5        7.9   

Costs recognised for accounting purposes

     70.6        71.0   

Employer social security charges on emoluments

     (6.5     (7.9

Other long-term benefits – difference between awards granted and costs recognised

     (3.9     (13.4

Share-based payments – difference between awards granted and costs recognised

     (18.3     (12.0

Total remuneration awarded

     41.9        37.7   

Disclosure required by the Companies Act 2006

The following information regarding directors is presented in accordance with the Companies Act 2006:

 

     

2013

£m

    

2012

£m

 

Aggregate emoluments

     5.3         5.5   

Gains on exercise of share options

     1.7           

Amounts paid under LTIPs

     0.7         2.8   
       7.7         8.3   

There were no pension contributions paid to defined contribution schemes on behalf of Directors (2012: £nil). There were no notional pension contributions to defined contribution schemes.

As at 31 December 2013, there were no Directors accruing benefits under a defined benefit scheme (2012: nil).

 

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Notes to the financial statements >

For the year ended 31 December 2013 continued

 

 

 

 

Note 43: Related party transactions and Directors’ remuneration continued

Directors’ and Officers’ shareholdings and options

The beneficial ownership of ordinary share capital of Barclays PLC by all Directors and Officers of Barclays PLC (involving 28 persons) amounted 6,932,951 (2012: 19,620,252) ordinary shares of 25p each (0.04% of the ordinary share capital outstanding).

At 31 December 2013 executive Directors and officers of Barclays PLC (involving 16 persons) held options to purchase a total of 345,943 Barclays PLC ordinary shares (2012: 1,128,437) of 25p each at prices ranging from 133.01p to 228.16p under Sharesave and 431.38p under the Incentive Share Option Plan, respectively.

Advances and credit to Directors and guarantees on behalf of Directors

In accordance with Section 413 of the Companies Act 2006, the total amount of advances and credits made available in 2013 to persons who served as directors during the year was £0.2m (2012: £0.3m). No guarantees were entered into on behalf of Directors during 2013 (2012: £nil).

Note 44: Auditors’ remuneration

Auditors’ remuneration is included within consultancy, legal and professional fees in administration and general expenses and comprises:

 

      Audit £m      Audit
related
£m
     Taxation
services
£m
     Other
services
£m
     Total £m  

2013

                                            

Audit of the Group’s annual accounts

     10                                 10   

Other services:

              

Fees payable for the Company’s associatesa

     25                                 25   

Other services suppliedb

             3                         3   

Other services relating to taxation

              

– compliance services

                     2                 2   

– advisory servicesc

                                       

Other

             3                 2         5   

Total auditors’ remuneration

     35         6         2         2         45   
           

2012

              

Audit of the Group’s annual accounts

     10                                 10   

Other services:

              

Fees payable for the Company’s associatesa

     25                                 25   

Other services suppliedb

             4                         4   

Other services relating to taxation

              

– compliance services

                     2                 2   

– advisory servicesc

                                       

Other

             2                 1         3   

Total auditors’ remuneration

     35         6         2         1         44   
           

2011

              

Audit of the Group’s annual accounts

     13                                 13   

Other services:

              

Fees payable for the Company’s associatesa

     26                                 26   

Other services suppliedb

             3                         3   

Other services relating to taxation

              

– compliance services

                     5                 5   

– advisory servicesc

                     1                 1   

Services relating to corporate finance transactions entered into or proposed to beentered into by or on behalf of the Company or any of its associatesd

                             2         2   

Other

             3                 1         4   

Total auditors’ remuneration

     39         6         6         3         54   

The figures shown in the above table relate to fees paid to PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP and its associates for continuing operations of business. Fees paid to other auditors not associated with PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP in respect of the audit of the Company’s subsidiaries were £5m (2012: £7m, 2011: £6m).

Notes

a Comprises the fees for the statutory audit of the subsidiaries and associated pension schemes both inside and outside Great Britain and fees for the work performed by associates of PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP in respect of the consolidated financial statements of the Company. Fees relating to the audit of the associated pension schemes were £0.2 (2012: £0.2m, 2011: £0.2m).
b Comprises services in relation to statutory and regulatory filings. These include audit services for the review of the interim financial information under the Listing Rules of the UK listing authority.
c Includes consultation on tax matters, tax advice relating to transactions and other tax planning and advice.
d Comprises due diligence related to transactions and other work in connection with such transactions.

 

 

 

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Note 45: Financial risks, liquidity and capital management

To improve transparency and ease of reference, by concentrating related information in one place, and to reduce duplication, disclosures required under IFRS relating to financial risks and capital resources have been included within the Risk management and governance section as follows:

 

¡   credit risk, on pages 142 to 189;

 

¡   market risk, on pages 190 to 198;

 

¡   capital resources, on pages 199 to 207; and

 

¡   liquidity risk, on pages 208 to 224.

Note 46: Transition Notes – Changes in accounting policies, comparability and other adjustments

IAS 19 (revised) Employee Benefits

In June 2011, the IASB issued revisions to IAS 19 Employee Benefits (IAS 19R or the revised standard). During 2013, Barclays adopted IAS 19R retrospectively in accordance with the transitional provisions set out in the standard. The revised standard introduces changes to the recognition, measurement, presentation and disclosure of post-employment benefits. IAS 19R eliminates the “corridor method”, under which the recognition of actuarial gains and losses was deferred. Instead, the full defined benefit obligation net of plan assets is now recorded on the balance sheet, with changes resulting from remeasurements recognised immediately in other comprehensive income. The measurement of the defined benefit obligation takes into account risk sharing features, such as those within our Swiss pension plan. In addition, IAS 19R requires net interest expense / income to be calculated as the product of the net defined benefit liability / asset and the discount rate as determined at the beginning of the year. The effect of this is to remove the previous concept of recognising an expected return on plan assets.

IFRS 10 Consolidation of Financial Statements

In May 2011, the IASB issued IFRS 10 Consolidation of Financial Statements. IFRS 10 establishes principles for the presentation and preparation of consolidated financial statements when an entity controls one or more other entities. IFRS 10 replaces the consolidation requirements in SIC-12 Consolidation—Special Purpose Entities and IAS 27 Consolidated and Separate Financial Statements. IFRS 10 builds on existing principles by identifying the concept of control as the determining factor in whether an entity should be included within the consolidated financial statements of the parent company.

The implementation of IFRS 10 resulted in the Group consolidating some entities that were previously not consolidated and deconsolidating some entities that were previously consolidated, principally impacting the consolidation of entities in the Investment Bank with credit market exposures. 142 entities were impacted by IFRS10 and were largely within Investment Bank and Wealth divisions. 79 entities were consolidated while 63 entities were deconsolidated.

Movement between the published and restated income statements for 31 December 2011

In the income statement for the year ending 2011, the adoption of the IAS 19 revised standard resulted in staff costs increasing by £109m, tax decreasing by £26m and the profit before tax reducing by £83m. The movement in the staff cost relates to the replacement of expected return on assets with net interest income/expense using the scheme discount rate resulting in further expense of £164m. This is partially offset by amortisation of unrecognised losses £55m no longer being recognised due to the removal of the corridor approach, with all actuarial losses recognised immediately on the balance sheet.

In addition, the adoption of the IAS 19 revised standard resulted in the basic earnings per share decreasing 0.6p from 23.5p to 22.9p and the diluted earnings per share decreasing 0.7p from 22.6p to 21.9p.

 

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Notes to the financial statements >

For the year ended 31 December 2013 continued

 

 

 

 

Note 46: Transition Notes – Changes in accounting policies, comparability and other adjustments continued

Consolidated income statement – movement between published and restated

For the year ended 31 December 2011

   Published
£m
     IFRS 10
£m
     IAS 19
revised
£m
     Othera
£m
     Restated
£m
 

Continuing operations

              

Interest income

     20,589                                 20,589   

Interest expense

     (8,388                              (8,388

Net interest income

     12,201                                 12,201   

Fee and commission income

     10,208                                 10,208   

Fee and commission expense

     (1,586                              (1,586

Net fee and commission income

     8,622                                 8,622   

Net trading income

     7,660                                 7,660   

Net investment income

     2,305                                 2,305   

Net premiums from insurance contracts

     1,076                                 1,076   

Gains on debt buy-backs and extinguishments

     1,130                                 1,130   

Other income

     39                                 39   

Total income

     33,033                                 33,033   

Net claims and benefits incurred on insurance contracts

     (741                              (741

Total income net of insurance claims

     32,292                                 32,292   

Credit impairment charges and other provisions

     (3,802                              (3,802

Impairment of investment in BlackRock, Inc.

     (1,800                              (1,800

Net operating income

     26,690                                 26,690   

Staff costs

     (11,407              (109      (837      (12,353

Administration and general expenses

     (6,681                      837         (5,844

Depreciation of property, plant and equipment

     (673                              (673

Amortisation of intangible assets

     (419                              (419

Goodwill impairment

     (597                              (597

Provision for PPI redress

     (1,000                              (1,000

Operating expenses

     (20,777              (109              (20,886

Share of post-tax results of associates and joint ventures

     60                                 60   

Loss on disposal of subsidiaries, associates and joint ventures

     (94                              (94

Profit before tax

     5,879                 (109              5,770   

Taxation

     (1,928              26                 (1,902

Profit after tax

     3,951                 (83              3,868   

Attributable to:

                                            

Equity holders of the Parent

     3,007                 (83              2,924   

Non-controlling interests

     944                                 944   

Profit after tax

     3,951                 (83              3,868   

Movement between the published and restated income statements for 31 December 2012

In the income statement for the year ending 2012, the adoption of the IFRS 10 and IAS 19 revised standards resulted in net operating income increasing by £574m, operating expenses increasing by £23m, tax increasing by £134m and the profit before tax increasing by £551m. The movement in the staff cost relates to the replacement of expected return on assets with net interest income/expense using the scheme discount rate resulting in further expense of £53m. This is partially offset by amortisation of unrecognised losses £31m no longer being recognised due to the removal of the corridor approach, with all actuarial losses recognised immediately on the balance sheet.

In addition, the adoption of the IAS 19 revised and IFRS 10 standards resulted in the basic loss per share decreasing by 3.2p from (8.0)p to (4.8)p and the diluted loss per share also decreasing by 3.2p from (8.0)p to (4.8)p.

Note

a The Group has also realigned outsourcing costs from administration and general expenses to staff costs in order to more appropriately reflect the nature and internal management of these costs. The net effect of these movements is to reduce administration and general expenses and increase staff costs by £837m.

 

 

 

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Note 46: Transition Notes – Changes in accounting policies, comparability and other adjustments continued

Consolidated income statement – movement between published and restated

For the year ended 31 December 2012

   Published
£m
    IFRS 10
£m
    IAS 19
revised
£m
    Othera
£m
    Restated
£m
 

Continuing operations

          

Interest income

     19,199        12                      19,211   

Interest expense

     (7,560 )      3                      (7,557 ) 

Net interest income

     11,639        15                      11,654   

Fee and commission income

     10,216        (3                   10,213   

Fee and commission expense

     (1,634 )      (43                   (1,677 ) 

Net fee and commission income

     8,582        (46                   8,536   

Net trading income

     3,025        322                      3,347   

Net investment income

     817        27                      844   

Net premiums from insurance contracts

     896                             896   

Other income

     332                             332   

Total income

     25,291        318                      25,609   

Net claims and benefits incurred on insurance contracts

     (600 )                           (600 ) 

Total income net of insurance claims

     24,691        318                      25,009   

Credit impairment charges and other provisions

     (3,596 )      256                      (3,340 ) 

Net operating income

     21,095        574                      21,669   

Staff costs

     (10,447 )      (1     (22     (997     (11,467 ) 

Administration and general expenses

     (6,988 )                    997        (5,991 ) 

Depreciation of property, plant and equipment

     (669 )                           (669 ) 

Amortisation of intangible assets

     (435 )                           (435 ) 

Provision for PPI redress

     (1,600 )                           (1,600 ) 

Provision for interest rate hedging products redress

     (850 )                           (850 ) 

Operating expenses

     (20,989     (1     (22            (21,012 ) 

Share of post–tax results of associates and joint ventures

     110                             110   

Profit on disposal of subsidiaries, associates and joint ventures

     28                             28   

Gain on acquisitions

     2                             2   

Profit before tax

     246        573        (22            797   

Taxation

     (482 )      (134                   (616 ) 

(Loss)/profit after tax

     (236     439        (22            181   

Attributable to:

                                        

Equity holders of the Parent

     (1,041 )      439        (22            (624 ) 

Non–controlling interests

     805                             805   

(Loss)/profit after tax

     (236     439        (22            181   

Impact of IAS 19 revised standard on the income statement for the year ending 31 December 2013

The impact of the IAS 19 revised standard is an increase in staff costs of £22m and a decrease in tax of £1m. The movement in the staff cost relates to the replacement of expected return on assets with net interest income/expense using the scheme discount rate resulting in a further expense of £113m. This is partially offset by amortisation of unrecognised losses £91m no longer being recognised due to the removal of the corridor approach, with all actuarial losses recognised immediately on the balance sheet.

In addition, the adoption of the IAS 19 revised standard resulted in the basic earnings per share decreasing 0.1p to 3.8p from 3.9p and the diluted earnings per share decreasing 0.1p to 3.7p from 3.8p.

Movement between the published and restated statement of comprehensive income for 31 December 2011

In the statement of comprehensive income for the year ending 2012, the adoption of the IAS 19 revised standard resulted in the other comprehensive income increasing by £748m. This is mainly attributable to the movement which relates to actuarial losses on scheme assets and liabilities no longer being deferred.

Movement between the published and restated statement of comprehensive income for 31 December 2012

In the statement of comprehensive income for the year ending 2012, the adoption of the IAS 19 revised and IFRS 10 standards resulted in the other comprehensive loss increasing by £787m.

A major part of the reduction of £1,235m can be attributed to the IAS 19 revised standard which impacted the retirement benefit remeasurements. The movement is as a result of actuarial losses on scheme assets and liabilities no longer being deferred.

Note

a The Group has also realigned outsourcing costs from administration and general expenses to staff costs in order to more appropriately reflect the nature and internal management of these costs. The net effect of these movements is to reduce administration and general expenses and increase staff costs by £997m.

 

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Notes to the financial statements >

For the year ended 31 December 2013 continued

 

 

 

 

Note 46: Transition Notes – Changes in accounting policies, comparability and other adjustments continued

Consolidated statement of comprehensive income – movement between published and restated

 

  For the year ended 31 December 2012    Published
£m
    IFRS 10
£m
     IAS 19
revised
£m
    Restated
£m
 

(Loss)/profit after tax

     (236     439         (22     181   

Other comprehensive income from continuing operations:

         

Currency translation reserve

         

– Currency translation differences

     (1,578     30                (1,548

Available for sale reserve

         

– Net gains from changes in fair value

     1,237                       1,237   

– Net gains transferred to net profit on disposal

     (703                    (703

– Net losses transferred to net profit due to impairment

     40                       40   

– Net losses transferred to net profit due to fair value hedging

     474                       474   

– Changes in insurance liabilities

     (150                    (150

– Tax

     (352                    (352

Cash flow hedging reserve

         

– Net gains from changes in fair value

     1,499                       1,499   

– Net gains transferred to net profit

     (695                    (695

– Tax

     (142                    (142

Other

     95        1                96   

Total comprehensive loss that may be recycled to profit or loss

     (275     31                (244

 

Other comprehensive loss not recycled to profit or loss:

                                 

Retirement benefit remeasurements

                    (1,553     (1,553

Deferred tax

                    318        318   

Other comprehensive loss for the period

 

     (275     31         (1,235     (1,479

Total comprehensive loss for the year

     (511     470         (1,257     (1,298

 

Attributable to:

         

Equity holders of the Parent

     (1,107     470         (1,257     (1,894

Non-controlling interests

     596                       596   
       (511     470         (1,257     (1,298

 

 

 

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Note 46: Transition Notes – Changes in accounting policies, comparability and other adjustments continued

Impact of IAS 19 revised standard on the statement of comprehensive income for 31 December 2013

The adoption of the IAS 19 revised standard resulted in the other comprehensive loss increasing by £3,846m. This movement is attributable to the actuarial losses on scheme assets and liabilities no longer being deferred.

Movement between the published 31 December 2011 and restated 1 January 2012 numbers on the balance sheet

The opening balance sheet as of 1 January 2012 and the comparative figures have been presented as if IAS 19R and IFRS 10 had always been applied. The effect of adoption on prior periods is shown in the table below. The adoption of IAS 19R and IFRS 10 has resulted in, total assets decreasing by £1,877m, total liabilities increasing by £305m and total equity decreasing by £2,182m as at 1 January 2012.

The movement on the retirement benefit assets principally relate to recognised losses whilst the movement on the retirement benefit liabilities relates to netting adjustments made to reclassify balances between assets and liabilities where the overall scheme is in a net deficit position. Movements on the assets, liabilities and equities balances are shown in the table below:

 

As at December 2011

  

Published

£m

     IFRS 10
£m
    IAS 19
revised
£m
   

Restated

£m

 

Assets

         

Cash and balances at central banks

     106,894         96               106,990   

Items in the course of collection from other banks

         
     1,812                       1,812   

Trading portfolio assets

     152,183         1,325               153,508   

Financial assets designated at fair value

     36,949         818               37,767   

Derivative financial instruments

     538,964         13               538,977   

Available for sale investments

     68,491         4               68,495   

Loans and advances to banks

     47,446         (24            47,422   

Loans and advances to customers

     431,934         (2,375            429,559   

Reverse repurchase agreements and other similar secured lending

     153,665         (635            153,030   

Prepayments, accrued income and other assets

     4,563         2               4,565   

Investments in associates and joint ventures

     427         60               487   

Property, plant and equipment

     7,166                       7,166   

Goodwill and intangible assets

     7,846                       7,846   

Current and deferred tax assets

     3,384         283        318        3,985   

Retirement benefit assets

     1,803                (1,762     41   

Total assets

     1,563,527         (433     (1,444     1,561,650   

Liabilities

         

Deposits from banks

     91,116         7               91,123   

Items in the course of collection due to other banks

     969                       969   

Customer accounts

     366,032         (505            365,527   

Repurchase agreements and other similar secured borrowing

     207,292                       207,292   

Trading portfolio liabilities

     45,887                       45,887   

Financial liabilities designated at fair value

     87,997         456               88,453   

Derivative financial instruments

     527,910         339               528,249   

Debt securities in issue

     129,736         (58            129,678   

Subordinated liabilities

     24,870                       24,870   

Accruals, deferred income and other liabilities

     12,580         274               12,854   

Provisions

     1,529                       1,529   

Current and deferred tax liabilities

     2,092         (1     (129     1,962   

Retirement benefit liabilities

     321                (78     243   

Total liabilities

     1,498,331         512        (207     1,498,636   

Total equity

         

Shareholders’ equity excluding non-controlling interests

     55,589         (945     (1,237     53,407   

Non-controlling interests

     9,607                         9,607   

Total equity

     65,196         (945     (1,237     63,014   

Total liabilities and equity

     1,563,527         (433     (1,444     1,561,650   

 

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Notes to the financial statements >

For the year ended 31 December 2013 continued

 

 

 

 

Note 46: Transition Notes – Changes in accounting policies, comparability and other adjustments continued

Movement between the published and restated balance sheet as at 31 December 2012

The adoption of the IAS 19 revised and IFRS 10 standards resulted in a decrease of £1,986m in the total assets, an increase of £985m in total liabilities and a reduction of the shareholders equity by £2,971m.

The movement on the retirement benefit assets principally relate to recognised losses, netting adjustments made to reclassify balances from assets to liabilities where the overall scheme is in a net deficit position and changes to asset values due to the removal of the expected return on assets. The movement on the retirement benefit liabilities relates to netting adjustments. Movements on the assets, liabilities and equities balances are shown in the table below:

Consolidated balance sheet – movement between published and restated

 

As at 31 December 2012

  

Published

£m

     IFRS 10
£m
    IAS 19
revised
£m
   

Restated

£m

 

Assets

         

Cash and balances at central banks

     86,175         16               86,191   

Items in the course of collection from other banks

     1,456         17               1,473   

Trading portfolio assets

     145,030         1,322               146,352   

Financial assets designated at fair value

     46,061         568               46,629   

Derivative financial instruments

     469,146         10               469,156   

Available for sale investments

     75,109                       75,109   

Loans and advances to banks

     40,489         (27            40,462   

Loans and advances to customers

     425,729         (1,823            423,906   

Reverse repurchase agreements and other similar secured lending

     176,956         (434            176,522   

Prepayments, accrued income and other assets

     4,360         5               4,365   

Investments in associates and joint ventures

     570         63               633   

Property, plant and equipment

     5,754                       5,754   

Goodwill and intangible assets

     7,915                       7,915   

Current tax assets

     252                       252   

Deferred tax assets

     3,016         139        408        3,563   

Retirement benefit assets

     2,303                (2,250     53   

Total assets

     1,490,321         (144     (1,842     1,488,335   

Liabilities

         

Deposits from banks

     77,010         2               77,012   

Items in the course of collection due to other banks

     1,573         14               1,587   

Customer accounts

     385,707         (296            385,411   

Repurchase agreements and other similar secured borrowing

     217,342         (164            217,178   

Trading portfolio liabilities

     44,794                       44,794   

Financial liabilities designated at fair value

     78,280         281               78,561   

Derivative financial instruments

     462,468         253               462,721   

Debt securities in issue

     119,581         (56            119,525   

Subordinated liabilities

     24,018                       24,018   

Accruals, deferred income and other liabilities

     12,232         300               12,532   

Provisions

     2,766                       2,766   

Current tax liabilities

     621         (1            620   

Deferred tax liabilities

     719                (377     342   

Retirement benefit liabilities

     253                1,029        1,282   

Total liabilities

     1,427,364         333        652        1,428,349   

Total equity

         

Shareholders’ equity excluding non-controlling interests

     53,586         (477     (2,494     50,615   

Non-controlling interests

     9,371                       9,371   

Total equity

     62,957         (477     (2,494     59,986   

Total liabilities and equity

     1,490,321         (144     (1,842     1,488,335   

Impact of IAS 19 revised standard on the balance sheet as at 31 December 2013

The adoption of the IAS 19 revised standard resulted in a change from a defined benefit asset of £2,066m to a defined benefit liability of £1,780m. This movement is due to actuarial losses of £3,846m being recognised on the balance sheet.

 

 

 

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Note 46: Transition Notes – Changes in accounting policies, comparability and other adjustments continued

Movement between the published and restated cash flow statement for 31 December 2012

The adoption of IFRS 10 standard mainly impacted the net cash from operating activities which further decreased by £107m during the year ending 2012. The cash and cash equivalents at the beginning of the year increased by £96m while the cash and cash equivalents at the end of the year reduced by £11m.

However, the adoption of the IAS 19 revised had no impact on the cash movements for the years ended 2011, 2012 and 2013.

Consolidated cash flow statement – movement between published and restated

 

For the year ended 31 December 2012

  

Published

£m

   

IFRS 10

£m

   

IAS 19

revised

£m

   

Restated

£m

 

Continuing operations

        

Reconciliation of profit before tax to net cash flows from operating activities:

        

Profit before tax

     246        573        (22     797   

Adjustment for non-cash items:

        

Allowance for impairment

     3,596        (256            3,340   

Depreciation, amortisation and impairment of property, plant, equipment and intangibles

     1,119                      1,119   

Other provisions, including pensions

     3,057        23               3,080   

Net profit on disposal of investments and property, plant and equipment

     (679                   (679

Other non-cash movements

     5,448        95        22        5,565   

Changes in operating assets and liabilities

        

Net decrease/(increase) in loans and advances to banks and customers

     2,231        (399            1,832   

Net (increase)/decrease in reverse repurchase agreements and other similar lending

     (23,291     (201            (23,492

Net (decrease)/increase in deposits and debt securities in issue

     (4,594     206               (4,388

Net increase/(decrease) in repurchase agreements and other similar borrowing

     10,050        (164            9,886   

Net decrease/(increase) in derivative financial instruments

     4,376        (83            4,293   

Net decrease/(increase) in trading assets

     6,893        3               6,896   

Net (decrease)/increase in trading liabilities

     (973                   (973

Net (increase)/decrease in financial investments

     (18,838     74               (18,764

Net decrease in other assets

     555        (20            535   

Net (decrease) in other liabilities

     (1,396     42               (1,354

Corporate income tax paid

     (1,516                   (1,516

Net cash from operating activities

     (13,716     (107            (13,823

Purchase of available for sale investments

     (80,796     (1            (80,797

Proceeds from sale or redemption of available for sale investments

     73,769        4               73,773   

Purchase of property, plant and equipment

     (604                   (604

Other cash flows associated with investing activities

     532        (1            531   

Net cash from investing activities

     (7,099     2               (7,097

Dividends paid

     (1,427                   (1,427

Proceeds of borrowings and issuance of subordinated debt

     2,258                      2,258   

Repayments of borrowings and redemption of subordinated debt

     (2,680                   (2,680

Net issue of shares and other equity instruments

     97                      97   

Net (purchase)/disposal of treasury shares

     (979                   (979

Net redemption of shares issued to non-controlling interests

     (111                   (111

Net cash from financing activities

     (2,842                   (2,842

Effect of exchange rates on cash and cash equivalents

     (4,109     (2            (4,111

Net (decrease)/increase in cash and cash equivalents

     (27,766     (107            (27,873

Cash and cash equivalents at beginning of year

     149,673        96               149,769   

Cash and cash equivalents at end of year

     121,907        (11            121,896   

Cash and cash equivalents comprise:

        

Cash and balances at central banks

     86,175        16               86,191   

Loans and advances to banks with original maturity less than three months

     33,500        (27            33,473   

Available for sale treasury and other eligible bills with original maturity less than three months

     2,228                      2,228   

Trading portfolio assets with original maturity less than three months

     4                      4   
       121,907        (11            121,896   

 

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Notes to the financial statements >

For the year ended 31 December 2013 continued

 

 

 

 

Note 47: Barclays PLC (the Parent Company)

Cost of investment in subsidiary

The cost of investment in subsidiary held by Barclays PLC (the Parent Company) represents investments made into Barclays Bank PLC. The £8.6bn increase was made up of £5.8bn and £0.7bn of capital injections into Barclays Bank PLC subsequent to the Barclays PLC rights issue and warrants converted respectively. A further £2.1bn was invested in Barclays Bank PLC in exchange for Additional Tier 1 Notes issued by Barclays Bank PLC.

Derivative financial instrument and other (expense)/income

The derivative financial instrument held by the Parent Company represents Barclays PLC’s right to receive a Capital Note for no additional consideration, in the event the Barclays PLC consolidated Core Tier 1 (CT1) or Common Equity Tier 1 (CET 1) ratio, as appropriate, falls below 7%, at which point the notes are automatically assigned by the holders to Barclays PLC. The changes in the fair value of the derivative financial instrument are reported in the income statement as other (expense)/income.

Other assets

Other assets held by the Parent Company include a £739m (2012: £nil) receivable held by Barclays PLC which is payable by Barclays Bank PLC. The receivable arose as a result of shares issued by Barclays PLC to fund share awards for employee share schemes within Barclays Bank PLC.

 

 

 

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Risk management >

Contents

  

 

 

 

 

A comprehensive overview of Barclays approach to risk management and more specific information on policies that the Group determines to be of particular significance in the current operating environment.

 

 

   

Barclays risk management strategy

     378   
    Barclays’ risk culture – enabling the ‘Go-To’ bank      378   
    Risk governance and assigning responsibilities      379   
    Principal risks      384   
   

Risk management in the setting of strategy

 

    

 

385

 

  

 

   

 

 
   

Credit risk management

     392   
    Overview      392   
    Credit risk mitigation      398   
    Forbearance and other concession programmes      400   
    Refinancing risk      402   
    Derivative expenses      402   
    Environmental risk      403   
   

Asset credit quality

 

    

 

404

 

  

 

   

 

 
   

Market risk management

     405   
    Overview      405   
    Management of traded market risk      407   
    Management of non-traded market risk      413   
   

Management of pension risk

 

    

 

414

 

  

 

   

 

 
   

Operational risk management

     415   
    Overview      415   
   

Operational risk management

 

    

 

416

 

  

 

   

 

 
   

Liquidity risk management

     418   
    Overview      418   
    Governance and organisation      418   
   

Ongoing business management

 

    

 

419

 

  

 

   

 

 
   

Capital risk management

     420   
    Overview      420   
    Our approach to capital risk management      420   
    Ongoing capital management risks      421   

 

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Risk management >

Barclays risk management strategy

 

 

 

 

 

 

LOGO

 

 

The following pages provide a comprehensive overview of Barclays approach to risk management and more specific information on policies that the Group determines to be of particular significance in the current operating environment.

 

This section outlines the Group’s strategy for managing risk and how risk culture has been developed to ensure that there is a set of objectives and practices which are shared across the Group. It provides details of the Group’s governance, how responsibilities are assigned and the committee structure. The last section provides an insight into how risk management is part of the strategy setting process, including the planning process, the setting of risk appetite and stress testing across the Group.

 

 

These disclosures are unaudited unless otherwise stated

Barclays Risk Management Strategy (audited)

Barclays has clear risk management objectives and a well established strategy to deliver them, through core risk management processes.

At a strategic level, the risk management objectives are to:

 

¡   Identify the Group’s significant risks;

 

¡   Formulate the Group’s risk appetite and ensure that the business profile and plans are consistent with it;

 

¡   Optimise risk/return decisions by taking them as closely as possible to the business, while establishing strong and independent review and challenge structures;

 

¡   Ensure that business growth plans are properly supported by effective risk infrastructure;

 

¡   Manage the risk profile to ensure that specific financial deliverables remain possible under a range of adverse business conditions; and

 

¡   Help executives improve the control and coordination of risk taking across the business.

In February 2013, Barclays announced the outcome of its strategic review and set out its commitments for 2015 which are critical to making Barclays the ‘Go-To’ bank for all its stakeholders.

As part of this commitment the Barclays ‘Go-To’ Enterprise Risk Management Framework (ERMF) sets out the activities, tools, techniques and organisational arrangements so that material risks facing the Bank can be better identified and understood, and that appropriate responses are in place to protect Barclays and prevent detriment to its customers, colleagues or community. This will help the Bank meet its goals, and enhance its ability to respond to new opportunities.

The aim of the ‘Go-To’ risk management process is to provide a structured, practical and easily understood set of three steps – Evaluate, Respond and Monitor (the E-R-M process) – that enables management to identify and assess those risks, determine the appropriate risk response, and then monitor the effectiveness of the risk response and changes to the risk profile.

 

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1.  Evaluate: Risk evaluation must be carried out by those individuals, teams and departments that are best placed to identify and assess the potential risks, and include those responsible for delivering the objectives under review.

2.  Respond: The appropriate risk response effectively and efficiently ensures that risks are kept within appetite, which is the level of risk that Barclays is prepared to accept whilst pursuing its business strategy. There are three types of response: accept the risk but take the necessary mitigating actions such as using risk controls; stop the existing activity/do not start the proposed activity, or continue the activity but lay off risks to another party e.g. insurance.

3.  Monitor: Once risks have been identified and measured, and controls put in place, progress towards objectives must be tracked. Monitoring must be ongoing and can prompt re-evaluation of the risks and/or changes in responses. Monitoring must be carried out proactively and is wider than just ‘reporting’ and includes ensuring risks are being maintained within risk appetite and checking that controls are functioning as intended and remain fit for purpose.

The process is orientated around material risks impacting delivery of objectives, and is used to promote an efficient and effective approach to risk management. This three step risk management process:

 

¡   Can be applied to every objective at every level in the bank, both top-down or bottom-up;

 

¡   Is embedded into the business decision making process;

 

¡   Guides our response to changes in the external or internal environment in which existing activities are conducted; and

 

¡   Involves all staff and all three lines of defence (see page 380)

Barclays’ risk culture – enabling the ‘Go-To’ bank

In every area of Barclays’ activities, outcomes of decisions or actions may be uncertain and could potentially impact whether, or how well, the Group delivers against its objectives. Risk management, therefore, plays a significant role in the Group achieving its goals and in turning Barclays into ‘Go-To’ bank.

Barclays risk culture is the set of objectives and practices, shared across the organisation, that drive and govern risk management.

 

 

 

 

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The Salz Reviewa issued recommendations to improve the culture of Barclays. Specifically, to develop a consistently strong risk culture, the report recommended:

 

¡   Embedding a strong, consistent risk control framework in all the businesses, that articulates responsibilities across the three lines of defence, and that reinforces the role of the front line;

 

¡   Clear risk appetite statements for all types of risk, embed adherence in all business units, and reinforce with strong management actions in cases of breaches; and

 

¡   Embedding risk and compliance criteria in performance evaluations, and in remuneration and promotion decisions.

During 2013 work streams have been initiated which implement the recommendations and help position the risk function to effectively and efficiently support Barclays’ strategy.

The ‘Transform Risk’ initiative

During 2013 a new global management structure for risk was unveiled to improve delivery against the Transform commitments, to meet the demands of the regulators, the Board, and the wider business and also to create an appropriate environment for risk colleagues to work, advance their careers and contribute to the success of the Bank.

‘Transform Risk’ is being led by the Risk Executive Committee, coordinated by the global Risk COO, and supported by a team of people from across the risk function. It represents a significant shift in the operating model, process and systems, and will support the drive for both greater effectiveness and efficiency.

The Transform programme has provided the opportunity to extend best practices to more functions and business units, and in other cases identify needed updates or improvements. This work has been captured in the new Enterprise Risk Management Framework (ERMF) that has been deployed across the organisation and provides a common set of principles and standards that will form the fundamental elements of the risk culture.

The components of the ERMF set out a philosophy and approach that is applicable to the whole bank, to all colleagues and to all types of risk, hence establishing, maintaining and improving the risk culture of Barclays.

See Risk Governance and Assigning Responsibilities on page 379 for more information.

Risk appetite and the ‘Tone from the top’

Communicating and enforcing risk appetite in all businesses creates a common understanding and fosters debate around what types of risks are acceptable, and what levels are appropriate at business and Group level.

To develop a consistently strong risk culture across the Group, Barclays has communicated clear statements as to the Group risk appetite for all risk types and further embedded adherence to Group-wide appetite into all businesses. In particular, risk appetite:

 

¡   Articulates the types and level of risk we are willing to take and why, to enable specific risk taking activities. It also specifies those risks we seek to avoid and why, to constrain specific risk taking activities;

 

¡   It will be embedded within key decision making processes including business planning, mergers and acquisitions, new product approvals and business change initiatives;

 

¡   It provides for performance management and disciplinary consequences in cases of breach; and

 

¡   Ultimately owned by the Group CEO, who is responsible for leading, managing and organising executive management to achieve execution of the Barclays strategy and business plans in line with risk appetite.

See Risk appetite on page 386 for more information.

Supporting colleagues to manage risk – in the right way

By supporting colleagues to manage Risk in the right way, the Group seeks to ensure that all risk managers share the Barclays values and a common understanding of the role that risk management plays in promoting them:

 

¡   Risk Management capability and ability to act in a risk aware manner forms part of the assessment process for all new and promotion candidates globally;

 

¡   Management of risk and control is assessed as part of the annual performance appraisal process for all colleagues globally. Positive risk management behaviours will be rewarded;

 

¡   The Being Barclays Global Induction programme supports new colleagues in understanding the importance of risk to how Barclays does business and the link to the Barclays values; and

 

¡   Leadership Master Classes cover the building, sustaining and supporting a trustworthy organisation and are offered to colleagues globally.

Risk Governance and Assigning Responsibilities (audited)

Responsibility for risk management resides at all levels of the Group, from the Board and the Executive Committee down through the organisation to each business manager and risk specialist. Barclays distributes these responsibilities so that risk/return decisions are: taken at the most appropriate level; as close as possible to the business: and, subject to robust and effective review and challenge. The responsibilities for effective review and challenges reside with senior managers, risk oversight committees, the independent Group Risk function, the Board Financial Risk Committee (BFRC), Board Conduct, Reputation and Operational Risk Committee (BCROR), Board Enterprise Wide Risk Committee (BEWRC) and, ultimately, the Board.

As part of the Transform programme, the Group has introduced the Enterprise Risk Management Framework (ERMF) which sets out standard group-wide governance arrangements. It also sets out the roles and responsibilities of all employees with respect to risk management, including the Chief Risk Officer and the Chief Executive Officer. The ERMF is a key deliverable of the programme and sets out a comprehensive and effective approach for the management of all risks at Barclays and supports the step change in risk management and control including:

 

¡   Sustainable and consistent implementation of the three lines of defence (see three lines of defence below);

 

¡   Further improvements to the management of risks including increased focus on Conduct and Reputational risks;

 

¡   Consistent application of Barclays risk appetite across all Principal Risks; and,

 

¡   Streamlining and simplification of the policy hierarchy.

The ERMF is intended to be widely read and to set out a philosophy and approach that is applicable to the whole bank, all colleagues and to all types of risk. It also sets out specific requirements for key individuals, including the Chief Risk Officer and Group Chief Executive, to undertake and the overall governance framework that will oversee its effective operation.

The ERMF sets out the activities, tools, techniques and organisational arrangements to ensure that all material risks are identified and understood, and that appropriate responses are in place to protect the Group and prevent detriment to its customers, colleagues or community, enabling the Bank to meets its goals, and enhance our ability to respond to new opportunities.

Note

a An independent review by Anthony Salz, commissioned by the Board
 

 

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Risk management >

Barclays risk management strategy continued

 

 

 

 

The ERMF includes those risks incurred by Barclays that are foreseeable, continuous, and material enough to merit establishing specific bank-wide control frameworks. These are known as Key Risks and are grouped into six Principal Risks. Conduct and Reputation risks were reclassified as Principal Risks in 2013. See Principal Risks on page 384 for more information.

A clear and consistent control framework entails specific responsibilities. As a result, not only has the definition of the three lines of defence been clarified (see three lines of defence below) but its scope has been extended to all businesses and functions. This creates the proper context for setting standards and establishing the right practices throughout the bank. See Barclays’ risk culture – enabling the ‘Go-To’ bank on pages 378 and 379 for more information.

Three lines of defence

The three lines of defence operating model enables Barclays to separate risk management activities between those parties that:

 

1. Own and take risk, and implement controls (first line);

 

2. Oversee and challenge the first line, provide second line risk manactivity and support controls (second line); and

 

3. Provide assurance that the E-R-M process is fit for purpose, and that it is being carried out as intended (third line).

The Enterprise Risk Management process is the ‘defence’ and organising businesses and functions into three ‘lines’ enhances the E-R-M process by formalising independence and challenge, whilst still promoting collaboration and the flow of information between all areas:

First Line: Own and take risk, and implement controls

First line activities are characterised by:

 

¡   Ownership of and direct responsibility for Barclays’ returns or elements of Barclays’ P&L; or

 

¡   Ownership of major operations, systems and processes fundamental to the operation of the bank; or

 

¡   Direct linkage of objective setting, performance assessment and reward to P&L performance.

With respect to risk management the first line responsibilities include:

 

¡   Taking primary accountability for risk identification, ownership, management and control (including performance of portfolios, trading positions, operational risks, etc.) within approved mandate, as documented under the Key Risk Control Frameworks, including embedding a supportive risk culture;

 

¡   Collaborating with second line on implementing and improving risk management processes and controls;

 

¡   Monitoring the effectiveness of risk controls and the risk profile compared to the approved risk appetite; and

 

¡   Maintaining an effective control environment across all risks, processes and operations arising from the business, including implementing standards to meet Group policies.

Second Line: Oversee and challenge the first line, provide second line risk management activity and support controls

Second line activities are characterised by:

 

¡   Oversight, monitoring and challenge of the first line of defence activities;

 

¡   Design, ownership or operation of Key Risk Control Frameworks impacting the activities of the first line of defence;

 

¡   Operation of certain second line risk management activities; and

 

¡   No direct linkage of objective setting, performance assessment and reward to revenue (measures related to mitigation of losses and balancing risk and reward are permissible).

With respect to risk management the second line of defence responsibilities include:

 

¡   Defining the Enterprise Risk Management Framework;

 

¡   Establishing the control environments for the Key Risks, including Key Risk Control Frameworks, policies, and standards;

 

¡   Defining delegated discretions and set limits within the control frameworks to empower risk taking by the first line;

 

¡   Assisting in the direction of the portfolio to achieve performance against risk appetite;

 

¡   May define and operate approval processes for certain decisions within the second line to protect the Bank from material risks;

 

¡   Communicating, educating and advising the first line on their understanding of the risk framework and its requirements;

 

¡   Collaborating with the first line to support business growth and drive an appropriate balance between risk and reward without diminishing the independence from the first line; and

 

¡   Reporting on the effectiveness of the risk and control environment to executive management and Board committees.

Third line: Provide assurance that the E-R-M process is fit for purpose, and that it is being carried out as intended

Third line activities are characterised by:

 

¡   Providing independent and timely assurance to the Board and Executive Management over the effectiveness of governance, risk management and control.

With respect to risk management the third line of defence responsibilities include:

 

¡   Assessing the effectiveness of risk management and risk mitigation in the context of the current and expected business environment; and

 

¡   Acting independently and objectively, without taking responsibility for the operations of the bank or the definition of the Enterprise Risk Management Framework and Group policies.

Governance (audited)

Governance Structure

Risk exists when the outcome of taking a particular decision or course of action is uncertain and could potentially impact whether, or how well, we deliver on our objectives.

Barclays faces risks throughout its business, every day, in everything it does. Some risks we choose to take after appropriate consideration – like lending money to a customer. Other risks may arise from unintended consequences of internal actions, for example an IT system failure or poor sales practices. Finally, some risks are the result of events outside the Bank but which impact our business – such as major exposure through trading or lending to a market counterparty which later fails.

All employees must play their part in the Bank’s risk management, regardless of position, function or location, and are required to be familiar with risk management policies that are relevant to their activities, know how to escalate actual or potential risk issues, and have a role appropriate level of awareness of the Enterprise Risk Management Framework, risk management process and governance arrangements.

 

 

 

 

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Board Oversight

 

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There are four key Board level committees which review and monitor risk across the Group. These are: the Board, the Board Enterprise Wide Risk Committee, the Board Financial Risk Committee and the Board Conduct, Reputation and Operational Risk Committee.

The Board

The Board (Board of Directors of Barclays PLC) is responsible for approving risk appetite (see the Barclays risk management strategy section on page 378), which is the level of risk the Group chooses to take in pursuit of its business objectives. The Chief Risk Officer regularly presents a report to the Board summarising developments in the risk environment and performance trends in the key portfolios. The Board oversees the management of the most significant risks through the regular review of risk exposures and related key controls. Executive management responsibilities relating to this are set via the Group’s ERMF.

The Board Enterprise Wide Risk Committee (BEWRC)

The BEWRC was introduced in 2013 and is a committee of the Board, from which it derives its authority and to which it regularly reports. The principal purpose of the Committee is to review, on behalf of the Board, management’s recommendations on risk, in particular:

 

¡   Consider and recommend to the Board the Group’s overall risk appetite;

 

¡   Review, on behalf of the Board, the Group’s overall Risk Profile; and

 

¡   Satisfy itself on the design and completeness of the Group’s internal control and assurance framework relative to the risk profile, including the Principal Risk categories.

BEWRC membership comprises the Group Chairman and Chairmen of the Board Audit Committee, Board Conduct, Reputation and Operational Risk Committee, Board Financial Risk Committee and Board Remuneration Committee. The Group CEO, Group CRO, Group Finance Director, Head of Compliance, General Counsel and Chief Internal Auditor are mandatory attendees.

The Board Financial Risk Committee (BFRC)

BFRC monitors the Group’s risk profile against the agreed appetite. Where actual performance differs from expectations, the actions being taken by management are reviewed to ensure that the BFRC is comfortable with them. After each meeting, the Chair of the BFRC prepares a report for the next meeting of the Board. Barclays first established a separate BFRC in 1999 and all members are non-executive directors. The Finance Director and the Chief Risk Officer attend each meeting as a matter of course.

The BFRC receives regular and comprehensive reports on risk methodologies and the Group’s risk profile including the key issues affecting each business portfolio and forward risk trends. The Committee also commissions in-depth analyses of significant risk topics, which are presented by the Chief Risk Officer or senior risk managers in the businesses. The Chair of the Committee prepares a statement each year on its activities (see the BFRC Chairman’s report on page 70).

The Board Conduct, Reputation and Operational Risk Committee (BCROR)

The BCROR was created in 2013 in order to strengthen the Board level governance over conduct risk and reputation matters. It reviews the effectiveness of the processes by which Barclays identifies and manages conduct and reputational risk and considers whether business decisions will compromise Barclays ethical policies or core business beliefs and values. It also considers the Group’s risk appetite statement for operational risk and evaluates the Group’s operational risk profile and operational risk monitoring.

In addition, the Board Audit and Board Remuneration Committees receive regular reports on risk to assist them in the undertaking of their duties. See the BCROR Chairman’s Report on page 73 for additional details of its membership and activities of the BCROR.

The Board Audit Committee (BAC)

The BAC receives quarterly reports on control issues of significance and a half-yearly review of the adequacy of impairment allowances, which it reviews relative to the risk inherent in the portfolios, the business environment, the Group’s policies and methodologies and the performance trends of peer banks. The Chair of the BAC also sits on the BFRC. See the BAC Chairman’s Report on page 62 for additional details on the membership and activities of the BAC.

The Board Remuneration Committee (BRC)

The BRC receives a detailed report on risk management performance from the BFRC which is considered in the setting of performance objectives in the context of incentive packages. See the Remuneration Report on page 89 for additional details on membership and activities of the Board Remuneration Committee.

Summaries of the relevant business, professional and risk management experience of the Directors of the Board are given in the Board of Directors section on pages 83 to 85. The terms of reference for each of the principal Board Committees are available from the Corporate Governance section at: http://group.barclays.com/About-us/ Management-structure/Corporate-governance.

 

 

 

 

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The launch of the Transform programme and subsequent introduction of the ERMF has introduced a more integrated ‘One Risk’ approach to how the Group manages risk, including governance, risk appetite, processes, and the effectiveness of its controls, together with leveraging colleague development opportunities.

During its day-to-day operations the Group faces a number of risks, which may be: i) assessed and considered appropriate (e.g. granting a loan to a customer); ii) as a result of unintended consequences of internal actions (e.g. IT system failure); or (iii) as a result of events outside the Group’s control but which impacts our business (e.g. financial disruption in a region in which the Group operates).

The Group’s approach to risk taking is structured, systematic and comprehensive, built into the decision making as objectives and aligned to the Evaluate, Respond and Monitor (E-R-M) process as defined in the section ‘Barclays Risk Management Strategy’.

The Enterprise Wide Risk Management Committee (EWRMC) was created in 2013 and was established by, and derives its authority from, the Group Chief Risk Officer (CRO). It supports the CRO in the provision of oversight and challenge of the systems and controls in respect of risk management, particularly:

 

¡   Review, challenge and recommend risk appetite;

 

¡   Monitor risk profile against risk appetite; and

 

¡   Review the design and completeness of the ERMF and Principal Risk categories.

EWRMC membership includes the Group CRO, Group Chief Executive Officer (CEO), Group Finance Director, Group General Counsel, and Head of Compliance.

 

 

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The CRO is a member of the Executive Committee and has overall day-to-day accountability for risk management under delegated authority from the CEO. While the CEO is accountable for proposing a risk appetite that underpins the strategic plan to the Board for approval, the CRO is responsible for providing oversight, advice and challenge to the CEO, and providing a recommendation to the Board. Risk appetite therefore sets the ‘tone from the top’ and provides a basis for ongoing dialogue between management and Board level around Barclays’ current and evolving risk profile.

The CRO manages the independent Group Risk function and chairs the Financial Risk Committee (FRC) and the Operational Risk and Control Committee (ORCC), which monitor the Group’s financial and non-financial risk profile relative to established risk appetite. Reporting to the CRO, and working in the Group Risk function, are risk type heads for retail credit risk, wholesale credit risk, market risk, operational risk and fraud risk. The risk type heads are responsible for establishing a Group-wide framework for oversight of the relevant risks and controls. The risk type teams liaise with each business as part of the monitoring and management processes.

In addition, each business has an embedded risk management function, headed by a Business Chief Risk Officer (BCRO). BCROs and their teams are responsible for assisting business heads in the identification and management of their business risk profiles and for implementing appropriate controls. These teams also assist Group Risk in the formulation of Group policies and their implementation across the businesses. The business risk directors report jointly to their respective business heads and to the CRO.

The risk type heads within the Group Risk function and the BCROs within the businesses report to the Chief Risk Officer and are members of the FRC or ORCC as appropriate.

During 2013 a Risk Executive Committee was created, which is responsible for the effectiveness and efficiency of risk management and embedding a strong risk culture, approval of the Group’s risk governance framework, and agreement and endorsement of the overall infrastructure strategy for the risk function. It is also the senior decision making forum for the risk function excluding matters relating to the risk profile. It is chaired by the CRO with a membership comprising senior risk management from the risk centre and the businesses.

The CEO must consult the Chairman of the BFRC in respect of the Chief Risk Officer’s performance appraisal and compensation as well as all appointments to or departures from the role.

The Group Treasurer heads the Group Treasury function and chairs the Treasury Committee which:

 

¡   Manages the Group’s liquidity, maturity transformation and structural interest rate exposure through the setting of policies and controls;

 

¡   Monitors the Group’s liquidity and interest rate maturity mismatch;

 

¡   Monitors usage of regulatory and economic capital; and

 

¡   Has oversight of the management of the Group’s capital plan.

The Head of Compliance chairs the Conduct and Reputation Committee which assesses quality of the application of the Reputation and Conduct Risk Control Frameworks. It also recommends risk appetite, sets policies to ensure consistent adherence to that appetite, and reviews known and emerging reputational and conduct related risks to consider if action is required.

Principal Risks (audited)

Risk management responsibilities are laid out in the ERMF, which covers the categories of risk in which Barclays has its most significant actual or potential risk exposures.

The ERMF:

 

¡   Creates clear ownership and accountability;

 

¡   Ensures the Group’s most significant risk exposures are understood and managed in accordance with agreed risk appetite (for financial risks) and risk tolerances (for non-financial risks); and

 

¡   Ensures regular reporting of both risk exposures and the operating effectiveness of controls.

A Principal Risk comprises individual Key Risk Types to allow for more granular analysis of the risk associated within it. The six Principal Risks are: i) Credit; ii) Market; iii) Funding; iv) Operational; v) Conduct; and vi) Reputation.

Each Key Risk is owned by a senior individual known as the Group Key Risk Officer who is responsible for developing a risk appetite statement and overseeing and managing the risk in line with the EMRF. This includes the documentation, communication and maintenance of a risk control framework which makes clear, for every business across the firm, the mandated control requirements in managing exposures to that Key Risk. These control requirements are given further specification, according to the business or risk type, to provide a complete and appropriate system of internal control.

Business function heads are responsible for obtaining ongoing assurance that the key controls they have put in place to manage the risks to their business objectives are operating effectively. Six-monthly reviews support the regulatory requirement for Barclays to make an annual statement about its system of internal controls.

Group Key Risk Officers report their assessments of the risk exposure and control effectiveness to Group-level oversight committees and their assessments form the basis of the reports that go to the:

BFRC:

 

¡   Financial Risk Committee has oversight of Credit and Market Risks; and

 

¡   Treasury Committee has oversight of Funding Risk.

and, BCRORC:

 

¡   Operational Risk and Control Committee has oversight of all Operational Risk types, with the exception of Tax Risk, which is primarily overseen by the Tax Risk Committee; and

 

¡   Conduct and Reputation Risk Committee has oversight of the Conduct and Reputation Risks.

Each Group Key Risk Officer also undertakes an annual programme of risk based conformance reviews.

 

 

 

 

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Conformance and assurance

Conformance and assurance is undertaken to assess the control environment:

Conformance: Activities undertaken to check the degree to which defined processes are being followed.

 

¡   Conformance testing – is a planned, systematic and documented programme of checking, that has the objective of providing evidence that controls have been operated in accordance with documented process. Testing results provide management with a view of the effectiveness of the control environment supporting their operations.

 

¡   Conformance review – is a planned, risk based programme of activity to assess the quality of conformance testing. Conformance review is undertaken by individuals who are independent of the management team running the operations. Review results enable management to assess how much assurance they can place on the results of conformance testing. Conformance testing and conformance review may also identify opportunities for improvement to policies and standards.

Assurance: Undertaken to independently assess the overall enterprise risk management framework, which includes testing specific elements of the control environment documented in standards and checking that conformance activities are reliable, to provide the Board confidence in the risk and control framework.

Internal Audit is responsible for the independent review of risk management and the control environment. Its objective is to provide reliable, valued and timely assurance to the Board and Executive Management over the effectiveness of controls, mitigating current and evolving high risks and in so doing enhancing the controls culture within the Group. The BAC reviews and approves Internal Audit’s plans and resources, and evaluates the effectiveness of Internal Audit. An assessment by external advisers is also carried out periodically.

The Executive Models Committee (EMC) is chaired by the Chief Risk Officer. The EMC, reports into the Enterprise Wide Risk Management Committee and fulfils the specific requirement of approving the Group’s most material (A*) models, as required by the PRA. The EMC receives submissions from the businesses responsible for the A* models and reviews and approves A* models and Post Model Adjustments (PMAs) related to those models.

The Disclosure Committee reviews and evaluates the Group’s disclosure controls and procedures and has responsibility for considering the materiality of information and determining disclosure obligations on a timely basis. It is chaired by the Group Finance Director. It reports into the Group Executive Committee and the BAC.

Risk management in the setting of strategy

The planning cycle is centred on the medium term planning (MTP) process, performed once a year. This embeds the Group’s objectives into detailed business plans which take account the likely business and macroeconomic environment. The risk functions at Group and business levels are heavily involved in this process.

 

 

The planning cycle

 

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In addition to supporting transaction decisions, the measurement and control of credit, market, operational and other risks have considerable influence on Barclays’ strategy. The Board is solely responsible for approving the MTP, the associated risk appetite statement, and the capital plans. As such, the business plans of Barclays must incur a level of risk that falls within the Board’s tolerance, or be modified accordingly. The BFRC has been in place since 1999 and is devoted to review the firm’s risk and make appropriate recommendations to the Board. For details of the activities of the Board and the BFRC in 2013 see the Governance Structure section on page 380 and 381 and the BFRC Chairman’s report on page 70.

The risk appetite and the Group-wide stress testing processes, described below, are closely linked to the MTP process and also support strategic planning and capital adequacy. The risk appetite process ensures that senior management and the Board understand the MTP’s sensitivities to key risk types, and includes a set of M&S limits to ensure the Group stays within appetite. Stress testing informs management on the impact to the business of detailed scenarios. Integral to the Group-wide stress testing process is to explicity identify a set of actions that management would take to mitigate the impact of a stress.

One of the main objectives of managing risk is to ensure that Barclays achieves an adequate balance between capital requirements and resources. The capital planning cycle is fully integrated within strategic planning.

 

 

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Medium-Term Planning (MTP) process

The MTP process, performed annually, requires each business to present its plans for business performance over the coming five years (with a key focus on the first three years of the plan). The MTP details the businesses strategy, the portfolio composition and the expected risk trends. Achieving the planned performance in each business is dependent upon the ability of the business to manage its risks. It is an iterative process featuring weekly reviews at the most senior levels as the plan is updated until final agreement. The output includes a detailed statement of the Group’s strategy over the medium-term, as well as detailed financial projections.

Risk managers support the MTP by providing robust review and challenge of the business plans to ensure that the financial projections are internally consistent; value creating; achievable given risk management capabilities (e.g. supported by appropriate risk infrastructure) and that they present a suitable balance between risk and reward. This culminates in the risk review meetings in which the CRO and senior management in each of our businesses discuss the findings from the risk reviews, and changes to the business plans are mandated as necessary.

The business plans are prepared with reference to a consistent set of economic assumptions which are agreed by senior management and reviewed within Group Risk to ensure that they appropriately reflect emerging risk trends. They are used as baseline scenarios in the stress testing and risk appetite processes.

The output from the business plan forms the basis of all strategic processes. In particular, the plans comprise projections of capital resources and requirements given profit generation, dividend policy and capital issuance. Risk variables are also considered, most importantly in the forecasting of the Group’s impairment charge, on the assessment of the business capital requirements going forward and in sensitivity analyses of the plans (which include risk appetite and stress testing).

Risk appetite

Risk appetite is defined as the level of risk that Barclays is prepared to accept whilst pursuing its business strategy, recognising a range of possible outcomes as business plans are implemented.

Risk appetite sets the ‘tone from the top’ and provides a basis for ongoing dialogue between management and Board with respect to Barclays’ current and evolving risk profile, allowing strategic and financial decisions to be made on an informed basis.

At Barclays, the risk appetite framework is intended to achieve the following objectives:

 

¡   Articulate the risks the Group is willing to take and why, to enable specific risk taking activities; and articulate those risks to avoid and why, to constrain specific risk taking activities;

 

¡   Consider all Principal and Key Risks both individually and, where appropriate, in aggregate;

 

¡   Consistently communicate the acceptable level of risk for different risk types; this may be expressed in financial or non-financial terms, but must enable measurement and effective monitoring;

 

¡   Describe agreed parameters for Barclays’ performance under varying levels of financial stress with respect to:

¨ Profitability, loss and return metrics

¨ The ability to continue to pay a dividend; and

 

¡   Be embedded in key decision-making processes including mergers and acquisitions, new product approvals and business change initiatives.

Unapproved breaches of risk appetite and/or limits will result in performance management and disciplinary consequences.

 

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Setting risk appetite

In this regard, the Group CEO is responsible for:

 

¡   Leading the development of the Barclays strategy and business plans that align to our Goal, Purpose and Values and includes a risk appetite and risk profile proposal for Board approval;

 

¡   Leading, managing and organising executive management to achieve execution of the Barclays strategy and business plans in line with the Board approved Purpose, Values, Code of Conduct (‘the Barclays Way’) and risk appetite. This includes assessing risk holistically, ensuring the soundness of the financial position of Barclays, and that due consideration is given to the impact of Barclays on society, customers and clients, colleagues and the wider financial system;

 

¡   Barclays’ performance including financial and operational activities, risk profile (current and outlook) compared to approved risk appetite, and compliance with all laws, regulations and the Barclays Operating Framework; and

 

¡   Providing accurate, transparent and timely reporting to the Board on Barclays’ performance against plan, and include the risk profile (current and outlook) compared to risk appetite under normal and stressed scenarios.

The Group CRO is responsible for:

 

¡   Providing oversight, advice and challenge to the CEO with respect to the strategic plan;

 

¡   Management of the risk appetite setting processes;

 

¡   Recommending risk appetite to the Board;

 

¡   Ensuring the Board receive regular management information that compares the risk appetite set for Barclays and the businesses by risk type and in aggregate where appropriate; and

 

¡   Developing, operating and maintaining a comprehensive risk management framework for Barclays that ensures the business performs in line with the approved risk appetite.

The Board review and approve risk appetite in aggregate and for all individual Principal Risks.

The Risk function is responsible for implementation, operation and monitoring of the bank’s approach to risk appetite.

Risk appetite is formally reviewed on an annual basis in conjunction with the Medium-Term Planning (MTP) process.

 

 

 

 

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Group-wide stress tests are an integral part of the annual MTP process and ensure that the Group’s financial position and risk profile provide sufficient resilience to withstand the impact of severe economic stress. A key objective of the Group-wide stress test process is to identify and document management actions that would be taken to mitigate the impact of stress. The bottom-up process ensures all levels of management are informed of the impact of the stress scenarios and are aware of appropriate management actions to be taken when a stress event occurs. The approach also includes reverse stress testing techniques which aim to identify the circumstances under which our business model would become no longer viable, leading to a significant change in business strategy. See Stress testing below for more information.

Risk appetite is approved and disseminated across Key Risks and businesses, including the use of ‘M&S’ limits to enable and control specific activities that have material concentration risk implications for the Group. These limits also help avoid large one-off losses that are specific to Barclays and outside stakeholder expectations.

Barclays has run a risk appetite process since 2004 and this process comprises ‘Financial Volatility’, which is the level of potential deviation from expected financial performance Barclays is prepared to sustain, and ‘Mandate and Scale’, which ensures the Group stays within appetite. The strategy and business activities are reflected in key performance metrics, which are dependent in large part on risk performance.

Simulate risk

 

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Financial volatility

Financial volatility is defined as the level of potential deviation from expected financial performance that Barclays is prepared to sustain at relevant points on the risk profile. When setting appetite, management and the Board articulate the Group’s strategy and summarise objectives in terms of key financial metrics. The Group’s risk profile is assessed via a ‘bottom-up’ analysis of the Group’s business plans to establish the volatility of the key metrics. If the projections entail too high a level of risk (i.e. breach the top-down financial objectives at the through-the-cycle, moderate or severe level), management will challenge each area to re-balance the risk profile to bring the bottom-up risk appetite back within top-down appetite. Performance against risk appetite usage is measured and reported to the Executive Committee and the Board regularly throughout the year. Our top-down appetite is quantified through an array of financial performance and capital metrics which are reviewed by the Board on an annual basis. For 2013, the strategic metrics in the table below were set at three levels: ’through-the-cycle’, and stressed ‘one in seven’ and ‘one in twenty-five’, which are defined as:

 

¡   Through-the-cycle: the average losses based on measurements over many years;

 

¡   1 in 7 (moderate) loss: the worst level of losses out of a random sample of 7 years; and

 

¡   1 in 25 (severe) loss: the worst level of losses out of a random sample of 25 years.

These scenarios are defined through a level of probability of occurrence rather than through a specific set of economic variables like in stress tests.

Risk appetite concepts (diagram not to scale)

 

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The potentially larger but increasingly less likely levels of loss are illustrated in the risk appetite concepts chart above. Since the level of loss at any given probability is dependent on the portfolio of exposures in each business, the statistical measurement for each key risk category gives the Group clearer sight and better control of risk taking throughout the enterprise. Specifically, this framework enables it to:

 

¡   Improve management confidence and debate regarding the Group’s risk profile;

 

¡   Re-balance the risk profile of the MTP where breaches are indicated, thereby achieving a superior risk-return profile;

 

¡   Identify unused risk capacity, and thus highlight the need to identify further profitable opportunities; and

 

¡   Improve executive management control and co-ordination of risk taking across businesses.
 

 

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Measure relevant to strategy and risk

  

Link between strategy and risk profile

Profit before tax,

  

Fundamental economic and business indicators, which best describes shareholder focus in terms of profitability and ability to use capital resources efficiently.

Return on equity,

  

Return on RWAs

    

Loan loss rate (LLR)

  

Describes the credit risk profile and whether impairment is within appetite.

Core Tier 1 and leverage ratios

  

Monitors our capital adequacy in relation to capital plan.

Dividends

  

Measures the risks of being able to continue paying appropriate dividends.

 

In summary, the stress levels represent the risk tolerance of Barclays in terms of its key objectives. These objectives act as constraints on risk performance and imply maximum levels of acceptable losses that are tracked quarterly and reported to the Board. Any breaches must be approved and remedial actions mandated.

Mandate and Scale

The second element to the setting of risk appetite in Barclays is an extensive system of Mandate and Scale limits, which is a risk management approach that seeks to formally review and control business activities to ensure that they are within Barclays mandate (i.e. aligned with expectations), and are of an appropriate scale (relative to the risk and reward of the underlying activities). Barclays achieves this by using limits and triggers to avoid concentrations which would be out of line with expectations, and which may lead to unexpected losses of a scale that would be detrimental to the stability of the relevant business line or the Group. These limits are set by the independent risk function, formally monitored each month and subject to Board-level oversight.

For example, in our commercial property finance and construction portfolios, a comprehensive series of limits are in place to control exposure within each business and geographic sector. To ensure that limits are aligned to the underlying risk characteristics, the Mandate and Scale limits differentiate between types of exposure. There are, for example, individual limits for property investment and property development.

Barclays uses the Mandate and Scale framework to:

 

¡   Limit concentration risk;

 

¡   Keep business activities within Group and individual business mandate;

 

¡   Ensure activities remain of an appropriate scale relative to the underlying risk and reward; and

 

¡   Ensure risk taking is supported by appropriate expertise and capabilities.

As well as Group-level Mandate & Scale limits, further limits are set by risk managers within each business unit, covering particular portfolios.

Interaction of risk appetite with business strategy

The strategy and business activities are reflected in key performance metrics, which are dependent in large part on risk performance. Risk appetite, as described above, helps to ensure that the strategy is adaptable to various degrees of financial stress.

Each year, the MTP process ensures that appetite takes account of the strategy (detailed in the Barclays risk management strategy section on page 386).

The Group risk profile developing in the plan is assessed in the financial volatility scenarios via a bottom-up process; this is then compared with the top-down view articulated via the key financial metrics described above. Any gap between the two views is challenged by management in order to re-balance the risk profile and bring the bottom-up risk appetite back within top-down appetite.

For further information on Risk factors and the Operating and business environment, refer to the Risk factors section (see pages 133 to 141).

Stress testing

Group-wide stress tests are an integral part of the annual MTP process and annual review of risk appetite to ensure that the Group’s financial position and risk profile provide sufficient resilience to withstand the impact of severe economic stress. The following diagram outlines the key steps in the Group-wide stress testing process, which are described below. Barclays also maintains Recovery Plans which consider actions to facilitate recovery from severe stress or an orderly resolution. These actions are additional to those included in the Group-wide stress testing process described in this section.

 

 

 

 

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¡   Scenario design and setting: BFRC agrees the range of scenarios to be tested and the independent Group Risk function leads the process. Macroeconomic stress test scenarios are designed to be both severe and plausible, and relevant to our business. The following diagram summarises the process for designing and agreeing the
   

scenarios to be run. The process includes Group Risk consultation with economists in the businesses. This ensures relevance of scenarios to our businesses and a consistent interpretation of the scenarios across the Group.

 

 

Scenario design and setting

 

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At the Group level, stress test scenarios capture a wide range of macroeconomic variables that are required to assess the impact of the stress scenario for each portfolio, and reflect the wide range of models used across the Group to assess the impact of the stress. This includes for example, GDP, unemployment, asset prices, foreign exchange rates and interest rates. Economic parameters are set using expert judgement and are calibrated using historical and quantitative analysis to ensure internal coherence and appropriate severity. In addition, our scenarios are tested against the PRA’s stress test scenarios.

Examples of types of scenarios/themes run as Group-wide stress tests include:

 

¡   A global recession scenario capturing the wide range of businesses across Barclays;

 

¡   US-centred macroeconomic scenario; and

 

¡   A peripheral Eurozone stress as part of the reverse stress testing framework (see page 391).
¡   Businesses prepare MTP/business plans: each business prepares detailed business plans which are used as the baseline for running their stress test analysis. The MTP business plans are prepared at performance cell level across a detailed set of performance metrics covering income, impairment, balance sheet and RWA information (which is also reflected in the stress testing results) – see page 386 for further details on the MTP process. The stress testing results are used to inform MTP business plans, so there may be a number of iterations before the MTP business plans are finalised.

 

¡   Businesses run stress testing models: the stress testing process is detailed and comprehensive using bottom-up analysis performed by each of Barclays’ businesses, covering detailed performance metrics as outlined above and results are produced for each performance cell. It includes all aspects of the Group’s balance sheet across all risk types and is forward looking over a five year period. Our stress testing approach combines running statistical models with expert judgement to ensure the results accurately reflect the impact of the stress test economic scenario.

An overview of our stress testing approach by Principal Risk is provided in the table below:

 

 

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 Principal Risk

   Stress testing approach

 

Credit risk

  

¡  Credit risk impairments: For retail portfolios businesses use regression models to establish a relationship between arrears movements and key macroeconomic parameters, such as interest rates and unemployment, incorporating roll-rate analysis to estimate stressed levels of arrears by portfolio. In addition, combination of house price reductions and increased customer drawdowns for revolving facilities leads to higher loss given default (LGD) which also contributes to increased impairment levels. For wholesale portfolios the stress shocks on credit risk drivers (PDs, LGDs and EADs) are primarily calibrated using historical and expected relationships with key macroeconomic paremeters such as GDP, inflation and interest rates.

  

¡  The scenarios include market risk shocks that are applied to determine the market value under stress of contracts that give rise to counterparty credit risk. Counterparty losses, including from changes to the credit valuation adjusment and from defaults, are modelled based on the impact of these shocks as well as using stressed credit risk drivers (PDs and LGDs). The same approach is used to stress the market value of assets held as available for sale or at fair value in the banking book.

  

¡  Credit risk weighted assets: The impact of the scenarios is calculated via a combination of business volumes and similar factors to impairment drivers above, as well as the regulatory calculation and the level of pro-cyclicality of underlying regulatory credit risk models.

 

Market risk

  

¡  Trading book losses: All market risk factors on the balance sheet are stressed using specific market risk shocks (and are used for the counterparty credit risk analysis, above). The severity of the shocks applied are dependent on the liquidity of the market under stress, e.g. illiquid or sticky positions are assumed to have a longer holding period than positions in liquid markets.

  

¡  Pension fund: The funding position of pension funds are stressed, taking into account key economic drivers impacting future obligations (e.g. long term inflation and interest rates) and the impact of the scenarios on the value of fund assets.

 

Funding risk

  

¡  The risk of a mismatch between assets and liabilities, leading to funding difficulties, is assessed. Businesses apply scenario variables to forecasts of customer loans and advances and deposits levels, taking into account management actions to mitigate the impact of the stress which may impact business volumes. The Group funding requirement under stress is then estimated and takes into account lower availability of funds in the market.

  

¡  The analysis of funding risk also contributes to the estimate of stressed income and costs:

  

¨  Stress impact on non-interest income is primarily driven by lower projected business volumes and hence lower income from fees and commissions;

  

¨  Impact on net interest income is driven by stressed margins, which depend on the level of interest rates under stress as well as funding costs,and on stressed balance sheet volumes. This can be partly mitigated by management actions that may include repricing of variable rate products, taking into account interbank lending rates under stress; and

  

¨  The impact on costs is mainly driven by business volumes and management actions to partly offset profit reductions (due to impairment increases and decreases in income) such as headcount reductions and lower performance costs.

 

Operational risk, Conduct risk and Reputation risk

  

¡  These Principal Risks are generally not assessed as part of economic scenario assessments, as they are not directly linked to the economic scenario. Note that Operational risk, however, is included as part of the reverse stress testing framework that incorporates assessment of idiosyncratic operational risk events.

  

¨  Management of Operational risk is described on pages 225 and 415 to 417

  

¨  Management of Conduct risk is described on pages 228 to 229

  

¨  Management of Reputation risk is described on pages 226 to 227

 

¡   Review and challenge: the business’ stress test methodologies and results are subject to a detailed review and challenge both within the businesses (including review and sign-off by business CROs) and by Head Office Functions. In particular, this includes detailed risk review of both the stressed estimates (e.g. impairments), and the methodology used to translate the economic scenario to stressed estimates. Businesses are required to document their stress test methodologies and results, including key assumptions made. The stress testing results are presented and discussed as part of the MTP risk reviews held between each business and Barclays CRO.

 

¡   Results (pre- and post-business management actions): a key objective of the Group-wide stress test process is to identify and document management actions that would be taken to mitigate the impact of stress. Businesses are required to report results both pre- and post-business management actions, such as cost reductions and increased collections activity to reduce impairments, and to document these actions. The bottom-up process ensures all levels of management are informed of the impact of the stress scenarios and are aware of appropriate management actions to be taken when a stress event occurs. For instance, during the recession of 2008-2010 a programme of work based on the stress management actions was implemented and directly overseen by the Group Executive Committee.
¡   Capital plan including capital management actions: the business’ stress test results are aggregated to form a Group view of the impact of the stress, which are used by Barclays Treasury Capital Management to determine the stress impact on the Group capital plans. As part of this assessment, capital management actions such as reducing dividend payments or redeeming certain capital instruments may be considered. These are in addition to the business management actions included in business’ stress testing results. Further management actions available in Barclays’ recovery plan that are not included in the Group-wide stress testing results.

 

¡   Committee presentations and approval of stress scenario results: the stress test results are presented for review by the Executive Committee and BFRC, and are also shared with the Board.

The results of our H2 2013 internal Group-wide stress test exercise show that the Group’s profit before tax remains positive under the modelled severe global stress scenario, with the Group remaining well capitalised above the required regulatory minimum level. The stress test results are also shared with the PRA, e.g. as part of our internal capital adequacy assessment process (ICAAP) submission.

 

 

 

 

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Reverse stress testing

The Group-wide stress testing framework also includes reverse stress testing techniques which aim to identify the circumstances under which Barclays’ business model would become no longer be viable, leading to a significant change in business strategy. Examples include extreme macroeconomic downturn scenarios, such as a break-up of the Euro area, or specific idiosyncratic events, covering both Operational risk and capital/liquidity events.

 

Reverse stress testing is used to help support ongoing risk management and is fully integrated into our risk appetite framework. Reverse stress testing methodology includes identifying tail risks associated with specific low likelihood circumstances, and identifying appropriate mitigating actions. For example, the approach for managing Eurozone peripheral risks was informed by the results of the reverse stress testing assessment ran in 2010.

 

Business and risk type specific stress tests

Barclays also uses stress testing techniques at portfolio and product level to support risk management. For example, portfolio management in the US cards business employs stressed assumptions of loss rates to determine profitability hurdles for new accounts. In the UK mortgage business, affordability thresholds incorporate stressed estimates of interest rates. In the Investment Bank, global scenario testing is used to gauge potential losses that could arise in conditions of extreme market stress. Stress testing is also conducted on positions in particular asset classes, including interest rates, commodities, equities, credit and foreign exchange.

 

Information on the Group’s stress testing specifically relating to liquidity risk is set out in the Funding risk – Liquidity section. Further information on market risk stress testing is provided in the Market Risk section.

    

 

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Risk management >

Credit risk management

 

 

 

 

 

LOGO

   Credit risk is the risk of suffering financial loss should any of the Group’s customers, clients or market counterparties fail to fulfil their contractual obligations to the Group. The granting of credit is one of the Group’s major sources of income and, as the most significant risk, the Group dedicates considerable resources to its control.

 

These disclosures are unaudited unless otherwise stated

Barclays Risk Management Strategy

Barclays has clear risk management objectives and a well-established strategy to deliver them, through core risk management processes.

Overview (audited)

The credit risk that the Group faces arises mainly from wholesale and retail loans and advances together with the counterparty credit risk arising from derivative contracts entered into with clients. This is demonstrated by the impairment charge analysis chart. Other sources of credit risk arise from trading activities, including debt securities, settlement balances with market counterparties, available for sale assets and reverse repurchase loans.

Credit risk management objectives are to:

 

¡   Maintain a framework of controls to ensure credit risk-taking is based on sound credit risk management principles;

 

¡   Identify, assess and measure credit risk clearly and accurately across the Group and within each separate business, from the level of individual facilities up to the total portfolio;

 

¡   Control and plan credit risk-taking in line with external stakeholder expectations and avoiding undesirable concentrations;

 

¡   Monitor credit risk and adherence to agreed controls; and

 

¡   Ensure that risk-reward objectives are met.

Total credit impairment charge and other provisions (£3,071m)

 

 

 

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1 Wholesale Loans and Advances

2 AFS and Reserve Repos

3 Contingent Liabilities and Guarantees

4 Retail Loans and Advances

  

£892m*

£9m £17m £2,153m*

 

 

*Excludes charges against contingent liabilities and guarantees

 

 

Organisation and structure

 

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Wholesale and retail portfolios are managed separately to reflect the differing nature of the assets; wholesale balances tend to be larger and are managed on an individual basis while retail balances are smaller in value and can be managed on a homogenous portfolio basis.

Barclays has structured the responsibilities of credit risk management so that decisions are taken as close as possible to the business, whilst ensuring robust review and challenge of performance, risk infrastructure and strategic plans. The credit risk management teams in each business are accountable to the business risk directors in those businesses who, in turn, report to the CRO and also to the heads of their businesses.

The responsibilities of the credit risk management teams in the businesses include: sanctioning new credit agreements; monitoring risk against limits and other parameters; ensuring all elements of post sanction fulfilment are completed in line with terms of the sanction; maintaining robust systems, data gathering, quality, storage and reporting methods for effective credit risk management; for wholesale portfolios performing effective turnaround and workout scenarios via dedicated restructuring and recoveries teams; and for retail portfolios maintaining robust collections and recovery processes/units.

Credit risk approval is undertaken by experienced credit risk professionals operating within a clearly defined delegated authority framework, with only the most senior credit officers entrusted with the higher levels of delegated authority. The largest credit exposures are approved at the Credit Committee which is managed by Central Risk. In the wholesale portfolios, credit risk managers are organised in sanctioning teams by geography, industry and/or product.

The role of the Central Risk function is to provide Group-wide direction, oversight and challenge of credit risk-taking. Central Risk sets the Credit Risk Control Framework, which provides a structure within which credit risk is managed together with supporting Credit Risk Policies. Central Risk also provides technical support, review and validation of credit risk measurement models across the Group.

Reporting

The Group dedicates considerable resources to gaining a clear and accurate understanding of credit risk across the business and ensuring that its balance sheet correctly reflects the value of the assets in accordance with applicable accounting principles. This process can be summarised in five broad stages:

¡   Measuring exposures and concentrations;

 

¡   Monitoring performance and asset quality;

 

¡   Monitoring for weaknesses in portfolios;

 

¡   Raising allowances for impairment and other credit provisions; and

 

¡   Returning assets to a performing status or writing off assets when the whole or part of a debt is considered irrecoverable.

Measuring exposures and concentrations

Loans and advances to customers provide the principal source of credit risk to the Group although Barclays can also be exposed to other forms of credit risk through, for example, loans to banks, loan commitments and debt securities. Barclays’ risk management policies and processes are designed to identify and analyse risk, to set appropriate risk appetite, limits and controls, and to monitor the risks and adherence to limits by means of reliable and timely data.

One area of particular review is concentration risk. A concentration of credit risk exists when a number of counterparties are engaged in similar activities and have similar economic characteristics that would cause their ability to meet contractual obligations to be similarly affected by changes in economic and other conditions. As a result, Barclays constantly reviews its concentration in a number of areas including, for example, geography, maturity and industry (see page 145 for further detail).

Mandate and Scale limits are used to maintain concentrations at appropriate levels. Limits are typically based on the nature of the lending and the amount of the portfolio meeting certain standards of underwriting criteria. Diversification, to reduce concentration risk, is achieved through setting maximum exposure guidelines to individual counterparties. Excesses are reported to the FRC and the BFRC.

Monitoring performance and asset quality

Trends in the quality of the Group’s loan portfolio are monitored in a number of ways including by way of:

Loan loss rate

The loan loss rate (LLR) provides Barclays with a way of consistently monitoring trends in loan portfolio quality at the Group, business and product levels. At Barclays, the LLR represents the annualised impairment charges on loans and advances to customers and banks and other credit provisions as a percentage of the total, period-end loans and advances to customers and banks, gross of impairment allowances. Details of the LLR for the current period may be found on the retail credit risk section (page 158) and the wholesale credit risk section (page 173).

 

 

Loan loss rate (bps) – Longer term trends

 

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From a recent full year peak of 156bps at 31 December 2009, the LLR has been on an improving trend. By the end of 2011, the LLR of 77bps had returned to pre-crisis levels and was lower than the long term average. The LLR has continued to fall in 2012-13 and now stands at 64bps.

 

Note

a Restated to reflect the impact of IFRS10, which results in some Exit Quadrant exposures being recorded at fair value in 2012 and 2013.
 

 

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Risk management >

Credit risk management continued

 

 

 

 

Coverage ratios

The impairment allowance is the aggregate of the identified and unidentified impairment balances. Impairment allowance coverage, or the coverage ratio, is reported at two levels:

 

¡   Credit risk loans (CRLs) coverage ratio, calculated as impairment allowances as a percentage of CRL balances;

 

¡   Potential credit risk loans coverage ratio (impairment allowances as a percentage of total CRL and Potential Problem Loan (PPLs) balances); and

 

¡   See identifying potential credit risk loans on page 395 for more information on the criteria for this category.

Appropriate coverage ratios will vary according to the type of product but can be broadly shown to have typical severity rates based upon historic analysis:

 

¡   Secured retail home loans: 5%-25%;

 

¡   Credit cards, unsecured and other personal lending products: 65%-80%; and

 

¡   Corporate facilities: 30%-50%.

CRL coverage ratios would therefore be expected to be at or around these levels over a defined period of time. In principle, a number of factors may affect the Group’s coverage ratios, including:

 

¡   The mix of products within total CRL balances: Coverage ratios will tend to be lower when there is a high proportion of secured retail and corporate balances within total CRLs. This is due to the fact that the recovery outlook on these types of exposures is typically higher than retail unsecured products, with the result that they will have lower impairment requirements;
¡   The stage in the economic cycle: Coverage ratios will tend to be lower in the earlier stages of deterioration in credit conditions. At this stage, retail delinquent balances will be predominantly in the early delinquency cycles and corporate names will have only recently moved to CRL categories. As such balances attract a lower impairment requirement, the CRL coverage ratio will be lower;

 

¡   The balance of PPLs to CRLs: The impairment requirements for PPLs are lower than for CRLs, so the greater the proportion of PPLs, the lower the PCRL coverage ratio; and

 

¡   Write-off policies: The speed with which defaulted assets are written off will affect coverage ratios. The more quickly assets are written off, the lower the ratios will be, since stock with 100% coverage will tend to roll out of PCRL categories more quickly.

Details of the coverage ratios for the current period are shown in the following chart and may be found in the analysis of loans and advances and impairment section (pages 151 to 157), the retail credit risk section (pages 158 to 172) and the wholesale credit risk section (pages 173 to 180).

CRL coveragea

 

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Monitoring weaknesses in portfolios

Whilst the basic principles for monitoring weaknesses in wholesale and retail exposures are broadly similar, they reflect the differing nature of the assets. As a matter of policy all facilities granted to corporate or wholesale counterparties are subject to a review on, at least, an annual basis, even when they are performing satisfactorily.

 

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Note

a Balances prior to 2012 have not been restated for the adoption of IFRS 10.

 

 

 

 

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Wholesale portfoliosa

Within the wholesale portfolios, the Basel definitions of default are used as default indicators which have been aligned to the IAS 39 objective evidence of impairment. A default is triggered if individual identified impairment is recognised. Barclays definitions of default used are:

 

1. Bank puts the credit obligation on a non-accrued status.

 

2. Bank makes a charge-off or account specific identified impairment resulting from a significant perceived decline in credit quality.

 

3. Bank sells the credit obligation at a material credit-related economic loss.

 

4. Bank consents to a distressed restructuring of the credit obligation where this is likely to result in a diminished financial obligation caused by the material forgiveness or postponement of principal, interest or fees.

 

5. Bank triggers a petition for obligor’s bankruptcy or similar order.

 

6. Bank becomes aware of the obligor having sought or having been placed in bankruptcy or similar protection where this would avoid or delay repayment of the credit obligation to the banking group.

 

7. Bank becomes aware of an acceleration of an obligation by a firm.

 

8. Where the obligor is a bank – revocation of authorisation.

 

9. Where the obligor is a sovereign – trigger of default definition of an approved external credit assessment institution (i.e. a rating agency).

 

10. Obligor past due more than 90 days on any material credit obligation to the banking group.

Wholesale accounts that are deemed to contain heightened levels of risk are recorded on graded early warning lists (EWL) or watchlists (WL) comprising three categories graded in line with the perceived severity of the risk attached to the lending, and its probability of default. Examples of heightened levels of risk may include, for example:

 

¡   a material reduction in profits;

 

¡   a material reduction in the value of collateral held;

 

¡   a decline in net tangible assets in circumstances which are not satisfactorily explained; or

 

¡   periodic waiver requests or changes to the terms of the credit agreement over an extended period of time.

These lists are updated monthly and circulated to the relevant risk control points. Once an account has been placed on WL or EWL, the exposure is carefully monitored and, where appropriate, exposure reductions are effected. Should an account become impaired, it will normally, but not necessarily, have passed through each of the three categories, which reflect the need for increasing caution and control. While all obligors, regardless of financial health, are subject to a full review of all facilities on at least an annual basis, more frequent interim reviews may be undertaken should circumstances dictate. Specialist recovery functions deal with clients in higher levels of EWL/WL, default, collection or insolvency. Their mandate is to maximise shareholder value ideally via working intensively with the client to help them to either return to financial health or in the cases of insolvency obtain the orderly and timely recovery of impaired debts. Where an obligor’s financial health gives grounds for concern, it is immediately placed into the appropriate category.

Retail portfolios

Within the retail portfolios, which tend to comprise homogeneous assets, statistical techniques more readily allow potential credit weaknesses to be monitored on a portfolio basis. The approach is

consistent with the Group’s policy of raising a collective impairment allowance as soon as objective evidence of impairment is identified. Retail accounts can be classified according to specified categories of arrears status (or cycle), which reflects the level of contractual payments which are overdue. An outstanding balance is deemed to be delinquent when it is one day or one penny down and goes into default when it moves into recovery, normally 180 days. Impairment is considered from entry into delinquency.

The probability of default increases with the number of contractual payments missed, thus raising the associated impairment requirement.

Once a loan has passed through a prescribed number of cycles (normally six) it will charge-off and enter recovery status. ‘Charge-off’ refers to the point in time when collections activity changes from the collection of arrears to the recovery of the full balance. In most cases, charge-off will result in the account moving to a legal recovery function or debt sale. This will typically occur after an account has been treated by a collections function. However, in certain cases, an account may be charged off directly from a performing status, such as in the case of insolvency or death.

The timings of the charge-off points are established based on the type of loan. For the majority of products, the standard period for charging off accounts is six cycles (180 days past due date of contractual obligation). Early charge-off points are prescribed for unsecured assets. For example, in case of customer bankruptcy or insolvency, associated accounts are charged off within 60 days of notification.

Identifying potential credit risk loans

The Group reports potentially and actually impaired loans as Potential Credit Risk Loans (PCRLs). PCRLs comprise two categories of loans: Potential Problem Loans (PPLs) and Credit Risk Loans (CRLs).

PPLs are loans that are currently complying with repayment terms but where serious doubt exists as to the ability of the borrower to continue to comply with such terms in the near future. If the credit quality of a wholesale loan on an EWL or WL deteriorates to the highest category or a retail loan deteriorates to delinquency cycle 2, consideration is given to including it within the PPL category.

Should further evidence of deterioration be observed, a loan may move to the CRL category. Events that would trigger the transfer of a loan from the PPL to the CRL category include a missed payment or a breach of covenant. CRLs comprise three classes of loans:

 

¡   Impaired loans: comprise loans where an individually identified impairment allowance has been raised and also include loans which are fully collateralised or where indebtedness has already been written down to the expected realisable value. This category includes all retail loans that have been charged off to legal recovery. The category may include loans, which, while impaired, are still performing;

 

¡   Accruing past due 90 days or more: comprise loans that are 90 days or more past due with respect to principal or interest. An impairment allowance will be raised against these loans if the expected cash flows discounted at the effective interest rate are less than the carrying value; and

 

¡   Impaired and restructured loans: comprise loans not included above where, for economic or legal reasons related to the debtor’s financial difficulties, a concession has been granted to the debtor that would not otherwise be considered. Where the concession results in the expected cash flows discounted at the effective interest rate being less than the loan’s carrying value, an impairment allowance will be raised. See Forbearance and other concession programmes on page 400 for more detail.

Note

a Includes certain Business Banking facilities which are recorded as Retail for management purposes.
 

 

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Risk management >

Credit risk management continued

 

 

 

 

Allowances for impairment and other credit provisions

Barclays establishes, through charges against profit, impairment allowances and other credit provisions for the incurred loss inherent in the lending book. Under IFRS, impairment allowances are recognised where there is objective evidence of impairment as a result of one or more loss events that have occurred after initial recognition, and where these events have had an impact on the estimated future cash flows of the financial asset or portfolio of financial assets. Impairment of loans and receivables is measured as the difference between the carrying amount and the present value of estimated future cash flows discounted at the financial asset’s original effective interest rate. If the carrying amount is less than the discounted cash flows, then no further allowance is necessary.

As one of the controls to ensure that adequate impairment allowances are held, movements in impairment to individual names with a total impairment allowance of £25m or more are presented to the Group’s most senior Credit Committee for agreement, and of £10m-£25m to the Group Credit Risk Director for his agreement.

Individually assessed impairment

Impairment allowances are measured individually for assets that are individually significant, and collectively where a portfolio comprises homogenous assets and where appropriate statistical techniques are available. In terms of individual assessment, the principal trigger point for impairment is the missing of a contractual payment which is evidence that an account is exhibiting serious financial problems, and where any further deterioration is likely to lead to failure. Details of other trigger points can be found above. Two key inputs to the cash flow calculation are the valuation of all security and collateral, as well as the timing of all asset realisations, after allowing for all attendant costs. This method applies mainly in the wholesale portfolios.

Collectively assessed impairment

For collective assessment, the principal trigger point for impairment is the missing of a contractual payment which is the policy consistently adopted across all credit cards, unsecured loans, mortgages and most other retail lending. Details of other trigger points can be found above. The calculation methodology relies on the historical experience of pools of similar assets; hence the impairment allowance is collective. The impairment calculation is typically based on a roll-rate approach, where the percentage of assets that move from the initial delinquency to default is derived from statistical probabilities based on historical experience. Recovery amounts are calculated using a weighted average for the relevant portfolio. This method applies mainly to the retail portfolios and is consistent with Barclays’ policy of raising an allowance as soon as impairment is identified. Unidentified impairment is also included in collective impairment.

Impairment for losses incurred but not specifically identified

Unidentified impairment allowances are also raised to cover losses which are judged to be incurred but not yet specifically identified in customer exposures at the balance sheet date, and which, therefore, have not been specifically reported. The incurred but not yet reported calculation is based on the asset’s probability of moving from the performing portfolio to being specifically identified as impaired within the given emergence period and then on to default within a specified period, termed as the outcome period. This is calculated on the present value of estimated future cash flows discounted at the financial asset’s effective interest rate. The emergence and outcome periods vary across products.

Wholesale portfolios

Impairment in the wholesale portfolios is generally calculated by valuing each impaired asset on a case by case basis, i.e. on an individual assessment basis. A relatively small amount of wholesale impairment relates to unidentified or collective impairment; in such cases impairment is calculated using modelled Probability of Default (PD) x Loss Given Default (LGD) x Exposure at Default (EAD) adjusted for an emergence period.

Retail portfolios

For retail portfolios, the impairment allowance is mainly assessed on a collective basis and is based on the drawn balances adjusted to take into account the likelihood of the customer defaulting at a particular point in time (PDpit) and the amount estimated as not recoverable (LGD). The basic calculation is:

Impairment allowance = Total outstandings x Probability of Default (PDpit) x Loss Given Default (LGD)

The PDpit increases with the number of contractual payments missed thus raising the associated impairment requirement.

In retail, the current policy also incorporates a High Risk segment which is included in the unidentified impairment calculation. High Risk segments are those which can be demonstrated to experience higher risk characteristics when compared to the rest of the performing segment. This segmentation allows for earlier identification of potential loss in a portfolio. Unidentified impairment is also referred to as collective impairment. This is to reflect the impairment that is collectively held against a pool of assets where a loss event has occurred, but has not yet been captured.

Sensitivity of the impairment to key assumptions

Wholesale portfolios

Impairment in the wholesale portfolios is generally calculated by valuing each impaired asset on a case by case basis, and is not therefore primarily model-driven. As such, the key assumptions that would have the most impact on impairment provisions in the wholesale portfolios are the valuations placed upon security and collateral held and the timing of asset realisations.

When calculating impairment, estimated future cash flows are discounted at the financial asset’s original effective interest rate. At present in wholesale portfolios the impact of discounting is relatively small in itself but would rise with reference rates. In addition, to the extent that a rise in interest rates impacted upon economic growth and/or serviceability of wholesale clients and customers, this would be expected to feed through in future impairment numbers.

In 2013, key judgements were made on a number of identified cases within Investment Bank, Corporate Banking and Wealth and Investment Management. No material changes were made to the unidentified impairment in 2013.

Retail portfolios

For retail portfolios, impairment is calculated, predominantly using models. The models are developed using historical data and include explicit and implicit assumptions such as debt sale estimates, house price valuations and the distribution of accounts. Model monitoring and validation are undertaken regularly, at least annually, to ensure that models are fit for purpose. Further to this, Barclays accounts for the impact of changes in the economic environment and lags resulting from the design of the models to ensure overall impairment adequacy. See Management adjustments to models for impairment (page 159) for more information on key management judgements in 2013. See Stress testing (page 388) for further information.

Emergence and outcome periods

To develop models to calculate the allowance for impairment it is first necessary to estimate the time horizons of these models. These time horizons are called the emergence and outcome periods. Emergence period is the time it takes for an account that is likely to be impaired but not yet identified as such, to move from the performing to the impaired segment. Outcome period is the time it takes for a retail account to move from the impaired segment to the default segment.

 

 

 

 

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This methodology ensures that the Group captures the loss incurred at the correct balance sheet date. These impairment allowances are reviewed and adjusted at least quarterly by an appropriate charge or release of the stock of impairment allowances based on statistical analysis and management judgement. The accuracy of this analysis is periodically assessed against actual losses.

Wholesale portfolios

For wholesale portfolios in Corporate Banking and Investment Bank, the emergence period is portfolio specific and is based on the anticipated length of time from the occurrence of a loss event to identified impairment being incurred. The emergence period in Corporate Banking is derived from actual case file review. This has also been benchmarked against the time taken to move between risk grades in internal watch lists, from EWL1 or 2 into EWL3 which is the level of risk that will attract a collective impairment allowance. Both methodologies produce similar results for the emergence period, which is currently three months. The average life of the Investment Bank portfolio is estimated to be 18 months, during which time Investment Bank is exposed to losses on the portfolio. However, it is expected that incurred losses would become apparent within six months, therefore the Investment Bank used a six-month emergence period.

Retail portfolios

For retail portfolios, minimum emergence periods and outcome periods are defined at a product level. Emergence and outcome periods at 31 December 2013 for the main retail products are as shown in the table below:

Minimum emergence periods

 

Product type

               
      Emergence
period
(months)
     Outcome
period
(months)
 

Mortgages

     6         12   

Credit cards

     3         6   

Personal loans, overdrafts & other secured loans

     3         6   

Business banking arrears managed commercial mortgages

     6         12   

Business banking arrears managed non-‘commercial mortgages’

     3         6   

Business banking EWL managed

     3         12   

Mortgages under forbearance

     n/a         24   

All unsecured products under forbearance

     n/a         12   

Business banking EWL managed under forbearance

     n/a         24   

Outcome periods are tested periodically (at least annually) against the actual time elapsing from the initial indication of potential default to the default event. When necessary, the outcome period is adjusted to reflect our most up-to-date experience of customer behaviour.

The emergence period for Credit Cards products has been raised to three months to align it with the approach adopted for other retail unsecured retail products. Given the minimum emergence period possible is one month, the period was moved to three months based on expert judgement, with a lower emergence period permitted only on a case by case basis where supported by analytical evidence.

Returning assets to a performing status

Wholesale portfolios

In wholesale portfolios, an account may only be returned to a performing status when it ceases to have any actual or perceived financial stress and no longer meets any of the EWL/WL criteria, or once facilities have been fully repaid or cancelled. Unless a facility is fully repaid or cancelled, the decision in Corporate Banking to return an account to performing status may only be taken by the business credit risk, while within the Investment Bank, the decision can only be taken by the Investment Bank WatchList Committee.

Retail portfolios

A retail asset, prior to charge-off may only be returned to a performing status in the following circumstances:

 

1. All arrears (both capital and interest) have been cleared and payments have returned to original contractual payments;

 

2. For revolving products, a re-age event (see page 402) has occurred, when the customer is returned to an up to date status without having cleared the requisite level of arrears;

 

3. For amortising products excluding residential mortgages, a small arrears capitalisation event has occurred, where the customer is returned to an up to date status without having cleared the requisite level of arrears; and

 

4. For amortising products, which are performing on a programme of Forbearance and meet the following criteria may be returned to the performing book classified as High Riska:

 

  (a) No interest rate concessions must have been granted;

 

  (b) Restructure must remain within original product parameters (original term + extension);

 

  (c) 12 consecutive payments at the revised contractual payment amount must have been received post the Restructure event.

For residential mortgages, accounts may also be considered for rehabilitation post charge-off, where customer circumstances have changed. The customer must clear all unpaid capital and interest and confirm their ability to meet full payments going forward.

Recovery units

Recovery units are responsible for exposures where deterioration of the client credit profile is severe to the extent that timely or full recovery of exposure is considered unlikely and default has occurred or is likely in the short-term. Recovery teams set and implement strategies to recover the Bank’s exposure through realisation of assets and collateral in cooperation with clients and where this is not possible through insolvency and legal procedures.

In Wholesale, for a case to be transferred to a recovery unit it must be in default and have ceased to actively trade through the bank account or be in insolvency. In Retail, the timings of the charge-off points to recovery units are established based on the type of loan. For the majority of products, the standard period for charging off accounts is six missed contractual payments (180 days past due date of contractual obligation) unless a Forbearance programme is agreed. Early charge-off points are prescribed for unsecured assets. For example, in case of customer bankruptcy or insolvency, associated accounts are charged off within 60 days of notification. See recovery information included in Portfolio reviews on page 165. In addition please refer to Foreclosures in process and properties in possession on page 167.

 

Note

a The identification and subsequent treatment of up-to-date customers who, either through an event or observed behaviour exhibit potential financial difficulty. High Risk must also include customers who have suffered recent financial dislocation, i.e. prior forbearance or re-age.
 

 

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Writing off assets

Write-off refers to the point where it is determined that the asset is irrecoverable, it is no longer considered economically viable to try and recover the asset, it is deemed immaterial, or full and final settlement is reached and a shortfall remains. In the event of write-off, the customer balance is removed from the balance sheet and the impairment reserve held against the asset is released.

The timing and extent of write-offs may involve some element of subjective judgement. Nevertheless, a write-off will often be prompted by a specific event, such as the inception of insolvency proceedings or other formal recovery action, which makes it possible to establish that some or the entire advance is beyond realistic prospect of recovery. In any event, the position of impaired loans is reviewed at least quarterly to ensure that irrecoverable advances are being written off in a prompt and orderly manner and in compliance with any local regulations.

For Retail portfolios, the timings of the write-off points are established based on the type of loan. For unsecured assets, write-off must occur within 12 months after charge-off if no payment has been received for 12 months. For secured loans, the shortfall after the receipt of the proceeds from the disposal of the collateral is written off within three months of that date if no repayment schedule has been agreed with the borrower. Such assets are only written off once all the necessary procedures have been completed and the amount of the loss has been determined.

Subsequent recoveries of amounts previously written off are written back and hence decrease the amount of the reported loan impairment charge in the income statement. In 2013, total write-offs of impaired financial assets decreased 19% to £3,343m (2012: £4,119m).

Total write offs of impaired financial assets (£m)

 

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Credit risk mitigation (audited)

Barclays employs a range of techniques and strategies to actively mitigate credit risks to which it is exposed. These can broadly be divided into three types:

 

¡   Netting and set-off;

 

¡   Collateral; and

 

¡   Risk transfer.

Barclays has detailed policies in place to ensure that credit risk mitigation is appropriately recognised and recorded. The recognition of credit risk mitigation is subject to a number of considerations, including ensuring legal certainty of enforceability and effectiveness, ensuring the valuation and liquidity of the collateral is adequately monitored, and ensuring the value of the collateral is not materially correlated with the credit quality of the obligor.

All three types of credit risk mitigation may be used by different areas of the Group for exposures with a full range of counterparties. For instance, Investment Bank, Corporate Banking and other business areas may all take property, cash or other physical assets as collateral for exposures to retailers, property companies or other client types.

Netting and set-off

In many jurisdictions in which Barclays operates, credit risk exposures can be reduced by applying netting and set-off. In exposure terms, this credit risk mitigation technique is used mainly in derivative transactions with financial institutions and has the largest overall impact on net exposure to derivative financial instruments compared with other risk mitigation techniques.

For derivative transactions, Barclays will often seek to enter into standard master agreements with counterparties (e.g. ISDA). These master agreements allow for netting of credit risk exposure to a counterparty resulting from a derivative transaction against Barclays’ obligations to the counterparty in the event of default, to produce a lower net credit exposure. These agreements may also reduce settlement exposure (e.g. for foreign exchange transactions) by allowing for payments on the same day in the same currency to be set off against one another.

In the majority of its portfolios, Barclays uses the Internal Model Method (IMM) to calculate counterparty credit risk exposures.

Collateral

The Group has the ability to call on collateral in the event of default of the borrower or other counterparty, comprising:

 

¡   Home loans: a fixed charge over residential property in the form of houses, flats and other dwellings. The value of collateral is impacted by property market conditions which drive demand and therefore value of the property. Other regulatory interventions on ability to repossess, longer period to repossession and granting of forbearance may also affect the collateral value;

 

¡   Wholesale lending: a fixed charge over commercial property and other physical assets, in various forms;

 

¡   Other retail lending: includes charges over motor vehicle and other physical assets; second lien charge over residential property, which is subordinate to first charge held either by the Group or by another party; and finance lease receivables, for which typically the Group retains legal title to the leased asset and has the right to repossess the asset on the default of the borrower;

 

¡   Derivatives: Barclays also often seeks to enter into a Credit Support Annex (CSA) with counterparties with which Barclays has master agreements in place. These annexes to master agreements provide a mechanism for further reducing credit risk, whereby collateral (margin) is posted on a regular basis (typically daily or weekly) to collateralise the mark-to-market exposure of a derivative portfolio;

 

¡   Reverse repurchase agreements: collateral typically comprises highly liquid securities which have been legally transferred to Barclays subject to an agreement to return them for a fixed price; and

 

¡   Financial guarantees and similar off-balance sheet commitments: cash collateral may be held against these arrangements.

For details of the fair value of collateral held please refer to Maximum exposure table on page 143. For detail of collateral in credit portfolios see pages 166 to 178.

In exposure terms, the main portfolios that Barclays takes collateral for are home loans and reverse repurchase agreements with financial institutions.

Floating charges over receivables

The Group may also obtain collateral in the form of floating charges over receivables and inventory of corporate and other business customers. The value of this collateral varies from period to period depending on the level of receivables and inventory. It is impracticable to provide an estimate of the amount (fair value or nominal value) of this collateral. The Group may in some cases obtain collateral and other enhancements at a counterparty level, which are not specific to a particular class of financial instrument. The fair value of the credit enhancement gained has been apportioned across the relevant asset classes.

 

 

 

 

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Collateral for derivative contracts

The collateral obtained for derivatives is predominantly either cash, direct debt obligation government (G14+) bonds denominated in the domestic currency of the issuing country, debt issued by supranationals or letters of credit issued by an institution with a long-term unsecured debt rating of A+/A3 or better. Where the Group has ISDA master agreements, the collateral document will be the ISDA CSA. The collateral document must give Barclays the power to realise any collateral placed with it in the event of the failure of the counterparty.

Valuation of collateral and impact of market moves

Typically assets other than cash are subject to regular revaluation (for example via physical review, linking to an external index or depreciation of the asset) to ensure they continue to achieve appropriate mitigation of risk. Customer agreements often include requirements for provision of additional collateral should valuations decline or credit exposure increase, for example due to market moves impacting a derivative exposure.

The carrying value of non-cash collateral reflects the fair value of the physical assets limited to the carrying value of the asset where the exposure is over-collateralised. In certain cases where active markets or recent valuations of the assets are not available, estimates are used. For assets collateralised by residential or commercial property (and certain other physical assets), where it is not practicable to assess current market valuations of each underlying property, values reflect historical fair values updated for movements in appropriate external indices. For further information on LTV ratios in principal home loans portfolios, see the Retail Credit Risk section on page 166.

Liens over fluctuating assets such as inventory and trade receivables, known as floating charges, over the assets of a borrower are monitored at least annually. The valuation of this type of collateral takes into account the ability to establish objectively a price or market value, the frequency with which the value can be obtained (including a professional appraisal or valuation), and the volatility or a proxy for the volatility of the value of the collateral.

For assets collateralised by traded financial instruments, values reflect mark to market or mark to model values of those assets, applying a haircut where appropriate. A haircut is the valuation percentage applicable to each type of collateral and will be largely based on liquidity and price volatility of the underlying security.

Valuation of collateral – property

When property is taken as collateral it is monitored to ensure that the current value is not less than its value at origination. Monitoring is undertaken annually for commercial property or via linking to an external index for residential property. More frequent monitoring may be carried out where the property sector is subject to significant deterioration.

Deterioration is monitored principally by geography. Specific exercises to monitor property values may be undertaken where the property sector in a given geography has been subject to significant deterioration and where Barclays has a material concentration of property collateral.

Monitoring may be undertaken either a portfolio level (Retail) or at the level of an individual property (Wholesale).

In Retail businesses, monitoring on a portfolio level refers to a more frequent process of indexing collateral values on each individual loan, using a regional or national index, and updating LGD values. This monitoring may be a desktop assessment and need not necessarily include physical assessment of properties. In the event of charge-off, an individual valuation of the property is undertaken within three months of the charge-off event and subsequently undertaken at least every six months whilst in charge-off.

 

In Wholesale, monitoring is undertaken by individuals who are not part of the sales / relationship part of the business. The monitoring may be a desktop assessment and need not necessarily include physical assessment of properties. Where an appropriate local index is not available, property values are monitored on an individual basis as part of the annual review process for the loan. For larger loans, in addition to the regular annual review, the property value is reviewed by an independent valuer at least once every three years. This review is a more detailed assessment than the standard property monitoring review, and may include a fresh professional valuation. In addition, an independent valuer reviews the property valuation where information indicates that the value of the property may have declined materially relative to general market prices. In addition, trigger points are defined under which property values must be reviewed.

Valuation of collateral – distressed assets

The net realisable value from a distressed sale of collateral obtained by the Group upon default or insolvency of counterparty will in some cases be lower than the carrying value recognised above. Assets obtained are normally sold, generally at auction, or realised in an orderly manner for the maximum benefit of the Group, the borrower and the borrower’s other creditors in accordance with the relevant insolvency regulations. For business customers, in some circumstances, where excess funds are available after repayment in full of the outstanding loan, they are offered to any other, lower ranked, secured lenders. Any additional funds are returned to the customer. Barclays does not, as a rule, occupy repossessed properties for its business use or use assets obtained in its operations.

Additional revaluations are usually performed when a loan is moved to EWL or WL. Exceptions to this may be considered where it is clear a revaluation is not necessary, for instance where there is a very high margin of security or a recent valuation has been undertaken. Conversely, a material reduction in the value of collateral held represents an increase in credit risk and will often cause a loan to be placed on the EWL or WL.

Any one of the above events may also trigger a test for impairment, depending on individual circumstances of the loan. When calculating impairment, the difference between an asset’s carrying amount and the present value of all estimated cash flows discounted at the original effective interest rate will be recognised as impairment. Such cash flows include the estimated fair value of the collateral which reflects the results of the monitoring and review of collateral values as detailed above and valuations undertaken as part of our impairment process.

Whether property values are updated as part of the annual review process, or by indexation of collateral values, the updated collateral values feed into the calculation of risk parameters which, in turn, feed into identified and unidentified impairment calculations at each balance sheet date.

Trends in loan loss rates incorporate the impact of any decrease in the fair value of collateral held.

Collateral – regulatory capital benefit

Where regulatory capital is calculated under advanced IRB regulations the benefit of collateral is generally taken by adjusting LGDs. For standardised portfolios the benefit of collateral is taken using the financial collateral comprehensive method: supervisory volatility adjustments approach.

 

 

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Risk transfer

A range of instruments including guarantees, credit insurance, credit derivatives and securitisation can be used to transfer credit risk from one counterparty to another. These mitigate credit risk in two main ways:

 

¡   if the risk is transferred to a counterparty which is more credit worthy than the original counterparty, then overall credit risk will have been reduced; and

 

¡   where recourse to the first counterparty remains, both counterparties must default before a loss materialises. This will be less likely than the default of either counterparty individually so credit risk is reduced.

Risk transfer can also be used to reduce risk concentrations within portfolios lowering the impact of stress events.

Risk transfer transactions are undertaken with consideration to whether the collateral provider is correlated with the exposure, the credit worthiness of the collateral provider and legal certainty of enforceability and effectiveness. Where credit risk mitigation is deemed to transfer credit risk this exposure is appropriately recorded against the credit risk mitigation provider.

In exposure terms, risk transfer is used most extensively as a credit risk mitigation technique for wholesale loans and derivative financial instruments.

For instruments that are deemed to transfer credit risk, in advanced IRB portfolios the protection is generally recognised by using the PD and LGD of the protection provider.

Off-balance sheet risk mitigation

The Group applies fundamentally the same risk management policies for off-balance sheet risks as it does for its on-balance sheet risks. In the case of commitments to lend, customers and counterparties will be subject to the same credit management policies as for loans and advances. Collateral may be sought depending on the strength of the counterparty and the nature of the transaction.

Forbearance and other concession programmes

Forbearance programmes

Forbearance takes place when a concession is made on the contractual terms of a facility in response to an obligor’s financial difficulties. The Group offers forbearance programmes to assist customers and clients in financial difficulty through agreements that may include accepting less than contractual amounts due where financial distress would otherwise prevent satisfactory repayment within the original terms and conditions of the contract. These agreements may be initiated by the customer, Barclays or a third party.

Forbearance programmes for wholesale portfolios

Wholesale client relationships are individually managed with lending decisions made with reference to specific circumstances and on bespoke terms.

Forbearance occurs when Barclays, for reasons relating to the actual or perceived financial difficulty of an obligor, grants a concession below current Barclays standard rates (i.e. lending criteria below the Group’s current lending terms), that would not otherwise be considered. This includes all troubled debt restructures granted below our standard rates.

Forbearance would typically be evident where the concession(s) agreed impact the ability to repay debt or avoid recognising a default with a lack of appropriate commercial balance and risk mitigation/ structural enhancement of benefit to Barclays in return for concession(s).

The following list is not exhaustive but provides some examples of instances that would typically be considered to be evidence of forbearance:

 

¡   A reduction of current contractual interest rate for the sole purpose of maintaining performing debt status with no other improvement to terms of benefit to the Bank;

 

¡   Non-enforcement of a material covenant breach impacting the borrower’s ability to repay;

 

¡   Converting a fully or partially amortising facility to bullet repayment at maturity with no other improvement to terms of benefit to the Bank for the sole purpose of avoiding a payment default due to customer’s inability to meet amortisation;

 

¡   Extension in maturity date for a project finance facility that gives an effective contractual term longer than the underlying project contract being financed; and,

 

¡   Any release of a material security interest without receiving appropriate value by way of repayment/ alternate security offered or other improvement in terms available to the Bank commensurate with the value of the security released.

Where a concession is granted that is not a result of financial difficulty and/ or is within our current market terms, the concession would not amount to forbearance. For example, a commercially balanced restructure within our current terms which involves Barclays granting concessions and receiving risk mitigation/ structural enhancement of benefit to Barclays would not be indicative of forbearance.

The following list (not exhaustive) gives some examples of instances that would not typically be considered to be forbearance:

 

¡   Temporary/ permanent waivers/ resets of covenants agreed in line with our current terms;

 

¡   Amending contractual maturity to meet current lending terms that results in a previously amortising facility having a bullet repayment as a consequence of shorter maturity date;

 

¡   Equity/ warrants taken to increase return to the Bank without compromising contractual interest;

 

¡   Extension of maturity date where the extension is within the normally granted terms for the type of facility in question; and

 

¡   Release of a material security interest where commensurate value is received by way of repayment/ other security offered.

Cases where a technical default may have occurred, the Bank has decided to reserve its position but does not consider the default to be sufficient to impact the borrower’s ability to pay, would not typically be considered forbearance (as the borrower would continue to meet its payment obligations under existing terms).

The Group WL/EWL and Forbearance Policy requires that a permanent record is retained of all individual cases of forbearance, and upon granting forbearance the obligor is placed on WL/EWL. The obligor then remains on WL/EWL and is flagged as being in forbearance for a minimum of 12 months from the date forbearance is applied. Obligors may be removed from WL/EWL status in less than 12 months in exceptional circumstances, e.g. full repayment of facilities or significant restructuring. Obligors placed on WL/EWL status are subject to increased levels of credit risk oversight.

Obligors who have been granted forbearance are classified as a Basel ‘unlikeliness’ to pay default for capital purposes with PD of 1 throughout the period that they remain classified as being in forbearance. This is on the basis that without intervention by Barclays the obligor is unlikely to meet its obligations in full which would lead to default.

 

 

 

 

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Impairment is assessed on an individual basis and recognised where relevant impairment triggers have been reached including where customers are in arrears and require renegotiation of terms. Forbearance is considered to be an indicator that impairment may be present and an impairment test is performed for all cases placed in forbearance.

Given that these loans have already been assessed for impairment at the point of being classified as being in forbearance, Barclays does not have additional procedures to evaluate the likelihood that these loans would default within the loss emergence and confirmation periods.

A control framework exists along with regular sampling to ensure watch list and impairment policies are enforced as defined and to ensure that all assets have suitable levels of impairment applied. Portfolios are subject to independent assessment.

Aggregate data for wholesale forbearance cases is reviewed by the Wholesale Credit Risk Management Committee.

Please see the Wholesale Credit risk section in the Risk review (pages 175 and 176) for details of loans currently in forbearance.

Forbearance programmes for retail portfolios

Retail forbearance is available to customers experiencing financial difficulties. Forbearance solutions take a number of forms depending on individual customer circumstances. Short-term solutions focus on temporary reductions to contractual payments and may change from capital and interest payments to interest only. For customers with longer-term financial difficulties, term extensions may be offered, which may include interest rate concessions. For customers with longer-term financial difficulties, term extensions may be offered, which may include interest rate concessions and a switch to fully amortising balances for card portfolios.

When an account is placed into a programme of forbearance, the asset will be classified as such for the remainder of its term, unless after 12 months it qualifies for reclassification, upon which it will be returned to the up to date book and classified as High Risk for a further 12 month period. When Barclays agrees to a forbearance programme with a customer, the impairment allowance recognises the impact on cash-flows of the agreement to receive less than the original contractual payments. The Retail Impairment Policy prescribes the methodology for impairment of forbearance assets, which is measured by comparing the debt outstanding to the revised expected repayment. This results in higher impairment, in general, than for fully performing assets, reflecting the additional credit risk attached to loans subject to forbearance.

During 2013, Barclays continued to assist customers in financial difficulty through the use of forbearance programmes. However, the extent of forbearance offered by the Group to customers and clients remains small in comparison to the overall size of the loan book.

Forbearance on the Group’s principal portfolios in UK, US, Europe, and South Africa are presented in the Retail Credit risk section of the Risk review. See forbearance programmes on principal cards, overdrafts, unsecured loans, home loans and business lending portfolios on pages 161 to 164 for more details of assets currently in forbearance. The level of forbearance extended to customers in other retail portfolios is not material and, typically, does not currently play a significant part in the way customer relationships are managed. However, additional portfolios will be added to this disclosure should the forbearance in respect of such portfolios become material.

Barclays would not consider a retail loan to be renegotiated where the amendment is at the request of the customer, there is no evidence of actual or imminent financial difficulty and the amendment meets with all Barclays underwriting criteria. In this case it would be treated as a new loan. In the normal course of business, customers who are not in financial difficulties frequently apply for new loan terms, for example to take advantage of a lower interest rate or to secure a further advance on a mortgage product. Where these applications meet our underwriting criteria and the loan is made at market interest rates, the loan is not classified as being in forbearance. Only in circumstances where a customer has requested a term extension, interest rate reduction or further advance and there is evidence of financial difficulty is the loan classified as forbearance and included in our disclosures on forbearance.

Impairment of loans under forbearance

Loans under forbearance programmes are subject to Group Impairment Policy. In both retail and wholesale portfolios, identified impairment is raised for such accounts, recognising the agreement between the Bank and customer to pay less than the original contractual payment and is measured using a future discounted cash flow approach comparing the debt outstanding to the expected repayment on the debt. This results in higher impairment, in general, being held for loans under forbearance than for fully performing assets, reflecting the additional credit risk attached to loans subject to forbearance.

Sustainability of loans under forbearance

The Group closely monitors the sustainability of loans for which forbearance has been granted.

Wholesale portfolios

In the wholesale portfolios, customers that have been granted forbearance are placed on WL/EWL and therefore subject to increased levels of credit risk oversight. Obligors then remain on WL/EWL and are classified as being in forbearance with a PD of 1 for capital purposes for a minimum of 12 months from the date forbearance is applied until satisfactory performance is evidenced. Forbearance status and the related default treatment for capital can be removed after 12 months from being applied if any of the following criteria is met:

 

¡   The customer no longer benefits from a concession below our current market rates or reverts back to their original lending terms (prior to the concession being applied);

 

¡   The customer ceases to have any actual or perceived financial stress; or

 

¡   A significant restructure takes place which leads to a significant improvement in the credit profile of the customer.

Obligors may only be removed from being classified as being in forbearance with a PD of 1 for capital purposes in less than 12 months in exceptional circumstances, e.g. full repayment of facilities or significant restructuring that materially improves credit quality. Customers continuing to benefit from a concession below current market can be removed from EWL / WL and no longer be classified as in forbearance provided they do not meet any of the EWL / WL criteria and can evidence consistent satisfactory performance throughout the minimum 12 month period.

Retail portfolios

In retail portfolios, the type of forbearance programme offered should be appropriate to the nature and the expected duration of the customer’s financial distress. It is imperative that the solution agreed is both appropriate to that customer and sustainable, with a clear demonstration from the customer of both willingness and ability to repay. Before any permanent programme of forbearance is granted, an affordability assessment is undertaken to ensure suitability of the offer. When customers exit forbearance, the accounts are ring-fenced as a ‘high risk’ segment within the up to date book for a period of at least 12 months.

 

 

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For disclosure on the Group’s accounting policy with respect to impairment, see Note 7 and the Reporting section on page 393.

Other programmes

Retail re-aging activity

Re-aging refers to the placing of an account into an up-to-date position without the requisite repayment of arrears. The re-age policy applies to revolving products only. No reduction is made to the minimum due payment amounts which are calculated, as a percentage of balance, with any unpaid principal included in the calculation of the following month’s minimum due payment.

The changes in timing of cash flows following re-aging do not result in any additional cost to Barclays. The following are the conditions required to be met before a re-age may occur:

 

¡   The account must not have been previously charged off or written off;

 

¡   The borrower cannot be bankrupt, subject to an Individual Voluntary Arrangement (a UK contractual arrangement with creditors for individuals wishing to avoid bankruptcy), a fraud or deceased;

 

¡   The borrower must show a renewed willingness and ability to repay the debt. This will be achieved by the borrower making at least three consecutive contractual monthly payments or the equivalent cumulative amount. Contractual monthly payment is defined as the contractual minimum due. Funds may not be advanced for any part of this;

 

¡   The account must have been on book at least nine months (i.e. nine months prior to the three month qualification period); and

 

¡   No account should be re-aged more than once within any 12 month period, or more than twice in a five year period.

Barclays considers assets are considered to belong to a separate ‘High Risk’ pool. Under ‘High Risk’, the performance of the assets is a risk characteristic and results in a higher probability of default being assigned to them in impairment models which meet the requirement of IAS 39, AG87-88. This results in an appropriately higher impairment allowance being recognised on the assets. See Re-age in Risk review section on page 170 for more information.

Retail small arrears capitalisation

Small arrears capitalisation is available for amortising products with the exception of residential mortgages. This refers to the capitalisation of small levels of arrears (up to 90 days past due), together with either a corresponding term extension or increase to contractual monthly payment without the requirement to classify the accounts as forbearance. Contractual monthly payments must not be reduced. The small arrears capitalisation activity is also subject to the conditions outlined above under retail re-aging activity, being met. Any capitalisation event exceeding this must be executed under the direction of the Forbearance policy.

Refinancing risk

This is the risk that the borrower or group of correlated borrowers may be unable to roll or repay bullet repayment loans at expiry, and will therefore need refinancing.

From a Wholesale perspective, refinancing risk will typically be associated with loans that have an element of bullet repayment incorporated into the repayment profile. Refinancing risk is taken into account on a case by case basis as part of the credit review and approval process for each individual loan. The review will consider factors such as the strength of the business model and sustainability of the cash flows and for bridge loans the review will also include an evaluation of the market risk.

Commercial Real Estate loans will frequently incorporate a bullet repayment element at maturity. Where this is the case, deals are sized and structured to enable Barclays to term out the loan if the client were unable to refinance the loan at expiry. Credit review will incorporate an examination of various factors that are central to this consideration, such as tenant quality, tenancy agreements (including break clauses) and interest rate sensitivity.

Loans to SMEs will typically be either revolving credit lines to cover working capital needs or amortising exposures, with periodic refinancing to give the opportunity to review structure, pricing, etc.

Please refer to the maturity analysis for UK CRE, customers with interest only home loans and Spanish corporate exposure in the Risk review on pages 172 and 177 for more information.

Derivative exposures

Derivative counterparty credit exposures

The Group buys and sells financial instruments that are traded or cleared on an exchange, including interest rate swaps, futures and options on futures. Holders of exchange traded instruments provide margin daily with cash or other security at the exchange, to which the holders look for ultimate settlement.

The Group also buys and sells financial instruments that are traded over the counter, rather than on a recognised exchange. These instruments range from standardised transactions in derivative markets, to trades where the specific terms are tailored to the requirements of the Group’s customers. In many cases, industry standard documentation is used, most commonly in the form of a master agreement, with individual transaction confirmations. The existence of a signed master agreement is intended to give the Group protection in situations where counterparty is in default.

Counterparty credit exposure arises from the risk that parties are unable to meet their payment obligations under certain financial contracts such as derivatives, securities financing transactions (e.g. repurchase agreements), or long settlement transactions.

Internal capital for counterparty credit risk is assessed and allocated based on the economic capital for wholesale credit risk calculation. The magnitude of the exposure is determined by considering the current mark to market of the contract, the historic volatility of the underlying asset and the time to maturity. This allows calculation of a Credit Equivalent Exposure (CEE) for such exposures. The total economic capital for a portfolio of such exposures is then calculated in a manner similar to a book of loans.

‘Wrong-way risk’ in a trading exposure arises when there is significant correlation between the underlying asset and the counterparty, which in the event of default would lead to a significant mark to market loss. When assessing the credit exposure of a wrong-way trade, analysts take into account the correlation between the counterparty and the underlying asset as part of the sanctioning process.

Adjustments to the calculated CEE are considered on a case by case basis. In the case of specific wrong-way risk trades, which are self-referencing or reference other entities within the same counterparty, specific approval by a senior credit officer is required.

 

 

 

 

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Derivative netting and collateral arrangements

Credit risk from derivatives is mitigated where possible through netting agreements whereby derivative assets and liabilities with the same counterparty can be offset. Group policy requires all netting arrangements to be legally documented. The ISDA Master Agreement is the Group’s preferred agreement for documenting over the counter (OTC) derivatives. It provides the contractual framework within which dealing activities across a full range of OTC products are conducted and contractually binds both parties to apply close-out netting across all outstanding transactions covered by an agreement if either party defaults or other predetermined events occur. The majority of the Group’s OTC derivative exposures are covered by ISDA master netting and ISDA Credit Support Annex (CSA) collateral agreements.

Collateral is obtained against derivative assets, depending on the creditworthiness of the counterparty and/or nature of the transaction. Any collateral taken in respect of OTC trading exposures will be subject to a ‘haircut’, which is negotiated at the time of signing the collateral agreement. A haircut is the valuation percentage applicable to each type of collateral and will be largely based on liquidity and price volatility of the underlying security. The collateral obtained for derivatives is predominantly either cash, direct debt obligation government (G14+) bonds denominated in the domestic currency of the issuing country, debt issued by supranationals or letters of credit issued by an institution with a long-term unsecured debt rating of A+/ A3 or better. Where the Group has ISDA master agreements, the collateral document will be the ISDA CSA. The collateral document must give Barclays the power to realise any collateral placed with it in the event of the failure of the counterparty.

Under IFRS, netting is permitted only if both of the following criteria are satisfied:

 

¡   the entity currently has a legally enforceable right to set off the recognised amounts; and

 

¡   the entity intends either to settle on a net basis, or to realise the asset and settle the liability simultaneously.

Derivative counterparty credit risk measurement
(Credit Value Adjustments)

As Barclays participates in derivative transactions it is exposed to counterparty credit risk, which is the risk that a counterparty will fail to make the future payments agreed in the derivative contract. This is considered as a separate risk to the volatility of the mark to market payment flows. Modelling this counterparty risk is an important part of managing credit risk on derivative transactions.

The counterparty risk arising under derivative transactions is taken into account when reporting the fair value of derivative positions. The adjustment to the value is known as Credit Value Adjustment (CVA). It is the difference between the value of a derivative contract with a risk free counterparty and that of a contract with the actual counterparty. This is equivalent to the cost of hedging the counterparty risk, which is replicated by purchasing and selling credit default swaps (CDS) on the counterparty to create a hedge position that mirrors the expected exposure profile for the counterparty.

CVAs for derivative positions are calculated as a function of the expected exposure, which is the average of future hypothetical exposure values (or mark-to-market) for a single transaction or group of transactions by the same counterparty, and the CDS spread for a given horizon.

In order to calculate the Expected Exposure, the expected mark to market is calculated using Monte Carlo simulations of risk factors that may affect the valuation of the derivative. These simulations include credit mitigants such as exposure netting, collateral, mandatory break clauses and set-off clauses. Counterparties with appropriate credit mitigants will generate a lower Expected Exposure profile compared to counterparties without credit mitigants in place for the same derivative transactions.

Environmental risk

Barclays has a dedicated Environmental Risk Management team which is a part of the central Credit Risk Management function in Group Risk, recognising that environment is a mainstream credit risk issue. Environmental issues are required considerations in credit risk assessment, and environmental risk policies are explicitly referenced in the Credit Facility Sanctioning Standards.

Barclays approach to environmental credit risk management addresses risk under any of three categories:

Direct risk can arise when the Bank takes commercial land as collateral. In many jurisdictions, enforcement of a commercial mortgage by the bank, leading to possession, potentially renders the Bank liable for the costs of remediating a site if deemed by the regulator to be contaminated, including for pre-existing conditions. In the UK, the Group’s approach requires commercial land, if being pledged as collateral, to be subject to a screening mechanism. Assessment of the commercial history of a piece of land and its potential for environmental contamination helps ensure any potential environmental degradation is reflected in the value ascribed to that security. It also identifies potential liabilities which may be incurred by the Bank, if realisation of the security were to become a possibility.

Indirect risk can arise when environmental issues may impact the creditworthiness of the borrower. For instance, incremental costs may be incurred in upgrading a business’ operations to meet emerging environmental regulations or tightening standards. In other circumstances, failure to meet those standards may lead to fines. Environmental impacts on businesses may also include shifts in the market demand for goods or services generated by our customers, or changing supply chain pressures. Environmental considerations affecting our clients can be varied. The bank has developed a series of environmental risk briefing notes, covering ten broad industry headings ranging from Agriculture and Fisheries to Oil and Gas, from Mining and Metals to Utilities and Waste Management. These briefing notes are available to colleagues in business development and credit risk functions across the organisation, outlining the nature of environmental and social risks of which to be aware, as well as the factors which mitigate those risks.

Reputation risk may arise and cause damage to the Bank’s image, through association with clients, their transactions or projects if these are perceived by external stakeholders to be environmentally damaging. Where the Bank is financing infrastructure projects which have potentially adverse environmental impacts the Group’s Environmental and Social Impact Assessment (ESIA) policy will apply. This policy identifies the circumstances in which the Bank requires due diligence to include assessment of specialist environmental reports. These reports will include consideration of a wide range of the project’s potential impacts including on air, water and land quality, on biodiversity issues, on locally affected communities, including any material upstream and downstream impacts, and working conditions together with employee and community health and safety. Adherence to the Group ESIA policy is the mechanism by which Barclays fulfils the requirements of the Equator Principles. These Principles are an internationally recognised framework for environmental due diligence in project finance. Barclays was one of the four banks which collaborated in developing the Principles, ahead of their launch in 2003 with 10 adopting banks. There are now over 75 banks worldwide which have adopted the Equator Principles (see www.equator-principles.com).

 

 

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Further details on the Barclays approach to environmental risk management can be found at Barclays.com, in the section on Citizenship; the way we do business, ‘Managing Social and Environmental Risk in Lending’.

Asset credit quality

All loans and advances are categorised as either neither past due nor impaired; past due but not impaired; or impaired, which includes restructured loans. For the purposes of the disclosures in the balance sheet credit quality section (page 149) and the analysis of loans and advances and impairment section (page 151):

 

¡   a loan is considered past due when the borrower has failed to make a payment when due under the terms of the loan contract;

 

¡   the impairment allowance includes allowances against financial assets that have been individually impaired and those subject to collective impairment;

 

¡   loans neither past due nor impaired consist predominantly of wholesale and retail loans that are performing. These loans, although unimpaired, may carry an unidentified impairment;

 

¡   loans that are past due but not impaired consist predominantly of wholesale loans that are past due but individually assessed as not being impaired. These loans, although individually assessed as unimpaired, may carry an unidentified impairment provision;
¡   impaired loans that are individually assessed consist predominantly of wholesale loans that are past due and for which an individual allowance has been raised; and

 

¡   impaired loans that are collectively assessed consist predominantly of retail loans that are one day or more past due for which a collective allowance is raised. Wholesale loans that are past due, individually assessed as unimpaired, but which carry an unidentified impairment provision, are excluded from this category.

Home loans and credit card receivables that are subject to forbearance in the retail portfolios are included in the collectively assessed impaired loans column in the tables in the Analysis of loans and advances and impairment section (page 151). Included within wholesale loans that are neither past due nor impaired are a portion of loans that have been subject to forbearance or similar strategies as part of the Group’s ongoing relationship with clients. The loans will have an internal rating reflective of the level of risk to which the Group is exposed, bearing in mind the circumstances of the forbearance and the overall performance and prospects of the client. Loans on forbearance programmes will typically, but not always, attract a higher risk rating than similar loans which are not. A portion of wholesale loans under forbearance is included in the past due but not impaired column, although not all loans subject to forbearance are necessarily impaired or past due. Where wholesale loans under forbearance have been impaired, these form part of individually assessed impaired loans.

 

 

 

 
    

Retail

lending

     Wholesale
lending
        
  

 

 

 

Credit quality description

   Probability
of default
     Probability
of default
     Default grade    

 

 

Strong

     0.0-0.60%        
 
 
 
0.0-0.05%
0.05-0.15%
0.15-0.30%
0.30-0.60%
  
  
  
  
    

 

 

 

1-3  

4-5  

6-8  

9-11  

  

  

  

  

 

 

Satisfactory

     0.60-10.00%        
 
0.60-2.15%
2.15-11.35%
  
  
    
 
12-14  
15-19  
  
  

 

 

Higher risk

     10.00%+         11.35%+         20-21     

 

 

 

For loans that are performing, these descriptions can be summarised as follows:

Strong: there is a very high likelihood of the asset being recovered in full;

Satisfactory: while there is a high likelihood that the asset will be recovered and, therefore, is of no current cause for concern to the Group, the asset may not be collateralised, or may relate to facilities such as unsecured loans and credit card balances; and

Higher risk: there is concern over the obligor’s ability to make payments when due. However, these have not yet converted to actual delinquency. There may also be doubts over value of collateral or security provided. However, the borrower or counterparty is continuing to make payments when due and is expected to settle all outstanding amounts of principal and interest.

Loans that are past due are monitored closely, with impairment allowances raised as appropriate and in line with the Group’s impairment policies. These loans are all considered Higher Risk for the purpose of this analysis of credit quality.

Debt securities

For assets held at fair value, the carrying value on the balance sheet will include, among other things, the credit risk of the issuer. Most listed and some unlisted securities are rated by external rating agencies. The Group mainly uses external credit ratings provided by Standard & Poor’s or Moody’s. Where such ratings are not available or are not current, the Group will use its own internal ratings for the securities.

 

 

 

 

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Market risk management

  

 

 

 

 

 

Introduction to the management of market risk

 

LOGO   Barclays’ definition of market risk
  Market risk is the risk of the Group’s earnings or capital being reduced due to:
 

n The Group being impacted by changes in the level or volatility of positions in its trading books. This includes changes in the interest rates, credit spreads, commodity prices, equity prices and foreign exchange levels (‘traded market risk’).

 

n The Group being unable to hedge its banking book balance sheet at prevailing market levels (‘non-traded market risk’).

 

n The Group’s defined benefit obligations increasing or the value of the assets backing these defined benefit obligations decreasing due to changes in both the level and volatility of prices (‘pension risk’).

  Each of the above has been identified by Barclays’ management as key risks underlying the principal risk: market risk.

 

These disclosures are unaudited unless otherwise stated

 

 

 

 

 

Overview

Traded market risk overview (audited)

Traded market risk arises primarily as a result of client facilitation in wholesale markets, involving market making activities, risk management solutions and execution of syndications. Upon execution of a trade with a client, Barclays will look to hedge against the risk of the trade moving in an adverse direction. Mismatches between client transactions and hedges result in market risk due to changes in asset prices.

Non-traded market risk overview (audited)

Barclays banking book operations generate non-traded market risk, primarily through interest rate risk arising from the sensitivity of net interest margins to changes in interest rates. Banking businesses, such as RBB or Corporate Banking, engage in internal derivative trades with Treasury to remove this interest rate risk, however, the businesses remain susceptible to market risk from three key sources:

 

¡   Prepayment risk: Balance run-off may be faster or slower than expected due to economic conditions or customers’ response to interest rates. This can lead to a mismatch between the anticipated balance of products provided to customers and the hedges executed with Treasury;

 

¡   Recruitment risk: The volume of new business may be lower or higher than expected requiring the business to unwind or execute hedging transactions with Treasury at different rates than expected; and

 

¡   Residual risk and margin compression: The business may retain a small element of interest rate risk to facilitate the day-to-day management of customer business. Additionally, in the current low rate environment, Barclays managed rate deposits are exposed to margin compression. This is because for any further fall in base rate Barclays must absorb an increasing amount of the rate move in its margin.

Barclays banking operations also generate non-traded market risk through the sensitivity of balance sheet items to movements in market levels, primarily foreign exchange and interest rates.

Pension risk overview (audited)

Barclays maintains a number of defined benefit pension schemes for past and current employees. The ability of the pension fund to meet the projected pension payments is maintained principally through investments.

Pension risk arises because the estimated market value of the pension fund assets might decline; or their investment returns might reduce; or the estimated value of the pension liabilities might increase. Barclays monitors the market risks arising from its defined benefit pension schemes, and works with the trustees to address shortfalls. In these circumstances, Barclays could be required or might choose to make extra contributions to the pension fund. The Group’s main defined benefit scheme was closed to new entrants in 2012.

Organisation and structure

Traded risk in the businesses resides primarily in the Investment Bank, while non-traded market risk resides mainly in Retail and Business Banking, Corporate Banking, Wealth and Investment Management and Treasury. Pension risk is monitored centrally with the cost borne across businesses.

 

 

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Overview of the business market risk control structure

 

LOGO

 

Roles and responsibilities

The objectives of Barclays market risk management is to:

 

¡   understand and control market risk by robust measurement, limit setting, reporting and oversight;

 

¡   facilitate business growth within a controlled and transparent risk management framework;

 

¡   ensure that traded market risk in the businesses resides primarily in Investment Bank including Absa CIBW; and

 

¡   minimise non-traded market risk.

To ensure the above objectives are met, Barclays has a well established governance structure in place, whereby the risks are identified, assessed, controlled and reported on throughout the organisation.

The Board Financial Risk Committee (BFRC) reviews and approves market risk appetite for the group. The Group Market Risk Director is responsible for the Barclays Market Risk Control Framework and, under delegated authority from the Group Chief Risk Officer, sets a limit framework within the context of the approved market risk appetite.

The Market Risk Committee approves and makes recommendations concerning the market risk profile across Barclays Group. This includes approving the Barclays Market Risk Control Framework and Group Market Risk Policies; reviewing arising market or regulatory issues, limits and utilisation; and proposing risk appetite levels to the Board. The Committee is chaired by the Group Market Risk Director and attendees include the Group Chief Risk Officer, respective business aligned risk managers and senior managers from Group Market Risk as well as Internal Audit.

 

The head of each business is accountable for all market risks associated with its activities. The head of the market risk team covering each business is responsible for implementing the risk control framework for market risk. The control frameworks for traded, non-traded and pensions risk are all governed by the Market Risk Control Framework, which sets out how market risk should be identified, measured, controlled, reported and reviewed. The Framework also outlines and references Group Market Risk policies.

Market risk oversight and challenge is provided by business committees, Group committees, including the Market Risk Committee and Group Market Risk. The chart above gives an overview of the business control structure.

Risk management in the setting of strategy

Appetite for market risk is recommended by the risk function, to be agreed by BFRC. Mandate and scales are set to control levels of market risk and ensure the Group remains within risk appetite. The Group runs an annual Group-wide stress testing exercise which aims to simulate the dynamics of exposures across Barclays Group and cover all risk factors. The exercise is also designed to measure the impact to Barclays’ fundamental business plan, and is used to manage the wider Group’s strategy.

See page 385 for more detail on the role of risk in the setting of strategy.

Market risk culture

The Investment Bank risk function, which includes the market risk function, reports directly to the Group Chief Risk Officer, in line with the Transform initiative. Market risk managers are independent from the businesses they serve which embeds a risk culture with strong adherence to limits that support Group wide risk appetite. See page 378 for more detail on Barclays’ risk culture.

 

 

 

 

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Management of traded market risk

Barclays’ governance structure helps ensure all market risks that the Group is exposed to are well managed and understood.

Traded market risk is generated primarily as a result of market making activities, syndications and providing structured risk management solutions to clients at Barclays Investment Bank only. The Investment Bank also manages the Interest Rate risks

for other businesses through the Group Treasury function. Positions will contribute both to market risk limits and regulatory capital if relevant.

Traded market risk measurement – management view

Market risk management measures

Barclays uses a range of complementary approaches to measure traded market risk which aim to capture the level of losses that the Investment Bank is exposed to due to unfavourable changes in asset prices. The primary tools to control the firm’s exposures are:

 

 

 

Measure

   Description

 

 Management Value at Risk (VaR)    An estimate of the potential loss arising from unfavourable market movements, if the current positions were to be held unchanged for one business day.

 

 Primary stress tests    An estimate of potential losses that might arise from extreme market moves or scenarios to key liquid risk factors.

 

 Secondary stress tests    Modelled losses to unfavourable market movements to illiquid market risk exposures.

 

 Combined scenario stresses    Multi asset scenario analysis of extreme, but plausible events that may impact the market risk exposures of the Investment Bank.

 

 

Barclays’ use of Management VaR for traded market risk is broader than the application for use of VaR for regulatory capital and captures standardised, advanced and certain banking books where traded market risks are deemed to exist. The wider scope of Management VaR is what Barclays deems as material market risk exposures which may have a detrimental impact on the performance of the investment bank. The scope used in Regulatory VaR (see page 409) applies only to trading book positions as defined by the PRA which is a narrower scope.

Stress testing and scenario analysis are also an important part of the risk management framework, to capture potential risk that may arise in severe but plausible events.

Management VaR

 

¡   Estimates the potential loss arising from unfavourable market movements.

 

¡   Management VaR differs from the Regulatory VaR used for capital purposes.

 

¡   Backtesting performed to ensure model is fit for purpose.

VaR is an estimate of the potential loss arising from unfavourable market movements if the current positions were to be held unchanged for one business day. For internal market risk management purposes, the Investment Bank uses a historical simulation methodology with a two-year equally weighted historical period, at the 95% confidence level for all trading books and some banking books. VaR is split by risk factor as summarised below:

 

 

 

Risk factor

   Description

 

 Interest rate    Changes in the level of interest rates can impact prices of interest rate sensitive assets, such as bonds and derivative instruments, for example, Interest Rate Swaps.

 

 Spread risk    Spread Risk (difference between bond yields and swap rates) arises when the business has positions in both bonds and derivative instruments; both assets may trade at different levels but are fundamentally exposed to similar risk.

 

 Foreign exchange risk    The impact of changes in foreign exchange rates and volatilities. Investment Bank may be exposed to adverse or favourable movements in FX prices (e.g. movement of FX trade after entering into a forward rate FX contract).

 

 Equity risk    Market risk may arise due to changes in equity prices, volatilities and dividend yields, for example, the Investment Bank is exposed to this risk as part of its market making activities, syndication or underwriting Initial Public Offerings.

 

 Commodity risk    Commodity risk arises primarily from the Investment Bank’s commodities businesses, who provide hedging solutions to clients and access to financial investors.

 

 Inflation risk    The impact of changes in inflation rates and volatilities on cash instruments and derivatives. This arises as part of market making activities, whereby Investment Bank may be exposed to changes in inflation rates, for example, market making syndications for inflation linked securities.

 

 Credit risk

 

 

   The market risk that arises from the uncertainty of credit quality impacting prices of assets, for example, positions such as Corporate Bonds, Securitised products and derivative instruments, for example, Credit Default Swaps provide market risk exposure.

 

 Basis risk    The impact of changes in interest rate tenor basis (e.g. the basis between swaps vs. 3M LIBOR and swaps. 6M LIBOR) and cross currency basis and is primarily generated as a result of market making activities.

 

 

In some instances, historical data is not available for particular market risk factors for the entire lookback period, for example, complete historical data would not be available for an equity following an Initial Public Offering. In these cases, market risk managers will proxy the unavailable market risk factor data with available data for a related market risk factor.

The output of the Management VaR model can be readily tested through backtesting process. Backtesting checks instances where actual losses exceed the predicted potential loss estimated by the VaR model. If the number of instances is too high, where actual losses exceed the predicted potential loss estimated by the VaR model, this could indicate limitations with the VaR calculation, for example, the calculation is not capturing certain market risk factors.

 

 

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The Management VaR model in some instances may not appropriately measure some market risk exposures, especially for market moves that are not directly observable via prices. Market risk managers are required to identify risks which are not adequately captured in VaR (‘risks not in VaR’ or ‘RNIVs’). RNIVs can be of two varieties:

 

¡   Non VaR-type RNIVs: Represents a risk which would not be well captured by any VaR model either because it represents an event not historically observed (e.g. currency peg break) or a market risk factor which is not seen to move frequently (e.g. correlation).

 

¡   VaR-type RNIVs: Represents risks that are not captured in VaR, mainly because of infrastructure limitations or methodology limitations.

Risk managers estimate RNIVs on a regular basis to improve the accuracy of the VaR capture model.

When reviewing VaR estimates, the following considerations should be taken into account:

 

¡   The historical simulation uses the most recent two years of past data to generate possible future market moves, but the past may not be a good indicator of the future;

 

¡   The one day time horizon may not fully capture the market risk of positions that cannot be closed out or hedged within one day;

 

¡   VaR is based on positions as at close of business and consequently, it is not an appropriate measure for intra-day risk arising from a position bought and sold on the same day; and

 

¡   VaR does not indicate the potential loss beyond the VaR confidence level.

Limits are applied at the total Investment Bank level as well as by risk factor type, which are then cascaded down to particular trading desks and businesses by the market risk management function.

See page 192 for a review of Management VaR in 2013.

Primary stress tests

Key tool used by management to measure liquid market risks from extreme market movements or scenarios in each major trading asset class.

Stress testing provides an estimate of potential significant future losses that might arise from extreme market moves or scenarios. Primary stress tests apply stress moves to key liquid risk factors for each of the major trading asset classes, namely:

 

¡   Interest rates – shock to the level and structure of interest rates and inflation across currencies;

 

¡   Credit – impact on traded corporate credit exposures, including across rating grades, geography, sectors and products;

 

¡   Foreign exchange – impact of unfavourable moves in currency prices and volatility;

 

¡   Equity – shocks to share prices including exposures to specific geographies, products and sectors;

 

¡   Emerging Markets – stresses across specific countries including corporate and sovereign credit, interest rates and currency shocks;

 

¡   Commodities – adverse commodity price changes across both physical and derivative markets; and

 

¡   Securitised Products – stresses to securitised structures and associated hedges.

Primary stresses apply moves to liquid assets incorporating up to a few days holding period. Shock scenarios are determined by a combination of observed extreme historical moves and forward looking elements as appropriate.

Primary stresses are calculated for each asset class on a standalone basis. Risk managers calculate several stress scenarios and publish results to senior managers to highlight concentrations and the level of exposures. Primary stress loss limits are applied across the Investment Bank and is a key market risk control.

Secondary stress tests

¡   Key tool used by management to measure illiquid market risks from extreme market movements or scenarios in each major trading asset class.

Secondary stress tests are used in measuring potential losses arising from illiquid market risks that cannot be hedged or reduced within the time period covered in primary stress tests. Therefore, the extended holding period under stress may compound the estimated losses under a stressed environment which is a more conservative assumption. These may relate to financial instruments or risk exposures which are not readily or easily tradable or markets that are naturally sensitive to a rapid deterioration in market conditions.

For each asset class, secondary stresses are aggregated to a single stress loss which allows the business to manage its liquid and illiquid risk factors. Limits against secondary stress losses are also applied, which allows the firm to manage and control the level of illiquid risk factors.

Stresses are specific to the exposure held and are calibrated on both observed extreme moves and some forward looking elements as appropriate.

Combined scenario stresses

¡   Key tool used by management to measure aggregated losses across the entire trading book as a result of extreme forward looking scenarios encompassing simultaneous shocks to multiple asset classes.

The combined scenario stresses apply simultaneous shocks to several risk factors assessed by applying respective changes in foreign exchange rates, interest rates, credit spreads, commodities and equities to the entire portfolio, for example, the impact of a rapid and extreme slowdown in the global economy. The measure shows results on a multi-asset basis across all Investment Banking trading exposures. Combined scenarios are a useful tool in identifying concentrations of exposures and highlighting areas that may provide some diversification.

The estimated impact on market risk exposures are calculated and reported by the market risk management function on a weekly basis. The stress scenario and the calibration on the shocks are also reviewed by market risk managers periodically for its relevance considering any market environment.

Scenarios such as a global recession, deterioration in the availability of liquidity and contagion effects of a slowdown in one of the major economies are examples of combined scenarios. If necessary, market event specific scenarios are also calculated, such as, an unfavourable outcome of a US debt ceiling negotiation and the impact of a disorderly exit of quantitative easing programmes.

See page 194 for a review of combined scenario stresses in 2013.

 

 

 

 

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Traded market risk measurement – regulatory view

Regulatory view of traded positions

For regulatory purposes, the trading book is defined as one that consists of all positions in CRD financial instruments and commodities held either with trading intent or in order to hedge other elements of trading and which are either free of any restrictive covenants on their tradability or able to be hedged. A CRD financial instrument is defined as a contract that gives rise to both a financial asset of one party and a financial liability or equity instrument of another party.

All of the below regulatory measures, including the standardised approach, generate market risk capital requirement, in line with the regulatory requirements set out in the Capital Requirements

Directive (‘CRD III’) and the PRA’s Prudential Sourcebook for Banks, Building Societies and Investment Firms (‘BIPRU’). Positions which cannot be included in the trading book are included within the banking book and generate risk capital requirements in line with this treatment.

Regulatory measurements are not used for market risk management purposes due to the scope and model assumptions.

Regulatory measures for traded market risk

There are a number of regulatory measures which Barclays has permission to use in calculating regulatory capital (internal models approval). These are listed below:

 

 

 

Measure

   Definition

 

  Regulatory Value at Risk (VaR)    An estimate of the potential loss arising from unfavourable market movements calibrated to 99% confidence interval 10 day holding period.

 

  Stressed Value at Risk (SVaR)    An estimate of the potential loss arising from a 12 month period of significant financial stress over a 10 day holding period.

 

  Incremental Risk Charge (IRC)    An estimate of the incremental risk arising from rating migrations and defaults, beyond what is already captured in specific market risk VaR for the non correlation trading portfolio.

 

  All Price Risk (APR)    An estimate of all the material market risk, including rating migration and default for the correlation trading portfolio.

 

Regulatory VaR

¡   Estimates the potential loss arising from unfavourable market movements.

 

¡   Regulatory VaR differs from the management approach

 

 

VaR Variable

   Regulatory    Management

 

  Confidence interval    99%    95%

 

  Scope    As approved by the Regulator (PRA)    Barclays’ management view of market risk exposures. Includes trading books and banking books exposed to price risk

 

  Look-back period    2 years    2 years

 

  Liquidity Horizon    10 days    1 day

 

 

Regulatory VaR allows oversight of the total potential losses, at a given confidence level, of those trading books which received approval from the regulator to be covered via an internal model. Regulatory VaR levels contribute to the calculation of the Market Risk RWAs.

Management VaR allows the bank to supervise the total risk within Investment bank, including the trading book and some banking books. Management VaR is also utilised for internal capital model (economic capital).

Regulatory VaR is fundamentally the same as the Management VaR (see page 407), with the key differences listed above.

The model includes RNIVs, as described on page 408.

Stressed Value at Risk (SVaR)

¡   Estimates the potential loss arising from unfavourable market movements in a stressed environment;

 

¡   Identical to Regulatory VaR, but calibrated over a one year stressed period; and

 

¡   Regulatory capital is allocated to individual businesses, but not actively used by management to set limits on traded market risk.

As part of CRD III, Barclays is required to compute a market risk capital requirement based on a 10 day, 99% VaR metric calibrated to a period of significant financial stress. This Stressed VaR (‘SVaR’) capital requirement is added to the market risk capital requirement arising from Regulatory VaR, the Incremental Risk Charge and the All Price Risk on an undiversified basis.

The SVaR model is required to be identical to the VaR model used by Barclays, with the exception that the SVaR model must be calibrated to a one-year period of significant financial stress (‘the SVaR period’). Barclays selects the SVaR period to be a one-year period that maximises the sum of general market risk Regulatory VaR and specific market risk Regulatory VaR for positions in scope of regulatory approval. The SVaR period is reviewed on a quarterly basis or when required by material changes in market conditions or the trading portfolio.

SVaR cannot be meaningfully backtested and is not sensitive to current market conditions and consequently, it is more difficult to use SVaR as a direct risk management tool as compared to VaR. Many market risk factors with complete historical data over a two year period may not have complete data covering the SVaR period and consequently, more proxies may be required for SVaR than for VaR. The SVaR metric itself has the same strengths and weaknesses as the Group’s VaR model.

Incremental Risk Charge (IRC)

¡   Captures risk arising from rating migrations and defaults for traded debt instruments incremental to that already captured by Regulatory VaR and SVaR.

As part of CRD III, Barclays was required to introduce IRC to capture the risk arising from ratings migrations or defaults in the traded credit portfolio. IRC measures this risk at a 99.9% confidence level with a one year holding period and applies to all positions in scope for specific risk including sovereign exposure.

 

 

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Barclays IRC model simulates default and ratings transition events for individual names. The behaviour of names is correlated with one another to simulate a systemic factor to model the possibility of multiple downgrades or defaults. The correlations between non-sovereign names are based on the Basel-defined correlations stipulated in the Internal Ratings Based approach to measuring credit risk capital, with a fixed correlation between sovereign names.

Barclays IRC model simulates the impact of a ratings transition by estimating the improvement or deterioration in credit spreads resulting from the transition and assumes that the historically observed average change in credit spreads (measured in relative terms) resulting from ratings transitions provides an accurate estimate of likely widening or tightening of credit spreads in future transitions. For each position, the model computes the impact of spread moves up or down at pre-specified relative movements in spread and the actual impact is obtained by interpolating or extrapolating the actual spread move from these pre-computed values.

Barclays IRC model assumes that ratings transitions, defaults and any spread increases occur on an instantaneous basis. Consequently there is no need to model a reduction in duration or roll off of positions over the one year horizon.

All Price Risk (APR)

Captures all market risks affecting the correlation trading portfolio.

APR covers the correlation trading portfolio and is intended to capture all risk factors relevant to corporate nth-to-default (on a basket of referenced names) and tranched credit derivatives. The capital requirement is based on a 99.9% confidence interval over a one year holding period. The model generates a scenario based on a Monte Carlo simulation and revalues the portfolio under the simulated market scenario. The model captures the following risk factors in the credit correlation portfolio;

 

¡   Default and ratings migration over a one year time horizon

 

¡   Credit spread volatility

 

¡   Recovery risk – uncertainty of the recoverable value under default

 

¡   Correlation risk
¡   Basis risk – basis between credit indices and its underlying constituents

 

¡   Hedge slippage – portfolio rebalancing assumption

Barclays APR model is based on the IRC model but also captures market risks not related to transition or default events, such as movements in credit spreads or correlations. These risk factors are included as part of the Monte Carlo simulation using distributions calibrated to historically observed moves.

Regulatory traded risk measurements summary

Barclays maintains a Trading Book Policy Statement (‘TBPS’) which defines the minimum requirements a business must meet to run trading positions and the process by which positions are allocated to trading or banking books. Trading intent is a key element in deciding whether a position should be treated as a trading or banking book exposure.

Currently all trading books must be managed by either Investment Bank or separately by Absa CIBW. Businesses with trading books are required to document their implementation of trading book standards which define how the Barclays-wide TBPS requirements will be implemented. In particular, businesses are expected to evidence trading intent, for example, by setting and enforcing risk and position limits and defining the consequences of breaching these limits.

Positions in the trading book are subject to market risk capital, computed using models where regulatory approval has been granted, otherwise the market risk capital requirement is calculated using standard rules as defined by the PRA in BIPRU. If any of the criteria specified in the TBPS are not met for a position, then that position must be allocated to the banking book.

Most of Barclays market risk regulatory models are assigned the highest model materiality rating of ‘A*’. Consequently, the Regulatory VaR model is subject to annual re-approval at the Executive Models Committee (‘EMC’), which is chaired by the Group Chief Risk Officer and the Group Chief Financial Officer. EMC considers evidence of model suitability provided by the model owner, as well as an independent validation conducted by the Group Centre Independent Validation Unit. The following table summarises the models used for market risk regulatory purposes and the applicable regulatory thresholds.

 

 

Component modelled

     Number of significant models and
size of associated portfolio (RWAs)
     Model description and methodology      Applicable regulatory thresholds

 

Regulatory VaR

     1 model; £5.0bn      Equally-weighted historical simulation of potential daily P&L arising from market moves      Regulatory VaR is computed with 10 day holding period and 99% confidence level

 

SVaR

     1 model; £9.9bn      Same methodology as used for VaR model      Regulatory SVaR is computed with 10 day holding period and 99% confidence level

 

IRC

     1 model; £2.1bn      Monte Carlo simulation of P&L arising from ratings migrations and defaults      IRC is computed with one year holding period and 99.9% confidence level

 

APR

     1 model; £1.0bn      Monte Carlo simulation of P&L arising from ratings migrations and defaults and market-driven movements in spreads and correlations      APR is computed with one year holding period and 99.9% confidence level. As required in CRD III, the APR charge is subject to a floor set with reference to standard rules charge

 

See page 194 for a review of regulatory measures in 2013.

 

 

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Regulatory Backtesting

Backtesting is the method by which Barclays checks and affirms that its procedures for estimating VaR are reasonable and serve its purpose of estimating the potential loss arising from unfavourable market movements. Barclays’ backtesting process is a regulatory requirement and seeks to estimate the performance of the regulatory VaR model if it had been employed in prior periods. Performance is measured by the number of exceptions to the model i.e. net trading P&L loss in one trading day is greater than the estimated VaR for the same trading day. If exceptions occur regularly (a 99% confidence interval indicates that one exception will occur in 100 days), Barclays’ procedures could be underestimating VaR.

Backtesting is performed at a legal entity level and at sub-portfolio levels on Barclays’ regulatory VaR model. Regulatory backtesting compares Regulatory VaR at 99% confidence level (1 day holding period equivalent) to a clean and hypothetical P&L as defined in BIPRU 7.10. The consolidated Barclays Bank Plc and Barclays Capital Securities Ltd is the highest level of consolidation for the VaR models that are used in the calculation of regulatory capital.

A backtesting exception is generated when a loss is greater than the daily VaR for any given day.

As defined by the PRA, a green model is consistent with a good working VaR model and is achieved for models that have four or fewer backtesting exceptions in a 12-month period. Backtesting counts the number of days when a loss (as defined by the PRA) exceeds the corresponding VaR estimate, measured at the 99% regulatory confidence level. For the Investment Bank’s VaR model, green model status was maintained for 2013.

Backtesting is also performed on management VaR to ensure it remains reasonable and fit for purpose.

The table below shows the VaR backtesting exceptions in 2013. A backtesting exception is generated when a loss is greater than the VaR for a given day.

 

 

 

Regulatory portfolios

    

Total exceptions

    

Status

 

Equities

    

3

    

Green

 

Commodities

    

3

    

Green

 

Foreign Exchange

    

3

    

Green

 

Credit Correlation

    

2

    

Green

 

Fixed Income Rates

    

2

    

Green

 

Emerging Markets (excluding credit)

    

2

    

Green

 

Credit Support Annex Aware Discounting Valuation

    

1

    

Green

 

Treasury

    

0

    

Green

 

Client Capital Management

    

0

    

Green

 

Fixed Income Credit

    

0

    

Green

 

Emerging Markets Credit

    

0

    

Green

 

Counterparty Risk Trading Single Name Trading

    

0

    

Green

 

 

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Risk management >

Market risk management continued

     

 

 

 

The charts below show VaR for Barclays’ regulatory portfolios where at least one exception has occurred during 2013. The black lines indicate losses on the small number of days on which they exceeded the VaR amount.

 

LOGO

 

Typical drivers of the exceptions shown above are as follow:

 

¡   Exceptional market moves, outside the confidence level at which the model operates, for example, the market volatility caused by the Federal Reserve tapering announcement.

 

¡   Risks which are not captured in VaR (for more information on RNIVs see page 408).

Exceptions are reported to internal management and regulators on a regular basis and exceptions are investigated to ensure the model performs as expected.

Traded Market Risk Control

The metrics that Barclays use to measure market risk are controlled through the use of appropriate limit framework. Limits are set at the total Investment Bank portfolio level, risk factor level, for example, interest rate risk, and at business level, for example, Emerging Markets. Stress limits and many book limits, such as foreign exchange and interest rate sensitivity limits, are also used to control risk appetite.

The BFRC ratified firm wide limits are termed A-level limits for total management VaR, risk factor VaR, primary stress and secondary stresses. These are then cascaded down by risk managers in order to meet the firm wide risk appetite.

 

 

 

 

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Each A-level limit is set after consideration is given to revenue generation opportunities and overall risk appetite approved by the Board. Compliance with limits is monitored by the independent Risk function in the Investment Bank with oversight provided by Group Market Risk.

Throughout 2013, Group Market Risk continued its ongoing programme of conformance reviews on the Investment Bank’s market risk management practices. These reviews are intended to verify the business’s conformance with Barclays Market Risk Control Framework and best practices.

Traded market risk reporting

Investment Bank market risk managers produce a number of detailed and summary market risk reports daily, weekly, fortnightly and monthly for business and risk managers. These are sent to Group Market Risk for review and a risk summary is presented at the Market Risk Committee and the Investment Bank’s Traded Positions Risk Review. The overall market risk profile is also presented to BFRC on a regular basis.

Management of non-traded market risk

Non-Traded Risk Measurement

Barclays uses a range of complementary technical approaches to measure non-traded market risk.

 

 

Summary of measures for non-traded market risk

 

 

Measure

   Definition

 

Annual Earnings at Risk    Impact on earnings of a parallel (upward or downward) movement in interest rates.

 

Economic Value of Equity (EVE)    Change in the present value of the banking book of a parallel (upward or downward) interest rate shock.

 

Economic Capital    Economic Capital (EC) is held to protect against unexpected loss (in excess of expected loss) and calculated over a one year time horizon.

 

Value at Risk (VaR)    An estimate of the potential loss arising from unfavourable market movements, if the current positions were to be held unchanged for a set period of time.

 

Stress Testing    Scenario based stress testing using a variety of economic parameters to quantify the impact to P&L and the Balance Sheet under various levels of stress.

 

 

The risk in each business is measured and controlled using both an income metric (Annual Earnings at Risk) and value metrics (Economic Value of Equity, Economic Capital and VaR).

Annual Earnings at Risk (AEaR)

AEaR measures the sensitivity of net interest income over the next one year period. It is calculated as the difference between the estimated income using the current yield curve and the lowest estimated income following a parallel increase or decrease in interest rates (200bps), subject to a minimum interest rate of 0%. 200bp shocks are consistent with industry best practise and supported by banking regulators.

The main model assumptions are:

 

¡   The balance sheet is kept at the current level i.e. no growth is assumed; and

 

¡   Balances are adjusted for an assumed behavioural profile. This includes the treatment of fixed rate loans including mortgages.

AEaR is applied to the entire banking book, including the liquidity buffer and trades to hedge against non-traded market risk. The metric provides a measure of how interest rate risk may impact the Groups Profit & Loss, providing a simple comparison between risk and returns. The main disadvantage of the metric is its short term focus, as it only measures the impact on a position in the first 12 months. In order to counter this, the Group has implemented additional Economic Value risk metrics.

See page 195 for a review of AEaR in 2013.

Economic Value of Equity (EVE)

Economic Value of Equity (EVE) calculates the change in the present value of the banking book for a parallel upward and downward interest rate (200bps) shock. This shock is useful for drawing comparisons across portfolios, and is also a regulatory reporting requirement. Note that the EVE calculation measures sensitivity in terms of present value, while AEaR measures income sensitivity.

The EVE measure is applied to the entire banking book, including the liquidity buffer and trades to hedge against non-traded market risk and covers the full life of transactions and hedges, ensuring the risk over the whole life of positions are considered. The main weaknesses of this model stem from its simplicity. In particular, it does not capture the impact of business growth or of management actions and is based on the balance sheet as at the reporting date.

Economic Capital (for recruitment, prepayment and residual risk)

Economic Capital (EC) consistent models are used to measure unexpected losses to a 99.98% confidence interval over a 1 year period which reflects the level of confidence (consistent with the Bank’s target AA rating). Within non-traded risk, this measure aims to capture recruitment risk, prepayment risk and residual risk for banking book products (see page 196). EC metrics typically measure variations in economic value from specific sources of risk, for example, prepayment risk EC for fixed rate mortgages predicts the cost of hedging to reduce any mismatch exposure resulting from the impact of an interest rate shock on customer prepayment levels.

EC is used in the active management of the banking book. Limits are set against EC metrics and breaches trigger mitigating actions to reduce exposure to appropriate levels. EC modelling is typically applied only to fixed rate products and the majority of variable rate and administered rate portfolios are not subject to an EC measure.

As part of the Group’s risk appetite and limit framework, limits are set by product and portfolio for the three EC categories across each business unit. Each business unit, in line with Treasury, is tasked with managing the risk to within the levels that in practise involves ensuring any required pre or post hedging takes place in a timely fashion to minimise recruitment and residual risk.

An advantage of EC is that it can calculate unexpected losses to an appropriate degree of confidence given the nature of the risks and covers sources of loss beyond the scope of other models (for instance, AEaR only covers income changes over a one year period; EVE only considers existing business and does not include any dynamic customer behaviour assumptions). The main weaknesses come from necessary simplifying assumptions. In the case of models based on statistical confidence intervals, the choice of the statistical distribution may drive under-prediction of very extreme events (i.e. the real distribution may be “fat-tailed”). To mitigate this, the Group continues to improve its models using long time series of historical data to capture the extreme effects.

See page 196 for a review of EC in 2013.

 

 

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Value at Risk (VaR)

Value at Risk (VaR) is an estimate of the potential loss arising from unfavourable market movements, if the current positions were to be held unchanged for a set period. For internal market risk management purposes, the Investment Bank uses a historical simulation methodology with a two-year equally weighted historical period, at the 95% confidence level for banking book portfolios covered by the measure. This calculation is a present value sensitivity while AEaR is an income sensitivity.

Daily Value at Risk is used to measure residual interest and foreign exchange risks within certain banking book portfolios, following a methodology and approach consistent with that of the trading book.

Quarterly Scaled Value at Risk is used to measure risk in the Liquidity Buffer Investment Portfolio. The calculation uses a 5 year historical period, a 95% confidence level and is scaled from daily to quarterly by a constant of 8.1. The five year historical period is considered to be more reflective of the AFS Banking Book portfolio, i.e. less reactive to current market conditions whilst still capturing the stress period of 2008 and 2009.

Stress Testing

Stress losses are calculated for liquidity buffer portfolio, but not subject to controlled limits.

All Non-traded Market Risk positions are subject to the Banks annual stress testing exercise where scenarios based on economic parameters are used to determine the potential impact of the positions on P&L and the Balance Sheet.

Non-traded Market risk Control

Non-traded market risk is controlled through the use of limits on many of the above risk measures. Limits are set at the total business level and then cascaded down. The total business level limits for AEaR, EVE, EC and VaR are agreed by the Group Market Risk Committee. Compliance with limits is monitored by the respective business market risk team with oversight provided by Group Market Risk.

The interest rate risk for balances with no defined maturity date and an interest rate that is not linked to the base rate is managed by Group Treasury. A series of continuous rolling hedges are used to mitigate the interest rate risk in the banking book.

Non-traded Market risk Reporting

Barclays’ Group market risk function produces a number of detailed market risk reports on a daily, weekly, fortnightly and monthly basis, for business and risk managers. A risk summary is presented at the Market Risk Committee.

Asset Management Structural Risk

Asset management structural risk arises where the fee and commission income earned by asset management products is affected by a change in market levels, primarily through the link between income and the value of assets under management. Asset management structural risk mainly resides in Wealth and Investment Management, where the risk is incorporated into the medium term plan and group wide stress test.

Asset management structural risk is subject to Group policy, with limits set and is reported to the Market Risk Committee.

Asset management structural risk is measured using AEaR considering a 30% fall in equity markets and 200bps increase in yields. Group policy is for businesses to monitor and regularly assess potential hedging strategies.

Management of pension risk

Pension risk control

As the investment strategy of the UKRF is owned and defined by the Trustees who are independent to the bank, pension risk is not governed by the conventional limit framework observed in traded and non-traded market risk. However, risk and positions are reported monthly to the Market Risk Committee (MRC) and periodically to the Pension Management Group (PMG), Pension Executive Board (PEB) and BFRC.

Group Market Risk is responsible for the ongoing challenge of the risk profile and to that aim will ensure the following:

 

¡   At least annual review of all Pension Funds shortfalls;

 

¡   Detailed review of liability driven data;

 

¡   Ensure a continuous and detailed interaction exists between Group Market Risk and the pension asset manager;

 

¡   To conduct, where necessary, any deep dives to ensure a consistent view of the risk positions of the fund.

Pension risk measurements

The following metrics are used to describe pension risk:

 

¡   Asset/Liability mismatch under IAS 19R, Funding and Solvency Rules;

 

¡   Asset VaR and liability VaR;

 

¡   Total pension risk VaR i.e. which includes potential diversification between assets and liabilities.

The VaR used for pension risk is calibrated at a 95% confidence level, with a one year horizon to reflect the long-term nature of the risk. Whilst the asset portfolio is sensitive to the volatility to any asset class the pension asset manager invests in, the liabilities are mainly exposed to inflation, and interest rates and corporate credit spreads which are the main components of the discount rate.

See page 197 for a review of pension risk in 2013.

 

 

 

 

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Operational risk management

  

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Operational Risk Management Overview

 

Operational Risk is defined as the risk of direct or indirect impacts resulting from human factors, inadequate or failed internal processes and systems or external events. During 2013 the Board Conduct, Reputation and Operational Risk Committee was established and met to consider the impacts that operational risk may have on the Group.

 

 

 

 

These disclosures are unaudited unless otherwise stated

 

Overview (audited)

The management of operational risk has two key objectives:

 

1. To minimise the impact of losses suffered, both in the normal course of business (small losses) and from extreme events (large losses).

 

2. To improve the effective management of the Group and strengthen its brand and external reputation.

Barclays is committed to the measurement and management of operational risk and was granted a waiver by the FSA (now the PRA) to operate an Advanced Measurement Approach (AMA) for operational risk under Basel 2, which commenced in January 2008. The majority of the Group calculates regulatory capital requirements using AMA (93% of capital requirements), however, in specific areas we apply the Basic Indicator Approach (7%). Barclays works to benchmark its internal operational risk management and measurement practices with peer banks and to drive the further development of advanced techniques.

Organisation and structure (audited)

Barclays is committed to operating within a strong system of internal control that enables business to be transacted and risk taken without exposing itself to unacceptable potential losses or reputational damage. Barclays has an overarching framework that sets out Barclays approach to internal governance (‘the Barclays Guide’). The Barclays Guide establishes the mechanisms and processes by which the Board directs the organisation, through setting the tone and expectations from the top, delegating its authority and monitoring compliance.

A key component of the Barclays Guide is the Enterprise Risk Management Framework (ERMF). The purpose of the ERMF is to identify and set minimum requirements in respect of the main risks to achieving the Group’s strategic objectives and to provide reasonable assurance that internal controls are effective. The key elements of the Group’s system of internal control, which is aligned to the recommendations of The Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission, Internal Control – Integrated Framework (COSO), are set out in the risk control frameworks relating to each of the Group’s Key Risks and in the Group Operational Risk Framework.

Operational Risk is one of six Principal Risks in the EMRF and comprises a number of specific Key Risks defined as follows:

 

¡   CyberSecurity: Risk of loss or detriment to Barclays’ business and customers as a result of actions committed or facilitated through the use of networked information systems;

 

¡   External supplier: Inadequate selection and ongoing management of external suppliers;

 

¡   Financial reporting: Reporting mis-statement or omission within external financial or regulatory reporting;

 

¡   Fraud: Dishonest behaviour with the intent to make a gain or cause a loss to others;

 

¡   Information: Inadequate protection of Barclays’ information in accordance with its value and sensitivity;

 

¡   Legal: Failure to identify and manage legal risks;

 

¡   Payments: Failure in operation of payments processes;

 

¡   People: Inadequate people capabilities, and/or performance/reward structures, and/or inappropriate behaviours;

 

¡   Premises & security: Unavailability of premises (to meet business demand) and/or safe working environments, and inadequate protection of physical assets, employees and customers against external threats;

 

¡   Product: Inadequate design, assessment and testing of products/ services;

 

¡   Regulatory: Failure or inability to comply fully with the laws, regulations or codes applicable specifically to the financial services industry;

 

¡   Taxation: Failure to comply with tax laws and practice which could lead to financial penalties, additional tax charges or reputational damage;

 

¡   Technology: Failure to develop and deploy secure, stable and reliable technology solutions; and

 

¡   Transaction operations: Failure in the management of critical transaction processes.

These risks may result in financial and/or non-financial impacts including legal/regulatory breaches or reputational damage. For more information on Legal, Regulatory and Taxation risks please see pages 136 to 140.

 

 

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The Operational Risk Framework comprises a number of elements which allow Barclays to manage and measure its Operational risk profile and to calculate the amount of Operational risk capital that Barclays needs to hold to absorb potential losses. The minimum, mandatory requirements for each of these elements are set out in the Group Operational Risk Policies. This framework is implemented across the Group:

 

¡   vertically, through the organisational structure with all businesses required to implement and operate an Operational risk framework that meets, as a minimum, the requirements detailed in these operational risk policies; and

 

¡   horizontally, with the Group Key Risk Officers required to monitor information relevant to their Key Risk from each Operational risk framework element.

The prime responsibility for the management of operational risk and the compliance with control requirements rests with the business and functional units where the risk arises. Operational risk partners are widely distributed throughout the Group and support these areas, assisting line managers in understanding and challenging the effectiveness of management of risks that they own.

The Operational Risk Director (or equivalent) for each business is responsible for ensuring the implementation of and compliance with Group Operational Risk policies.

The Group Operational Risk Director is responsible for establishing, owning and maintaining an appropriate Group-wide Operational Risk Framework and for overseeing the portfolio of Operational Risk across the Group. The Operational Risk & Control Committee (OR&CC) is the senior executive body responsible for the oversight and challenge of Operational Risk and the control environment in Barclays. The outputs of the OR&CC are presented to the Board Conduct, Reputation and Operational Risk Committee (BCRORC).

In addition, specific operational risk committees or governance and control committees at the business level, monitor the risk and control environment. The OR&CC receives reports from these committees and considers Group-significant control issues and their remediation. In addition, the OR&CC presents control issues to the Board Audit Committee (BAC).

Businesses are required to report their operational risks on both a regular and an event-driven basis. The reports include a profile of the material risks to their business objectives and the effectiveness of key controls, control issues of Group-level significance, operational risk events and a review of scenarios and capital. Specific reports are prepared on a regular basis for OR&CC, BCRORC and BAC.

The Internal Audit function provides further independent review and challenge of the Group’s operational risk management controls, processes and systems and reports to the Board and senior management.

Operational risk management (audited)

The Barclays Operational Risk framework is a key component of the Enterprise Risk Management Framework and has been designed to meet a number of external governance requirements including the Basel Capital Accord, the Capital Requirements Directive and Turnbull guidance as an evaluation framework for the purposes of Section 404 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act. It also supports the Sarbanes-Oxley requirements.

The operational risk framework includes the following elements:

Risk and control self-assessments

Barclays identifies and assesses all material risks within each business and evaluates the key controls in place to mitigate those risks. Managers in the businesses use self-assessment techniques to identify risks, evaluate the effectiveness of key controls in place and assess whether the risks are effectively managed within business risk appetite. The businesses are then able to make decisions on what, if any, action is required to reduce the level of risk to Barclays. These risk assessments are monitored on a regular basis to ensure that each business continually understands the risks it faces.

Risk events

An operational risk event is any circumstance where, through the lack or failure of a control, Barclays has actually, or could have, made a loss. The definition includes situations in which Barclays could have made a loss, but in fact made a gain, as well as incidents resulting in reputational damage or regulatory impact only.

A standard threshold is used across the Group for reporting risk events and part of the analysis includes the identification of improvements to processes or controls, to reduce the recurrence and/or magnitude of risk events. For significant events, both financial and non-financial, this analysis includes the completion of a formal lessons learnt.

Barclays also uses a database of external risk events which are publicly available and is a member of the Operational RiskData eXchange (ORX), a not-for-profit association of international banks formed to share anonymous loss data information. Barclays uses this external loss information to support and inform risk identification, assessment and measurement.

Key indicators

Key Indicators (KIs) are metrics which allow Barclays to monitor its operational risk profile. KIs include measurable thresholds that reflect the risk appetite of the business. KIs are monitored to alert management when risk levels exceed acceptable ranges or risk appetite levels and drive timely decision making and actions.

 

 

 

 

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Operational risk appetite

Barclays approach to determining its operational risk appetite combines both quantitative measures and qualitative judgement, in order to best reflect the nature of non-financial risks.

The monitoring and tracking of operational risk measures is supplemented with qualitative review and discussion at senior management executive committees on the action being taken to improve controls and reduce risk to an acceptable level.

Operational risk appetite is aligned to the Group’s Risk Appetite Framework. The Board Conduct, Reputation and Operational Risk Committee considers and recommends to the Board for approval, via the Enterprise Wide Risk Committee, the Group’s risk appetite statement for Operational Risk based on performance in the current year and the projections for financial volatility the following year.

Reporting

The ongoing monitoring and reporting of operational risk is a key component of the Barclays Operational Risk Framework. Reports are used by the Operational Risk function and by Business management to understand, monitor, manage and control operational risks and losses.

The operational risk profile is reviewed by senior management at the Operational Risk & Control Committee and the Board at the Board Conduct, Reputation and Operational Risk Committee.

Key risk scenarios

¡   Key Risk Scenarios are a summary of the extreme potential risk exposure for each Key Risk in each business and function, including an assessment of the potential frequency of risk events, the average size of losses and three extreme scenarios. The Key Risk Scenario assessments are a key input to the Advanced Measurement Approach calculation of regulatory and economic capital requirements (see following section on Operational Risk Measurement). The assessment is performed by Key Risk Officers, taking into account analysis of internal and external loss experience, key risk indicators, risk and control self-assessments and other risk information. The businesses and functions analyse potential extreme scenarios, considering:

 

¡   the circumstances and contributing factors that could lead to an extreme event;

 

¡   the potential financial and non-financial impacts (eg reputational damage); and

 

¡   the controls that seek to limit the likelihood of such an event occurring, and the mitigating actions that would be taken if the event were to occur (eg crisis management procedures, business continuity or disaster recovery plans).

Management may then conclude whether the potential risk is acceptable (within appetite) or whether changes in risk management control or business strategy are required.

Operational risk measurement

Barclays assesses its operational risk capital requirements using an Advanced Measurement Approach. The approach involves estimating the potential range of losses that could be incurred in a year from operational risk events, using statistical distributions. Regulatory capital requirements are set to cover 99.9% of the estimated losses. Barclays also assesses its economic capital requirements to cover 99.98% of the estimated losses that exceed the typical losses (diversified across all risk classes).

The potential frequency and severity of losses is estimated for each Key Risk (within the Operational Risk category) in each business and function. The potential range of individual loss severities is represented by a statistical distribution, estimated from the average loss size and three extreme scenarios (from Key Risk Scenarios), as well as loss data from the Operational RiskData eXchange (ORX).

The capital calculation also takes into account the possibility of correlations between operational risk losses occurring in a year (between risks within businesses and functions and between businesses and functions).

In certain joint ventures and associates, Barclays may not be able to apply the AMA and so uses the Basic Indicator Approach (BIA) to calculate operational risk capital. With the BIA, Barclays is required to hold a certain percentage, currently 15% of average gross income, in capital. Areas where the BIA is applied are: the Africa RBB businesses, including Barclays Bank Mozambique and National Bank of Commerce (Tanzania); Barclays Bank PLC Pakistan; the new to bank business activities acquired from Lehman Brothers; and the portfolios of assets purchased from Woolworths Financial Services in South Africa, Citi Cards Portugal and Italy, Standard Life Bank, ING Direct, MBNA Corporate Cards, Upromise, RCI, Egg Cards, EdCon, Sallie Mae and Ameriprice.

Insurance

As part of its risk management approach, the Group also uses insurance to mitigate the impact of some operational risks.

 

 

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Risk management >

Liquidity risk management

  

 

 

 

 

 

 

Liquidity Risk

 

 

LOGO

  Liquidity risk is the risk that a firm, although solvent, either does not have sufficient financial resources available to enable it to meet its obligations as they fall due, or can secure such resources only at excessive cost. This also results in a firm’s inability to meet regulatory liquidity requirements. This risk is inherent in all banking operations and can be affected by a range of Group-specific and market-wide events.
 

 

 

 

These disclosures are unaudited unless otherwise stated

 

Overview (audited)

The Board has formally recognised a series of risks that are continuously present in Barclays and materially impact the achievement of Barclays’ objectives one of which is Funding risk. Liquidity risk is recognised as a Key risk within Funding risk. The efficient management of liquidity is essential to the Group in retaining the confidence of the financial markets and ensuring that the business is sustainable. Liquidity risk is managed through the Liquidity Risk Management Framework (the Liquidity Framework) which is designed to maintain liquidity resources that are sufficient in amount and quality and a funding profile, which is appropriate to maintain market confidence in the Group’s name and meet the liquidity risk appetite as expressed by the Board.

This is achieved via a combination of policy formation, review and governance, analysis, stress testing, limit setting and monitoring. Together, these meet internal and regulatory requirements.

Governance and organisation (audited)

Barclays Treasury operates a centralised governance control process that covers all of the Group’s liquidity risk management activities by the Board Financial Risk Committee. The Liquidity Framework is subject to annual review. The Liquidity Framework describes liquidity policies and controls that the Group has implemented to manage liquidity risk within the Liquidity Risk Appetite.

The Board sets the Group’s Liquidity Risk Appetite (LRA), being the level of risk the Group chooses to take in pursuit of its business objectives and in meeting its regulatory obligations. The Treasury Committee is responsible for the management and governance of the mandate defined by the Board and includes the following sub-committees:

 

¡   The Balance Sheet Management Committee – provides a coordinated forum to oversee the management and governance of Balance Sheet Management including behavioural mismatch, structural risk, and transfer pricing;

 

¡   The Investment Advisory Group supervises the investment of a portion of the Group’s liquidity pool in longer dated liquid assets. The Investment Advisory Group approves a detailed allocation framework across assets and tenors, and reviews the performance and risks associated with these holdings. The holdings are subject to limits set by the Board Financial Risk Committee and by the independent Group market and credit risk functions; and

 

¡   The Funding and Liquidity Risk Committee, a sub-committee of the Balance Sheet Management Committee, is responsible for the review, challenge and recommendation of the Liquidity Framework to the Treasury Committee.

Liquidity risk framework

Barclays has a comprehensive Liquidity Framework for managing the Group’s liquidity risk. The Liquidity Framework is designed to deliver the appropriate term and structure of funding consistent with the Liquidity Risk Appetite set by the Board.

The Liquidity Framework incorporates a range of ongoing business management tools to monitor, limit and stress test the Group’s balance sheet and contingent liabilities and a Contingency Funding Plan. Limit setting and transfer pricing are tools that are designed to control the level of liquidity risk taken and drive the appropriate mix of funds, which together reduce the likelihood that a liquidity stress event could lead to an inability to meet the Group’s obligations as they fall due. The stress tests assess potential contractual and contingent stress outflows under a range of scenarios, which are then used to determine the size of the liquidity pool that is immediately available to meet anticipated outflows, if a stress occurred.

The Group maintains a Contingency Funding Plan which details how liquidity stress events of varying severity would be managed. Since the precise nature of any stress event cannot be known in advance, the plans are designed to be flexible to the nature and severity of the stress event and provide a menu of options that could be used as appropriate at the time. Barclays also maintains Recovery Plans which consider actions to generate additional liquidity in order to facilitate recovery in a severe stress.

 

 

 

         
Ongoing business management    Early signs/ Mild stress    Severe Stress    Recovery    Resolution

¡  LRA and Planning

¡   Liquidity limits

¡  Early Warning Indicators Committee

  

¡  Monitoring and review

¡   Low cost actions and balance sheet optimism

  

¡  Activate Contingency Funding Plan

¡   Balance sheet reduction and business limitations

  

¡  Asset and liability actions to generate additional liquidity

  

¡  Ensure an orderly resolution can be carried out if necerssary, without adverse systemic risk or exposing the public fund to loss

 

 

 

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Ongoing business management

Risk appetite and planning

Under the Liquidity Framework, Barclays has established a Liquidity Risk Appetite (LRA) together with the appropriate limits for the management of the liquidity risk. This is the level of liquidity risk the Group chooses to take in pursuit of its business objectives and in meeting its regulatory obligations. The key expression of the liquidity risk is through internal stress tests. This involves comparing the liquidity pool with anticipated stressed net contractual and contingent outflows for each of three stress scenarios.

The LRA is reviewed on a continuous basis and is subject to formal Board approval at least annually. The Group runs three primary liquidity stress scenarios, aligned to the PRA’s prescribed stresses:

 

¡   90 day market-wide stress event;

 

¡   30 day Barclays-specific stress event; and

 

¡   30 day combined market-wide and Barclays-specific stress event.

In addition to the liquidity pool, the Liquidity Framework provides for other management actions, including generating liquidity from other liquid assets on the Group’s balance sheet in order to meet additional stress outflows, or to preserve or restore the Liquidity Pool in the event of a liquidity stress

 

 

Liquidity limits

Barclays manages limits on a variety of on and off-balance sheet exposures, a sample of which is shown in the table below. These limits serve to control the overall extent and composition of liquidity risk taken by managing exposure to the cash outflows.

Examples of Liquidity Limits

 

Money market framework

   FX Cashflow limits    Concentration limits    Structurered Notes limits
       

Secured Mismatch limits

   Debt Buyback limits    Off-Balance Sheet
commitment limits
   Ratings Downgrade limits

 

Internal pricing and incentives

Barclays actively manages the composition and duration of the balance sheet and of contingent liquidity risk through the transfer of liquidity premium directly to business units. Liquidity premiums are charged and credited to businesses according to the behavioural life of assets and liabilities and contingent liquidity risk. These transfer pricing mechanisms are designed to ensure that liquidity risk is reflected in product pricing and performance measurement, thereby ensuring that the Liquidity Framework is integrated into business level decision making to drive the appropriate mix of sources and uses of funds.

Early warning indicators

Barclays monitors a range of market indicators for early signs of liquidity risk either in the market or specific to Barclays, a sample of which are shown in the table below. These are designed to immediately identify the emergence of increased liquidity risk to maximise the time available to execute appropriate mitigating actions. Deterioration in Early Warning Indicators can lead to invocation of the Group’s Contingency Funding Plan, which provides a framework for how the liquidity stress would be managed.

 

 

Examples of Early Warning Indicators

 

Change in composition of deposits

   Level of debt buybacks    Rising funding costs
     

Widening CDS spreads

   Change in maturity profile    Repo haircut widening

 

Contingency Funding Plan and Recovery Resolution Plan

Barclays maintains a Contingency Funding Plan (CFP), which is designed to provide a framework where a liquidity stress could be effectively managed. The CFP is proportionate to the nature, scale and complexity of the business and is tested to ensure that it is operationally robust. The CFP details the circumstances in which the plan could be invoked, including as a result of adverse movements in Liquidity Early Warning Indicators. As part of the plan the Barclays Treasurer has established a Liquidity Management Committee (LMC) On invocation of the CFP, the LMC would meet to identify the likely impact of the event on the Group and determine the response, which would be proportionate to the nature and severity of the stress.

The CFP provides a communication plan and includes management actions to respond to liquidity stresses of varying severity. These could include monetising the liquidity pool, slowing the extension of credit and increasing the tenor of funding.

The Group continues to work with the authorities on recovery and resolution planning (RRP). The Group made its first formal RRP submissions to the UK and US regulators in mid-2012 and has since continued to work with the authorities to identify and address any impediments to resolvability.

Barclays also maintains a Group Recovery Plan, which details potential actions in the event of a severe stress including securitising or selling assets, disposals, divestment and capital raising.

 

 

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Risk management >

Capital risk management

  

 

 

 

 

 

  Overview
 

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Capital risk is the risk that the Group has insufficient capital resources to:

 

n  Meet minimum regulatory requirements in the UK and in other jurisdictions such as the United States and South Africa where regulated activities are undertaken. The Group’s authority to operate as a bank is dependent upon the maintenance of adequate capital resources;

 

n   Support its credit rating. A weaker credit rating would increase the Group’s cost of funds; and

 

n   Support its growth and strategic options.

 

 

 

 

These disclosures are unaudited unless otherwise stated

 

Overview (audited)

Capital Management is integral to the Group’s approach to financial stability and sustainability management and is therefore embedded in the way our businesses and legal entities operate. Our Capital Management strategy is driven by the strategic aims of the Group and the risk appetite set by the Board.

Our objectives are achieved through well embedded capital management practices:

 

 

Primary objectives

   Core practices

 

Provide a viable and sustainable business offering by maintaining adequate capital to cover the Group’s current and forecast business needs and associated risks

  

¡  Maintain a capital and leverage plan on a short-term and medium-term basis aligned with strategic objectives

¡   Meet minimum regulatory requirements at all times in the UK and in all other jurisdictions that the Group operates in, such as the United States and South Africa where regulated activities are undertaken

 

Ensure the Group and legal entities maintain adequate capital to withstand the impact of the risks that may arise under the stressed conditions analysed by the Group

  

¡  Perform Group-wide internal and regulatory stress tests

¡   Maintain capital buffers over regulatory minimums

¡  Develop contingency plans for severe (stress management actions) and extreme stress tests (recovery actions)

 

Support a strong credit rating

  

¡  Maintain capital and leverage ratios aligned with rating agency expectations

 

Our approach to capital risk management

We adopt a forward-looking, risk based approach to Capital Risk Management. Capital demand and supply is actively managed on a centralised basis, at a business level, at a local entity level and on a regional basis taking into account the regulatory, economic and commercial environment in which Barclays operates.

Capital planning

Capital forecasts are managed on a top-down and bottom-up analysis through both short-term (monthly for year 1) and medium-term (3 year) financial planning cycles. Barclays’ capital plans are developed with the objective of maintaining capital that is adequate in quantity and quality to support the approved risk profile and business needs, including our Transform financial commitments. As a result, the Group holds a diversified pool of capital resources that provides strong loss absorbing capacity and optimised returns.

Capital planning also includes managing capital against leverage targets. These requirements are being developed by the Basel Committee and by national regulators. The Group is required to meet the PRA’s leverage requirements calculated on a PRA adjusted CET1 capital base plus qualifying Additional Tier 1 capital using CRD IV leverage exposure.

Barclays’ capital plans are continually monitored against relevant internal target capital ratios to ensure they remain appropriate, and consider risks to the plan including possible future regulatory changes.

Local management ensures compliance with an entity’s minimum regulatory capital requirements by reporting to local asset and liability committees with oversight by the Group’s Capital Committee, as required.

Target ratios

The Group’s capital plan and target ratios are set in consideration of CRD IV, and draft Recovery and Resolution Directive (RRD) requirements. The target capital structure expected to be achieved during the course of 2015 in consideration of these requirements and the Transform commitments anticipate a target:

 

¡   Fully loaded CRD IV CET1 ratio of 10.5% comprising of an expected 4.5% regulatory minimum CET1 ratio requirement leading to a 9.0% regulatory target CET1 ratio including Conservation and Global Systemic buffers (but excluding Pillar 2A and counter-cyclical buffer) and a 1.5% CET1 ‘internal management buffer’;

 

¡   1.5% Additional Tier 1 layer (excluding Pillar 2A); and

 

¡   5.0% Tier 2 debt capital to meet a internal target 17% total capital ratio.

In addition to Barclays’ end state capital structure, target ratios have also been set in respect of the PRA’s leverage ratio expectation of 3.0% applicable from June 2014.

Capital allocation

Capital allocations are approved by the Group Executive Committee and monitored by the Treasury Committee, taking into consideration the risk appetite, growth and strategic aims of the Group. Barclays Bank PLC (BBPLC) is the primary source of capital to its legal entities. Regulated legal entities are, at a minimum, allocated adequate capital to meet their current and forecast regulatory and business requirements.

 

 

 

 

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Risk identification

Capital demand is assessed and quantified for credit, market, operational, interest rate risk on the banking book, pension obligation risk and securitisation risks, in line with the PRA’s regulatory requirements.

Barclays Treasury works closely with Group Risk, businesses and legal entities to support a proactive approach to identifying sources of capital ratio volatilities which are incorporated in the Group’s capital plan. Capital risks against firm-specific and macroeconomic early warning indicators are monitored and reported to the Treasury Committee, associated with clear escalation channels to Senior Management.

Stress testing

Internal stress testing is undertaken to quantify and understand the impact of sensitivities on the capital plan and capital ratios, arising from 1 in 7 year and 1 in 25 year stresses. Actual recent economic, market and peer institution stresses are used to inform the assumptions of the stress tests and assess the effectiveness of mitigations strategies.

The Group also undertakes stress tests prescribed by the PRA and ECB. Legal entities undertake stress tests prescribed by their local regulators. These stress tests inform decisions on the size and quality of capital buffer required and the results are incorporated into the Group capital plan to ensure adequacy of capital under normal and severe, but plausible stressed conditions.

Risk mitigation

As part of the stress testing process actions are identified that should be taken to mitigate risks that could arise in the event of material adverse changes in the current economic and business outlook.

As an additional layer of protection, the Barclays Recovery Plan defines the actions and implementation strategies available for the Group to increase or preserve capital resources in the event that stress events are more extreme than anticipated. In addition, the strong regulatory focus on resolvability has continued in 2013, from both UK and international regulators. The Group continues to work with the authorities on recovery and resolution planning (RRP), and the detailed practicalities of the resolution process, including the provision of information that would be required in the event of a resolution, so as to enhance Barclays resolvability (a Citizenship commitment made in May 2012).

Transferability of capital

The Group’s policy is for surplus capital held in Group entities to be repatriated to BBPLC in the form of dividends and/or capital repatriation, subject to local regulatory requirements, exchange controls and tax implications. This approach provides optimal flexibility on the redeployment of capital across legal entities. The Group is not aware of any material impediments to the prompt transfer of capital resources, in line with the above policy, or repayment of intra-group liabilities when due.

Governance

The Group and legal entity capital plans are underpinned by the Capital Management Framework, which includes the capital management policies and practices approved by the Capital Committee. These are implemented consistently and aimed at delivering on the Group objectives.

Group Treasury Committee and the Board approve the Group capital plan, stress tests and Recovery Plan. The Group Treasury Committee also manages compliance with the Group’s capital management objectives and reviews actual and forecast capital demand and resources on a monthly basis. The Board Financial Risk Committee annually reviews risk appetite and then analyses the impacts of stress scenarios on the Group capital forecast (see pages 70 to 72) in order to understand and manage the Group’s projected capital adequacy.

Resources

Global teams operate in accordance with the Group’s policies and procedures, having direct access to local regulators and businesses in order to support individual capital management at a legal entity level.

Senior Management awareness and transparency

Capital ratios, early warning indicators and movements in capital demand and supply are reported to Group Treasury Committee monthly.

Capital management information is readily available at all times to support the Executive Management’s strategic and day-to-day business decision making, as may be required.

The Group submits its Board approved ICAAP document to the PRA on an annual basis, which forms the basis of the Individual Capital Guidance (ICG) set by the PRA.

Pillar 3 disclosures are approved by the Board and publicly available as a separate document in line with the Basel 3 and PRA requirements.

Ongoing capital management risks

Capital ratio sensitivity to foreign exchange rate movements

The Group has capital resources and RWAs denominated in foreign currencies. Changes in foreign exchange rates result in changes in the GBP equivalent value of foreign currency denominated capital resources and RWAs. As a result, the Group’s regulatory capital ratios are sensitive to foreign currency movements.

The Group’s capital ratio management strategy is to minimise the volatility of the capital ratios caused by foreign exchange rate movements. To achieve this, the Group aims to maintain the ratio of foreign currency CET 1, Tier 1 and Total capital resources to foreign currency RWAs the same as the Group’s consolidated capital ratios.

The Group’s investments in foreign currency subsidiaries and branches, to the extent that they are not hedged for foreign exchange movements, translate into GBP upon consolidation creating CET1 capital resources sensitive to foreign currency movements. Changes in the GBP value of the investments due to foreign currency movements are captured in the currency translation reserve, resulting in a movement in CET1 capital.

To create foreign currency Tier 1 and Total Capital resources additional to the CET1 capital resources, the Group issues, where possible, debt capital in non-GBP currencies. This is primarily achieved by the issuance of debt capital from Barclays Bank PLC in USD and EUR, but can also be achieved by subsidiaries issuing capital in local currencies, such as Barclays Africa Group Limited in South Africa.

 

 

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Shareholder information >

Contents

  

 

 

 

 

 

Resources for shareholders including a summary of the Company Articles of Association and contact details for Shareholder enquiries.

 

Shareholder information

   424

 

Shareholder enquiries

   428

 

Index

   429

 

Your Barclays shareholding

   433
 

 

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Shareholder information   

 

 

 

 

 

Articles of Association

The Company is a public limited company registered in England and Wales under company number 48839. Barclays, originally named Barclay & Company Limited, was incorporated in England and Wales on 20 July 1896 under the Companies Acts 1862 to 1890 as a company limited by shares. The company name was changed to Barclays Bank Limited on 17 February 1917 and it was registered on 15 February 1982 as a public limited company under the Companies Acts 1948 to 1980. On 1 January 1985, the Company changed its name to Barclays PLC.

Under the Companies Act 2006 a company’s Memorandum of Association now need contain only the names of the subscribers and the number of shares each subscriber has agreed to take. For companies in existence as of 1 October 2009, all other provisions which were contained in the company’s Memorandum of Association, including the company’s objects, are now deemed to be contained in the company’s Articles. The Companies Act 2006 also states that a company’s objects are unrestricted unless the company’s Articles provide otherwise.

The Articles of Association were adopted at the Company’s Annual General Meeting (AGM) on 30 April 2010 and amended at the AGM of the Company on 25 April 2013.

The Company may, by special resolution, amend its Articles of Association.

The following is a summary and explanation of the current Articles of Association.

Directors

(i) The minimum number of Directors (excluding alternate Directors) is five. There is no maximum limit. There is no age limit for Directors.

 

(ii) Excluding executive remuneration and any other entitlement to remuneration for extra services (including service on board committees) under the Articles, a Director is entitled to a fee at a rate determined by the Board but the aggregate fees paid to all Directors shall not exceed £2,000,000 per annum or such higher amount as may be approved by an ordinary resolution of the Company. Each Director is entitled to reimbursement for all reasonable travelling, hotel and other expenses properly incurred by him/her in or about the performance of his/her duties.

 

(iii) No Director may act (either himself/herself or through his/her firm) as an auditor of the Company. A Director may hold any other office of the Company on such terms as the Board shall determine.

 

(iv) At each AGM of the Company, one third of the Directors (rounded down) are required under the Articles of Association to retire from office by rotation and may offer themselves for re-election. The Directors so retiring are first, those who wish to retire and not offer themselves for re-election and, second those who have been longest in office (and in the case of equality of service length are selected by lot). Other than a retiring Director, no person shall (unless recommended by the Board) be eligible for election unless a member notifies the Company Secretary in advance of his/her intention to propose a person for election. It is Barclays’ practice that all Directors offer themselves for re-election annually in accordance with the UK Corporate Governance Code.

 

(v) The Board has the power to appoint additional Directors or to fill a casual vacancy amongst the Directors. Any Director so appointed holds office until the next AGM, when he/she may offer himself/ herself for reappointment. He/she is not taken into account in determining the number of Directors retiring by rotation.
(vi) The Board may appoint any Director to any executive position or employment in the Company on such terms as they determine.

 

(vii) The Company may by ordinary resolution remove a Director before the expiry of his/her period of office (without prejudice to a claim for damages for breach of contract or otherwise) and may by ordinary resolution appoint another person who is willing to act to be a Director in his/her place.

 

(viii) A Director may appoint either another Director or some other person approved by the Board to act as his/her alternate with power to attend Board meetings and generally to exercise the functions of the appointing Director in his/her absence (other than the power to appoint an alternate).

 

(ix) The Board may authorise any matter in relation to which a Director has, or can have, a direct interest that conflicts, or possibly may conflict with, the Company’s interests. Only Directors who have no interest in the matter being considered will be able to authorise the relevant matter and they may impose limits or conditions when giving authorisation if they think this is appropriate.

 

(x) A Director may hold positions with or be interested in other companies and, subject to legislation applicable to the Company and the FCA’s requirements, may contract with the Company or any other company in which the Company is interested. A Director may not vote or count towards the quorum on any resolution concerning any proposal in which he/she (or any person connected with him/her) has a material interest (other than by virtue of his/her interest in securities of the Company) or if he/she has a duty which conflicts or may conflict with the interests of the Company, unless the resolution relates to any proposal:

 

  (a) to indemnify a Director or provide him/her with a guarantee or security in respect of money lent by him/her to, or any obligation incurred by him/her or any other person for the benefit of (or at the request of), the Company (or any other member of the Group);

 

  (b) to indemnify or give security or a guarantee to a third party in respect of a debt or obligation of the Company (or any other member of the Group) for which the Director has personally assumed responsibility;

 

  (c) to obtain insurance for the benefit of Directors;

 

  (d) involving the acquisition by a Director of any securities of the Company (or any other member of the Group) pursuant to an offer to existing holders of securities or to the public;

 

  (e) that the Director underwrite any issue of securities of the Company (or any other member of the Group);

 

  (f) concerning any other company in which the Director is interested as an officer or creditor or Shareholder but, broadly, only if he/she (together with his/her connected persons) is directly or indirectly interested in less than 1% of either any class of the issued equity share capital or of the voting rights of that company; and

 

  (g) concerning any other arrangement for the benefit of employees of the Company (or any other member of the Group) under which the Director benefits or stands to benefit in a similar manner to the employees concerned and which does not give the Director any advantage which the employees to whom the arrangement relates would not receive.
 

 

 

 

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(xi) A Director may not vote or be counted in the quorum on any resolution which concerns his/her own employment or appointment to any office of the Company or any other company in which the Company is interested.

 

(xii) Subject to applicable legislation, the provisions described in sub-paragraphs (x) and (xi) may be relaxed or suspended by an ordinary resolution of the members of the Company or any applicable governmental or other regulatory body.

 

(xiii) A Director is required to hold an interest in ordinary shares having a nominal value of at least £500, which currently equates to 2,000 Ordinary Shares unless restricted from acquiring or holding such interest by any applicable law or regulation or any applicable governmental or other regulatory body. A Director may act before acquiring those shares but must acquire the qualification shares within two months from his/her appointment. Where a Director is unable to acquire the requisite number of shares within that time owing to law, regulation or requirement of any governmental or other relevant authority, he/she must acquire the shares as soon as reasonably practicable once the restriction(s) end.

 

(xiv) The Board may exercise all of the powers of the Company to borrow money, to mortgage or charge its undertaking, property and uncalled capital and to issue debentures and other securities.

Classes of shares

The Company only has Ordinary Shares in issue. The Articles of Association also provide for pound sterling preference shares of £100 each, US dollar preference shares of $100 each, US dollar preference shares of $0.25 each, euro preference shares of 100 each and yen preference shares of ¥10,000 each (together, the Preference Shares). In accordance with the authority granted at the AGM on 25 April 2013, Preference Shares may be issued by the Board from time to time in one or more series with such rights and subject to such restrictions and limitations as the Board may determine. No Preference Shares have been issued to date.

Dividends

Subject to the provisions of the Articles and applicable legislation, the Company in general meeting may declare dividends on the Ordinary Shares by ordinary resolution, but any such dividend may not exceed the amount recommended by the Board. The Board may also pay interim or final dividends if it appears they are justified by the Company’s financial position.

Each Preference Share confers the right to a preferential dividend (Preference Dividend) payable in such currency at such rates (whether fixed or calculated by reference to, or in accordance with, a specified procedure or mechanism), on such dates and on such other terms as may be determined by the Board prior to allotment thereof.

The Preference Shares rank in regard to payment of dividends in priority to the holders of Ordinary Shares and any other class of shares in the Company ranking junior to the Preference Shares.

Dividends may be paid on the Preference Shares if, in the opinion of the Board, the Company has sufficient distributable profits, after payment in full or the setting aside of a sum to provide for all dividends payable on (or in the case of shares carrying a cumulative right to dividends, before) the relevant dividend payment date on any class of shares in the Company ranking pari passu with or in priority to the relevant series of Preference Shares as regards participation in the profits of the Company.

 

If the Board considers that the distributable profits of the Company available for distribution are insufficient to cover the payment in full of Preference Dividends, Preference Dividends shall be paid to the extent of the distributable profits on a pro rata basis.

Notwithstanding the above the Board may, at its absolute discretion, determine that any Preference Dividend which would otherwise be payable may either not be payable at all or only payable in part.

If any Preference Dividend on a series of Preference Shares is not paid, or is only paid in part, for the reasons described above, holders of Preference Shares will not have a claim in respect of such non-payment.

If any dividend on a series of Preference Shares is not paid in full on the relevant dividend payment date, a dividend restriction shall apply. The dividend restriction means that, subject to certain exceptions, neither the Company nor Barclays Bank PLC may (a) pay a dividend on, or (b) redeem, purchase, reduce or otherwise acquire, any of their respective Ordinary Shares, other Preference Shares or other share capital ranking equal or junior to the relevant series of Preference Shares until the earlier of such time as the Company next pays in full a dividend on the relevant series of Preference Shares or the date on which all of the relevant series of Preference Shares are redeemed.

All unclaimed dividends payable in respect of any share may be invested or otherwise made use of by the Board for the benefit of the Company until claimed. If a dividend is not claimed after 12 years of it becoming payable, it is forfeited and reverts to the Company.

The Board may, with the approval of an ordinary resolution of the Company, offer Shareholders the right to choose to receive an allotment of additional fully paid Ordinary Shares instead of cash in respect of all or part of any dividend. The Company currently provides a scrip dividend programme pursuant to an authority granted at the AGM held on 25 April 2013.

Voting

Every member who is present in person or represented at any general meeting of the Company, and who is entitled to vote, has one vote on a show of hands. Every proxy present has one vote. The proxy will have one vote for and one vote against a resolution if he/she has been instructed to vote for or against the resolution by different members or in one direction by a member while another member has permitted the proxy discretion as to how to vote. On a poll, every member who is present or represented and who is entitled to vote has one vote for every share held. In the case of joint holders, only the vote of the senior holder (as determined by order in the share register) or his proxy may be counted. If any sum payable remains unpaid in relation to a member’s shareholding, that member is not entitled to vote that share or exercise any other right in relation to a meeting of the Company unless the Board otherwise determine.

If any member, or any other person appearing to be interested in any of the Company’s Ordinary Shares, is served with a notice under Section 793 of the Companies Act 2006 and does not supply the Company with the information required in the notice, then the Board, in its absolute discretion, may direct that that member shall not be entitled to attend or vote at any meeting of the Company. The Board may further direct that if the shares of the defaulting member represent 0.25% or more of the issued shares of the relevant class, that dividends or other monies payable on those shares shall be retained by the Company until the direction ceases to have effect and that no transfer of those shares shall be registered (other than certain specified ‘excepted transfers’). A direction ceases to have effect seven days after the Company has received the information requested, or when the Company is notified that an ‘excepted transfer’ of all of the relevant shares to a third party has occurred, or as the Board otherwise determines.

 

 

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Shareholder information continued      

 

 

 

 

Transfers

Ordinary Shares may be held in either certificated or uncertificated form. Certificated Ordinary Shares shall be transferred in writing in any usual or other form approved by the Board and executed by or on behalf of the transferor. Transfers of uncertificated Ordinary Shares shall be made in accordance with the Companies Act 2006 and CREST Regulations.

The Board is not bound to register a transfer of partly paid Ordinary Shares, or fully paid shares in exceptional circumstances approved by the FCA. The Board may also decline to register an instrument of transfer of certificated Ordinary Shares unless it is duly stamped and deposited at the prescribed place and accompanied by the share certificate(s) and such other evidence as reasonably required by the Board to evidence right to transfer, it is in respect of one class of shares only, and it is in favour of a single transferee or not more than four joint transferees (except in the case of executors or trustees of a member).

Preference Shares may be represented by share warrants to bearer or be in registered form.

Preference Shares represented by share warrants to bearer are transferred by delivery of the relevant warrant. Preference Shares in registered form shall be transferred in writing in any usual or other form approved by the Board and executed by or on behalf of the transferor. The Company’s registrar shall register such transfers of Preference Shares in registered form by making the appropriate entries in the register of Preference Shares.

Each Preference Share shall confer, in the event of a winding up or any return of capital by reduction of capital (other than, unless otherwise provided by their terms of issue, a redemption or purchase by the Company of any of its issued shares, or a reduction of share capital), the right to receive out of the surplus assets of the Company available for distribution amongst the members and in priority to the holders of the Ordinary Shares and any other shares in the Company ranking junior to the relevant series of Preference Shares and pari passu with any other class of Preference Shares (other than any class of shares then in issue ranking in priority to the relevant series of Preference Shares), repayment of the amount paid up or treated as paid up in respect of the nominal value of the Preference Share together with any premium which was paid or treated as paid when the Preference Share was issued in addition to an amount equal to accrued and unpaid dividends.

Redemption and Purchase

Subject to applicable legislation and the rights of the other Shareholders, any share may be issued on terms that it is, at the option of the Company or the holder of such share, redeemable. The Directors are authorised to determine the terms, conditions and manner of redemption of any such shares under the Articles of Association.

Calls on capital

The Directors may make calls upon the members in respect of any monies unpaid on their shares. A person upon whom a call is made remains liable even if the shares in respect of which the call is made have been transferred. Interest will be chargeable on any unpaid amount called at a rate determined by the Board (of not more than 20% per annum).

If a member fails to pay any call in full (following notice from the Board that such failure will result in forfeiture of the relevant shares), such shares (including any dividends declared but not paid) may be forfeited by a resolution of the Board, and will become the property of the Company. Forfeiture shall not absolve a previous member for amounts payable by him/her (which may continue to accrue interest).

The Company also has a lien over all partly paid shares of the Company for all monies payable or called on that share and over the debts and liabilities of a member to the Company. If any monies which are the subject of the lien remain unpaid after a notice from the Board demanding payment, the Company may sell such shares.

Variation of Rights

The rights attached to any class of shares may be varied either with the consent in writing of the holders of at least 75% in nominal value of the issued shares of that class or with the sanction of special resolution passed at a separate meeting of the holders of the shares of that class.

The rights of shares shall not (unless expressly provided by the rights attached to such shares) be deemed varied by the creation of further shares ranking equally with them or subsequent to them.

 

 

 

 

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Annual and other general meetings

The Company is required to hold an AGM in addition to such other general meetings as the Directors think fit. The type of the meeting will be specified in the notice calling it. Under the Companies Act 2006, the AGM must be held within six months of the financial year end. A general meeting may be convened by the Board on requisition in accordance with the applicable legislation.

In the case of an AGM, a minimum of 21 clear days’ notice is required. The notice must be in writing and must specify the place, the day and the hour of the meeting, and the general nature of the business to be transacted. A notice convening a meeting to pass a special resolution shall specify the intention to propose the resolution as such. The accidental failure to give notice of a general meeting or the non-receipt of such notice will not invalidate the proceedings at such meeting.

Subject as noted above, all Shareholders are entitled to attend and vote at general meetings. The Articles do, however, provide that arrangements may be made for simultaneous attendance at a satellite meeting place or, if the meeting place is inadequate to accommodate all members and proxies entitled to attend, another meeting place may be arranged to accommodate such persons other than that specified in the notice of meeting, in which case Shareholders may be excluded from the principal place.

Holders of Preference Shares have no right to receive notice of, attend or vote at, any general meetings of the Company as a result of holding Preference Shares.

Limitations on foreign shareholders

There are no restrictions imposed by the Articles of Association or (subject to the effect of any economic sanctions that may be in force from time to time) by current UK laws which relate only to nonresidents of the UK and which limit the rights of such non-residents to hold or (when entitled to do so) vote the Ordinary Shares.

Notices

A document or information may be sent by the Company in hard copy form, electronic form, by being made available on a website, or by another means agreed with the recipient, in accordance with the provisions set out in the Companies Act 2006. Accordingly, a document or information may only be sent in electronic form to a person who has agreed to receive it in that form or, in the case of a company, who has been deemed to have so agreed pursuant to applicable legislation. A document or information may only be sent by being made available on a website if the recipient has agreed to receive it in that form or has been deemed to have so agreed pursuant to applicable legislation, and has not revoked that agreement.

In respect of joint holdings, documents or information shall be sent to the joint holder whose name stands first in the register.

A member who (having no registered address within the UK) has not supplied an address in the UK at which documents or information may be sent in hard copy form, or an address to which notices, documents or information may be sent or supplied by electronic means, is not entitled to have documents or information sent to him/her.

In addition, the Company may cease to send notices to any member who has been sent documents on two consecutive occasions over a period of at least 12 months and when each of those documents is returned undelivered or notification is received that they have not been delivered.

Capitalisation of profits

The Company may, by ordinary resolution, upon the recommendation of the Board, capitalise all or any part of an amount standing to the credit of a reserve or fund to be set free for distribution provided that amounts from the share premium account, capital redemption reserve or any profits not available for distribution should be applied only in paying up unissued shares to be allotted to members credited as fully paid and no unrealised profits shall be applied in paying up debentures of the Company or any amount unpaid on any share in the capital of the Company.

Indemnity

Subject to applicable legislation, every current and former Director or other officer of the Company (other than any person engaged by the company as auditor) shall be indemnified by the Company against any liability in relation to the Company, other than (broadly) any liability to the Company or a member of the Group, or any criminal or regulatory fine.

 

Officers of the Group         Date of
appointment
as officer

 

Lawrence Dickinson    Company Secretary    2002

 

Robert Le Blanc    Chief Risk Officer    2004

 

Maria Ramos    Chief Executive, Barclays Africa Group    2009

 

Peter Estlin    Financial Controller    2012

 

Valerie Soranno Keating    CEO, Barclaycard    2012

 

Ashok Vaswani    CEO, Retail and Business Banking    2012

 

Bob Hoyt    Group General Counsel    2013

 

Eric Bommensath    Co-Chief Executive, Corporate and Investment Banking    2013

 

Thomas King    Co-Chief Executive, Corporate and Investment Banking    2013

 

Irene McDermott-Brown    Group Human Resources Director    2013

 

Darryl West    Interim Chief Operations and Technology Officer    2013

 

Skip McGee    Chief Executive, Americas    2013

 

Peter Horrell    Chief Executive, Wealth and Investment Management    2013

 

Mike Roemer    Group Head of Compliance    2014

 

 

 

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Shareholder enquiries

     

 

 

 

 

 

   

 

LOGO

  

Investors who have any questions about
their investment in Barclays, or about
Barclays in general, may write to the
Director, Investor Relations at our Head
Office as follows:

 

 

In the United Kingdom:

Investor Relations

Barclays PLC

1 Churchill Place

London

E14 5HP

Registered and Head Office

1 Churchill Place

London

E14 5HP

Tel: +44 (0) 20 7116 1000

Registrar

The Registrar to Barclays

Aspect House

Spencer Road

Lancing

West Sussex

BN99 6DA

Tel: 0871 384 2055 (from the UK)a

or +44 (0) 121 415 7004 (from overseas)

Email: questions@share-registers.co.uk

or, in the United States of America:

The Corporate Communications Department

Barclays Bank PLC

745 Seventh Avenue

New York, NY 10019, USA

ADR Depositary

JP Morgan Chase Bank, N.A.

PO Box 64504

St. Paul

MN 55164-0854

USA

Tel: 1-800-990-1135 (toll-free for US domestic callers)

or +1 651 453 2128

Email: jpmorgan.adr@wellsfargo.com

 

 

 

Notes

 

a   Calls cost 8p per minute plus network extras. Lines open 8.30am to 5.30pm, Monday to Friday, excluding public holidays.

 

 

 

428 > Barclays PLC Annual Report 2013    barclays.com/annualreport


Table of Contents

Index

  

 

 

 

 

 

>A   
Accounting   
developments      286   
policies      284-287   
presentation      270   
Africa   
business analysis      256-257   
business strategy      26-29   
Allowance for impairment   
credit risk      154   
notes to the accounts      324   
Annual General Meeting      433   
Annual Report and Accounts (approval)      279   
Assets by class of business      249   
Auditors reports      271-276   
Available for sale investments      303   
>B   
Balanced Scorecard      10-11   
Barclaycard   
business analysis      258-259   
business strategy      30-33   
>C   
Capital adequacy data   
capital management and resources      199-207   
capital ratios      247   
Chairman’s governance overview      46   
Chief Executive’s strategic review      04-05   
Consolidated balance sheet      279   
Consolidated cash flow statement      281   
Consolidated income statement      277   
Consolidated statement of changes in equity      280   
Consolidated statement of comprehensive income      278   
Concentrations of credit risk      145-148   
Contingent liabilities and commitments      334   
Corporate Banking   
business analysis      262-263   
business strategy      38-41   
Corporate governance   
corporate governance report      52-77   
attendance at board meetings      55   
Conduct risk      228-229   
Credit risk      142-189   
Critical accounting estimates      287   
Currency of presentation      285   
Currency risk      197   
>D   
Derivatives and other financial instruments   
credit risk      179   
notes to the accounts      299-302   
Directors and officers   
biographies      83-85   
emoluments      111-121   
interests      116   
notes to the accounts      366-368   
Directors’ report      78-82   
Dividends      297   
>E   
Earnings per share      297   
Economic capital      207   
Employees   
diversity and inclusion      86-87   
involvement      86-88   
Europe Retail and Business Banking   
business analysis      254-255   
business strategy      22-25   
Executive Committee      85   
>F   
Fair value of assets and liabilities      304-322   
Financial assets designated at fair value      298   
Financial and operating highlights      03   
Financial liabilities designated at fair value      303   
Financial review      237-298   
Funding risk – Capital      199-207   
Funding risk – Liquidity      208-224   
>G   
Glossary (refer to http://group.barclays.com/about-
barclays/investor-relations/annual-reports)
  
Goodwill      328-329   
Group Finance Director’s review      12-13   
>H   
Head Office and Other Operations   
business analysis      266   
>I   
Impairment charges   
credit risk      154   
notes to the accounts      291-292   
Intangibles assets      328-329   
Interest rate risk      191-193   
Investments in associated and joint ventures      363   
Investment Bank   
business analysis      260-261   
business strategy      34-37   
 

 

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Index continued      

 

 

 

 

>K   
Key performance indicators      238-244   
>L   
Leasing      330   
Legal, competition and regulatory matters      334-340   
Loans and advances to banks      324   
Loans and advances to customers      324   
>M   
Market risk      190-198   
Memorandum and Articles of Association      424   
>N   
Net fee and commissions income      289   
Net interest income      288-289   
Non-controlling interests      346-347   
>O   
Operating expenses   
administration and general expenses      293   
staff costs      348-349   
Operational risk      225   
Ordinary shares, share premium and other equity      344-345   
>P   
Parent company accounts (Barclays PLC)      282-283   
Pensions   
directors      115   
notes to the accounts      351-355   
Potential credit risk loans      156   
Presentation of information      270   
Property, plant and equipment      326-327   
Provisions      332-333   
>R   
Related party transactions      366-368   
Remuneration report      89-125   
Reputation risk      226-227   
Reserves      345-346   
Risk factors      133-141   
Risk management      377-421   
Risk weighted assets      202-203   
>S   
Securities, borrowing, securities lending, repurchasing and reverse repurchase agreements      325   
Securitisation      363-365   
Segmental reporting   
by class of business      249   
by geographical segments      250   
Share-based payments      349-351   
Shareholder information      424-427   
Subordinated liabilities      341-344   
Supervision and regulation      230-235   
>T   
Tax   
tax contribution      92   
notes to accounts      294-297   
Trading portfolio      298   
>U   
UK Retail and Business Banking   
business analysis      252-253   
business strategy      18-21   
>W   
Wealth and Investment Management   
business analysis      264-265   
business strategy      42-45   
 

 

 

 

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Table of Contents


Table of Contents


Table of Contents

Shareholder information

Your Barclays Shareholding

 

Key dates*

 

28 March

2013 Final dividend payment date

 

24 April

2014 Annual General Meeting

 

13 June

2014 First interim dividend payment date

 

19 September

2014 Second interim dividend payment date

 

5 December

2014 Third interim dividend payment date

 

*Please note that these dates are provisional and subject to change.

Annual General Meeting (AGM)

This year’s AGM will be held at the Royal Festival Hall, Southbank Centre, Belvedere Road, London SE1 8XX on Thursday, 24 April 2014 at 11.00am.

The Chairman and Chief Executive will update shareholders on our performance in 2013 and our goals for 2014. Shareholders will also have the opportunity to ask the Board questions at the meeting.

 

   LOGO  

You can find out more at

Barclays.com/agm

Dividends

We remain committed to a 40% to 50% payout ratio over time, however, we expect to be at 40% from 2014 to allow focus on capital accretion. We would not expect it to rise further in to the 40% to 50% payout range until the 10.5% Core Equity Tier 1 milestone has been reached.

How do Barclays shareholders receive their dividends?

As at 31 December 2013, Barclays shareholders received their dividends in the following ways:

 

LOGO

You can choose how you would like to receive your Barclays dividends – save time and receive your dividends faster You can have your dividends paid directly into your bank or building society account. It is easy to set up and your money will be in your bank account on the dividend payment date. If you hold 2,500 shares or less, you can provide your bank or building society details quickly and easily over the telephone using the contact details overleaf. If you hold more than 2,500 shares, please write to The Registrar.

Scrip Dividend Programme (the Programme)

Shareholders can choose to have their dividends reinvested in new ordinary Barclays shares through the Programme. More information including the Programme Terms and Conditions and application form are available on our website (details below).

Unclaimed dividends

We are aware that some shareholders do not keep their personal details on the share register up to date. Therefore, during 2013, we conducted a tracing process to re-unite over 24,000 Barclays Sharestore members, who lost contact with us, with their unclaimed dividends. We have returned over £2 million of unclaimed dividends to our shareholders.

 

   LOGO   To find out more contact The Registrar to Barclays or visit Barclays.com/dividends

Charity donations – Thank you for your support

We would like to take this opportunity to thank our shareholders for helping us to make two fantastic donations to charity.

Firstly, thank you to all of our Barclays Dividend Re-investment Plan (DRIP) participants (which was withdrawn in June 2013) who chose to donate their DRIP cash residue to our chosen charity, ABF The Soldier’s Charity. As at the end of January 2014, we had raised over £40,000.

Secondly, following the close of the Rights Issue in October 2013, shareholders who let some or all of their Rights lapse received a cheque for their share of the net premium provided that it was £3.00 or more. Any amounts due to shareholders that were less than £3.00 were donated to UNICEF. We are delighted to tell you that Barclays shareholders have donated over £89,000 to UNICEF.

ShareGift your shares

Shareholders with small holdings of shares, whose value makes them uneconomic to sell, may wish to donate them to ShareGift, the share donation charity (registered charity number 1052686).

 

   LOGO   Further information about ShareGift and the charities it has supported may be obtained from their website, www.ShareGift.org

Action for shareholders

Keep your personal details up to date

Please remember to tell The Registrar if:

¡   You move house
¡   You need to update your bank or building society details.

If you are a Barclays e-view member, you can update your bank or building society account or address details online. If you hold 2,500 shares or less, you can update details quickly and easily over the telephone using the contact details overleaf. If you hold more than 2,500 shares you will need to write to The Registrar. You must provide a copy of your share certificate, Sharestore statement or most recent dividend tax voucher. If these are not available, you will need to provide a copy of a utility bill or bank statement dated in the last three months.

Duplicate documents

If you receive duplicate documents and split dividends on your Barclays shares, this may be because you have more than one account on the Barclays share register.

 

   LOGO   If you think that this affects you and you would like to combine your shareholdings, please contact The Registrar to Barclays (details overleaf).

 

 

Shareholder Security

Shareholders should be wary of any unsolicited investment advice and offers to buy shares at a discounted price. These fraudsters use persuasive and high-pressure tactics to lure shareholders into scams. Please keep in mind that firms authorised by the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) are unlikely to contact you out of the blue with an offer to buy or sell shares. You should think about getting independent financial or professional advice before you hand over any money.

 

  LOGO   Report a scam If you are approached by fraudsters please tell the FCA using the share fraud reporting form at www.fca.org.uk/scams. You can also call the FCA Helpline on 0800 111 6768.
 


Table of Contents

Shareholder enquiries>

Useful contact details

 

 

Barclays e-view

 

LOGO

You do not have to receive paper shareholder information. Many Barclays shareholders go online to manage their shareholding and find out about Barclays’ performance. Barclays e-view members receive the latest updates from Barclays directly by email.

To join Barclays e-view, please follow these 3 easy steps:

 

Step 1    Go to www.eviewsignup.co.uk
Step 2    Register for electronic communications by following the instructions on screen
Step 3    You will be sent an activation code in the post the next working day

 

 

 

 

LOGO Alternative formats

Shareholder documents can be provided in large print, audio CD or Braille free of charge by calling the Barclays Shareholder Helpline.

 

0871 384 2055* (in the UK)

+44 121 415 7004 (from overseas)

 

Audio versions of the Annual Review will also be available at the AGM.

 

The Registrar to Barclays

If you have any questions about your Barclays shares, please contact The Registrar to Barclays:

 

  LOGO      questions@share-registers.co.uk
     0871 384 2055* (in the UK)
     +44 121 415 7004 (from overseas)
    
     ABC Textphone
     0871 384 2255* (in the UK)
     +44 121 415 7028 (from overseas)
    
     The Registrar to Barclays
     Aspect House, Spencer Road,
     Lancing, West Sussex BN99 6DA

Shareholder Relations

To give us your feedback or if you have any questions, please contact:

 

  LOGO    privateshareholderrelations@barclays.com
     Shareholder Relations, Barclays PLC,
     1 Churchill Place, London E14 5HP

Share price

Information on the Barclays share price and other share price tools are available at:

 

  LOGO    Barclays.com/investorrelations

Barclays Stockbrokers

If you hold your shares in Barclays Sharestore, you are only able to deal through Barclays Stockbrokers:

 

  LOGO    www.sharestore.barclays.co.uk
     0845 777 7400** (in the UK)
     +44 141 352 3904** (from overseas)

If you have any general enquiries, please contact:

 

  LOGO   

0800 279 6551† (in the UK)

+44 141 352 3909** (from overseas)

This report is printed on paper made in the UK using FSC/PEFC certified fibre. The printer and manufacturing mill are both accredited with ISO14001 Environmental Management System Standards and both are FSC certified. The mill operates a low carbon energy policy in accordance with the Government Climate Change Levy, helping to reduce the carbon footprint of this document.

Registered office:

1 Churchill Place, London E14 5HP

Registered in England. Registered No: 48839

© Barclays Bank PLC 2014

9913280

Designed by Fishburn™

thisisfishburn.com

Photography by Philip Gatward

 

LOGO

 

 

Notes

* Calls cost 8p per minute plus network extras. Lines open 8.30am to 5.30pm Monday to Friday, excluding public holidays.

**Call costs may vary please check with your telecoms provider. Calls may be recorded to monitor the quality of our service, to check instructions and for security purposes. Lines open     8.30am to 5.30pm Monday to Friday.

Calls to 0800 numbers are free if made from a UK landline. Calls to 0141 numbers may vary – please check with your telecoms provider. Calls may be recorded so that we can monitor  the quality of our service and for security purposes. Our opening hours are 7.30am to 7pm Monday to Thursday, 7.30am to 6pm on Friday (excluding bank holidays) and 9.30am to  12.30pm on Saturday.


Table of Contents

 

 

LOGO  

Building the

‘Go-To’ bank

  LOGO   LOGO
     

Barclays PLC

 

Strategic Report 2013


Table of Contents

Barclays PLC >

Chairman’s letter

   The Strategic Report was approved by the Board of Directors on 3 March 2014 and signed on its behalf by the Chairman.

 

LOGO

Barclays is going through a major transition. Critical progress was made in 2013 in putting in place the foundations for sustainable long-term success. The journey is incomplete, with major cultural change well in train but still requiring time to be fully entrenched and, externally, a continuing unsettled economic and financial market environment, and a demanding and changing regulatory agenda.

We must focus not only on what we do but on how we do it, and we are committed to embedding a values-driven culture in Barclays. To deliver sustainable performance, we have to balance the needs of all our stakeholders across the short and long-term. You can read elsewhere in this Report how our values: Respect, Integrity, Service, Excellence and Stewardship, are being driven down into the organisation. In 2013 we introduced a balanced scorecard for Barclays which seeks to ensure that we are meeting the needs of all of our stakeholders by measuring performance against metrics in five key areas:

 

¡   Customer & Client
¡   Colleague
¡   Citizenship
¡   Conduct
¡   Company

We have set ourselves stretching but achievable goals in all of these areas which are designed to drive, and which are starting to deliver, mutually reinforcing outcomes. You can read more about the Balanced Scorecard in the following pages.

There has been understandable concern and criticism of the increase in the incentive pool in a year in which the bank’s profits were down. The immediate challenge for the Board Remuneration Committee and Board for 2013 was to find the right practical balance between the need to give shareholders a greater share of the income we generate, to bear down on costs, and to meet society’s expectations without eroding the long-term competitiveness of the Investment Bank, and thus damaging the interests of our shareholders. Whilst the conclusion reached was an extremely difficult one, we believe that it was the right decision for shareholders in the long term. Looking forward, we remain committed to achieving a compensation to adjusted net operating income ratio in the mid 30s over the medium term. There is more detail on this in the Summary remuneration report in the following pages.

There have been a number of changes to both the composition of the Board and to our governance structures during 2013. In particular, we created a new Board Conduct, Reputation and Operational Risk Committee to provide clear and dedicated focus on each of these major areas in complement to the role of the Board Financial Risk Committee. You can read more on these changes in my governance overview.

Elements in the global economic environment and prospects now seem more favourable than at the beginning of 2013, but financial markets face uncertainty created by structually lower economic growth over a prolonged period and an uncertain political outlook in many of the areas in which we operate. And, while substantial progress has been made in strengthening the balance sheet, further regulation in prospect, including in particular retail ring-fencing in the UK and rules to be put in place under the Dodd Frank legislation in the United States, and the emerging business environment, will inevitably call for rigorous review and adaptation of the mix and structure of the businesses of the Bank.

This year the Annual Report incorporates the Strategic Report in line with reporting requirements. The changes are intended to facilitate more effective communication with all our stakeholders, improve corporate accountability and to provide more concise and relevant narrative reports. These objectives are entirely in line with our aim to become more clear and transparent on our journey to be the ‘Go-To’ bank. We will continue to engage with stakeholders to identify ways in which we can further advance this agenda.

2014 will be a critical year for Barclays as we work toward meeting the needs and expectations of all our stakeholders in terms of both the business we do and how we do it. Your Board and the executive team led by Antony Jenkins are encouraged by what was accomplished in 2013 and are focused and determined to complete the Transform Programme, and we are confident of doing so.

 

LOGO

Sir David Walker

Chairman

 

 

Notes

The term ‘Barclays PLC Group’ or the ‘Group’ means Barclays PLC together with its subsidiaries and the term ‘Barclays Bank PLC Group’ means Barclays Bank PLC together with its subsidiaries. ‘Barclays’ and ‘Group’ are terms which are used to refer to either of the preceding groups when the subject matter is identical. The term ‘Company’, ‘Parent Company’ or ‘Parent’ refers to Barclays PLC and the term ‘Bank’ refers to Barclays Bank PLC. In this report, the abbreviations ‘£m’ and ‘£bn’ represent millions and thousands of millions of pounds sterling respectively; the abbreviations ‘$m’ and ‘$bn’ represent millions and thousands of millions of US Dollars respectively; ‘m’ and ‘bn’ represent millions and thousands of millions of euros respectively and ‘C$m’ and ‘C$bn’ represent millions and thousands of millions of Canadian dollars respectively.

Unless otherwise stated, the income statement analyses compare the 12 months to 31 December 2013 to the corresponding 12 months of 2012 and balance sheet comparisons, relate to the corresponding position at 31 December 2012. Unless otherwise stated, all disclosed figures relate to continuing operations. Relevant terms that are used in this document but are not defined under applicable regulatory guidance or International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) are explained in the glossary online at www.barclays.com/annualreport. A hard copy can be provided on request by contacting Barclays Investor Relations, Barclays PLC, 1 Churchill Place, London E14 5HP.

Adjusted profit before tax and adjusted performance measures have been presented to provide a more consistent basis for comparing business performance between periods. Adjusted profit before tax is defined in the online glossary at barclays.com/annualreport. Items excluded from the adjusted measures are: the impact of own credit; gains on debt buy-backs; impairment and disposal of the investment in BlackRock, Inc.; the provision for Payment Protection Insurance redress payments and claims management costs; the provision for interest rate hedging products redress and claims management costs; goodwill impairments; and gains and losses on acquisitions and disposals.

Forward-looking statements

This document contains certain forward-looking statements within the meaning of Section 21E of the US Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, and Section 27A of the US Securities Act of 1933, as amended, with respect to certain of the Group’s plans and its current goals and expectations relating to its future financial condition and performance. Barclays cautions readers that no forward-looking statement is a guarantee of future performance and that actual results could differ materially from those contained in the forward-looking statements. These forward-looking statements can be identified by the fact that they do not relate only to historical or current facts. Forward-looking statements sometimes use words such as “may”, “will”, “seek”, “continue”, “aim”, “anticipate”, “target”, “projected”, “expect”, “estimate”, “intend”, “plan”, “goal”, “believe”, “achieve” or other words of similar meaning. Examples of forward-looking statements include, among others, statements regarding the Group’s future

financial position, income growth, assets, impairment charges and provisions, business strategy, capital, leverage and other regulatory ratios, payment of dividends (including dividend pay-out ratios), projected levels of growth in the banking and financial markets, projected costs, original and revised commitments and targets in connection with the Transform Programme, deleveraging actions, estimates of capital expenditures and plans and objectives for future operations and other statements that are not historical fact. By their nature, forward-looking statements involve risk and uncertainty because they relate to future events and circumstances. These may be affected by changes in legislation, the development of standards and interpretations under International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS), evolving practices with regard to the interpretation and application of accounting and regulatory standards, the outcome of current and future legal proceedings and regulatory investigations, future levels of conduct provisions, the policies and actions of governmental and regulatory authorities, geopolitical risks and the impact of competition. In addition, factors including (but not limited to) the following may have an effect: capital, leverage and other regulatory rules (including with regard to the future structure of the Group) applicable to past, current and future periods; UK, United States, Africa, Eurozone and global macroeconomic and business conditions; the effects of continued volatility in credit markets; market related risks such as changes in interest rates and foreign exchange rates; effects of changes in valuation of credit market exposures; changes in valuation of issued securities; volatility in capital markets; changes in credit ratings of the Group; the potential for one or more countries exiting the Eurozone; the implementation of the Transform Programme; and the success of future acquisitions, disposals and other strategic transactions. A number of these influences and factors are beyond the Group’s control. As a result, the Group’s actual future results, dividend payments, and capital and leverage ratios may differ materially from the plans, goals, and expectations set forth in the Group’s forward-looking statements. Additional risks and factors are identified in our filings with the SEC including our Annual Report on Form 20-F for the fiscal year ended 31 December 2012, and in the Form 6-K (Film No. 131097818) dated 16 September 2013, both of which are available on the SEC’s website at http://www.sec.gov.

Any forward-looking statements made herein speak only as of the date they are made and it should not be assumed that they have been revised or updated in the light of new information or future events. Except as required by the Prudential Regulation Authority, the Financial Conduct Authority, the London Stock Exchange plc (LSE) or applicable law, Barclays expressly disclaims any obligation or undertaking to release publicly any updates or revisions to any forward-looking statements contained herein to reflect any change in Barclays’ expectations with regard thereto or any change in events, conditions or circumstances on which any such statement is based. The reader should, however, consult any additional disclosures that Barclays has made or may make in documents it has published or may publish via the Regulatory News Service of the LSE and/or has filed or may file with the SEC.

 


Table of Contents
  

 

 

LOGO   

 

‘We’ve made some changes to this year’s Strategic Report to give readers a clearer picture of how we operate, what our plans are and how they link to Barclays’ goal and purpose.’

 

In line with new regulatory reporting requirements and our commitment to transparent disclosures, this year’s Strategic Report gives greater information on the business model and strategy of the Group and its divisions.

  LOGO  

 

 

LOGO   

Corporate website

We maintain a corporate website at barclays.com containing a wide range of information of interest to institutional and private investors including:

 

¡   Latest news and press releases

¡  Annual reports and investor presentations

 

 

   LOGO   

 

 

See further content for the 2013 Annual Report online at barclays.com/annualreport

 

 

Status of the Strategic Report 2013

The Strategic Report 2013 is a part of the 2013 Annual Report and Accounts and does not contain sufficient information to allow as full an understanding of the results of the Group and the state of affairs of the Company or of the Group as would be provided by the full 2013 Annual Report and Accounts. Details on how to obtain a copy of the full 2013 Annual Report and Accounts can be found in the Shareholder enquiries section.

Report of the Auditor

The Auditor’s report on the full accounts for the year ended 31 December 2013 was unqualified, and their statement under section 496 (whether the Strategic Report and the Directors’ Report are consistent with the accounts) of the Companies Act 2006 was unqualified.

The Strategic Report

An overview of our 2013 performance, a focus on our new strategic direction, and a review of the businesses underpinning our strategy

 

Group overview      02   
Chief Executive’s strategic review      04   
Strategy and operating environment      06   
Business model/Value creation      08   
Balanced Scorecard      10   
Group Finance Director’s review      12   
Strategic risk overview      14   
UK Retail and Business Banking (UK RBB)      18   
Europe Retail and Business Banking (Europe RBB)      22   
Africa      26   
Barclaycard      30   
Investment Bank      34   
Corporate Banking      38   
Wealth and Investment Management      42   
Chairman’s governance overview      46   
Summary remuneration report      48   
Summary financial statements      52   

 

 

Shareholder information

Resources for shareholders including the Company articles of association, classes of shares and contact details for shareholder enquiries

 

Shareholder information      54   
Shareholder enquiries      56   
 

 

barclays.com/annualreport    Barclays PLC Strategic Report 2013 > 01


Table of Contents

Group overview

     

 

 

Barclays is a major global financial services provider engaged in personal banking, credit cards, corporate and investment banking, and wealth and investment management with an extensive international presence in Europe, the Americas, Africa and Asia.

 

With over 300 years of history and expertise in banking, Barclays operates in over 50 countries and employs approximately 140,000 people. Barclays moves, lends, invests and protects money for customers and clients worldwide.

   

 

Return on Equity

4.5%

Adjusted return on average shareholders’ equity decreased from 9.0% principally reflecting the decrease in profit before tax, a £440m write down of deferred tax assets and the £5.8bn equity raised from the rights issue

 

 

   

Dividends per share

6.5p

Full year dividend of 6.5p maintained at same level as 2012

 

 

Adjusted profit before tax

£5,167m

Down 32% due to costs to achieve Transform and a 4% reduction in income. Statutory profit before tax was up from £797m to £2,868m

 

   

Gross new lending to UK

£88bn

We provided £88bn of Funding for Lending eligible gross new lending to UK households and businesses in 2013

 

 

CRD IV fully loaded Common Equity Tier 1 Ratio

9.3%

Up from 8.4% in September 2013 principally due to the issuance of additional shares through the rights issue

 

   

 

Diverse employees

139,600

Of our 139,600 global workforce,

71,300 were female and 68,300 male

 

 

Key performance indicators (KPIs)

 

The KPIs presented below reflect the indicators management used during 2013 whilst transitioning to use of the Balance Scorecard (see page 10).     

Following the announcement of the Transform programme, a number of additional metrics have been monitored against the financial commitments made. These can be seen on page 13.

 

 

                 Statutory        Adjusted

 

   Measures         2013       2012      2011        2013       2012      2011  

 

    

 

Capital    Core Tier 1 ratio      13.2%       10.8%      11.0%                 
  

 

              
   Estimated PRA leverage ratioa      3.0%                          

 

              
                                   

 

    

 

Returns    Return on average shareholders’ equity (RoE)      1.0%       (1.2)%      5.9%        4.5%       9.0%      6.7%  
  

 

    

 

   Return on average tangible shareholders’ equity (RoTE)      1.2%       (1.4)%      7.1%        5.3%       10.6%      8.1%  
  

 

    

 

   Profit before tax      2,868       797      5,770        5,167       7,599      5,482  
  

 

    

 

   Cost: income ratio      79%       84%      65%        71%       63%      68%  
  

 

    

 

   Loan loss rate      64bps       70bps      77bps                 
  

 

              
   Dividend per share      6.5p       6.5p      6.0p                 

 

    

 

Income    Total income        27,935         25,009        32,292            28,155         29,361        28,513  
  

 

    

 

growth    Income by geography: UK      11,461       7,461      15,819        11,681       12,040      11,981  
  

 

    

 

                                         Europe      4,019       4,457      4,207        4,019       4,457      4,207  
  

 

    

 

                                         Americas      7,034       7,554      6,025        7,034       7,327      6,083  
  

 

    

 

                                         Africa and Middle East      4,137       4,472      4,967        4,137       4,472      4,967  
  

 

    

 

                                         Asia      1,284       1,065      1,274        1,284       1,065      1,274  
  

 

    

 

                         

 

    
Citizenship    Gross new lending to UK households and businessesb      £88bn       £44bn      £45bn       
  

 

    
   Global investment in our communities      £72m       £64.5m      £63.5m       
  

 

    
   Colleagues involved in volunteering, regular giving and fundraising initiatives      71,000       68,000      70,000       
  

 

    
   Group Employee Opinion Survey (EOS) – Proud to be Barclaysc           78%      81%       
  

 

    
   Percentage of senior managers who are femaled      23%       22%      21%       

 

    

 

Notes

a   In 2013, the adjusted gross leverage metric was superseded by the estimated PRA leverage ratio as the primary leverage measure used by management.

     Refer to barclays.com/annualreport for further details.

b   In 2013, we tracked Funding for Lending Scheme eligible gross new lending, a new measure introduced in June 2012.

c   In 2013, the EOS was not undertaken, having been superseded by the Sustained engagement of colleagues score in the Balanced Scorecard.

d   Based upon percentage of females in the Director corporate grade.

 

    

 

02 > Barclays PLC Strategic Report 2013    barclays.com/annualreport


Table of Contents

 

        
  Group overview   02       

The Group overview provides a view on how Barclays is segmented and reported, the services the businesses provide, and the performance of the Group as a whole.

  Chief Executive’s strategic review   04       
  Strategy and operating environment   06       
  Business model/Value creation   08       
  Balanced Scorecard   10       
  Group Finance Director’s review   12       
  Strategic risk overview   14       
  Performance review by division   18       
  Chairman’s governance overview   46       
  Summary remuneration report   48       
  Summary financial statements   52       
  Shareholder information   54       
        
 

 

LOGO

 

Barclays banking and financial service businesses work together to provide customers and clients the best offerings across our chosen markets.

UK Retail and Business Banking (UK RBB)

£4,523m

A leading UK high street bank providing retail banking services and general insurance to individuals and business banking services to small and medium enterprises (SMEs)

Europe Retail and Business Banking (Europe RBB)

£666m

A local presence for Barclays customers in Spain, Italy, Portugal and France, providing retail banking services to mass affluent individuals and business banking services to SMEs

Africa Retail and Business Banking (Africa RBB)

£2,617m

A leading pan-African retail and business bank serving customers and clients in 12 countries with a range of banking and bancassurance solutions

Barclaycard

£4,786m

A leading international payments business, offering payments and lending to individuals, and a range of business services including card issuing and payment acceptance services

Investment Bank

£10,733m

A global investment bank serving large corporate clients, financial institutions, governments and institutional investors with financial advisory, capital-raising, financing and risk management services

Corporate Banking

£3,115m

A leading provider of cash management, lending and trade financing to corporate clients in the UK and South Africa, and global businesses, financial institutions and international organisations

Wealth and Investment Management

£1,839m

A leading global wealth manager and advisor, providing private and intermediary clients with international and private banking, investment management, fiduciary services and brokerage

 

   LOGO   

 

 

 

More information on performance can be found online at barclays.com/annualreport

 

 

 

barclays.com/annualreport    Barclays PLC Strategic Report 2013 > 03


Table of Contents
Chief Executive’s strategic review   

 

 

LOGO

 

LOGO   

‘We have made good progress in 2013 and we start 2014 in a better position than for several years. While recognising there is much more to do, we have every reason to feel positive about our prospects and confident that we will become the ‘Go-To’ bank for all our stakeholders.’

  LOGO  

2013 has been a year of significant change for Barclays. A year ago we set out the outcome of our strategic review and our Transform plan to make Barclays the ‘Go-To’ bank for all our stakeholders. We continue to take steps to de-risk the business, strengthen the balance sheet, increase the efficiency of our operations and are making good progress against our plan.

Our 2013 results clearly demonstrate the benefits of the diversity we enjoy in the Group, as well as the strength of our core franchises. While impacted by the restructuring and de-risking activity, underlying business performance has been resilient, with adjusted income of £28.2bn and adjusted profit before tax of £5.2bn. Our core franchises remain strong, with UK Retail and Business Banking, Barclaycard, UK Corporate Banking, and within the Investment Bank our Equities and Investment Banking businesses all delivering good performances in 2013. Important progress has also been made in repositioning our African, European and Wealth businesses, although further work is required to get returns to acceptable levels. Our Fixed Income, Currency and Commodities business in the Investment Bank saw revenues fall, in line with our European peers, as market conditions remained subdued.

We are making good headway across the financial commitments we set out as part of our Transform plan as well as on de-leveraging to meet the PRA’s revised target. I am pleased by our progress on RWAs and leverage. We have been able to move more quickly than anticipated in managing down CRD IV RWAs, bringing us a little below our Transform target well ahead of the 2015 timeline. Through rigorous analysis and focus, we have also virtually achieved the PRA leverage target six months in advance of the June 2014 deadline.

We have invested considerably in transforming our businesses. In the months ahead we expect to see the benefits of this coming through. We narrowly missed our cost guidance for 2013, largely due to a £331m increase at year-end in certain litigation provisions, but the true operating performance of Barclays was on track. Costs are a key area of focus for us and we remain committed to our 2015 Transform cost target of £16.8bn. Compensation for key talent is one area that we were prepared to invest in strategically. Our aim is to deliver a greater share of the income we generate to shareholders while remaining competitive on pay. Although profits for 2013 were down, the 38% reduction in incentives in the previous two years had begun to cause demonstrable damage to our business through increased attrition, with a near doubling of resignations of senior staff in the US for example. We concluded that a 2013 incentive pool of £2,378m was appropriate. Whilst this is up 10% on the final 2012 incentive pool, before adjustment for risk and conduct events it is down 18% on 2012 and remains 32% below the pool level in 2010 when we started to reposition Barclays’ remuneration. This was a difficult decision, but the right one for the long term interest of our shareholders.

We have also made progress against the two non-financial commitments we made last February. The first of these, culture change, and in particular the process of embedding our Purpose and Values throughout the organisation, is going well. Every colleague has completed a mandatory training programme, and we have integrated our Purpose and Values into the day to day management processes of the Bank. We have developed and published our new Code of Conduct which every colleague must abide by and attest to annually.

 

 

04 > Barclays PLC Strategic Report 2013    barclays.com/annualreport


Table of Contents
       
  Group overview   02      

The role of the Group Chief Executive includes implementing the Group’s strategy as agreed by the Board. Here Antony provides his view on the events of 2013, and a progress update on execution of the Transform plan.

  Chief Executive’s strategic review   04      
  Strategy and operating environment   06      
  Business model/Value creation   08      
  Balanced Scorecard   10      
  Group Finance Director’s review   12      
  Strategic risk overview   14      
  Performance review by division   18      
  Chairman’s governance overview   46      
  Summary remuneration report   48      
  Summary financial statements   52      
  Shareholder information   54      
       
 

 

The recent publication of our Balanced Scorecard for the Group addressed the second non-financial commitment we made, establishing the critical final component in our leadership framework. The Balanced Scorecard sets out a clear description of what we want Barclays to be, with eight clear targets out to 2018 against which our progress can be assessed by all of our stakeholders. The scorecard, alongside our Purpose and Values, is now embedded in how we measure and reward individual and business performance. This is a unique and powerful tool that aligns the organisation behind our Transform goals.

We begin 2014 in a better position than for several years. 2013 showed the tremendous value of the breadth and diversity of Barclays’ earnings profile, and we have seen continued evidence of the strong fundamentals which are essential for longer term growth. We have started to put our legacy issues behind us, and have greater clarity on what the future holds, particularly in terms of regulation. With my leadership team in place and building on the progress we have made on our Transform programme in 2013, we will continue to adapt and optimise our business, reaping the substantive benefits of our work in 2014, 2015 and beyond.

While we have much more to do and we expect the operating environment to remain challenging, we have every reason to feel positive about our prospects and confident that we will become the ‘Go-To’ bank for all our stakeholders.

 

LOGO

Antony Jenkins

Group Chief Executive

 

 

LOGO

 

barclays.com/annualreport    Barclays PLC Strategic Report 2013 > 05


Table of Contents
Strategy and operating environment   

 

 

LOGO   

‘We will not be able to generate sustainable returns over the long term unless we act at all times with good values.’

  LOGO

The landscape for banks has fundamentally changed and will continue to evolve in the coming years. We believe these changes are not cyclical but represent a structural shift. Our Transform programme, launched in 2013, will reshape Barclays to generate sustainable returns and to meet the needs of all of our stakeholders.

Market and operating environment

Barclays is a global financial services provider with our home markets in UK, US, and South Africa, and distribution and operations in a further 47 countries.

Banks are invariably exposed to the economies and markets in which they operate. This exposure ranges from mortgage lending (dependent on the ability of borrowers to repay and house price valuations) to corporate advisory (which may reflect business confidence in the economy). Prior to the financial crisis, global growth was supportive with banks well-positioned to benefit from their exposure to the upward trajectory of the global economy.

Global economic growth has faltered in recent years. This has prompted unprecedented monetary policies across central banks, for example quantitative easing and near zero interest rates. This policy response has, in turn, posed new challenges for banks such as compressed interest margins.

While global economic growth remained below the long-term trend in 2013, we saw improved consumer confidence and business sentiment in both the UK and US. Even with these grass root recoveries emerging in two of our home markets, we remain cognisant that global economic growth is expected to be subdued for a prolonged period.

Financial regulatory frameworks are evolving, as global regulators continue to respond to the issues that emerged during the financial crisis. It is clear that intensive and intrusive regulation is here to stay. Prudential reforms ranging from the UK Banking Reform Act to the US Dodd Frank Act are fundamentally changing the way that banks manage their capital, liquidity and risk.

A further challenge to the banking industry, and indeed to Barclays, in recent years is one of poor conduct, damaging our reputation and causing a loss of trust amongst our customers, clients and stakeholders. We recognise the importance of rebuilding trust in Barclays as well as meeting, and bettering, the developing needs of our customers and clients.

 

 

LOGO

 

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Table of Contents
       
  Group overview   02      

It is important that we understand the conditions in which we operate in order to run the company effectively.

 

In this section we aim to highlight some of the major external factors affecting Barclays and how we aim to address these factors through our strategy.

  Chief Executive’s strategic review   04      
  Strategy and operating environment   06      
  Business model/Value creation   08      
  Balanced Scorecard   10      
  Group Finance Director’s review   12      
  Strategic risk overview   14      
  Performance review by division   18      
  Chairman’s governance overview   46      
  Summary remuneration report   48      
  Summary financial statements   52      
  Shareholder information   54      
       
 

 

Barclays’ sustainable success will be assured by becoming the ‘Go-To’ bank for all of our stakeholders. If we understand their needs and priorities and ensure that these are at the heart of our decision-making, we will be able to build a bank which is lower-risk, more predictable and higher-performing.

The strategic response

In 2013, we launched the Transform programme to deliver the recommendations of the Strategic Review. Transform is the plan that will help Barclays become the ‘Go-To’ bank. It has three overall goals: Turnaround, Return Acceptable Numbers, Sustain FORward Momentum.

Turnaround the business

Turnaround was the immediate task of stabilising the business and maintaining momentum. In the second half of 2012, we delivered our new goal, purpose, and values to unite Barclays with a shared sense of direction – how we will do business.

We have put in place a new Executive team which is focused on delivery. The vast majority of our 139,600 colleagues have participated in workshops and training in Barclays’ values. To cement our cultural change, a guide for behaviour – The Barclays Way – has been published internally and externally.

Return Acceptable Numbers

In 2013, we turned our attention towards the longer-term transformation of Barclays. For our Return Acceptable Numbers phase, we are de-risking and de-leveraging the business to make it more sustainable for the long term.

We committed to consolidate to core lines of business, to generate £1.7bn of cost savings by 2015, to lower our RWAs, funding and liquidity, and to reach a Core Tier 1 capital ratio of 10.5%. See page 13 for further details on the Transform financial commitments.

In 2013, we:

 

¡   Completed a £5.8bn rights issue in October

 

¡   Issued £2.1bn of CRDIV and PRA-qualifying Additional Tier 1 (AT1) capital

 

¡   Reduced CRDIV leverage exposure by £196bn in H2 2013 to £1,363bn, of which an estimated £55bn related to foreign exchange

 

¡   Drove improvements in our loan-to-deposit ratio (to 101% at December 2013)

Additionally, we reduced legacy assets in our Exit Quadrant portfolios by £40bn through Investment Bank legacy asset reductions of £17bn and derivative efficiencies of £23bn.

Sustain Forward Momentum

Our journey to ‘Go-To’ depends on continuing to adapt Barclays for the future and ensuring that we do not return to a short-term bias as we execute our plans. In order to Sustain FORward Momentum, we have also set in place longer-term markers in four critical areas: Culture, Rewards, Control and Cost.

The Board-commissioned Salz Review also prompted us to review our conduct. We are committed to being open and transparent and to regaining the trust of all of Barclays’ stakeholders. We have integrated our necessary behavioural transformation into our Transform programme. Full details on our response to the Salz Review can be found online at barclays.com/annualreport

A strong culture is the first line of defence against repeating the mistakes of the past. To unite around Barclays’ Values and Behaviours, we published ‘The Barclays Way’ to govern our way of working across our business globally. Colleagues are essential to embedding our Purpose and Values and, in 2013, all colleagues attended Values and Behaviours engagement sessions.

Reward and incentivisation is a critical enabler of behavioural change. As of 2014, colleague performance will be measured and rewarded not only on ‘what’ an employee delivers but also ‘how’ they achieve their objectives. As such, remuneration will align with Barclays’ Purpose, Values and Behaviours as well as the Group Balanced Scorecard.

As of February 2013 control functions now have solid reporting lines into the Group CEO rather than business heads to avoid conflict of interest.

The Remuneration Committee will embed aggregate and individual incentive risk adjustments with additional Compliance and Risk input. Furthermore, our principal risk framework has been enhanced with the inclusion of conduct risk and reputation risk and a revised Enterprise-Wide Risk Committee will ensure adequate Board oversight.

To address the cost challenge, we have focused on creating the right level of financial analytics and on improving operational efficiencies. The key elements of our cost programme are right-sizing our businesses, industrialising handling of customer transactions and queries, and adopting innovative technology and automated processing.

Focus of efforts in 2014

In 2014, we will continue to build on the progress made in 2013. We will focus on delivering on our financial commitments and expect to see the benefits of our 2013 work on cost begin to crystallise.

We aim to respond positively to the evolving regulatory landscape. We have sought to constructively engage our regulators and improve our regulatory and public disclosures in order to improve transparency and consistency with society’s expectations.

The new regulatory and emerging business environment will inevitably call for continued rigorous review and adaption of the mix and structure of the businesses of the Bank to ensure we generate sustainable returns.

However, care needs to be taken to ensure that regulation does not go too far. A healthy banking sector ensuring returns above the cost of equity is essential to economic growth. Vibrant economies need vibrant banks. It is therefore important to ensure that the rightly-increased focus by the regulator on conduct supervision does not inadvertently result in the withdrawal of services and the restriction of choice.

Another key focus over 2013 and the coming years is rebuilding the trust that customers, clients, and stakeholders have in our organisation. We have pledged to increase transparency and conduct our business in the right way, as set out in our values.

We need to better respond to the current needs and anticipate the future demands of our customers and clients. As they become increasingly technology savvy we have worked to embed technology across our product offering. This ranges from payment innovations such as PingIt to expanding our Investment Bank’s electronic trading platform BARX.

 

 

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Table of Contents

Business model/Value creation

 

 

LOGO   

 

‘Our customers and clients are at the centre of our goal and purpose.’

  LOGO

Barclays is a globally diversified, universal bank – that is, we offer an integrated set of products and services across retail banking, wealth management, commercial and investment banking serving individuals, corporations, institutions, and governments.

 

 

LOGO

 

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Table of Contents
       
  Group overview   02       Our business model is the mechanism for delivering our social purpose. As such, in this section, we outline how the Group delivers services to our customers, how we make money on those services, and how our model and approach differs from our competitors.
  Chief Executive’s strategic review   04      
  Strategy and operating environment   06      
  Business model/Value creation   08      
  Balanced Scorecard   10      
  Group Finance Director’s review   12      
  Strategic risk overview   14      
  Performance review by division   18      
  Chairman’s governance overview   46      
  Summary remuneration report   48      
  Summary financial statements   52      
  Shareholder information   54      
       
 

 

Our business model

Barclays seeks to satisfy the needs of our customers and clients by offering a rounded value proposition – a full range of products and services – and thereby, we aim to achieve a smoother income stream and sustainable returns.

Barclays’ competitive advantage is created by the scale and diversity of our businesses and the quality, character and relationships of our people.

Our Retail and Business Banking businesses operate through a regional model, focusing on delivering targeted solutions to individuals and small businesses. We operate retail banks in UK (UK RBB), Africa (Africa RBB), and Europe (Europe RBB).

Barclaycard Investment Bank, Corporate Banking and Wealth and Investment Management operate in global models, leveraging their offerings to provide comprehensive solutions across borders.

We are increasingly operating a shared service model for Central Functions. Improved ‘functionalisation’ has allowed us to take advantage of synergies through the sharing of ideas and collaboration from cross-functional working groups.

The sum of the parts

Our business model enables us to maintain relevance to our customers and clients, whatever stage of life they are in. For example, this means being ready to help business owners launch a business, fund its growth, expand internationally, and protect against currency risk. For individuals, our model can provide a safe place to store savings, help a first-time buyer make their first steps onto the property ladder, create an investment portfolio as wealth grows, or provide cross-border advice for the affluent.

We seek to add value to our clients through our end-to-end network, for example an individual retail customer in the UK is able to access current and savings account balances along with Barclaycard data all on the same mobile banking app. Pingit, our peer to peer payments service, is seamlessly integrated within our retail banking offering, a further example of this joined up approach to the way we do business.

Our international reach and scale means we have the responsibility, indeed obligation following our designation as a Global Systemically Important Financial Institution, to work together with our regulators to de-risk the industry and provide a more sustainable banking landscape over the long term. We are actively engaging with UK, EU, and US banking supervisors to develop a new model for the industry and to ensure our business is sustainable and flexible – ready for the future.

 

 

LOGO

 

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Table of Contents

Balanced Scorecard

 

 

LOGO   

 

‘The Balanced Scorecard is the final crucial piece of our plan – alongside our Purpose and Values – to embed the right culture in our business and become the ‘Go-To’ bank’

  LOGO

The Balanced Scorecard sets out eight specific commitments across our 5Cs (Customer & Client, Colleague, Citizenship, Conduct and Company) and defines what need to achieve over the next five years to be well on the way to becoming the ‘Go-To’ bank.

We are committed to monitoring and reporting on our progress annually so that stakeholders can hold us to account. The Balanced Scorecard is supported by strategic initiatives that will drive progress across the 5Cs.

The Balanced Scorecard gives clear strategic context for our colleagues around what becoming the ‘Go-To’ bank will look like and lays out Barclays’ priorities. The Barclays Balanced Scorecard is cascaded into business unit and function scorecards. Together, these provide line of sight to employees to our organisational goal. They also provide a framework and starting point for all employees when they set their individual performance objectives across the 5Cs.

 

 

   LOGO   

 

 

For more detailed information on the Balanced Scorecard, please see barclays.com/balancedscorecard

 

 

 

LOGO

 

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Table of Contents

 

 

           
     Group overview   02       

The Balanced Scorecard defines what we need to achieve over the next five years to be well on the way to becoming the ‘Go-To’ bank. It clearly shows what success looks like across the 5Cs: Customer & Client, Colleague, Citizenship, Conduct, and Company.

     Chief Executive’s strategic review   04       
     Strategy and operating environment   06       
     Business model/Value creation   08       
     Balanced Scorecard   10       
     Group Finance Director’s review   12       
     Strategic risk overview   14       
     Performance review by division   18       
     Chairman’s governance overview   46       
     Summary remuneration report   48       
     Summary financial statements   52       
     Shareholder information   54       
           

 

   

Metrics and targets

 

   
 

We have agreed eight key measures against which we and our stakeholders can hold us to account. We are committed to monitoring and reporting on our progress annually.

 

 
 

 

 
            Metric   Actual 2013   Target 2018    
 

 

 
 

 

LOGO

  Customer & Client    

 

RBB, Barclaycard and W&IM: Weighted average ranking of Relationship Net Promoter Score®a vs. peer sets

 

 

 

4th

 

 

1st

 
     

 

 
     

CIB Client Franchise Rank: Weighted average ranking of wallet share or customer satisfaction with priority clients

 

  4th   Top 3  
 

 

 
 

 

LOGO

 

  Colleague  

 

Sustained engagement of colleagues score

 

 

 

74%

 

 

 

87-91%

 

 
     

 

 
     

% women in senior leadershipb

 

 

21%

 

 

26%

 

 
 

 

 
 

LOGO

   

 

Citizenship Plan – initiatives on track or ahead

  10/11   Plan Targets  
    Citizenship          
 

 

 
 

LOGO

 

   

 

Conduct Reputation (YouGov survey)

  5.2/10   6.5/10  
   

Conduct

 

         
 

 

 
 

 

LOGO

  Company   Return on Equity (Adjusted)   4.5%   > Cost of equity      
     

 

 
     

 

Fully Loaded CRD IV CET1 ratio

 

 

9.3%

 

 

>10.5%

 

 
 

 

 
  LOGO   For further information on Balanced Scorecard Methodology and Data Sources please visit barclays.com/balanced scorecard and see the ‘Metrics and targets’ page  
    A detailed view of performance against Citizenship Plan targets is available in the Citizenship Report 2013 at barclays.com/citizenshipreport  
 

Delivering our strategic targets: Example Strategic initiatives

 

 
 

Here are some examples of strategic initiatives that will drive progress across the 5Cs and support our goal to become the ‘Go-To’ bank.

 

 
 

 

 
  LOGO   Customer & Client    

 

n

 

 

We are using technology to improve our customers’ and clients’ experience and to be responsive to their changing needs, such as through Barclays Mobile Banking, BARX, PayTag and Barclays.Net

 
     

 

n

 

 

We are making our most important customer and client interactions as simple and instant as possible – putting power in their hands to transact when, where and how they want to

 
      n  

We are simplifying our products and services and improving what we offer to match customer needs with the right service model

 

 
 

 

 
  LOGO   Colleague   n   We have launched our Purpose and Values, and we are embedding them into all our HR processes including recruitment, promotion and performance management  
      n   We are developing and training leaders through the Barclays Leadership Academy and Barclays Global Curriculum  
      n  

We are driving a consistent global diversity and inclusion plan resulting in a more visibly diverse talent pipeline

 

 
 

 

 
 

 

LOGO

  Citizenship   n   We are ensuring the way we do business reflects broader societal and environmental considerations  
      n   We are contributing to growth through financing, supporting businesses and ensuring our products and services support sustainable progress  
      n  

We are supporting the communities where we operate by helping five million young people to develop enterprise, employability and financial skills

 

 
 

 

 
 

 

LOGO

  Conduct   n   We are following a rigorous and transparent framework on conduct risk reporting and management  
      n   We are using material conduct risk assessments to effectively identify, assess and manage conduct risk  
      n  

We are exercising sound judgements to avoid detriment to customers, clients and counterparties or to market integrity

 

 
 

 

 
 

 

LOGO

  Company   n   We are delivering the initiatives across the strategic quadrants: Invest and grow, Reposition, Transition, and Exit  
      n   We are managing costs (rightsizing, industrializing, innovating) and delivering our leverage and capital commitments  
      n  

We are improving our controls through the roll-out of “The Barclays Guide”, which covers how we organise, manage and govern ourselves and includes a new risk management framework

 

 
 

 

 
  Notes  
 

a   Net Promoter, Net Promoter Score, and NPS are trademarks of Satmetrix Systems, Inc., Bain & Company, Inc., and Fred Reichheld.

 

b   Senior leadership represents the Managing Director and Director corporate grades combined, a population of over 8,000 employees. Under the Companies Act 2006 we are also required to report on the gender breakdown of our ‘senior managers’. For this purpose, we have 988 senior managers (179 female and 809 male) who include Officers of the Group, certain direct reports of the Chief Executive, heads of major business units, senior Managing Directors, and directors on the boards of subsidiary undertakings of the Company.

 

 

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Table of Contents
Group Finance Director’s review  

 

 

 

LOGO

 

LOGO

 

‘We have made quick progress on leverage, but focusing on balance sheet optimisation for sustainable returns is now the priority going forward.’

 

LOGO

Reflecting on the 2013 financial results for Barclays, I believe progress has been made and momentum is building around the Transform Programme. This was the first year of the Programme, which necessitated a substantial investment in future cost reduction and repositioning of our balance sheet and capital base.

Financial review

Overview

Within the results, there are two areas that I felt were particularly noteworthy. First, the breadth and diversity of income in the Group, underpinned by our traditional consumer and commercial banking franchises. Similarly, within the Investment Bank, growth in Equities and Investment Banking income provided an offset to the market-led weakness in certain FICC businesses. Second, demonstration of strong financial fundamentals across funding and liquidity, capital, credit risk management and margins should stand the bank in good stead for generating sustainable returns going forward.

Income statement review

2013 profits were impacted by £1.2bn of costs to achieve Transform which drove a 32% reduction in adjusted profit before tax to £5.2bn, while statutory profit before tax improved from £0.8bn to £2.9bn due to a significant reduction in the own credit charge.

Adjusted income was down 4% to £28.2bn reflecting reductions in Investment Bank FICC, partially offset by impressive performances in Investment Bank Equities and Investment Banking and growth in UK RBB, Barclaycard and Corporate.

Impairment charges improved 8% to £3.1bn reflecting lower impairments in the wholesale businesses, with increases in UK RBB and Barclaycard due to business growth and non-recurrence of prior year releases.

Adjusted operating expenses increased £1.3bn to £19.9bn reflecting £1.2bn of costs to achieve Transform, £220m provisions for litigation and regulatory penalties in Q413 in the Investment Bank, mainly relating to the US residential mortgage-related business and UK bank levy of £504m (2012: £345m). The Group’s cost target for 2015 remains at £16.8bn excluding costs to achieve Transform.

I am pleased by the strong results in UK RBB, Barclaycard and Corporate Banking, whilst noting 2013 was a tough year for Investment Bank income. Moreover, following restructuring and de-risking activity we completed during the year, Europe RBB, Africa RBB and Wealth and Investment Management now have clear paths to shareholder value creation in the medium term. Importantly, the resilience of the underlying customer and client franchises across the Group allowed us to maintain dividends of 6.5p per share for full year 2013 despite a 25% increase in the total number of shares following the rights issue.

Balance sheet review

In October, I began conducting a detailed balance sheet review, specifically focused on meeting leverage ratio requirements as a priority. We have made strong and quick progress on this. Our Prudential Regulation Authority (PRA) leverage exposure reduced by nearly £200bn from June 2013 which, combined with the £5.8bn rights issue and issuance of £2.1bn of AT1 securities, strengthened our PRA leverage ratio to just under 3%. Our focus on Risk Weighted Asset (RWA) management continued throughout the year, resulting in a 7%, or over £30bn, reduction in CRD IV RWAs. Looking ahead, the balance sheet review will continue but with increased focus on optimising the balance sheet, considering both risk weights and leverage, in order to generate improved returns.

Tushar Morzaria

Group Finance Director

 

 

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Table of Contents

 

           
     Group overview   02       

The Group Finance Director is responsible for monitoring the Bank’s financial performance and position and communicating this to both internal and external stakeholders. Below he discusses the Bank’s performance during 2013 and its year end position as at 31 December 2013.

     Chief Executive’s strategic review   04       
     Strategy and operating environment   06       
     Business model/Value creation   08       
     Balanced Scorecard   10       
     Group Finance Director’s review   12       
     Strategic risk overview   14       
     Performance review by division   18       
     Chairman’s governance overview   46       
     Summary remuneration report   48       
     Summary financial statements   52       
     Shareholder information   54       
           

 

LOGO

 

What are the main financial issues in the year, and implications for the business?

 

What happened:

On 20 June 2013 the PRA announced the results of its review of capital adequacy of major UK banks and building societies. As part of its review, the PRA introduced a 3% Leverage Ratio target to be achieved by 30 June 2014. As at 30 June 2013, Barclays’ PRA Leverage Ratio was 2.2%, representing a capital gap of £12.8bn.

Actions taken:

In order to achieve the PRA’s 3% Leverage Ratio target by June 2014, we announced a series of actions including an underwritten rights issue, measures to reduce Barclays’ CRD IV leverage exposure, and the continued execution of Barclays’ capital plan with the issuance of CRD IV and PRA qualifying AT1 securities. In the second half of 2013, we increased our PRA Leverage Ratio from 2.2% to just shy of the 3.0% requirement through these actions.

A significant proportion of the capital gap was reduced through completion of a one for four rights issue which raised £5.8bn of capital for the Group. The rights issue completed on 4 October 2013 and, with a 94.63% acceptance rate of shareholder rights, we welcome the strong support shown by shareholders during what was a challenging period.

Through management actions we were also able to reduce the Group’s CRD IV leverage exposure by nearly £200bn to £1,363bn. This was achieved through de-risking the business via actions such as improving legal netting agreements on derivatives and reducing low returning Exit Quadrant assets.

A highlight of 2013 was Barclays’ issuance of £2.1bn equivalent of benchmark Euro and US Dollar AT1 securities. This represented the targeted issuance for the PRA leverage plan, and constitutes a key step in transitioning our capital base towards future regulatory capital requirements.

Outlook:

As a result of these actions, Barclays is now in a much stronger capital position and this has allowed us to increase the dividend payout ratio target from 30% to 40-50%, with a 40% payout ratio expected in 2014 to allow focus on capital accretion.

We remain committed to structurally reducing the cost base of the Group and we have reaffirmed our £16.8bn cost target with a mid-50s cost: income ratio for full year 2015. We will also continue to closely manage RWAs through rundown of the low returning Exit Quadrant and other balance sheet optimisation, and we target Group RWAs of £440bn by year-end 2015.

Regulation remains a key variable and, while we have gained clarity in certain areas, there remain a number of outstanding items which we will continue to anticipate as best we can. In particular, the Transform targets will allow us to achieve a fully loaded CRD IV Common Equity Tier (CET) 1 ratio of greater than 10.5% in 2015 with a fully loaded CRD IV leverage ratio of 3.5% by year-end 2015 with 3.5-4% targeted thereafter.

2014 will likely be another year of transition, with greater focus on balance sheet optimisation, particularly in the Investment Bank, combined with strict cost control in order to generate higher and more sustainable returns in the future. Ultimately, increasing the Group’s RoE will help to reduce the market valuation discount and increase total shareholder returns.

 

 

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Table of Contents

Strategic risk overview

 

 

LOGO

 

LOGO

  

‘Although economic and market conditions remained challenging in 2013, our credit and market risk portfolios have continued to perform well’

  

LOGO

Maintaining our risk profile at an acceptable and appropriate level is essential to ensure our continued performance. Barclays constantly reviews its exposures in a number of areas including asset quality, industry and geography.

2013 performance

While the economic environment in Barclays’ main areas of business was marked by generally weak growth in 2013, the loan impairment charges reduced by 7% with the loan loss rate finishing the year 6bp lower at 64bps. The loan impairment charge for wholesale decreased by 27% principally reflecting a reduction in Corporate Banking due to lower exposure to the Spanish property and construction sector and lower charges in the UK. Impairment increased by 4% in retail mainly in UK RBB and Barclaycard as the two businesses grew and expanded their business portfolios and from the non-recurrence of releases in 2012.

Market risk remains at moderate levels and the daily value at risk reduced in 2013 from a combination of risk reduction and improved market conditions, notably, tightening of credit spreads.

The operational risk profile remained broadly steady while conduct risk relating to legacy issues was evidenced by additional provisions for PPI and interest rate hedging product redress.

Our funding profile continued to strengthen during 2013 as reliance on wholesale funding reduced as the loan to deposit ratio decreased to 101%. The Group’s capital position was enhanced through the £5.8bn rights issue and £2.1bn AT1 securities as action was taken to move toward regulatory capital and leverage targets.

Risk was realigned in 2013 through two main programmes:

Transform Programme

Under Transform, the risk profiles of businesses were adjusted as they were aligned with their revised strategies to meet the goal of becoming the ‘Go-To’ bank. This included a lowering of risk in Corporate Banking as Exit Quadrant assets were reduced in 2013. In Europe RBB, the risk profile is in line with the change of focus to mortgage lending and small business customers through its Premier proposition. The risk profile in Barclaycard remained broadly stable with growth within appetite and in line with ongoing strategy of recruiting quality prime customers, combined with a controlled testing into other open market areas of business.

Revised Risk Management Structure

In 2013, the Group also introduced the Enterprise Risk Management Framework (ERMF), which sets out a framework and approach that is applicable to the whole bank, all colleagues and to all types of risk. To strengthen the governance relating to conduct and reputation matters Conduct risk and Reputation risk were re-categorised as Principal Risks in 2013 with Executive Committee sponsorship from the Principal Risk Owner, the Head of Compliance. The Board Enterprise Wide Risk Committee was also created in 2013. It recommends to the Board the Group’s overall risk appetite as well as evaluating and reporting details of the Group’s overall risk profile and risk monitoring.

 

 

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Table of Contents

 

          
    Group overview   02        In this section the Group Chief Risk Office gives a summary of key changes in Principal Risks during 2013.
    Chief Executive’s strategic review   04       
    Strategy and operating environment   06       
    Business model/Value creation   08       
    Balanced Scorecard   10       
    Group Finance Director’s review   12       
    Strategic risk overview   14       
    Performance review by division   18       
    Chairman’s governance overview   46       
    Summary remuneration report   48       
    Summary financial statements   52       
    Shareholder information   54       
          

 

Key influences on risk in 2013

In 2013, a number of risks were considered and dealt with in order to minimise impact on the Group’s performance and ability to meet its goals and priorities. These included, but were not limited to:

 

¡   Uncertain economic environment, including GDP growth, inflation, property values and unemployment

 

¡   Political uncertainty in a number of countries which could have adversely impacted the Group’s retail and institutional customers

 

¡   The risk of a Eurozone crisis whereby a sovereign may default and exit from the Eurozone. While this receded somewhat during 2013 it could have resulted in losses to the Group through, for example, redomination risk

 

¡   Changes in both the level and volatility of prices, for example, interest rates, credit spreads, commodity prices, equity prices and foreign exchange rates, which could impact earnings or capital

 

¡   Potential operational risk of service disruption to customers as a result of failed systems or human errors, or increasing threat from cyber-attacks and breaches of security, with adverse effects on the Group’s reputation, operations and financial condition

 

¡   Increased levels of legal proceedings in jurisdictions where it operates, and changing legal and regulatory environments, which could lead to fines, public reprimands and damage to reputation

 

¡   Changing and uncertain regulatory environment

Risk and business strategy

The risk function plays a significant role in review and challenge of risks inherent within business plans and strategy by verifying that they fall within financial volatility risk appetite and incur a level of risk that is individually and in aggregate acceptable to the Board, or be modified accordingly. The Group-wide stress testing process is similarly linked to the medium term planning process and also supports strategic planning and capital adequacy. Barclays manages human rights risk via our environmental and social risk procedures and guidance and our reputational risk framework and continues to work collaboratively with others in our sector on integration of human rights issues into business decision making. Risk management responsibilities are laid out in the ERMF, which covers the categories of risk in which Barclays has its most significant actual or potential risk exposures, which are known as Principal Risks (see table on the following pages).

Robert Le Blanc

Chief Risk Officer

 

 

LOGO Future priorities

 

At a time of significant internal and external change and uncertainty in the business environment, it is important that we continue to keep our customers at the forefront of our activities while meeting new regulatory requirements and improving effectiveness in the risk management process. Our priorities for 2014 reflect these aims and include:

 

¡  Providing our customers with faster decisions and enhancing support for those experiencing difficulties

 

¡  Closely managing funding and liquidity risk including redenomination risk

 

¡  Meeting regulatory expectations in relation to the PRA Leverage Ratio during 2014

 

¡  Implementing and embedding the ERMF across Risk including further enhancement of reputation and conduct risk management

 

¡  Continuing to manage and control impairment across the firm

 

¡  Continuing to enhance and strengthen our operational risk management processes

 

¡  Further enhancing Recovery and Resolution Planning and responding to regulatory requirements for structural reform (e.g. UK Retail Ring Fence)

 

 
 

 

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Table of Contents

Strategic risk overview >

continued

 

 

LOGO  

Example of a related strategic

objective and associated risks

  LOGO     

 

 
       Principal Risk          Objective          Example of a significant risk taken in pursuit of the  objective     
 

Credit risk

 

                   
 

The suffering of financial loss should any of our customers not fulfil their contractual obligations to the Group.

     

We are committed to supporting all our customers, counterparties and clients in their day-to-day banking needs and to tailoring our products to meet their requirements.

 

 

 

     

The credit risk that the Group faces from providing services to customers mainly arises from the default of wholesale and retail loans and advances particularly in a deteriorating credit environment.

 

   
 

Market risk

 

                   
 

The reduction to earnings or capital due to volatility of trading book positions or an inability to hedge the banking book balance sheet.

 

 

     

To provide a range of execution and risk management services across all the major traded product classes.

     

Extreme market events have the potential to create large losses.

   
 

Funding risk

 

                   
 

Failure to maintain capital ratios and liquidity obligations could lead to an inability to support normal business activity and meet liquidity regulatory requirements.

     

To maintain high levels of quality capital to ensure we have the financial strength to continue supporting customers and clients, be it lending to creditworthy small businesses or arranging the financing of large cross-border projects.

 

 

     

If we cannot forecast our future capital needs accurately, for instance because of unforeseen regulatory actions or unexpected losses, a funding shortfall may occur.

   
 

Operational risk

 

                   
 

Losses or costs resulting from human factors, inadequate or failed internal processes and systems or external events.

     

To provide our personal customers with 24/7 access to the widest range of account facilities to enable them to pursue their financial goals, whenever they want and wherever.

 

 

     

Criminals are constantly searching for ways to perpetrate fraud against Barclays and its customers.

   
 

Conduct risk

 

                   
 

Detriment caused to our customers, clients, counterparties, or the Bank and its employees because of inappropriate judgement in the execution of our business activities.

 

 

     

We seek to provide customers with products that are tailored to their changing needs and the evolving financial landscape.

 

     

In pursuit of business, products may be sold to customers and clients that are unsuitable because of inadequate complexity, liquidity or other factors.

   
 

Reputation risk

 

                   
 

Damage to Barclays brand arising from any association, action or inaction which is perceived by stakeholders to be inappropriate or unethical.

     

We aim to become the ‘Go-To’ bank for customers and all stakeholders.

     

The negative events that have beset Barclays and the banking industry in past years could recur if we failed to identify and pro-actively mitigate the risk of failure to act in accordance with our purpose and values.

 

 

 

   
 

 

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Table of Contents
  

 

 

 

 

     
    

 Examples of how Barclays mitigates the risk...

    ...and how this primarily contributes to our scorecard         
       
   

 

The Group sets out the level of risk it is prepared to accept through the risk appetite agreed by the Board and closely monitors and manages the risk during the year through, for example, the application of mandate and scale limits. When a customer does experience financial difficulties the Group may assist by offering a forbearance programme which is structured to be appropriate to the nature and expected duration of the their distress. It aims to provide the customer with a sustainable programme to help return them to good financial health.

 

 

 

LOGO   Customers & Clients

 

LOGO   Citizenship

 

LOGO   Company

 

 
           
   

 

We have built a business centred on client needs as opposed to the pursuit of profits from price changes and our well embedded stress testing framework helps ensure our portfolio is not overly exposed to extreme market events.

 

 

LOGO   Customers & Clients

 

LOGO   Company

 

 
           
   

 

Capital planning is a significant component of our stress testing framework. The adequacy of all categories of capital are tested under severe economic and market scenarios, including consideration of business losses, and the availability of funds in the market according to different scenarios. Mitigation plans are developed based on this analysis.

 

 

LOGO   Customers & Clients

 

LOGO   Citizenship

 

LOGO   Company

 

 
           
   

 

Our Fraud Risk management team works to ensure we keep ahead of fraudsters by investing in technology, and ensuring we support clients where incidents may occur.

 

 

 

LOGO   Customers & Clients

 

LOGO   Citizenship

 

 
           
   

 

We have developed a suitability framework that clarifies the criteria that must be followed before a product is considered suitable for a customer or client. It ensures that management and their teams consider how customers’ needs may change in the future under various scenarios.

 

 

 

LOGO   Customers & Clients

 

LOGO   Colleague

 

LOGO   Conduct

 

 
           
   

 

As part of our plan to become the ‘Go-To’ bank, the Transform Programme places significant emphasis on values. All members of staff have received extensive training and senior management aim to embody our new values in everything they do. These values are being embedded in all of the bank’s activities.

 

 

 

LOGO   Customers & Clients

 

LOGO   Citizenship

 

LOGO   Conduct

 

 

 
     

 

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Table of Contents

UK Retail and Business Banking (UK RBB)

  

 

 

 

LOGO   

 

‘We are determined to go out of our way to make our customer’s lives much easier, which is how we will continue to achieve sustainable long-term results.’

   LOGO     

LOGO

 

Ashok Vaswani

CEO, Retail and Business Banking

 

 

 

The UK Retail and Business Banking business model

LOGO

 

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Table of Contents
           
     Group overview   02        This section provides a summary of the business models, strategies and risks in each of the Barclays businesses, as well as a discussion on the 2013 financial performance.
     Chief Executive’s strategic review   04       
     Strategy and operating environment   06       
     Business model/Value creation   08       
     Balanced Scorecard   10       
     Group Finance Director’s review   12       
     Strategic risk overview   14       
     Performance review by division   18       
     Chairman’s governance overview   46       
     Summary remuneration report   48       
     Summary financial statements   52       
     Shareholder information   54       
           

 

 

Our overriding goal is to provide our customers with simple products and to invest heavily in the customer experience, through both technology and people. This should result in customers consolidating their relationships with us and provide us with balance sheet and income growth.

Market and operating environment

UK RBB is performing well and continues to support the UK economy.

There is an opportunity to embrace the technological innovation and changing competitive landscape to enable our existing customers to do more with us, while protecting our market share and particularly driving income growth in Business Banking and mortgages.

We are reshaping the way we interact with our customers in a way that will drive customer satisfaction and deepen customer engagement, whilst simultaneously reducing the costs that customers do not value and growing our franchise.

Business model risks

While executing our strategy with speed and without compromising quality, we need to be cognisant of the emerging regulatory changes and adapt accordingly. As we continue to focus on rebuilding trust and reputation through improving customer experience, we also need to ensure operational risks are appropriately addressed in the business.

Any deterioration in the economic environment in the UK could adversely impact customers ability to keep up repayments and consequently, we will continue to manage risk appropriately. The UK remains a competitive environment with specialised providers offering web-based services, however our continued investment in technology and processing will help significantly improve and differentiate our customer experience.

Balanced Scorecard

 

 

LOGO

 

 

Customer and client

Our aim is to become the ‘Go-To’ bank for all of our customers. That means we want all of our customers to be advocates of Barclays. We have a lot of work to do.

We will achieve this by significantly improving and differentiating customers’ experience of banking with Barclays – through routine transactions and at the vital moments in their life.

We will measure progress through our Net Promoter Score® – a widely used measure of customer advocacy.

Our external complaints reporting has also been enhanced in the UK with reporting beyond the FCA requirements and the launch of externally published ‘Spotlight’ reports that focus on the key areas of customer complaints and how we are tackling them.

Through regular and rigorous review of our customers’ feedback we will identify where and how we will invest to make customer’s interactions with us simpler, more intuitive and more personalised.

 

 

 

LOGO

 

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Table of Contents

UK Retail and Business Banking (UK RBB) >

continued

 

 

This will ensure we will deliver the right outcomes for customers, quickly and transparently and keep them informed along the way.

It will also help our colleagues better understand what we need do differently to become ‘Go-To’ for our customers across Barclays’ retail operations.

In 2013 we implemented a number of initiatives to affect this ambition:

 

¡   We made significant progress in our core processes satisfaction scores

 

¡   We asked customers how we can make banking better through the Your Bank campaign and we’re using their ideas to make some real improvements

 

¡   We are also evolving the way we operate to meet customers’ changing needs. The pilot we’ve recently announced with Asda, bringing us closer to offering services where and when our customers want them, and SkyBranch, which transforms how our telephony business connects with customers, are great examples of this

Colleague

We will continue to invest in our colleagues and create a diverse and inclusive environment allowing colleagues to fulfil their potential. This will ensure that our colleagues are fully engaged allowing them to provide excellent end-to-end customer service.

We also have an ambition to create the most digitally savvy workforce to help our customers become confident with digital banking.

During 2013 we started our search for ‘Digital Eagles’ – colleagues across the business to support digital awareness and understanding in the UK. With over 5,000 Digital Eagle colleagues across the UK we are well placed to achieve this ambition.

Citizenship

UK RBB continued to embed and contribute to the Barclays’ 2015 Citizenship Plan. We have been focusing on the way we do business, listening more to our customers and showing them we’ve acted. We launched the Your Bank site where everyone (not just Barclays customers) can tell us what products and services will make their lives easier.

UK RBB continued to support the UK economy; advancing £1.8bn of gross new term lending to small businesses and helping over 120,000 start-ups. We also organise small business seminars, tools and trainings, which were attended by over 20,000 people in 2013.

We are supporting our community through activities such as LifeSkills, our free, curriculum-linked programme designed to give young people in the UK access to the skills, information and opportunities they need to help them towards getting the jobs they want. The programme has so far reached out to 276,000 young people.

Conduct

We continue to de-risk our portfolio ensuring everything that we do is open and transparent, this includes the way we’re managing the PPI complaints process.

We are committed to building a culture based on Barclays’ Values. We will continue to focus on the right outcomes for our customers delivered by empowered colleagues who act with integrity at all times. We have conducted business-wide risk assessments to identify conduct risk issues. We will use this process to measure and control these risks and in so doing eliminate the gaps between what our customers expect from us and what we deliver to them. We intend to lead the way in restoring trust and pride in our industry and becoming the ‘Go-To’ Bank

Company        

 

 

Contribution to total income

£4,523m

 

 

 

LOGO  

 

 

 

     2013      2012      2011  

Income (£m)

    4,523         4,384         4,621   

Adjusted profit before tax (£m)

    1,195         1,225         1,222   

Adjusted ROE (%)

    11.5         12.3         12   

Loan loss rate (bps)

    25         21         44   
Loans and advances to customers (£bn)     136.5         128.1         121.2   

Customer deposits (£bn)

    135.5         116.0         111.8   

Distribution points

      1,560         1,593         1,625   

UK RBB performed well in 2013, growing at a faster rate than the market in key products, including increasing its stock share of mortgages. Income increased 3% to £4,523m driven by strong mortgage growth and contribution from Barclays Direct (previously ING Direct UK, acquired during Q113).

UK RBB continued to restructure and invest in the business as part of the Transform strategy. Adjusted operating expenses increased 4% to £3,008m due to costs to achieve Transform of £175m.

Adjusted profit before tax decreased 2% to £1,195m.

Loans and advances to customers increased 7% to £136.5bn due to Barclays Direct, which added £4.4bn, and other mortgage growth.

 

 

 

LOGO

 

 

  More information on performance can be found online at

  barclays.com/annualreport

 

 

  LOGO Future priorities
 

¡

  Revolutionising our product set; offering simple products which are supported by industrial strength engines
 

¡

  Investing in the customer experience; instant, transparent services with seamless multichannel access
 

¡

  Selective balance sheet growth; opportunity with ‘customers we know’ in consumer lending and mortgages
 

¡

 

Cost reduction; delivery of straight through processing, reduction in paper and infrastructure

 

 

 

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Table of Contents

‘Your Bank’ –

learning from our customers

 

 

LOGO

 

We are determined to rebuild trust in Barclays and demonstrate day-in day-out that we are changing, and doing the right thing for customers. In September, we launched Your Bank – the online platform that allows us to continually listen, respond, anticipate and learn from our customers.

As well as getting feedback and sense-checking our ideas, we have created a place where customers can share their ideas and suggestions for how Barclays can be better shaped around their needs and individual life stages, putting them at the heart of everything we do.

In the first week we received over 370,000 interactions on the Your Bank site and 2,226 ideas.

With all of the ideas that we receive, we are taking a ‘you said, we did’ approach and have made 8 commitments to making real change for our customers.

1. We are undertaking a formal review of our overdraft charges in 2014, with a view to making them simpler and more transparent. We have already started pilots with the launch of text alerts in June to customers who had gone over their overdraft limit and into their personal reserve, which would mean they would traditionally incur a £22 charge. The alerts tell them they have a day’s grace to add cleared funds and avoid the charge. In the first three months, over 65,000 customers avoided charges totalling over £1.4m, a response rate of 27 per cent. We are

now looking at where else we can roll out text alerts as a next step. Yes it’s a cost to us, but it’s the right thing to do.

2. We have launched CloudIt through online and mobile banking as a result of customer feedback. Being able to access your secure documents whilst on the move will really make our customer’s lives much easier.

3. Contactless payments have been very well received by customers, so we’re now looking at alternative contactless methods of payments which we’ll be testing with customers.

4. We’re looking to pilot paying in coin machines in our branches. Our customers told us they’d welcome something that can automatically count coins and credit their account.

5. We will extend our free Barclays Pingit app to the under 16’s, subject to developing proper parental controls. Younger customers, being tech savvy, will benefit from the app allowing them to send and receive money simply using their mobile phone number.

6. We are going to allow our mobile banking customers to set up new payees on their mobiles. This will extend the app meaning that customers can really do much more on the move.

7. To further extend our services to a wider range of customers we’ve made our mobile banking app available on Windows platform and are planning to do the same for Pingit.

8. We have expanded our mobile banking services to include mortgage accounts, so customers can view their mortgage arrangements wherever they are.

 

 

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Europe Retail and Business Banking (Europe RBB)

 

 

LOGO   

 

‘In 2013 we restructured our business and are now on track to deliver the Go-To Premier bank in Europe.’

  LOGO    

LOGO

 

Curt Hess

Chief Executive Officer, Europe RBB

 

 

The Europe Retail and Business Banking business model

LOGO

 

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In 2013 we made significant progress in transforming ourselves to become the ‘Go-To’ bank for mass affluent customers in Spain, Portugal, Italy and France

Market and operating environment

In 2013 the macroeconomic environment remained challenging – economic contraction, unemployment and political and regulatory uncertainty impacted both us and our competitors. Against these uncertainties we successfully reduced headcount and branch operations while taking steps to de-risk the business.

Going forward we will grow mass affluent customers, leveraging strong relationship management capabilities and a comprehensive product range, while capitalising on our global brand and investment services expertise. This focused strategy will enable us to compete successfully with local and international competitors. At the same time we will continue to support our existing mass market customers through a lower cost platform.

Business Model risks

Further deterioration in macroeconomic conditions in Europe could adversely impact credit risk through the deterioration in asset prices or a customer’s ability to service repayment obligations.

The business continues to proactively work to identify and mitigate any operational risk of pending regulatory change without compromising customer service and minimise disruption to the progress of our business.

In executing our strategy, we need to ensure we can manage operational risk and grow the business without compromising on quality or control.

Balanced Scorecard

 

 

 

LOGO

 

 

Customer and client

Our aim is to become the ‘Go-To’ bank for mass affluent customers. We will do this by providing customers with top quality service and a differentiated proposition based on relationship management and investment services.

We will measure our progress through our Net Promoter Score®. By reviewing our customers’ feedback we will know whether we are achieving the positive customer experiences critical to our goal of growing mass affluent relationships.

In 2013 we launched initiatives to improve customer experience, including:

 

¡   A new Premier value proposition which provides customers with an experience tailored to their needs and ambitions

 

¡   Issuing iPads to our colleagues to speed up customer service and allow us to serve them where they are

 

¡   Faster credit approvals – in Spain 98% of customers get a decision within 2 hours

 

¡   Enhanced online capabilities which allow customers to customise the banking alerts and updates they receive from us
 

 

 

LOGO

 

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Europe Retail and Business Banking (Europe RBB) >

continued

 

 

These contributed to strong customer satisfaction and high customer advocacy scores – in Portugal we ranked #1 for service quality in a recent mystery shopping survey and in Spain we ranked the #2 ‘most loved’ bank in a recent survey, well ahead of our mass affluent segment competitors.

Colleague

We are committed to investing in our colleagues and encouraging the right values and behaviours from them.

In 2013 we launched the ‘Premier Way’, a training program that enables relationship managers to have confident, professional discussions with clients about their holistic financial needs.

In 2014 this programme will expand to include financial planning as well as giving colleagues access to externally recognised professional qualifications.

Citizenship

We are implementing mechanisms to make citizenship part of what we do every day, as well as inspiring our colleagues, clients and other stakeholders to do the same.

In 2013 we implemented the Citizenship Lens into our processes for approving new products.

We continued our commitment to local communities by investing in employability programs for young people – Europe RBB colleagues have contributed over 11,000 hours to help their local communities.

Conduct

We are dedicated to delivering the right outcomes for our customers.

In 2013 we raised awareness of conduct as a principal risk across the business and launched a Code of Conduct to guide how we all should work each day. We also commenced a programme to review critical end-to-end processes and identify possible conduct issues – in doing so identify potential mitigants to eliminate the gap between what our customers expect from us and what we deliver to them.

Company    

 

Contribution to total income

£666m

 

 

LOGO  

 

 

 

      2013      2012     2011  
Income (£m)      666         708        1,004   
Loss before tax (£m)      (996      (343     (767
Adjusted ROE (%)      (45.2      (12.9     (9.7
Loan loss rate (bps)      75         64        43   
Loans and advances to customers (£bn)      37.0         39.2        42.7   
Customer deposits (£bn)      45.0         46.1        50.2   
Distribution points      633         1,142        1,228   

Europe RBB continued to focus on restructuring the cost base of its business in 2013, as part of the Transform strategy. Income declined 6% to £666m, reflecting actions taken to reduce assets, particularly in Spain and Italy, to address the continuing economic challenges across Europe.

During the year the business reduced full time equivalent employees by 1,600 and closed over 500 distribution points. Operating expenses increased by £435m to £1,242m, almost entirely reflecting costs to achieve Transform of £403m.

Loss before tax increased £653m to £996m, including costs to achieve Transform of £403m and an increase in other net expenses.

Europe RBB also rolled out a new Premier customer proposition, targeting profitable growth from the mass affluent segment, in a drive to increase margins.

Loans and advances to customers fell by 6% to £37.0bn, driven by asset reduction activity as part of the Transform strategy.

 

 

   LOGO  

 

 

More information on performance can be found online at barclays.com/annualreport

 

 

LOGO  Future priorities

In 2014 we will:

 

  ¡   Grow Premier customers

¨ Acquire new mass affluent customers

¨ Deepen relationships with existing customers

 

  ¡   Continue to control costs by transitioning mass market customers to lower cost channels over time

 

  ¡   Optimise the performance and accelerate the run-off of our less attractive Exit Quadrant assets

 

 

 

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Happy customers and

healthy relationships

 

 

 

LOGO

 

For one Italian customer Barclays has provided investment management and advice for three years and over that period developed a healthy and profitable relationship.

During this time we have worked to provide the customer with bank-assurance products, mutual funds, structured products, asset under custody and liquidity products. In doing so we have successfully deepened our relationship with the customer by more than doubling his assets under management over a two year period.

This customer is a strong advocate for Barclays and has been extremely satisfied with his Premier relationship manager – highlighting the professionalism, proactivity and transparency of the services his relationship manager provided as the reasons for the customer’s high satisfaction.

In addition to the high quality day-to-day relationship, we were also able to leverage some of the benefits we get from being part of a UK based global bank by giving this customer the opportunity to attend exclusive events that the customer greatly appreciated. These have helped us enhance our relationship.

Going forward we will continue to work closely with this customer to meet their personal banking and investment needs.

But we’re not stopping there! We know this customer owns a successful SME business and we want to further deepen our relationship by providing products and services to that business – in doing so help our client achieve his ambitions across both his professional and personal life.

 

 

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Africa      

 

 

 

LOGO   

 

‘We offer our clients deep local knowledge and presence and the expertise and support of a global bank.’

  LOGO    LOGO
       

 

Maria Ramos

Chief Executive, Africa

 

 

Africa business model

 

LOGO

 

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The African continent provides an excellent growth opportunity for the Group. With our strategy for Africa, we are well-positioned to benefit from this emerging market opportunity.

Market and operating environment

Emerging markets’ growth eased somewhat in 2013 whilst developed country central banks maintained their accommodative monetary policy stance, with some cutting interest rates and others injecting liquidity into the financial system. South Africa’s economic growth remained muted and we faced increasingly strong competition. In our rest of Africa markets, economic growth remained resilient. Our regulatory environment continues to evolve and rising customer and client expectations as well as new technologies are challenging how we do business.

Business Model risks

Current economic conditions in South Africa bring increased financial pressure on customers and clients, some of whom may already be struggling to fulfil their payment obligations when faced with subdued economic activity and potentially rising interest rates. Rest of Africa challenges such as infrastructure constraints, lower commodity prices, and fiscal and current account imbalances in some markets have led to modest declines in our economic growth forecasts for some of the economies.

Intensified regulatory and government intervention ensures a sound operating environment; however, it does lead to increased cost of compliance and complexity of doing business.

We continue to see a host of emerging and non-traditional competitors as well as increasing consumer expectations for traditional banks to meet new service standards.

Balanced Scorecard

 

 

 

LOGO

 

 

 

Customer and client

Barclays is a powerful local bank, a powerful regional bank and a powerful global player. We use this unique advantage to the benefit of our customers and clients.

In Retail and Business Banking (RBB), we have focused on enhancing the customer experience. In South Africa this began with simplifying transactional product offerings, expanding the digital experience through the launch of our banking app, and rolling out a fully integrated online insurance platform. In our rest of Africa markets, customers are benefiting from revised Premier and Prestige banking proposition, Barclays Direct, Worldmiles Platinum credit / debit card as well as CashSend money transfer. It is our goal to simplify processes and improve customer experience.

We will measure our progress in our RBB businesses through our Net Promoter Score® a widely used measure of customer advocacy. Through regular and rigorous review of our customers’ and clients’ feedback we will identify where and how we need to invest to make the customer journeys simpler, more intuitive and more personalised.

 

 

 

 

LOGO

 

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Africa >

continued

     

 

 

For our Corporate and Investment Banking clients we continue to bring African clients to the global financial markets and give our global clients access to Africa. For example, we are leveraging our leading foreign exchange platform BARX Africa to trade 40 currencies across our key African markets. We have completed a pilot for Barclays.Net – a streamlined and full-featured cash management platform for our corporate and commercial clients with full roll-out in South Africa in 2014.

In 2013, we were named Best Debt House in Africa for the fourth consecutive year by EuroMoney, Best Bond House and Best FX House at the Spire Awards and we were voted best Overall Bank by Risk South Africa.

We have a strong plan in place to continue capturing the opportunities before us by improving customer and client experience, driving process simplification as well as innovative products and systems.

Colleague

We have made notable progress in building a talent pipeline that supports our ambitions and our expanded African footprint provides a unique opportunity for talented people to advance their careers. We want to be known for our leadership bench strength and we have embarked on a number of transformational leadership and values based programmes which are designed to support our leaders in delivering on a demanding performance agenda.

Citizenship

Our ambition is to help facilitate greater, more inclusive prosperity in Africa. In 2013, we consolidated our citizenship structures thus strengthening our ability to deliver our African plan. Over the year our activities ranged from funding renewable energy projects to increasing access to financial services for individuals and small businesses. We continued to invest our community investment spend in targeted skills development programmes with proven job creation capabilities. Our colleagues continued to participate in a range of volunteering events such as the Nelson Mandela Day in South Africa and Barclays global Make a Difference Day campaign.

Conduct

Our values underpin the way we behave and form the backbone of our reputation as a trusted financial services provider. Our ongoing programme to bring our revised values alive culminated with the launch of the Barclays Way – a global Code of Conduct – to embed clear and consistent expectations of behaviours across the Group.

In addition to our underlying values, we believe that laws, regulations and codes are an enabler to our business – ensuring that we make informed decisions in how we manage our business and sustain ourselves into the future.

As with many other jurisdictions, we are managing regulatory change as well as increasing expectations from stakeholders, and our response supports our commitment to treat our customers fairly and operate with integrity.

Basis of Company reporting

Barclays Group reports Africa RBB separately and the following information relates specifically to the Africa RBB reporting segment. Results from other global businesses operating in Africa are integrated within each respective business’ results.

Company

 

 

Contribution to total income

 

£2,617m

   LOGO

 

 

 

Africa RBB    2013      2012     2011  
Income (£m)      2,617         2,928        3,364   
Profit before tax (£m)      404         322        730   
Adjusted ROE (%)      0.4         (0.1     7.4   
Loan loss rate (bps)      128         202        136   
Loans and advances to customers (£bn)      24.2         29.9        32.5   
Customer deposits (£bn)      16.9         19.5        20.3   
Distribution points      1,396         1,451        1,493   

2013 was affected by increased competition, a changing regulatory environment and foreign exchange movements, as average ZAR depreciated 16% against GBP. Income declined 11% to £2,617m driven by foreign currency movements, partially offset by the non-recurrence of fair value adjustments in the commercial property finance portfolio in the prior year. On a constant currency basis, income improved 5%, despite continued pressure on transaction volumes in a competitive environment.

The business incurred £26m of costs to achieve Transform which supported the re-shaping of the branch network and ongoing work on digitalisation of customer channels and products. Operating expenses decreased 4% to £1,896m. On a constant currency basis, costs increased 11% driven by a combination of increased investment spend on infrastructure and inflation increases in South Africa.

Profit before tax increased 25% to £404m. On a constant currency basis, profit before tax was up 57%, largely as a result of lower impairment provisions on the South African home loans recovery book.

Loans and advances to customers decreased 19% to £24.2bn as foreign currency movements offset growth of 2%, particularly in vehicle and asset finance.

 

  LOGO    

 

More information on performance can be found online at barclays.com/annualreport

 

 

 

 

LOGO Future priorities

 

We have articulated very clear priorities for 2014:

 

¡ Continuing the turnaround programme for our RBB franchise in South Africa, and the build out across the continent;

 

¡ Investing in Corporate Banking across the continent;

 

¡ Capturing the growth opportunity in our Wealth, Investment Management and Insurance franchise;

 

¡ Continuing to invest in and develop the talent we have across the business; and

 

¡ These priorities are underpinned by an investment programme of over ZAR 3bn that will be invested into several large projects such as transforming our branches, integrating and standardising IT, investing  in our digital capabilities and creating efficient processing hubs in the right locations.

 

 

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Working together to serve global and regional clients and local customers

 

 

LOGO

 

We are bringing together the best of our African businesses with the best of our global franchise to the benefit of our customers and clients.

During 2013, we worked closely between our operations across Africa and with our global colleagues to meet the needs of our customers and clients. We have been the bridge between local and global markets, we have helped our African clients achieve their regional growth ambitions and we have brought new products and solutions to our customers, clients and the communities in which we operate.

Local going global

Acting as a joint-lead arranger we have raised $1bn for South African state-owned power utility Eskom through a 10-year bond offering. The transaction achieved $4bn in investor demand and represented Eskom’s second US Dollar issuance. We are the only institution to have acted as joint-lead manager on both issuances.

Global going local

Acting as the sole sponsor and joint financial advisor, we helped Glencore Xtrata, a global diversified natural resource company to access Africa with a listing on the Johannesburg Stock Exchange. This listing makes investment in Glencore more accessible to South African investors through its classification as a ‘domestic’ equity.

Local going regional

South African companies are looking at the rest of the continent for growth and we continue to help the expansion of corporates on the continent. We are supporting a clothing retailer’s expansion into Ghana and won the tender to provide services to a major food retailer across six countries – Botswana, Ghana, Mauritius, Tanzania, Uganda and Zambia.

Access to global products and services

With Barclaycard, we have rolled out a Worldmiles Platinum credit card in Botswana, Egypt, Kenya and Mauritius and the debit card version in Egypt, Ghana, Tanzania, Uganda and Zambia providing local customers with access to a leading global product. We have also worked closely with Barclaycard to launch the Pebble – a mobile payment device – in South Africa.

Leveraging the Barclays Social Innovation Facility for product and services that drive social and commercial value

With GlaxoSmithKline, we are investing up to £7m over three years, to help remove financial barriers to healthcare access while supporting small business development and job creation in Zambia. By combining our skills, expertise and resources, we hope to tackle the challenges of last mile delivery and create a model that could be scaled across Africa to help more people gain access to affordable healthcare.

 

 

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Barclaycard

 

     

 

 

LOGO   

‘Barclaycard is one of the few global leaders in payments that provides ‘Go-To’ solutions to both buyers and sellers, enabling us to deliver consistent growth and welcome close to 14m new customers in the past three years.’

   LOGO

LOGO

Valerie Soranno Keating

CEO, Barclaycard

 

 

 

 

The Barclaycard business model

LOGO

 

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Barclaycard operates in the fast-growing consumer payments space, supporting buyers and sellers by enabling consumers and businesses to make and take payments. We provide the ability for consumers and businesses to fund these payments with credit.

Market and Operating environment

The consumer payments sector is growing rapidly as a result of changing customer behaviour, based on the growth of electronic and mobile commerce and changing payment preferences as key factors. New technology, competition and regulations all present opportunities, but also the need to adjust our business model. Our customers and clients want us to do more for them, and to do it better, faster and cheaper, and digitally. This presents many opportunities for Barclaycard and also presents challenges.

Business Model risks

This changing marketplace could create risks to the Barclaycard business model. The emerging competitive landscape in consumer payments is seeing new players enter the payment value chain, and new use of technology generating the need for continuous innovation and technology investment. Our unique ability of supporting both buyers and sellers, diverse distribution channels, and the scale of our business in multiple countries helps to mitigate the impact of this risk.

Other potential risks come from macroeconomic headwinds creating further credit risk for our customers and reducing income though potential margin compression, impacts of further regulatory change or increased operational risk. Our diversified business model and commitment to leading standards for business practice should help limit the potential impact from these.

Balanced Scorecard

 

 

 

LOGO

 

 

Customer and client

Barclaycard serves 35.5m customers, an 8% increase on prior year and 350k business clients, an 11% increase. We have focused on offering customers simple, innovative products as part of our objective of moving from satisfied customers to customers who are strong advocates of our business. We have implemented Net Promoter Score® as our key customer metric to measure this.

We have continued to build on a heritage of innovation, supporting more than 1m payments enabled devices across three continents and working with Transport for London on acceptance of contactless cards for over 6.5m bus journeys in the UK. We have launched bFlex, a revolutionary, flexible finance product designed for online purchases. Our tailored offers engine for UK customers, ‘bespoke’, has reached over 800k registered users, of whom over half are new to Barclays.

We have also worked with other areas of Barclays to better serve our customers, such as through the ‘Better Together’ initiative, which combines current accounts and Barclaycard Freedom Rewards to provide customers with access to credit and the launch of Absa Pebble, Africa’s first mobile payment acceptance device.

 

 

 

 

LOGO

 

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Barclaycard >

continued

     

 

 

Through our customer focus, we have seen a 39% reduction in complaints to a level of 3.12 per 1,000 accounts in 2013 and zero high-rated Regulatory Compliance monitoring reviews.

Our leading products have received numerous industry awards, including the Moneyfacts award for ‘Best Card Provider’ for both our Balance Transfer rate (3rd year in a row) and Standard rate products in the UK, being ranked 2nd among Visa/MasterCard issuers in the 2013 JD Power industry customer service rankings in the US and winning the ‘Best Corporate Card Provider’ at the Business Travel Awards.

Colleague

We are committed to attracting, developing and retaining colleagues of the highest calibre and integrity. We continue to bring in the best talent from diverse backgrounds, while developing our existing talent. We ensure progression and rotation at all levels of the organisation and follow a structured learning and leadership development programme to develop our colleagues.

In 2013, we continued to make progress with our diversity agenda, with 34% women in senior leadership. We have also sustained high levels of colleague engagement to ensure talent retention, with 95% of high performers retained.

We have moved our Absa Card office to a new, world-class site in Pretoria and won the Customer Service Training Network ‘Training Programme of the Year’ award for our UK contact centres.

Citizenship

Barclaycard has continued to embed and contribute to the Barclays’ 2015 Citizenship Plan.

We have continued to focus on ‘the way we do business’ to ensure we are fair and transparent. We have simplified the Terms & Conditions of many of our products.

We have ensured we are supporting the economy and contributing to growth, including offering £15.8bn in new lending to businesses and households in 2013, and adding a charity redemption category for Freedom Rewards customers in the UK who want to donate their collected points.

We are supporting our community through activities such as Royal British Legion London Poppy Day, supporting poppy sales with our colleagues and contactless terminals.

Conduct

We continue to rollout the Barclays Values and Behaviours, empowering our Values Leaders to embed them with their colleagues.

Barclaycard continues to review policies and practices to identify and proactively ensure that they continue to be simple, leading, innovative and transparent, including those associated with handling PPI complaints. We are committed to ensuring that we adhere to the highest standards of conduct, proactively driving cultural change through developing best-in-class conduct risk awareness training.

Company

 

 

Contribution to total income

 

£4,786m

   LOGO

 

 

 

      2013      2012      2011  
Income (£m)      4,786         4,344         4,305   
Adjusted profit before tax (£m)      1,507         1,482         1,212   
Adjusted ROE (%)      18.4         19.8         16.1   
Loan loss rate (bps)      337         294         394   
Loans and advances to customers (£bn)      35.6         33.8         31.0   
Customer deposits (£bn)      38.9         38.2         34.8   

Barclaycard continued to grow in all markets, with a net increase of nearly three million new customers in 2013. Income improved 10% to £4,786m reflecting continued net lending growth and contributions from 2012 portfolio acquisitions.

The business incurred £49m of costs to achieve Transform, as it continued to seek to become the ‘Go-To’ bank for consumer payments. Adjusted operating expenses increased 11% to £2,048m reflecting increased costs from 2012 portfolio acquisitions, net lending growth, higher operating losses and costs to achieve Transform.

Barclaycard continued to deliver adjusted profit growth, improving 2% to £1,507m driven by the US and UK card portfolios.

Total assets increased 2% to £38.9bn primarily driven by the increase in loans and advances to customers across the UK and international businesses.

 

  LOGO    

 

More information on performance can be found online at barclays.com/annualreport

 

 

 

 

LOGO Future priorities

 

Barclaycard will become the ‘Go-To’ bank for consumer payments through:

 

¡  Delivering simple, leading and innovative products to our retail consumers and business clients that help them achieve their ambitions – in the right way.

 

¡ Maintaining our track record of delivering strong financial performance, and delivering against the Transform targets through continued efficiencies, realising economies of scale, diversifying our business model and using world class analytics.

 

¡  Attracting, developing and retaining colleagues of the highest calibre and integrity.

 

¡  Continuing to have a positive impact in local communities by creating sustainable relationships and using the skills of the business and our colleagues to support these communities.

 

¡ Focusing on ‘the way we do business’ to ensure that our products and services are industry-leading in transparency.

 

 

 

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Payment flexibility

 

  

 

 

 

LOGO

 

Marco Tripoli is a charismatic ladies’ fashion designer and boutique owner in South-West London. He uses a Barclaycard ePDQ terminal in his shop to take payment by credit or debit card.

Marco’s tiny shop in Barnes is bursting at the seams with unique handbags, jewellery and clothes – around half of which Marco designs himself, the rest arriving twice weekly from all over Europe. His brand is built on a few key selling points: commitment to quality, sustainability and affordability, and a unique approach to customer service.

When women fall in love with a bag or dress at Tripoli’s, they’re not constrained to a quick decision in a cramped fitting room. Thanks to his Barclaycard ePDQ terminal, Marco can give his customer the option to try before she buys, in the comfort of her own home.

“Many of my customers pop in on their way back from dropping the kids at school and if they like something, they’ll take it with them to try on at home,” says Marco. “That way, they can see how a dress looks with their own shoes and accessories – or how one of my handbags complements an outfit.”

After closing for the day, Marco calls personally at each of his prospective customers’ homes. If they’ve decided against an item, it goes back to the shop with him. And if they’ve decided to buy, Marco simply uses his ePDQ terminal to take payment by credit or debit card.

“This works really well for people who have children and can’t come back to the shop in the afternoon. It’s convenient for them and a much friendlier way to do business. In fact, technology, often considered to be faceless and impersonal, actually allows me to have a far more personal service with my customers.”

Marco also uses his flexible payment machine at events all over London. At a recent local fair, ePDQ helped him sell 45 tote bags - purely thanks to the convenience of paying by card.

Marco is proud of his service-led, community-centric approach. 5% of his net profits go to a local charity that helps the elderly and disabled - and many of the small businesses in Barnes promote each other’s services whenever they can.

These traditional, ethical business values are reflected in the high level of personalised support that Marco’s had from his dedicated Barclaycard account manager, Andy.

“He’s extremely proactive and offers advice whenever he can. He recently recommended that I use an accounting package to manage my daily expenditure and it’s saved me £200 a month in accountancy fees. He really does go over and above what you’d expect.”

When Marco’s machine broke down the night before a big event in Wimbledon, he simply called Andy and another one was flown immediately from Scotland to London. “It arrived 15 minutes before the event started,” says Marco, “You just can’t put a value on service like that.”

 

 

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Investment Bank

 

     

 

 

 

LOGO   

‘From our unique position with dual home markets and truly global reach, we are transforming the Investment Bank so that we can continue to help our target clients achieve their ambitions.’

   LOGO
LOGO   LOGO
Eric Bommensath   Thomas King

Co-Chief Executive, Corporate

and Investment Banking

 

Co-Chief Executive, Corporate

and Investment Banking

 

 

 

 

The Investment Bank business model

 

LOGO

 

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The Investment Bank is a leading provider of advice, financing and risk management solutions to companies, governments and institutions around the world.

Market and operating environment

Market conditions and the wider operating environment have remained challenging in 2013. While equity markets, advisory and underwriting all saw gains, continued macroeconomic uncertainty over the future of central bank bond buying programmes led to reduced volumes in Fixed Income markets. At the same time, the implementation of Basel III and new leverage ratios is increasing the constraints on capital allocation across the industry, thereby limiting opportunities for business growth.

Business Model risks

A rapidly evolving regulatory environment combined with a subdued macroeconomic environment has impacted the profitability of capital intensive business lines.

To help mitigate this impact we have been actively rebalancing our business model through growth in Equities and Investment Banking and further intensifying focus on capital management, leverage and the reduction of our Exit Quadrant assets. We continue to keep our business model under review.

The Investment Bank still faces litigation risk and we continue to invest time and resources in strengthening our control environment, evolving our culture and simplifying and de-risking products.

Our business relies on the quality of our people, and so we also continue to reinforce our employee value proposition through a focus on learning and development and, in light of global compensation legislation, reiterating our commitment to pay for performance.

Balanced Scorecard

 

 

 

LOGO

 

 

Customer and client

Becoming the ‘Go To’ partner for our clients is about building strong and deep relationships which enable us to support them in achieving their ambitions. To attain this aim we are focused on:

 

¡   Building strategic relationships with our clients by providing long-term solutions

 

¡   Providing a world-class client experience through the calibre of our people

 

¡   Offering seamless and efficient execution of transactions

 

¡   Developing the highest standards of client conduct through an enhanced product suitability framework

In 2013, we were named the best Flow House in Western Europe, the Best Flow House in North America and the best UK investment Bank by Euromoney.

 

 

 

 

LOGO

 

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Investment Bank >

continued

     

 

 

Colleague

Our people are fundamental to the performance of our business. We aim to support our colleagues to achieve their ambitions by:

 

¡   Providing world-class opportunities for career progression and global mobility

 

¡   Delivering industry leading solutions for clients

 

¡   Embracing diversity and inclusion

 

¡   Rewarding competitively for performance

2013 saw the launch of our Purpose and Values agenda, embedding them into all our HR processes including recruiting, promotion and performance management. Employee engagement was a key theme during the year with increased focus on Talent Management and Succession Planning; initiatives which saw a number of senior management moves across the Investment Bank. We continue to place Diversity & Inclusion to the forefront of our Talent agenda, because it is the right thing to do and because our clients are becoming increasingly diverse.

Citizenship

The Investment Bank contributes to the 2015 Citizenship Plan across our business.

In 2013 we supported a wide range of transactions that make a direct difference to our communities. We did this across our core competencies of capital raising, lending and distribution across various sectors including public finance (governments, supranationals, development banks and other public sector entities), alternative energy and life sciences sectors.

In addition, we provided employment and training opportunities for over 650 graduates, and our staff contributed over 48,000 volunteer hours in 2013 to worthwhile causes around the globe.

Conduct

Conduct is about ensuring that our products and services are designed and distributed to meet the needs of our clients and that we act with integrity in everything we do. In 2013 we have continued to invest heavily in this area through focus on the following:

 

¡   Culture and Organisation: Embedding our culture by completing values and behaviour training for all our staff and re-balancing how we assess and reward our people to place increased focus on conduct, risk and control

 

¡   Frameworks: Developing a comprehensive conduct risk framework and developing tools that support the consistent delivery of controls

 

¡   Governance: Putting in place an enhanced governance model including the introduction of a Chief Controls Officer, Reputation Risk Committee and Conduct Risk Steering Committee

 

¡   Control Initiatives: Strengthening control design around the trade lifecycle including with relation to unauthorised trading and key benchmark submissions

Company

 

 

 

Contribution to total income

£10,733m

   LOGO  

 

 

 

     2013       2012      2011  
Income (£m)      10,733          11,775         10,222   
Profit before tax (£m)      2,523          3,990         2,415   
ROE (%)      8.2          12.7         7.7   
Cost: income ratio (%)      75.0          65.0         76.0   
Compensation: income ratio (%)      43.2          39.6         48.4   

While industry FICC revenues reduced in 2013, strong growth was seen in the Equities franchise, which continued to outperform the market. Total income decreased 9% to £10,733m, including a reduction of £309m relating to the Exit Quadrant. FICC income decreased 17% to £5,537m. Equities and Prime Services income increased 22% to £2,672m reflecting higher commission income and increased client volumes. Investment Banking income increased 3% to £2,200m driven by increased equity underwriting fees, partly offset by declines in financial advisory activity.

The Investment Bank continued to make progress in delivering part of the Transform strategy in 2013. The business incurred costs to achieve Transform of £262m, primarily related to restructuring across Europe, Asia and America. Operating expenses increased 5% to £8,012m, driven by costs to achieve Transform, UK bank levy which increased 62% to £333m, cost increases related to infrastructure improvement, and provisions for litigation and regulatory penalties of £220m in Q413, mainly related to US residential mortgage-related business.

Profit before tax decreased 37% to £2,523m.

Total assets decreased £209.9bn to £863.8bn, primarily reflecting decreases in derivative financial instruments, cash and balances at central banks, and trading portfolio assets.

CRD IV RWAs reduced to £221.6bn (30 June 2013: £254.1bn) through accelerated sell down of the Exit Quadrant assets and continued focus on driving efficiency in the ongoing business.

 

   LOGO      More information on performance can be found online at barclays.com/annualreport

 

 

  LOGO Future priorities

Our priorities to become the ‘Go-To’ Investment Bank are to:

 

  ¡   Focus our people and resources on building the deepest relationships possible with our target clients so we become a first call  

 

  ¡   Invest in market-leading talent and technology to deliver the best client experience and remain responsive to clients’ changing needs  

 

  ¡   Make efficiency and control a competitive advantage by increasing standardisation and automation across the platform to reduce cost to serve and strengthen controls  

 

 

 

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Table of Contents
Advising on one of the largest mergers & acquisition deals in history

 

 

 

LOGO

 

Verizon is one of the world’s largest telecommunications companies, and its mobile subsidiary, Verizon Wireless, is the number one and most profitable wireless business in the United States.

Barclays has had a longstanding inner-circle strategic and financing relationship with Verizon, dating back to 2003. When Verizon decided to acquire Vodafone’s 45% stake in Verizon Wireless for $130bn, in the third largest M&A deal ever, Verizon turned to Barclays to act as a financial advisor and joint lead arranger for the largest acquisition finance bridge facility in history. Barclays also served as a main underwriter and lead manager on Verizon’s subsequent record breaking $49bn bond offering.

This landmark transaction will help Verizon achieve its long-term ambition of owning 100% of Verizon Wireless, and it will position Verizon to provide more efficient, industry leading products and solutions to its customers.

It also serves as a clear demonstration of what we mean by ‘Go-To’: building long term client relationships and combining strategic advice and deep financing expertise to help our clients achieve their business goals.

 

 

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Corporate Banking

 

     

 

 

LOGO   

 

‘Corporate Banking continues to support businesses both in the UK and internationally, and in 2013 delivered the best results since its creation in 2010.’

   LOGO

LOGO

John Winter

Chief Executive Officer

 

 

 

 

The Corporate Banking business model

 

LOGO

 

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Corporate Banking remains an attractive business, with companies searching for strong banking partners. However, the economic and regulatory environment continues to be challenging.

The global corporate banking market is still growing and profitable although with significant differences across geographies, customer segments and sectors.

 

¡   UK economic recovery is gathering pace

 

¡   Signs of improvement in the European economy

 

¡   The multinational corporates segment will grow faster than large/ mid-Corporates segment. However, top clients in this segment are targeted by both global and specialised local competitors

Risks to our business model

The corporate banking industry is facing a number of risks that we have anticipated and are planning to mitigate:

 

¡   Some sectors and geographies will likely remain challenging particularly if interest rates rise. This could trigger increases in loan loss rates particularly in the UK where loan loss rates are at a Corporate Banking historical low. We proactively review and manage our exposure to all clients. We have a proven record of supporting businesses through their difficulties and minimising credit losses.

 

¡   In contrast, low interest rates may cause margins to compress. We continue to strengthen our market position by expanding our cash management product offering.

 

¡   Cybercrime and technology disruptions remain a risk. Barclays actively works to increase the resilience and enhance the security of its banking systems by fully supporting UK government and other banks’ initiatives to increase system availability and reduce industry risks.
¡   Corporates increasingly use debt markets and other alternative sources of finance and non-UK banks have increased competition. To strengthen our market position we continue to expand our financing product capabilities, as well as to deepen existing, and acquiring new, client relationships.

Balanced Scorecard

 

 

 

LOGO

 

 

Customer and client

Corporate Banking is focused on becoming the ‘Go-To’ bank for business, corporate and institutional clients.

We work closely with clients to fully understand their business and continuously strive for better client service. As a result, no other bank achieved a higher rating from their Corporate Banking clients in the UK for overall satisfaction in 2013.a

Note

a Source: Charterhouse Research based on 2,200 interviews with companies turning over between £5m and £1bn carried out in YE Q4 2013. Survey data is weighted by turnover and region to be representative of the total market in Great Britain. Sum of top two box responses – Excellent and Very Good.

 

 

 

 

LOGO

 

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Corporate Banking >

continued

     

 

 

We are committed to helping businesses succeed and achieve their ambitions, no matter how complex or challenging. Our clients benefit from in-depth sector expertise – over 45 sector teams, and tailored industry research.

Our products and services are regularly recognised through industry awards, e.g. in 2013:

 

¡   Best Trade Bank in the UK – Global Trade Review

 

¡   Best Domestic Cash Manager in the UK – Euromoney

 

¡   Best Trade Bank in Africa – Treasury Management International

 

¡   UK Education Lender of The Year – for the fourth year running

We are constantly looking for ways to make our client interactions as simple and instant as possible – whether that is reducing time to set-up new client accounts or providing our front-line teams with iPads to deliver more insight directly to clients.

We see technology as a key means of responding proactively to clients’ changing needs. We continue to roll-out Barclays.net (our internet-based cash management service) and Pingit for Corporates, which now allows clients to complete a full spectrum of payment options via their smartphone.

Colleague

Corporate Banking continues to invest in our colleagues to ensure they are fully engaged, motivated and supported to provide excellent client service.

We continue to promote a globally diverse and inclusive environment where all colleagues can fulfil their potential.

Priorities include driving sustainable engagement, gender diversity and developing the potential of our workforce.

Citizenship

Every day Corporate Banking employees make a real difference; helping individuals, communities and businesses grow.

Primarily, we support businesses by lending money prudently. In 2013, we provided loans and advances of £61.1bn. Over 1,600 SME clients benefitted from the Cashback for Business scheme.a We paid £24m in cashback and have committed a further £6m. We have also continued to support the Business Growth Fundb – with a commitment of £500m in equity.

In addition, our colleagues contributed almost 30,000 hours volunteering in their local communities.

Conduct

We are focused on delivering the right outcomes for our clients.

Managing the conduct risks that arise in our business is fundamental to our success in becoming the ‘Go-To’ bank. This means proactively looking out for our client’s best interests and acting with integrity at all times.

In advancing our Interest Rate Hedging Products redress, 32% of the in-scope population now have review outcomes. We are progressing well and are on track to meet our commitments to the FCA. We expect to have a substantial majority of all customers at the redress offer stage by mid-year.

In line with other Barclays divisions, we are in the process of formalising our Conduct Risk reporting and management framework. This framework will ensure that client interests are being taken into account appropriately in all our business decisions. It includes everything from our business model and strategy through to ensuring our products are designed and sold in the right way.

Notes

a Cashback for Business offers 2% cashback to SMEs who take out a loan under the scheme.

b Business Growth Fund provides equity to businesses with a turnover of £5-100m

Company

 

 

 

Contribution to total income

£3,115m

   LOGO  

 

 

 

     2013      2012     2011  
Income (£m)      3,115         3,046        3,315   
Profit/(loss) before tax (£m)      151         (390     (5
Adjusted ROE (%)      3.1         2.9        0.4   
Loan loss rate (bps)      77         127        153   
Loans and advances to customers (£bn)      61.1         64.3        68.3   
Customer deposits (£bn)      108.7         99.6        87.5   

Corporate Banking continued to make good progress in pursuing its turnaround strategy, which increased momentum in 2013. Total income increased 2% to £3,115m reflecting an increase in UK income, partially offset by non-recurring income from a reduction from Exit Quadrant assets in Europe and previously exited businesses.

Credit impairment charges declined 42% to £510m largely driven by Europe, which saw charges reduce by £224m to £318m following ongoing action to reduce exposure to the property and construction sector in Spain. Charges were also lower against large corporate clients in the UK.

Costs to achieve Transform were incurred to further invest in the ongoing client business, as well as rationalise the offering within Europe and Rest of World. Adjusted operating expenses increased 6% to £1,806m including costs to achieve Transform of £114m.

Performance improved across all regions in 2013, with the UK franchise continuing to deliver strong results. Adjusted profit before tax improved 74% to £801m. UK adjusted profit before tax improved 14% to £948m.

Loans and advances to customers decreased 5% to £61.1bn driven by the rundown of Exit Quadrant portfolios in Europe and a reduction in client demand as working capital deposits increased in the UK.

 

 

 

LOGO  

 

 

 

More information on performance can be found online at barclays.com/annualreport

 

 

 

 

 

LOGO

 

 

Future priorities

   
 

 

Become the ‘Go-To’ bank for domestic corporations in the UK and South Africa and multinational corporations and financial institutions globally by satisfying their financing and servicing needs.

 

¡ Maintain market-leading rating for client satisfaction in the UK

 

¡ Continue to provide responsible lending to support growth for viable businesses

 

¡ Continue to strengthen our cross-border product offerings in Cash Management and Trade Finance

 

¡ Continue to improve profitability, supported by helping clients to access banking solutions from the Investment Bank, Barclaycard and Wealth

 

¡ Drive cost efficiencies and actively managing our balance sheet

 

¡ Further strengthen our strong culture standards and controls to help clients achieve their commercial ambitions in the right way

 

   
 

 

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Table of Contents

Helping UK businesses with

global growth ambitions

 

 

LOGO

 

“We are currently a mattress manufacturer that makes spring components. With Barclays’ continuing support, we can evolve confidently to become a global components manufacturer that makes mattresses.’’

Simon Spinks, Managing Director, Harrison Spinks

 

New Market Expansion

Harrison Spinks is a luxury bed and mattress manufacturer based in Leeds, with ambitious plans for growth. They wanted to take their spring technology to new products and markets. Barclays was their partner of choice to help them achieve their ambition.

With turnover increasing year-on-year, Harrison Spinks is thriving despite the challenging economy by innovating and seeking out new markets. They are expanding into North America by applying their innovative spring technology to new products such as baby mattresses, footwear and automotive seating.

Having supported them for eight years, Barclays is helping them to expand by meeting their corporate banking needs and foreign exchange requirements. Harrison Spinks is benefiting from our international scale and is tapping into our knowledge of the manufacturing industry.

As Simon Spinks, MD, says, “It’s good to have someone who knows your business and where you’re trying to go… Barclays actually allows you to move forward.”

 

 

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Table of Contents

Wealth and Investment Management

 

  

 

 

 

LOGO   

 

‘We are raising industry standards through our investment philosophy encompassing client profiling, investment strategies and portfolio construction.’

  LOGO    

LOGO

 

Peter Horrell

Chief Executive Officer, Wealth and Investment Management

 

 

 

The Wealth and Investment Management business model

 

LOGO

 

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We are one of the world’s leading wealth managers and we offer clients a gateway to the full range of Barclays’ capabilities. Wealth and Investment Management continues to focus on and invest in delivering an excellent client experience, while helping clients protect, grow and pass on wealth.

Market and operating environment

We serve clients around the world: in the UK, where we are headquartered; in the US, which is the world’s largest wealth market; in major hubs in Europe and in the fast growing markets of Asia, the Middle East and Africa.

We have a clear segmentation strategy across high net worth, affluent, retail and corporate clients which defines our services based on client need and value.

Risks to our business model

Major changes in the wealth management industry in recent years have been driven by regulation, changing demographics, new sources of wealth, and evolving client needs, particularly around digitalisation.

We are making good progress in implementing our strategy, which builds on our strengths, focuses on competing where we can win and simplifies how we operate.

Our investment in the business means that we meet or exceed regulatory standards in all the markets in which we operate. We have limited the number of markets we operate in specifically to reduce business risk and position ourselves to capture emerging wealth.

Balanced Scorecard

 

 

 

LOGO

 

 

Customer and client

We are building centres of excellence within Barclays for investment management and managing offshore banking relationships, as well as an online investment proposition for self-directed clients, which will significantly enhance our capabilities in this space.

We are making great strides in digital innovation, as evidenced by our voice biometrics programme, launched in 2013, and the continuing success of the online marketing service (Little Book of Wonders) for our high net worth clients.

We will measure success in serving clients through our Net Promoter Score®.

 

 

 

 

LOGO

 

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Wealth and Investment Management >

continued

  

 

 

Colleague

We are committed to engaging our colleagues and creating a diverse and inclusive environment where they can fulfil their potential. Following the launch of the Barclays Values and Behaviours, 96% of Wealth and Investment Management employees had attended a Values Workshop by June 2013, and we are making great progress in embedding the Values and Behaviours into our business and decision-making. In September 2013, colleagues had the opportunity to reflect on and absorb the strategy for Wealth and Investment Management: 2,200 colleagues in 26 locations around the world attended town halls and strategy conversations. The Wealth and Investment Management Global Diversity & Inclusion Council was established in 2013 with the purpose of attracting and developing the most talented people from all backgrounds.

Citizenship

Wealth and Investment Management contributes to the Barclays 2015 Citizenship Plan by embedding a citizenship ethos into the way we do business, through our strategy, decision-making and investment management approach. We will also contribute to growth by supporting the development of social impact investing and managing charity investments and support our communities through community investment and client philanthropy.

Our colleagues contributed over 9,000 hours to support our communities around the world in 2013.

Conduct

Effectively managing Conduct Risk is essential in building a sustainable wealth management business. We are introducing a rigorous and transparent Conduct Risk reporting and management framework which ensures that the interests of clients and other stakeholders are appropriately considered in all business decisions. In 2013 we developed specific internal communications programmes to drive awareness of this important risk and help employees understand how their behaviours and decision-making can specifically contribute to or mitigate client harm. We are also embedding conduct risk discipline into our business through a series of Material Risk Assessments intended to prevent potential client issues before they occur.

Company

 

 

 

Contribution to total income

£1,839m

    

 

LOGO  

 

  

 

 

 

     2013     2012      2011  
Income (£m)      1,839        1,820         1,770   
Adjusted (loss)/profit before tax (£m)      (19     274         188   
Adjusted ROE (%)      (1.0     11.2         9.5   
Loan loss rate (bps)      51        17         21   
Loans and advances to customers (£bn)      23.1        21.3         18.8   
Customer deposits (£bn)      63.4        53.8         46.5   

Total income of £1,839m remained broadly in line with the prior year, as growth in deposit and lending balances, primarily in the High Net Worth business, offset a lower net interest margin reflecting a change in product mix and reduced contributions from structural hedges.

Credit impairment charges increased £83m to £121m, largely reflecting the impact of deterioration in recovery values from property held as security, primarily in Europe.

The business continued to implement its strategic programme to build on its strengths, focus on target markets and simplify how it operates. Adjusted operating expenses increased £241m to £1,750m largely reflecting costs to achieve Transform of £158m.

Business growth remained robust with strong growth in client assets, customer deposits and loans and advances to customers, which increased 8% to £23.1bn primarily driven by growth in the High Net Worth business.

 

 

 

LOGO  

 

 

 

More information on performance can be found online at barclays.com/annualreport

 

 

 

 

 

LOGO

 

 

Future priorities

   
 

 

Wealth and Investment Management continues to be a key area of growth within Barclays. Examples of how we will achieve our strategy:

 

¡  Building on our strengths : a new direct to consumer offering for ‘DIY’ Buy and Hold investors – a growing and significant part of the investor market. We are on track to develop this direct to consumer offering, to be rolled out initially in the UK in 2015.

 

¡ Focus on competing where we can win: the strategic focus areas for our business continue to be the UK, US and global high-net worth hubs. In order to ensure that we are building a sustainable business and managing risks effectively, we are reducing the number of countries which we serve, taking into account the impact on clients, colleagues and local markets.

 

¡ Simplifying how we operate: we are making changes to the way we service our affluent clients in the UK with existing clients with assets of less than £500,000 managed by a new team called Private Clients.

 

   
 

 

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Table of Contents
Innovating security and simplicity with voice biometrics

 

 

LOGO

 

Barclays Wealth and Investment Management is the first wealth manager to introduce a pioneering ‘voice security’ service which stores the unique biometric (with more characteristics than a fingerprint) of an individual’s voice print to securely and quickly confirm a client’s identity.

Last year, Barclays Wealth and Investment Management successfully rolled out a cutting-edge service enhancement which is used to identify customers by the sound of their voice, greatly improving the client experience.

When a customer calls Barclays Wealth and Investment Management to access their account and completes the traditional knowledge based identification process their voice print is captured and they are asked if they would like to enrol in the service.

The next time they call Barclays, the customer engages in a few seconds of natural conversation with a customer service agent. During that time, the voice biometrics technology is used to compare the customer’s voice to their unique voiceprint on file, and silently signals to the Barclays representative when the customer’s identity has been verified.

This approach has been welcomed by customers who have seen the time taken to verify their identity fall from 1.5 minutes to less than 10 seconds.

94% of clients scored at least nine out of 10 for the speed, ease of use and security of voice authentication.

 

 

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Table of Contents

Chairman’s governance overview

 

  

 

 

LOGO

 

LOGO   

 

‘Key for the Board is ensuring that we have in place the right strategy, a robust and appropriate risk management and control framework and the right people to create long-term value for shareholders.’

  LOGO

The UK Corporate Governance Code makes clear the principle that the Board should set the company’s strategic aims, ensure that the necessary financial and human resources are in place for the company to meet its objectives and review management performance.

The right strategy

As a Board, we set direction and risk appetite and provide oversight and control of management in the day-to-day running of the business. As Chairman, I seek to ensure that adequate time is set aside at Board meetings for the open and collective discussion and debate of significant issues, most importantly, strategy. Once a well-informed decision is reached, we empower management to then execute that decision, with our ongoing oversight and support. This established process underpinned our endorsement of the Transform programme in early 2013 and the decision we made in July 2013 to undertake a rights issue.

The right risks and controls

It is essential that our risk culture supports our risk profile and that we have visible and dedicated risk management leadership, both in the Boardroom and in executive management. In 2013 we enhanced our internal control and risk management framework by creating a new Board-level committee charged with specific oversight of operational and conduct risks, reputational matters and our citizenship strategy. We also created a Board Enterprise Wide Risk Committee, whose role is to focus on a holistic view of our risk appetite and risk profile and to seek to identify potential future risk.

The right people

Talent development and succession planning are critical components of sustainable success and this starts at the very top, in the Boardroom. It is vital that we have on the Board the right balance and diversity of expertise, skills, experience, perspectives and, most crucially, independence of thought and action.

All Board appointments are made on merit, in the context of the diversity required for an effective Board, including diversity of skills, experience, background and gender. The aims set out in our Board Diversity Policy, published in April 2012, were to have 20% of the Board made up of women by the end of 2013, and for that position to have exceeded 25% by the end of 2015. There were three women on the Barclays Board at the end of 2013 (20%), compared to one woman at the end of 2012 (8%). Our Board Diversity Policy can be found on our website, Barclays.com

 

LOGO

Sir David Walker

Chairman

Board Gender Balance

 

 

LOGO

 

 

 

1 Directors – Men

2 Directors – Women

 

 

 

 

 

 

31.12.13

12

3

 

  

  

  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

31.12.12

11

1

 

 

  

  

  

 

 

 

 

 

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Table of Contents
                    
      

Group overview

Chief Executive’s strategic review

Strategy and operating environment  

Business model/Value creation

Balanced Scorecard

Group Finance Director’s review

Strategic risk overview

Performance review by division

Chairman’s governance overview

Summary remuneration report

Summary financial statements

Shareholder information

 

02  

04

06

08

10

12

14

18

46

48

52

54

 

Good governance is vital in supporting the delivery of our strategic priorities. More information on the role of the Board and its Committees can be found in ‘Corporate Governance in Barclays’ which is available online at Barclays.com

                    

 

Our Board

Sir David Walker (74) Group Chairman

Antony Jenkins (52) Group Chief Executive; Executive Director

Mike Ashley (59) Non-executive Director

Tim Breedon (56) Non-executive Director

Fulvio Conti (66) Non-executive Director

Simon Fraser (54) Non-executive Director

Reuben Jeffery (61) Non-executive Director

Wendy Lucas-Bull (60) Non-executive Director

Tushar Morzaria (45) Group Finance Director; Executive Director

 

Dambisa Moyo (45) Non-executive Director

Frits van Paasschen (52) Non-executive Director

Sir Michael Rake (66) Deputy Chairman and Senior Independent Director

Diane de Saint Victor (59) Non-executive Director

Sir John Sunderland (68) Non-executive Director

Steve Thieke (68) Non-executive Director

 

  LOGO  

Detailed biographies can be found online at barclays.com/annualreport

 

 

 

Board Governance Framework

 

LOGO

 

Our Board Committees

 

 

Board Committee   Role

 

Board Enterprise Wide Risk Committee  

Chaired by Sir David Walker

It takes an enterprise-wide view of risks and controls and brings together the overall risk appetite and risk profile of the business

 

 

Board Audit Committee  

Chaired by Mike Ashley

It takes a largely backward-looking view, focused on financial reporting and control issues, including overseeing any control issue remediation plans

 

 

Board Conduct, Reputation and Operational Risk Committee  

Chaired by Sir David Walker

It takes a largely forward-looking view of conduct risk, operational risk and reputation risk, including recommending the level of risk Barclays is prepared to take

 

 

Board Financial Risk Committee  

Chaired by Tim Breedon

It takes a largely forward-looking view of financial risk appetite and financial risk profile (credit, market, liquidity and funding risk) across Barclays

 

 

Board Remuneration     Committee  

Chaired by Sir John Sunderland

It sets the overarching principles and parameters of remuneration policy across Barclays and approves remuneration arrangements for executive directors, senior executives and individual remuneration awards

 

 

Board Corporate Governance and Nominations Committee  

Chaired by Sir David Walker

It makes recommendations on Board and Board Committee composition and effectiveness, Board and executive succession plans, talent management strategy and corporate governance

 

 

Governance in action

Our Board Committees continued to support the delivery of our strategic priorities during 2013:

 

¡   Board Audit Committee: estimating customer redress provisions, in particular PPI redress provisions, was an area of focus for the Board Audit Committee in 2013. The Committee played a key role in evaluating and challenging the assumptions underlying the provisions made.

 

¡   Board Conduct, Reputation and Operational Risk Committee: during 2013 the Board Conduct, Reputation and Operational Risk Committee spent time on developing Barclays’ approach to Conduct Risk, establishing what it means for Barclays and how we will manage it in a way that ensures positive outcomes for our customers and clients.

 

¡   Board Financial Risk Committee: the possibility of a Eurozone crisis remained during 2013, as the weak growth outlook continued to raise concerns about sovereign creditworthiness in some countries. The Board Financial Risk Committee’s focus was on continuing to reduce Barclays’ exposure to redenomination risk.

 

¡   Board Corporate Governance and Nominations Committee: executive succession and talent management are a critical component of long-term success. 2013 saw the Board Corporate Governance and Nominations Committee increase its focus on talent management.

 

  LOGO   You can read more about Governance in Action in the Corporate governance report, which is available online at barclays.com/annualreport
 

 

The activity of the Board Remuneration Committee during 2013 is described in the Remuneration report online at barclays.com/annualreport

 

 

 

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Table of Contents

Summary remuneration report

  

 

 

LOGO

‘Our aim is to deliver a greater share of the income we generate to shareholders while remaining competitive on pay. Although profits for 2013 were down, the 38% reduction in incentives in the previous two years had begun to cause demonstrable damage to our business. The difficult decision to address this by increasing incentives in certain key areas is in the long term interest of shareholders. We remain fully committed to reducing the ratio of compensation to adjusted net operating income over time.’

Dear Shareholders

The Committee’s objective is to maximise long term value for shareholders by ensuring that we do not pay more than is necessary while remaining competitive.

Remuneration Committee work in 2013

Determining the 2013 incentive pool was an extremely difficult decision for the Committee. We were acutely aware of public sentiment and of the challenge of presenting shareholders with an increased pool in a year where profits have fallen. The Committee concluded that a 2013 incentive pool of £2,378m was warranted. This was up 10% on the final 2012 incentive pool but it remains 32% below pool levels in 2010 when we started to reposition Barclays’ remuneration. Before adjustment for risk and conduct events the incentive pool was down 18% on 2012.

Significant progress has been made since 2010 in addressing imbalances in remuneration. The Barclays’ incentive pool reduced by 38% between 2010 and 2012 (48% for the Investment Bank) and bonuses for Managing Directors in the Investment Bank are fully deferred. The dilemma faced by the Committee in 2013 was that these actions were not matched by our peers, most notably the major US banks who are among our primary competitors. As a result, our lack of pay competitiveness was beginning to cause demonstrable damage to our business, especially outside the UK. The global resignation rate for senior staff in 2013 was significantly above that in 2012. This was particularly marked in the Investment Bank with a near doubling of resignations of senior staff in the US. In making our 2013 decisions on incentives, the Committee sought to ensure the health of the franchise in the long term interest of shareholders.

As in 2012, consideration of risk and conduct events was an important aspect of the Committee’s work during 2013. We made total reductions of £290m to incentives for PPI, Interest Rate Hedging Products and other events. Of this, £176m of adjustments were made through reductions in LTIP awards that were granted in previous years and £114m of reductions were made to the 2013 incentive pool. This contrasts with risk and conduct adjustments to the incentive pool of £860m in 2012 for events including the investigation into the setting of inter-bank offered rates.

When determining the incentive pool we looked at it on a pre- and post-adjustment basis for risk and conduct events. The Committee concluded that an incentive pool for 2013 of £2,492m on a pre-adjustment basis was appropriate. This is 18% down on the equivalent pre-adjustment pool in 2012. After applying an adjustment for risk and conduct events of £114m, the final 2013 incentive pool is £2,378m, up 10% on 2012, reflecting the lower level of risk and conduct adjustment for 2013.

 

 

48 > Barclays PLC Strategic Report 2013    barclays.com/annualreport


Table of Contents
                    
      

Group overview

Chief Executive’s strategic review

Strategy and operating environment  

Business model/Value creation

Balanced Scorecard

Group Finance Director’s review

Strategic risk overview

Performance review by division

Chairman’s governance overview

Summary remuneration report

Summary financial statements

Shareholder information

 

02  

04

06

08

10

12

14

18

46

48

52

54

 

The next two pages provide the 2013

single total figure of remuneration

for each Director, which form part of

the annual report on Directors’

remuneration.

                    

 

A significant part of the Committee’s work in 2013 was reviewing how to restructure executive Director and senior executive remuneration for compliance with new EU regulation, the Capital Requirements Directive IV and, in particular, the capped ratio of variable to fixed pay. Our approach is based on a new class of fixed pay called Role Based Pay. We are seeking shareholder approval at the 2014 AGM for a maximum ratio of variable to fixed pay of 2:1. For executive Directors, the level of Role Based Pay will be capped for the term of the policy and will be delivered in shares which will be subject to a holding period of up to five years to ensure alignment with shareholders. The Committee has recognised that in return for greater certainty there should be a reduced total remuneration opportunity.

Focus in 2014

The Committee will continue to focus on the need to pay at levels required to attract, retain and motivate our people. While not paying more than we judge to be necessary, we will ensure that we can continue to pay our people competitively and simultaneously seek to deliver a greater share of the income we generate to shareholders. We will be informed in this work by a continuing constructive engagement and dialogue with our shareholders and our other stakeholders.

I encourage you to read our full Remuneration report in the 2013 Annual Report or at www.barclays.com/annualreport.

On behalf of the Board

 

LOGO

Sir John Sunderland

Chairman, Board Remuneration Committee

3 March 2014

 

 

2013 compensation and incentive headlines

 

¡  Total compensation costs decreased 1% to £9,616m. Total compensation costs in the Investment Bank were slightly down at £4,634m (2012: £4,667m)

 

¡  This reduction in compensation costs in part offset the reduction in adjusted net operating income and meant that the Group compensation to adjusted net operating income ratio increased slightly to 38.3% (2012: 37.5%)

 

¡   There has been strong differentiation on the basis of individual performance to allow the Group to more effectively manage compensation costs

 

¡   While the final incentive pool is up on 2012, it is £1,106m or 32% below the 2010 outcome from when the Committee started its repositioning journey to reduce compensation. In the Investment Bank, incentive awards granted were 41% (£1,086m) below 2010 levels

 

¡  Before making adjustments for risk and conduct events, the 2013 incentive awards of £2,492m had been reduced 18% from 2012. After adjustments for risk and conduct, total incentive awards granted were £2,378m, up 10% on 2012

 

¡   Levels of deferral continue to significantly exceed the PRA Remuneration Code’s minimum requirements and are expected to remain among the highest deferral levels globally. 2013 bonuses awarded to Managing Directors in the Investment Bank were 100% deferred.

 

 

 

barclays.com/annualreport    Barclays PLC Strategic Report 2013 > 49


Table of Contents

Summary remuneration report >

continued

  

 

 

Single total figure for 2013 remuneration

The following table shows a single total figure of remuneration in respect of qualifying service for each executive Director together with comparative figures for 2012.

Executive Directors: Single total figure for 2013 remuneration (audited)

 

 
    

Salary

£000

    

Taxable benefits

£000

    

Bonus

£000

    

LTIP

£000

    

Pension

£000

    

Total

£000

 

 

 
     2013      2012      2013      2012      2013      2012      2013      2012      2013      2012      2013      2012    

 

 

Antony Jenkinsa

     1,100         373         138         19         0         0         0         0         364         137         1,602         529     

Tushar Morzariab

     171                 14                   1,200                 0                 43                 1,428         –     

Chris Lucasc

        501            800              47            34         500            0            985            643            125            200           2,158           1,677     

 

 

Notes

a Antony Jenkins joined the Board with effect from 30 August 2012.
b Tushar Morzaria joined the Board with effect from 15 October 2013.
c Chris Lucas stepped down from the Board with effect from 16 August 2013 due to ill health.

Additional information in respect of each element of pay for the executive Directors (audited):

Base salary

Antony Jenkins has been paid a salary of £1,100,000 per annum as Group Chief Executive since his appointment to the role. Tushar Morzaria commenced employment on 15 October 2013 on a salary of £800,000 per annum. Chris Lucas was paid a salary of £800,000 per annum.

Taxable benefits

Taxable benefits include private medical cover, life and ill health income protection, tax advice, home leave related costs, car allowance and the use of a company vehicle and driver when required for business purposes. The figure in the above table for Tushar Morzaria includes £4,576 of non-taxable relocation expenses. Further relocation expenses will be incurred for Tushar Morzaria.

Pension

Executive directors are contractually entitled to cash in lieu of pension contributions which reflects market practice for senior executives in comparable roles.

Annual bonus

Bonuses are earned by reference to the financial year and awarded in the following February. The Committee considered the performance of each of the executive Directors during their respective periods of office during the year. Their performance was assessed against their objectives agreed at the start of the year and comprised both Group and personal, financial and non-financial measures. Information on the Group measures is set out in the table below.

The executive Directors share collective responsibility for progress, as at the year end, against the Transform commitments set out at the start of 2013 and in the Rights Issue prospectus.

 

 

 

Objective

 

 

  

 

Targets / measures for 2013

 

 

 

 

  Progress in 2013

 

 

 

 

Strategic progress:

the Transform programme

  

 

Performance is assessed

against the Transform commitments of 2013

 

Financial measures in the Transform commitments included return on equity, cost to income ratio, core capital ratio, dividend payouts and risk weighted assets.

 

Non-financial measures include progress on cultural change, the development of the Balanced Scorecard and the reputation of and trust in Barclays.

 

 

 

  Financial

    

¡

 

Underlying performance has been resilient and momentum is building

    

¡

 

CRD IV Risk Weighted Assets within the £440bn target for 2015

    

¡

 

Fully loaded Common Equity Tier 1 capital ratio at 9.3% is on track to meet the target of 10.5% during 2015

    

¡

 

Cost reduction plans on target for expenses of £16.8bn in 2015 excluding costs to achieve Transform

    

¡

 

Adverse movement in cost to income ratio in 2013 mainly as a consequence of reduced income

    

¡

 

Work done in 2013 to target a 40% dividend payout ratio from 2014, achieving a payout ratio of 40-50% over time

      
       Non-financial
    

¡

 

Barclays Purpose, Values and Behaviours published and cascaded throughout organisation, now integrated into day to day management processes. Data shows that the culture is changing at Barclays.

    

¡

 

Balanced Scorecard published shortly after the year end. Data shows reputation of and trust in Barclays is improving.

 

 

 

 

 

2013 Financial and risk measures

  

 

The executive Directors lead delivery of overall performance measured by reference to income, profitability, risk weighted assets and return on equity

 

 

¡

 

 

Strength in the diversity of the Group’s income, underpinned by our traditional consumer and commercial banking franchises, and growth in Equities and Investment Banking in the Investment Bank

    

¡

 

But income in the Investment Bank overall was down 9% driven by a decrease in FICC

    

¡

 

Adjusted profit before tax was down 32% year on year due to reduced income and costs to achieve Transform

    

¡

 

Successful execution of Rights Issue

    

¡

 

Strong financial fundamentals across funding and liquidity, capital, credit risk management and margins

    

¡

 

Adjusted return on average shareholders’ equity decreased to 4.5% principally reflecting the decrease in profit before tax.

 

 

 

50 > Barclays PLC Strategic Report 2013    barclays.com/annualreport


Table of Contents
  

 

 

The Committee and Board agreed that Antony Jenkins had performed strongly in his first full year as Chief Executive. However, on 3 February 2014 Antony Jenkins announced that he would decline any 2013 bonus offered to him by the Committee, citing the Rights Issue, restructuring costs and costs associated with legacy issues as his reasons.

60% of Tushar Morzaria’s 2013 bonus of £1.2m will be deferred through a Share Value Plan award vesting over three years. 20% will be paid in cash and 20% in shares. All shares are subject to a six month holding period from the point of release. The bonus reflects both Tushar’s performance at Barclays and his forfeited bonus opportunity when he left his previous employer to join Barclays.

The Committee decided to award Chris Lucas a 2013 bonus at a level of 40% of the maximum (the maximum being 250% of salary), pro-rating the resulting amount to reflect his service during 2013. The resulting award of £500,000 will be 100% deferred through a Share Value Plan award vesting over three years, each annual release of shares being subject to an additional six month holding period.

LTIP

The LTIP amount included in the 2013 single total figure of remuneration is the value of vesting amounts in 2013 in relation to the LTIP award granted in 2011. Chris Lucas was the only executive Director participant in this cycle. Accordingly, as Antony Jenkins and Tushar Morzaria were not participants in this cycle, the LTIP figure in the single figure table is shown as zero for both of them. Vesting was dependent on the performance period ending in 2013. The performance achieved against the performance targets is shown below.

 

 

Performance measure

 

  

Weighting

 

  

Threshold

 

  

Maximum 100% vesting

 

 

Actual

 

 

% of maximum achieved

 

 

 

Return on Risk Weighted Assets (‘RoRWA’)

 

  

 

60%

  

 

23% of award vests for average annual RoRWA of 1%

 

  

 

Average annual RoRWA of 1.5%

 

 

 

0.4%

 

 

0%

 

 

Loan loss rate

  

 

30%

  

 

10% of award vests for average annual loan loss rate of 95 bps

 

  

 

Average annual loan loss rate of 81 bps or below

 

 

71 bps

 

 

30%

 

 

Sustainability metrics

  

 

10%

  

 

Performance against the sustainability metrics is assessed by the Committee to determine the % of the award that may vest between 0% and 10%

 

 

 

0%

 

 

0%

 

The award was also subject to a discretionary underpin by which the Committee must be satisfied with the underlying financial health of the Group. The Committee was satisfied that this underpin was met, and accordingly determined that the award should vest to the extent of 30% of the maximum number of shares under the total award. The shares are scheduled to be released in March 2014.

Chairman and non-executive Directors

Remuneration for non-executive Directors reflects their responsibility and time commitment and the level of fees paid to non-executive directors of comparable major UK companies.

Chairman and non-executive Directors: Single total figure for 2013 fees (audited)

 

 
    

            Fees

 

    

            Benefits

 

    

            Total

 

 

 

 
    

2013

£000

    

2012

£000

    

2013

£000

    

2012

£000

    

2013

£000

    

2012  

£000  

 

 

 

Chairman

                 

Sir David Walkera

     750         167         17         6         767         173     

 

 

Non-executive Directors

                 

Michael Ashleyb

     39                                 39         –     

David Boothc

     185         170                         185         170     

Tim Breedond

     183         18                         183         18     

Fulvio Conti

     110         110                         110         110     

Simon Fraser

     140         140                         140         140     

Reuben Jeffery III

     124         105                         124         105     

Sir Andrew Likiermane

     45         135                         45         135     

Wendy Lucas-Bullf

     25                                 25         –     

Dambisa Moyo

     129         120                         129         120     

Frits van Paasscheng

     33                                 33         –     

Sir Michael Rake

     220         220                         220         220     

Diane de Saint Victorh

     90                                 90         –     

Sir John Sunderland

     189         161                         189         161     

Alison Carnwathi

             114                                 114     

Marcus Agiusj

             750                 1                 751     

 

 

Total

             2,262                 2,210                      17                        7                 2,279                 2,217     

 

 

Notes

a Sir David Walker joined the Board as a non-executive Director with effect from 1 September 2012 and as Chairman from 1 November 2012.
b Michael Ashley joined the Board as a non-executive Director with effect from 18 September 2013.
c David Booth retired from the Board as a non-executive Director with effect from 31 December 2013.
d Tim Breedon joined the Board as a non-executive Director with effect from 1 November 2012.
e Sir Andrew Likierman retired from the Board as a non-executive Director with effect from 25 April 2013.
f Wendy Lucas-Bull joined the Board as a non-executive Director with effect from 19 September 2013.
g Frits van Paasschen joined the Board as a non-executive Director with effect from 1 August 2013.
h Diane de Saint Victor joined the Board as a non-executive Director with effect from 1 March 2013.
i Alison Carnwath resigned from the Board as a non-executive Director with effect from 24 July 2012.
j Marcus Agius stepped down as Chairman and as a non-executive Director on 2 July 2012.

 

barclays.com/annualreport    Barclays PLC Strategic Report 2013 > 51


Table of Contents

Summary financial statements >

Condensed income statement

  

 

 

 

 
     2013     2012a      

For the year ended 31 December

   £m     £m      

 

 

Continuing operations

    

Net interest income

     11,600        11,654      

Net fee and commission income

     8,731        8,536      

Net trading income

     6,553        3,347      

Net investment income

     680        844      

Net premiums from insurance contracts

     732        896      

Other income

     148        332      

 

 

Total income

     28,444        25,609      

Net claims and benefits incurred on insurance contracts

     (509     (600)     

 

 

Total income net of insurance claims

     27,935        25,009      

Credit impairment charges and other provisions

     (3,071     (3,340)     

 

 

Net operating income

     24,864        21,669      

Staff costs

     (12,155     (11,467)     

Administration and general expenses

     (6,611     (5,991)     

Depreciation of property, plant and equipment

     (647     (669)     

Amortisation of intangible assets

     (480     (435)     

Goodwill impairment

     (79     –      

Provision for PPI redress

     (1,350     (1,600)     

Provision for interest rate hedging products redress

     (650     (850)     

 

 

Operating expenses

     (21,972     (21,012)     

 

 

Share of post-tax results of associates and joint ventures

     (56     110      

Profit/(loss) on disposal of subsidiaries, associates and joint ventures

     6        28      

Gain on acquisitions

     26        2      

 

 

Profit before tax

     2,868        797      

Taxation

     (1,571     (616)     

 

 

Profit after tax

     1,297        181      

 

 

Attributable to:

    

 

 

Equity holders of the parent

     540        (624)     

Non-controlling interests

     757        805      

 

 

Profit after tax

     1,297        181      

 

 
     p     p     

 

 

Earnings per share

    

Basic earnings/(loss) per share

     3.8        (4.8)     

Diluted earnings/(loss) per share

     3.7        (4.8)     

 

 

 

Independent auditors’ statement to the members of Barclays PLC

 

Independent auditors’ statement to the members of Barclays PLC

We have examined the supplementary financial information included within the Strategic Report for the year ended 31 December 2013, which comprises the condensed consolidated balance sheet as at 31 December 2013 and the condensed consolidated income statement for the year ended 31 December 2013.

 

Respective responsibilities of the directors and the auditors

The directors are responsible for preparing the Strategic Report, in accordance with the Companies Act 2006, which includes information extracted from the full annual financial statements and the auditable part of the Directors’ Remuneration report of Barclays PLC for the year ended 31 December 2013

 

Our responsibility is to report to you our opinion on the consistency of the summary financial information, included within the Strategic Report, with those full annual financial statements and the auditable part of the Directors’ Remuneration report.

 

This statement, including the opinion, has been prepared for and only for the company’s members as a body and for no other purpose. We do not, in giving this opinion, accept or assume responsibility for

 

 

any other purpose or to any other person to whom this statement is shown or into whose hands it may come save where expressly agreed by our prior consent in writing.

 

Basis of opinion

Our examination involved agreeing the balances disclosed in the summary financial information to full annual financial statements. Our audit report on the company’s full annual financial statements and the auditable part of the Directors’ Remuneration report describes the basis of our opinion on those financial statements and the auditable part of that report.

 

Opinion

In our opinion the supplementary financial information is consistent with the full annual financial statements and the auditable part of the Directors’ Remuneration report of Barclays PLC for the year ended 31 December 2013.

 

PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP

Chartered Accountants and Statutory Auditors

London, United Kingdom

3 March 2014

Note

a The comparatives in the financial statements and notes to the financial statements have been restated to reflect the implementation of IFRS 10 Consolidated Financial Statements and IAS 19 Employee Benefits (Revised 2011).

 

52 > Barclays PLC Strategic Report 2013    barclays.com/annualreport


Table of Contents
                    

Summary financial statements >

Condensed balance sheet

   

Group overview

Chief Executive’s strategic review

Strategy and operating environment  

Business model/Value creation

Balanced Scorecard

Group Finance Director’s review

Strategic risk overview

Performance review by division

Chairman’s governance overview

Summary remuneration report

Summary financial statements

Shareholder information

 

02  

04

06

08

10

12

14

18

46

48

52

54

 

The summary consolidated income

statement and the summary

consolidated balance sheet were

approved by the Board of Directors

on 3 March 2014 and signed on its

behalf by the Chairman.

                    

 

 

 

 

As at

  

31 December
2013

£m

    

31 December  
2012a  

£m  

 

 

 

Assets

     

Cash and balances at central banks

     45,687         86,191     

Items in the course of collection from other banks

     1,282         1,473     

Trading portfolio assets

     133,069         146,352     

Financial assets designated at fair value

     38,968         46,629     

Derivative financial instruments

     324,335         469,156     

Available for sale investments

     91,756         75,109     

Loans and advances to banks

     37,853         40,462     

Loans and advances to customers

     430,411         423,906     

Reverse repurchase agreements and other similar secured lending

     186,779         176,522     

Prepayments, accrued income and other assets

     4,414         4,365     

Investments in associates and joint ventures

     653         633     

Property, plant and equipment

     4,216         5,754     

Goodwill and intangible assets

     7,685         7,915     

Current tax assets

     219         252     

Deferred tax assets

     4,807         3,563     

Retirement benefit assets

     133         53     

 

 

Total assets

     1,312,267         1,488,335     

 

 

Liabilities

     

Deposits from banks

     54,834         77,012     

Items in the course of collection due to other banks

     1,359         1,587     

Customer accounts

     427,902         385,411     

Repurchase agreements and other similar secured borrowing

     196,748         217,178     

Trading portfolio liabilities

     53,464         44,794     

Financial liabilities designated at fair value

     64,796         78,561     

Derivative financial instruments

     320,634         462,721     

Debt securities in issue

     86,693         119,525     

Subordinated liabilities

     21,695         24,018     

Accruals, deferred income and other liabilities

     12,934         12,532     

Provisions

     3,886         2,766     

Current tax liabilities

     1,042         621     

Deferred tax liabilities

     373         341     

Retirement benefit liabilities

     1,958         1,282     

 

 

Total liabilities

     1,248,318         1,428,349     

 

 

Total equity

     

Called up share capital and share premium

     19,887         12,477     

Other equity instruments

     2,063         –     

Other reserves

     249         3,674     

Retained earnings

     33,186         34,464     

 

 

Total equity excluding non-controlling interests

     55,385         50,615     

Non-controlling interests

     8,564         9,371     

 

 

Total equity

     63,949         59,986     

 

 

Total liabilities and equity

     1,312,267         1,488,335     

 

 

Note

a The comparatives in the financial statements and notes to the financial statements have been restated to reflect the implementation of IFRS 10 Consolidated Financial Statements and IAS 19 Employee Benefits (Revised 2011).

 

barclays.com/annualreport    Barclays PLC Strategic Report 2013 > 53


Table of Contents

Shareholder information >

Your Barclays Shareholding

  

 

 

Key dates*

 

 

28 March

2013 Final dividend payment date

 

24 April

2014 Annual General Meeting

 

13 June

2014 First interim dividend payment date

 

19 September

2014 Second interim dividend payment date

 

5 December

2014 Third interim dividend payment date

 

*Please note that these dates are provisional and subject to change.

Annual General Meeting (AGM)

This year’s AGM will be held at the Royal Festival Hall, Southbank Centre, Belvedere Road, London SE1 8XX on Thursday, 24 April 2014 at 11.00am.

The Chairman and Chief Executive will update shareholders on our performance in 2013 and our goals for 2014. Shareholders will also have the opportunity to ask the Board questions at the meeting.

 

LOGO

 

   LOGO  

You can find out more at

barclays.com/agm

Dividends

We remain committed to a 40% to 50% payout ratio over time, however, we expect to be at 40% from 2014 to allow focus on capital accretion. We would not expect it to rise further in to the 40% to 50% payout range until the 10.5% Core Equity Tier 1 milestone has been reached.

How do Barclays shareholders receive their dividends?

As at 31 December 2013, Barclays shareholders received their dividends in the following ways:

 

LOGO

You can choose how you would like to receive your Barclays dividends – save time and receive your dividends faster

You can have your dividends paid directly into your bank or building society account. It is easy to set up and your money will be in your bank account on the dividend payment date. If you hold 2,500 shares or less, you can provide your bank or building society details quickly and easily over the telephone using the contact details overleaf. If you hold more than 2,500 shares, please write to The Registrar.

Scrip Dividend Programme (the Programme)

Shareholders can choose to have their dividends reinvested in new ordinary Barclays shares through the Programme. More information including the Programme Terms and Conditions and application form are available on our website (details below).

Unclaimed dividends

We are aware that some shareholders do not keep their personal details on the share register up to date. Therefore, during 2013, we conducted a tracing process to re-unite over 24,000 Barclays Sharestore members, who lost contact with us, with their unclaimed dividends. We have returned over £2m of unclaimed dividends to our shareholders.

 

   LOGO   To find out more contact The Registrar to Barclays or visit barclays.com/dividends
 

 

54 > Barclays PLC Strategic Report 2013    barclays.com/annualreport


Table of Contents

 

                    

   

Group overview

Chief Executive’s strategic review

Strategy and operating environment  

Business model/Value creation

Balanced Scorecard

Group Finance Director’s review

Strategic risk overview

Performance review by division

Chairman’s governance overview

Summary remuneration report

Summary financial statements

Shareholder information

 

02  

04

06

08

10

12

14

18

46

48

52

54

 

Resources for shareholders including the

Company articles of association, classes

of shares and contact details for

shareholder enquiries.

                    

 

Charity donations –

Thank you for your support

We would like to take this opportunity to thank our shareholders for helping us to make two fantastic donations to charity.

Firstly, thank you to all of our Barclays Dividend Re-investment Plan (DRIP) participants (which was withdrawn in June 2013) who chose to donate their DRIP cash residue to our chosen charity, ABF The Soldier’s Charity.

As at the end of January 2014, we had raised over

£40,000

Secondly, following the close of the Rights Issue in October 2013, shareholders who let some or all of their Rights lapse received a cheque for their share of the net premium provided that it was £3.00 or more. Any amounts due to shareholders that were less than £3.00 were donated to UNICEF.

We are delighted to tell you that Barclays shareholders have donated over

£89,000    to UNICEF

ShareGift your shares

Shareholders with small holdings of shares, whose value makes them uneconomic to sell, may wish to donate them to ShareGift, the share donation charity (registered charity number 1052686).

 

   LOGO   Further information about ShareGift and the charities it has supported may be obtained from their website, www.ShareGift.org

Action for shareholders

Keep your personal details up to date

Please remember to tell The Registrar if:

 

¡   You move house
¡   You need to update your bank or building society details.

If you are a Barclays e-view member, you can update your bank or building society account or address details online. If you hold 2,500 shares or less, you can update details quickly and easily over the telephone using the contact details overleaf. If you hold more than 2,500 shares you will need to write to The Registrar. You must provide a copy of your share certificate, Sharestore statement or most recent dividend tax voucher. If these are not available, you will need to provide a copy of a utility bill or bank statement dated in the last three months.

Duplicate documents

If you receive duplicate documents and split dividends on your Barclays shares, this may be because you have more than one account on the Barclays share register.

 

   LOGO   If you think that this affects you and you would like to combine your shareholdings, please contact The Registrar to Barclays (details overleaf).

 

 

Shareholder Security

Shareholders should be wary of any unsolicited investment advice and offers to buy shares at a discounted price. These fraudsters use persuasive and high-pressure tactics to lure shareholders into scams. Please keep in mind that firms authorised by the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) are unlikely to contact you out of the blue with an offer to buy or sell shares. You should think about getting independent financial or professional advice before you hand over any money.

 

  LOGO   Report a scam If you are approached by fraudsters please tell the FCA using the share fraud reporting form at www.fca.org.uk/scams. You can also call the FCA Helpline on 0800 111 6768.
 

 

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Shareholder enquiries >

Useful contact details

 

 

Barclays e-view

 

LOGO

You do not have to receive paper shareholder information. Many Barclays shareholders go online to manage their shareholding and find out about Barclays’ performance. Barclays e-view members receive the latest updates from Barclays directly by email.

To join Barclays e-view, please follow these 3 easy steps:

 

Step 1    Go to www.eviewsignup.co.uk
Step 2    Register for electronic communications by following the instructions on screen
Step 3    You will be sent an activation code in the post the next working day

 

LOGO Alternative formats

Shareholder documents can be provided in large print, audio CD or Braille free of charge by calling the Barclays Shareholder Helpline.

 

0871 384 2055* (in the UK)

+44 121 415 7004** (from overseas)

 

Audio versions of the Annual Review will also be available at the AGM.

 

The Registrar to Barclays

If you have any questions about your Barclays shares, please contact The Registrar to Barclays:

 

  LOGO    questions@share-registers.co.uk
     0871 384 2055* (in the UK)
     +44 121 415 7004** (from overseas)
    
     ABC Textphone
     0871 384 2255* (in the UK)
     +44 121 415 7028** (from overseas)
    
     The Registrar to Barclays
     Aspect House, Spencer Road,
     Lancing, West Sussex BN99 6DA

Shareholder Relations

To give us your feedback or if you have any questions, please contact:

 

  LOGO    privateshareholderrelations@barclays.com
     Shareholder Relations, Barclays PLC,
     1 Churchill Place, London E14 5HP

Share price

Information on the Barclays share price and other share price tools are available at:

 

  LOGO    barclays.com/investorrelations

Barclays Stockbrokers

If you hold your shares in Barclays Sharestore, you are only able to deal through Barclays Stockbrokers:

 

  LOGO    www.sharestore.barclays.co.uk
     0845 777 7400** (in the UK)
     +44 141 352 3904** (from overseas)

If you have any general enquiries, please contact:

 

  LOGO   

0800 279 6551† (in the UK)

+44 141 352 3909** (from overseas)

Copies of the 2013 Annual Report and Accounts

Copies of the 2013 Strategic Report and the 2013 Annual Report and Accounts may be obtained free of charge by telephoning The Registrar or downloaded from the website:

 

  LOGO   

barclays.com/annualreport

 

0871 384 2055* (in the UK)

+44 121 415 7004** (from overseas)

 

 

Notes

* Calls cost 8p per minute plus network extras. Lines open 8.30am to 5.30pm Monday to Friday, excluding public holidays.
** Call costs may vary please check with your telecoms provider. Calls may be recorded to monitor the quality of our service, to check instructions and for security purposes. Lines open 8.30am to 5.30pm Monday to Friday.
Calls to 0800 numbers are free if made from a UK landline. Calls may be recorded so that we can monitor the quality of our service and for security purposes. Our opening hours are 7.30am to 7pm Monday to Thursday, 7.30am to 6pm on Friday (excluding bank holidays) and 9.30am to 12.30pm on Saturday.

 

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This report is printed on paper made in the UK using FSC/PEFC certified fibre. The printer and manufacturing mill are both accredited with ISO14001 Environmental Management System Standards and both are FSC certified. The mill operates a low carbon energy policy in accordance with the Government Climate Change Levy, helping to reduce the carbon footprint of this document.

Registered office:

1 Churchill Place, London E14 5HP

Registered in England.

Registered No: 48839

© Barclays Bank PLC 2014

9913281

Designed by Fishburn™

thisisfishburn.com

Photography by Philip Gatward

 

LOGO

 


Table of Contents

Barclays PLC Notice of Annual General Meeting >

Letter from the Group Chairman

   LOGO

 

 

 

This document is important and requires your immediate attention

When considering what action you should take, you are recommended to seek your own personal advice immediately from your stockbroker, bank manager, solicitor, accountant or other professional adviser who is authorised under the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000. If you have sold or transferred all your shares in Barclays PLC (the Company) please send this Notice of AGM and the accompanying proxy form to the person you sold or transferred your shares to, or the bank, stockbroker or other agent who arranged the sale or transfer for you, for transmission to the purchaser or transferee.

 

LOGO

Dear Shareholder

This year’s Annual General Meeting (the AGM) will be held on Thursday, 24 April 2014 at the Royal Festival Hall, London. The Notice of AGM is set out on pages 3 to 9.

We believe that the AGM is an important occasion for the Company and its shareholders and we encourage you to use the meeting as an opportunity to express your views by attending, raising questions and voting at the AGM. Details of how you can vote if you cannot attend the meeting, including details of the online e-voting process, can be found on page 13.

There have been a number of changes to the Board since the last AGM, with the departures of Sir Andrew Likierman, Chris Lucas and David Booth and the appointments of Frits van Paasschen, Mike Ashley, Wendy Lucas-Bull, Tushar Morzaria and Steve Thieke. All of the current Directors, with the exception of Fulvio Conti and Simon Fraser, are submitting themselves for reappointment. Fulvio and Simon will retire as Directors at the conclusion of the AGM. I would like to thank them on behalf of the Board for their excellent service to the Company and for their valuable contribution.

All of the Directors, with the exception of Steve Thieke, who recently joined the Board, have been subject to a formal, rigorous performance evaluation process, further details of which may be found in the 2013 Annual Report (which is available at Barclays.com/annualreport). I can confirm that, following the evaluation process, each of the Directors is considered to be fully effective by the Board, having demonstrated the commitment and behaviours expected of a Barclays Director in line with our Charter of Expectations for Directors (which is available at Barclays.com/corporategovernance). Each Director brings valuable skills and experience to the Board and its Committees, ensuring they are able to discharge their respective duties and responsibilities effectively. You can read about the skills and experience each Director brings to the Board in their biographies, which are included in the Notice of AGM. The Board has also concluded that each of the non-executive Directors standing for reappointment, with the exception of Wendy Lucas-Bull, are independent when assessed against the criteria set out in the UK Corporate Governance Code.

The Board believes that all of the proposals set out in the Notice of AGM are in the best interests of shareholders as a whole and the Company and unanimously recommends that you vote in favour of all the resolutions, as the Directors intend to do, to the extent permitted, in respect of their own beneficial holdings.

 

LOGO

Sir David Walker

Group Chairman

Barclays PLC

13 March 2014

 

 

Barclays PLC. Registered in England. Registered No. 48839. Registered office. 1 Churchill Place, London E14 5HP


Table of Contents

 

 

 

Directors standing for appointment >

 

LOGO    LOGO    LOGO   
Mike Ashley,    Wendy Lucas-Bull,    Tushar Morzaria,   
Non-executive Director    Non-executive Director    Group Finance Director   

 

Resolution: 5

  

 

Resolution: 6

  

 

Resolution: 7

  

 

LOGO    LOGO      
Frits van Paasschen,    Steve Thieke,      
Non-executive Director    Non-executive Director      

 

Resolution: 8

  

 

Resolution: 9

     

 

Directors standing for reappointment >

 

LOGO    LOGO    LOGO    LOGO
Tim Breedon,    Reuben Jeffery III,    Antony Jenkins,    Dambisa Moyo,
Non-executive Director    Non-executive Director    Group Chief Executive    Non-executive Director

 

Resolution: 10

  

 

Resolution: 11

  

 

Resolution: 12

  

 

Resolution: 13

 

LOGO    LOGO    LOGO    LOGO
Sir Michael Rake,    Diane de Saint Victor,    Sir John Sunderland,    Sir David Walker,
Deputy Chairman and    Non-executive Director    Non-executive Director    Group Chairman

Senior Independent Director

 

Resolution: 14

  

 

Resolution: 15

  

 

Resolution: 16

  

 

Resolution: 17

 

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Notice of AGM

 

 

Notice is hereby given that the 2014 Annual General Meeting (the AGM) of Barclays PLC (the Company) will be held at the Royal Festival Hall, Southbank Centre, Belvedere Road, London SE1 8XX on Thursday, 24 April 2014 at 11.00am to transact the following business:

Resolutions

The resolutions numbered 1 to 3, 5 to 21 and 23 are proposed as ordinary resolutions, which must each receive more than 50% of the votes cast in order to be passed.

The resolutions numbered 22 and 24 to 26 are proposed as special resolutions, which must each receive at least 75% of the votes cast in order to be passed.

Resolution 4 must be approved by shareholders holding a majority of at least 66% of the shares represented (in person or by proxy) at the AGM, provided that at least 50% of the total shares are represented (in person or by proxy) at the AGM. If the latter condition is not met, at least 75% of the shares represented (in person or by proxy) at the AGM must be voted in favour of the resolution in order for it to be passed.

Report and Accounts

1. That the Reports of the Directors and Auditors and the audited accounts of the Company for the year ended 31 December 2013, now laid before the meeting, be received.

We are required by the Companies Act 2006 (the Act) to present to the AGM the Reports of the Directors and Auditors and the audited accounts of the Company for each financial year (in this case for the year ended 31 December 2013).

The Company’s Articles of Association permit the Board to pay interim and final dividends. We use this authority rather than seek shareholder approval of the final dividend, as to do so would delay its payment to you. The final dividend for the financial year ended 31 December 2013 will be paid on 28 March 2014.

Directors’ Remuneration Report

2. That the Directors’ Remuneration Report (other than the part containing the Directors’ Remuneration Policy) for the year ended 31 December 2013, now laid before the meeting, be approved.

The Act requires quoted companies to present to their shareholders for approval a Directors’ Remuneration Report. Our Directors’ Remuneration Report for the year ended 31 December 2013 appears on pages 89 to 125 of the 2013 Annual Report, which is available at Barclays.com/annualreport. A summary remuneration report can be found in the Strategic Report, which is also available online. This shareholder vote is advisory and therefore does not directly affect the remuneration paid to any Director.

Directors’ Remuneration Policy

3. That the Directors’ Remuneration Policy contained in the Directors’ Remuneration Report for the year ended 31 December 2013, now laid before the meeting, be approved.

The Act requires quoted companies to present to their AGM for approval a Directors’ Remuneration Policy, which sets out the company’s policy on making remuneration payments to its Directors. The requirement for a separate resolution on the Directors’ Remuneration Policy was introduced by recent changes to the Act and applies to quoted companies reporting in respect of financial periods ending on or after 30 September 2013. The policy must be presented to shareholders for approval at least every three years.

Our proposed Directors’ Remuneration Policy appears on pages 100 to 110 of the Directors’ Remuneration Report for the year ended 31 December 2013, which is contained in the 2013 Annual Report (available at Barclays.com/annualreport). This shareholder vote is binding, which means that payments cannot be made under the policy until the policy or payment has been approved by the Company’s shareholders. The new policy is intended to apply for three years beginning on the date of this year’s AGM, subject to shareholder approval. Unless required earlier, shareholders will next be asked to approve the policy at the 2017 AGM.

Maximum ratio of fixed to variable remuneration

4. That Barclays PLC and its subsidiaries be authorised to apply a ratio of the fixed to variable components of total remuneration for ‘Remuneration Code Staff’ that exceeds 1:1, provided the ratio does not exceed 1:2.

The EU Capital Requirements Directive IV (CRD IV), together with rules made by the Prudential Regulation Authority (PRA) that implement CRD IV in the UK, introduce a limit on the ratio of the fixed to variable components of total remuneration for Remuneration Code Staff (as defined in the PRA’s Remuneration Code). This new limit applies to variable remuneration in respect of performance years beginning in 2014.

Under CRD IV and the relevant PRA rules, banks and other institutions that are subject to CRD IV are, as a basic rule, prevented from paying Remuneration Code Staff an amount of variable remuneration that is more than 100% of their fixed remuneration. However, the rules permit these institutions to pay such staff an amount of variable remuneration that is up to 200% of their fixed remuneration where shareholder approval is obtained. Shareholders are therefore being asked to approve resolution 4, which would give Barclays the flexibility to pay variable remuneration to its Remuneration Code Staff of up to a maximum limit of 200% of their fixed remuneration.

Please see Appendix 1 for more information on resolution 4, including our detailed recommendation to shareholders.

 

 

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Notice of AGM >

continued

 

 

Appointment of Directors joining the Board since the last AGM

The Company’s Articles of Association and provision B.7.1 of the UK Corporate Governance Code (the Code) provide that any new Director appointed by the Board during the year may hold office only until the next AGM, when that Director must stand for appointment by the shareholders. Mike Ashley, Wendy Lucas-Bull, Tushar Morzaria, Frits van Paasschen and Steve Thieke have each joined the Board since the last AGM and are accordingly seeking appointment by shareholders.

5. That Mike Ashley be appointed a Director of the Company.

Skills and experience: Mike joined the Board as a non-executive Director in September 2013. He was formerly Head of Quality and Risk Management for KPMG Europe LLP (ELLP), which forms part of the KPMG global network, where his responsibilities included the management of professional risks and quality control. He was a member of the ELLP Board and was also KPMG UK’s designated Ethics Partner. Mike has over 20 years’ experience as an audit partner, during which he was the lead audit partner for several large financial services groups, most recently HSBC Holdings and Standard Chartered PLC, and also for the Bank of England. Mike has an in-depth understanding of auditing and the associated regulatory issues, with specific experience of large, global banks.

Independent: Yes

Other current principal external appointments: Member, Institute of Chartered Accountants in England and Wales’ Ethics Standards Committee; Member, HM Treasury’s Audit Committee; Vice Chair, European Financial Reporting Advisory Group’s Technical Expert Group.

Committee membership: Board Audit Committee (Chairman); Board Conduct, Reputation and Operational Risk Committee; Board Corporate Governance and Nominations Committee; Board Financial Risk Committee; Board Enterprise Wide Risk Committee.

6. That Wendy Lucas-Bull be appointed a Director of the Company.

Skills and experience: Wendy was appointed to the Board as a non-executive Director in September 2013. She is currently Chairman of Barclays Africa Group Limited (formerly Absa Group Limited), one of the largest financial services groups in Africa and majority owned by Barclays. She previously served as an Executive Director of Rand Merchant Bank and became Chief Executive of FirstRand Ltd’s retail business following the merger of Rand Merchant Bank and First National Bank. She has held senior Board positions at the Development Bank of Southern Africa, the South African Financial Markets Advisory Board and Nedbank Group Limited. Wendy has also held positions on the boards of Telkom SA, Eskom, Aveng Ltd, Alexander Forbes Ltd, Dimension Data PLC and Anglo American Platinum Ltd. Her extensive experience from board level positions in South African banks, as well as her years of providing consultancy services to the largest banks in South Africa, provides the Board with valuable retail, commercial and investment banking expertise. Her in-depth knowledge of banking in Africa also provides an invaluable insight into banking in the region. Wendy has led or participated in a number of conduct related consultations throughout her career, and such knowledge and experience will contribute greatly towards the discussion of culture at Barclays.

Independent: No. Wendy is Chairman of Barclays Africa Group, which is majority owned by Barclays. The Code suggests that such a business relationship should be taken into account when determining a Director’s independence. The Board considers that Wendy demonstrates the essential characteristics of independence expected by the Board and set out in Barclays’ Charter of Expectations, but has decided not to designate her as an independent Director for the purposes of the Code.

Other current principal external appointments: Director, Afrika Tikkun NPC; Director, Peotona Group Holdings.

Committee membership: Board Conduct, Reputation and Operational Risk Committee.

7. That Tushar Morzaria be appointed a Director of the Company.

Skills and experience: Tushar joined the Board and Executive Committee of Barclays in October 2013 as Group Finance Director. Prior to this, he was CFO, Corporate and Investment Bank at JP Morgan Chase, a role he held on the merger of the investment bank and the wholesale treasury/security services business at JP Morgan. Prior to the merger, he was CFO of the investment bank and held various other roles during his career at JP Morgan. Tushar qualified as an accountant at Coopers & Lybrand Deloitte and for most of his career he has worked in investment banking, having held various roles at SG Warburg, JP Morgan and Credit Suisse. Tushar has over 20 years of strategic financial management experience, which will prove invaluable in his role as Group Finance Director.

Other current principal external appointments: None

Committee membership: Group Executive Committee.

8. That Frits van Paasschen be appointed a Director of the Company.

Skills and experience: Frits was appointed to the Board as a non-executive Director in August 2013. Frits is an experienced Director and Chief Executive Officer. He is currently CEO and President of Starwood Hotels and Resorts Worldwide Inc, one of the world’s largest hotel companies. He served as a non-executive Director for two NYSE listed companies, Jones Apparel Group and Oakley. He previously served as the CEO and President of Coors Brewing Company and has held various senior management positions with Nike, Inc. and Disney Consumer Products. Frits’ extensive global and commercial experience and role as a CEO of an international business provides valuable strategic insight. In particular, his experience in developing and marketing brands, and a broad knowledge of enhancing business performance and the customer experience in a retail environment, is highly beneficial to many aspects of Barclays’ business.

Independent: Yes

Other current principal external appointments: None

Committee membership: None

9. That Steve Thieke be appointed a Director of the Company.

Skills and experience: Steve was appointed to the Board as a non-executive Director in January 2014. He has four decades of experience in financial services, both in regulation and investment banking. Steve worked for the Federal Reserve Bank of New York for twenty years, where he held several senior positions in credit and capital market operations and banking supervision and later he became a non-executive director at the FSA. He has also held senior roles in investment banking and risk management with JP Morgan, where he spent ten years. He was Head of the Fixed Income Division, co-Head of Global Markets, President and Chairman of JP Morgan Securities, Inc. and Head of the Corporate Risk Management Group, retiring from JP Morgan in 1999. He has significant board level experience, both in executive and non-executive roles, including spending seven years as a director of Risk Metrics Group, where latterly he served as Chairman of the board, and nine years on the board of PNC Financial Services Corp.

Independent: Yes

Other current principal external appointments: None

Committee membership: Board Financial Risk Committee; Board Remuneration Committee.

 

 

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Annual reappointment of Directors

Section B.7.1 of the Code recommends that all Directors of FTSE 350 companies should be subject to annual reappointment by shareholders. The Directors standing for reappointment in light of this provision are listed in resolutions 10 to 17 below.

10. That Tim Breedon be reappointed a Director of the Company.

Skills and experience: Tim was appointed to the Board as a non-executive Director in November 2012. Tim held a number of roles at Legal & General Group plc (L&G) before joining its board as Group Director (Investments) and becoming Group Chief Executive. He was later an adviser to L&G, primarily with responsibilities in connection with Solvency II. Tim was a Director of the Association of British Insurers (ABI), and also served as its Chairman. He was also Chairman of the UK Government’s non-bank lending taskforce, an industry-led taskforce that looked at the structural and behavioural barriers to the development of alternative debt markets in the UK. Tim was a director of the Financial Reporting Council and was on the board of the Investment Management Association. Tim has over 25 years of experience in financial services and has extensive knowledge and experience of regulatory and government relationships. He brings to the Board the experience and knowledge of leading a financial services company, combined with an understanding of the UK and EU regulatory environment and risk management. His customer focus and understanding of investor issues, gained both at L&G and the ABI, is of particular relevance to Barclays.

Independent: Yes

Other current principal external appointments: Non-executive Director, Ministry of Justice.

Committee membership: Board Financial Risk Committee (Chairman); Board Audit Committee; Board Conduct, Reputation and Operational Risk Committee; Board Corporate Governance and Nominations Committee; Board Remuneration Committee; Board Enterprise Wide Risk Committee.

11. That Reuben Jeffery III be reappointed a Director of the Company.

Skills and experience: Reuben joined the Board in July 2009 as a non-executive Director. He is currently CEO and a director of Rockefeller & Co Inc. and Rockefeller Financial Services Ltd. Reuben served in the US government as Under Secretary of State for Economic, Energy and Agricultural Affairs, as Chairman of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission and as a special assistant to the President on the staff of the National Security Council. Before his government service, Reuben spent 18 years at Goldman, Sachs & Co where he was managing partner of Goldman Sachs in Paris and led the firm’s European Financial Institutions Group in London. Prior to joining Goldman Sachs, Reuben was a corporate attorney with Davis Polk & Wardwell. Reuben has a broad range of financial services experience, particularly investment banking, and in addition brings extensive insight into the US political and regulatory environment.

Independent: Yes

Other current principal external appointments: Member, International Advisory Council of the China Securities Regulatory Commission; Member, Advisory Board of Towerbrook Capital Partners LP; Member, International Advisory Committee, RIT PLC; Director, Financial Services Volunteer Corps; Director, J Rothschild Capital Management Limited.

Committee membership: Board Conduct, Reputation and Operational Risk Committee; Board Financial Risk Committee.

12. That Antony Jenkins be reappointed a Director of the Company.

Skills and experience: Antony was appointed Group Chief Executive in August 2012. Previously Antony was Chief Executive of Barclays’ Retail and Business Banking business. He has been a member of the Group Executive Committee since 2009.

Antony started his career at Barclays, where he completed the Barclays’ Management Development Programme, before going on to hold various roles in retail and corporate banking. He then moved to Citigroup, working in both London and New York, before rejoining Barclays as Chief Executive of Barclaycard. Antony has represented Barclays as a non-executive Director on the Board of Absa (now Barclays Africa Group). He was also on the Board of Visa Europe Ltd and the Board of Motability Operations Group plc. Since becoming Group Chief Executive, Antony has taken the lead in the development of Barclays’ Transform programme, including the introduction of a new Purpose and Values, with the aim of making Barclays the ‘Go-To’ Bank for customers and clients.

Other current principal external appointments: Member, Board of Directors of the Institute of International Finance; Member, International Advisory Panel of the Monetary Authority of Singapore.

Committee membership: Group Executive Committee (Chairman).

13. That Dambisa Moyo be reappointed a Director of the Company.

Skills and experience: Dambisa joined the Board in May 2010 as a non-executive Director. She is an international economist and commentator on the global economy, with a background in financial services. After completing a PhD in Economics, she worked for Goldman Sachs in the debt capital markets, hedge funds coverage and global macroeconomics teams. Dambisa has also worked for the World Bank and formerly served as a non-executive Director of Lundin Petroleum AB (publ). Dambisa’s background as an economist, in particular her knowledge and understanding of global macroeconomic issues and African economic, political and social issues, provides an important contribution to the Board’s discussion of Barclays’ business and citizenship strategy.

Independent: Yes

Other current principal external appointments: Non-executive Director, SABMiller PLC; Non-executive Director, Barrick Gold Corporation.

Committee membership: Board Conduct, Reputation and Operational Risk Committee; Board Financial Risk Committee.

14. That Sir Michael Rake be reappointed a Director of the Company.

Skills and experience: Sir Michael joined the Board in January 2008 as a non-executive Director. He was appointed Senior Independent Director in October 2011 and Deputy Chairman in July 2012. Sir Michael spent over 30 years with KPMG, where he was Senior Partner of the UK firm and Chairman of KPMG International. Sir Michael is Chairman of BT Group plc and was previously Chairman of the UK Commission for Employment and Skills, Chairman of Business in the Community, Chairman of easyJet plc and a director of the Financial Reporting Council. Sir Michael has substantial financial and commercial experience gained in the UK, Continental Europe and the Middle East. He also has significant experience, both as Chairman and a board member, of listed companies.

Independent: Yes

Other current principal external appointments: President, Confederation of British Industry; Director, McGraw-Hill Financial, Inc.

Committee membership: Board Corporate Governance and Nominations Committee; Board Enterprise Wide Risk Committee; Board Financial Risk Committee.

 

 

barclays.com/annualreport    Barclays PLC Notice of Meeting 2014  >  05


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Notice of AGM >

continued

 

 

15. That Diane de Saint Victor be reappointed a Director of the Company.

Skills and experience: Diane was appointed as a non-executive Director in March 2013. She is currently General Counsel and Company Secretary and a member of the Group Executive Committee of ABB Limited, the publicly listed international power and automation technologies company based in Switzerland. Her responsibilities include Head of Legal and Integrity Group. She was formerly Senior Vice President and General Counsel of EADS, the European aerospace and defence company. Diane’s legal experience and her knowledge of regulatory and compliance matters allows her to provide a unique perspective to the Board and its Committees.

Independent: Yes

Other current principal external appointments: Member, Advisory Board of The World Economic Forum’s Davos Open Forum.

Committee membership: Board Audit Committee; Board Conduct, Reputation and Operational Risk Committee.

16. That Sir John Sunderland be reappointed a Director of the Company.

Skills and experience: Sir John joined the Board as a non-executive Director in June 2005. He has extensive business and board level experience, having spent 40 years with Cadbury Schweppes PLC, where he became Chief Executive and subsequently Chairman. Sir John has significant experience as a director of UK listed companies, and has also held a number of similar positions in trade and professional bodies, including President of the Confederation of British Industry and President of the Chartered Management Institute. Sir John is Chairman of Merlin Entertainments Group plc and was formerly a director of the Financial Reporting Council. In addition to his board level experience, Sir John brings extensive experience and knowledge of retailing and brand marketing.

Independent: Yes

Sir John will have served on the Board for nine years in June 2014. The Board has asked Sir John to remain on the Board until the 2015 AGM and is satisfied that Sir John demonstrates the essential characteristics of independence that are expected of Barclays’ non-executive Directors.

Other current principal external appointments: Non-executive Director, AFC Energy plc; Governor, Reading University Council; Chancellor, Aston University.

Committee membership: Board Remuneration Committee (Chairman); Board Conduct, Reputation and Operational Risk Committee; Board Corporate Governance and Nominations Committee; Board Enterprise Wide Risk Committee.

17. That Sir David Walker be reappointed a Director of the Company.

Skills and experience: Sir David joined the Board as a non-executive Director in September 2012 and became Chairman in November 2012.

Sir David began his career with Her Majesty’s Treasury, where, with a period on secondment to the International Monetary Fund in Washington, he served until 1977. Sir David held several key positions at the Bank of England, where he became one of four executive Directors. He was Chairman of the Securities & Investment Board and, ex officio, a nominated member of the Council of Lloyd’s. Sir David was a non-executive member of the Court of the Bank of England, a non-executive board member of the former CEGB and subsequently of National Power plc. He was formerly Chairman of Reuters Venture Capital, Vice-Chairman of the Legal & General Group plc and was Chairman of the London Investment Bankers’ Association for four years. Sir David was Chairman and CEO of Morgan Stanley International, and subsequently Chairman. He retired as Chairman of Morgan Stanley International in December 2005 but remained a Senior Advisor until the end of August 2012. Sir David is a member and a trustee of the Group of Thirty and previously served as Treasurer of the Group. He was Chairman of the Business Leaders’ Group of the East End charity Community Links.

Sir David has completed two reports and made recommendations in respect of the private equity industry and corporate governance at financial institutions. He also co-led the independent review of the report that the FSA produced into the failure of Royal Bank of Scotland and was a member of the four-person Committee chaired by Lord Woolf (former Lord Chief Justice) into ethical business conduct at BAE Systems plc.

Sir David has significant experience as a director and chairman, coupled with an extensive knowledge of the financial services industry. This, in addition to an excellent understanding and experience of boardroom and corporate governance issues, enables him to provide effective leadership to the Barclays Board.

Independent: on appointment

Other current principal external appointments: Trustee, Cicely Saunders Foundation.

Committee membership: Board Conduct, Reputation and Operational Risk Committee (Chairman); Board Corporate Governance and Nominations Committee (Chairman); Board Enterprise Wide Risk Committee (Chairman); Board Remuneration Committee.

Reappointment of auditors

18. That PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP, Chartered Accountants and Statutory Auditors, be reappointed as auditors of the Company to hold office from the conclusion of this AGM until the conclusion of the next AGM at which accounts are laid before the Company.

The Act requires that auditors are reappointed at each AGM at which accounts are presented. The Board, on the unanimous recommendation of the Board Audit Committee, which has evaluated the effectiveness and independence of the Company’s external auditors, is proposing the reappointment of PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP.

Auditors’ remuneration

19. That the Directors be authorised to set the remuneration of the auditors.

The Board may set the remuneration of the auditors if authorised to do so by the shareholders. This resolution seeks that authority. Details of the remuneration paid to the Company’s external auditors for 2013 and details of how the Board monitors the effectiveness and independence of the external auditors may be found in the 2013 Annual Report.

Political donations

20. That, in accordance with sections 366 and 367 of the Companies Act 2006 (the ‘Act’) the Company and any company which, at any time during the period for which this resolution has effect, is a subsidiary of the Company, be and are hereby authorised to:

(a) make donations to political organisations not exceeding £25,000 in total; and

(b) incur political expenditure not exceeding £100,000 in total,

in each case during the period commencing on the date of this resolution and ending on the date of the AGM of the Company to be held in 2015 or on 30 June 2015, whichever is the earlier, provided that the maximum amounts referred to in (a) and (b) may consist of sums in any currency converted into sterling at such rate as the Board may in its absolute discretion determine. For the purposes of this resolution, the terms ‘political donations’, ‘political organisations’ and ‘political expenditure’ shall have the meanings given to them in sections 363 to 365 of the Act.

 

 

 

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Barclays does not give any money for political purposes in the UK nor does it make any donations to EU political organisations or incur EU political expenditure. However, the definitions of political donations and political expenditure used in the Act are very wide. As a result, they may cover activities that form part of relationships that are an accepted part of engaging with our stakeholders to ensure that issues and concerns affecting our operations are considered and addressed, but which would not be considered as political donations or political expenditure in the layman’s sense. The activities referred to above are not designed to support any political party nor to influence public support for any political party. The authority we are requesting is similar to that given by shareholders at the AGM in 2013 and is a precautionary measure to ensure that the Group does not inadvertently breach the Act.

General authority to allot shares and equity securities

21. That, in substitution for all existing authorities but without prejudice to any authority granted pursuant to resolution 23 (if passed), the Directors be and are hereby generally and unconditionally authorised pursuant to section 551 of the Act to exercise all the powers of the Company to:

(a) allot shares (as defined in section 540 of the Act) in the Company or grant rights to subscribe for, or to convert any security into, shares in the Company up to an aggregate nominal amount of £1,402,743,552, $77,500,000, €40,000,000 and ¥4,000,000,000; and

(b) allot equity securities (as defined in section 560 of the Act) up to an aggregate nominal amount of £2,725,487,104 (such amount to be reduced by the aggregate nominal amount of ordinary shares allotted or rights to subscribe for, or to convert any securities into, ordinary shares in the Company granted under paragraph (a) of this resolution 21) in connection with an offer by way of a rights issue:

(i)  to ordinary shareholders in proportion (as nearly as may be practicable) to their existing holdings; and

(ii) to holders of other equity securities (as defined in section 560 of the Act) as required by the rights of those securities, or subject to such rights, as the Directors otherwise consider necessary,

and so that the Directors may impose any limits or restrictions and make any arrangements which they consider necessary or appropriate to deal with treasury shares, fractional entitlements or securities represented by depositary receipts, record dates, legal, regulatory or practical problems in, or under the laws of, any territory or the requirements of any regulatory body or stock exchange or any other matter, such authorities to apply (unless previously renewed, varied or revoked by the Company in general meeting) for the period expiring at the end of the AGM of the Company to be held in 2015 or the close of business on 30 June 2015, whichever is the earlier but, in each case, so that the Company may make offers and enter into agreements before the authority expires which would, or might require shares to be allotted or rights to subscribe for, or to convert any security into, shares to be granted after the authority expires and the Directors may allot shares or grant such rights under any such offer or agreement as if the authority had not expired.

Resolution 21 is divided into two parts which, in total, will give the Board authority to allot all of the preference shares (denominated in Sterling and other currencies) that were created in 2008 and, in certain circumstances (explained below), ordinary shares up to an amount approximately equal to two-thirds of the Company’s current issued ordinary share capital (excluding shares held in treasury). As at 7 March 2014, the Company did not hold any treasury shares.

Paragraph (a) of the resolution will give the Board a general authority to allot all of the unissued preference shares in the Company and up to a maximum aggregate nominal amount of £1,362,743,552 of ordinary shares, being equivalent to one-third of the Company’s issued ordinary share capital as at 7 March 2014.

Paragraph (b) of the resolution will give authority to the Board to allot up to a further one-third of the current issued ordinary share capital, provided that the allotment is made in connection with a rights issue (an offer made to existing holders allowing them to purchase securities in proportion to their existing holding) in favour of holders of equity securities (which would include ordinary shareholders).

The amount in paragraph (b) would be reduced by the nominal amount of ordinary shares already issued or assigned under the authority conferred by paragraph (a) of this resolution, so that we would not have the power to issue in total more than two-thirds of the current issued ordinary share capital pursuant to the authority granted by this resolution. However, if resolution 23 is passed, we would have the additional authority to allot shares or grant rights to subscribe for, or to convert any security into, shares up to an amount approximately equal to 20% of the Company’s issued ordinary share capital (excluding shares held in treasury) as at 7 March 2014, as further described in resolution 23.

Resolution 21 is in line with guidance issued by the Association of British Insurers (ABI). The Directors are also seeking renewed authority under resolution 23 for the issuance of contingent Equity Conversion Notes (ECNs) that automatically convert into or are exchanged for ordinary shares in the Company in prescribed circumstances. This additional authority for ECNs is not contemplated by the guidance issued by the ABI but has been discussed previously with the ABI.

We have no current plans to make use of the authority sought under this resolution 21. The authority is, however, sought to ensure that the Company has maximum flexibility in managing the Group’s capital resources. We seek annual renewal of this authority in accordance with best practice.

This authority would remain in force until the end of the AGM in 2015 or the close of business on 30 June 2015, whichever is the earlier. Where the additional authority described in paragraph (b) of this resolution is used, all Directors would be required to stand for reappointment at the next AGM, although our usual practice is that Directors stand for reappointment annually.

Authority to allot equity securities for cash or to sell treasury shares other than on a pro rata basis to shareholders

22. That, in substitution for all existing powers, but without prejudice to any power granted pursuant to resolution 24 (if passed) and subject to the passing of resolution 21, the Directors be generally empowered pursuant to section 570 and section 573 of the Act to allot equity securities (as defined by section 560 of the Act) for cash, pursuant to the authority granted by resolution 21 and/or where the allotment constitutes an allotment of equity securities by virtue of section 560(3) of the Act, in each case free of the restriction in section 561 of the Act, such power to be limited:

(a) to the allotment of equity securities in connection with an offer of equity securities (but in the case of an allotment pursuant to the authority granted by paragraph (b) of resolution 21, such power shall be limited to the allotment of equity securities in connection with an offer by way of a rights issue only):

(i)  to ordinary shareholders in proportion (as nearly as may be practicable) to their existing holdings; and

 

 

 

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(ii) to holders of other equity securities (as defined in section 560 of the Act), as required by the rights of those securities or, subject to such rights, as the Directors otherwise consider necessary,

and so that the Directors may impose any limits or restrictions and make any arrangements which they consider necessary or appropriate to deal with treasury shares, fractional entitlements or securities represented by depositary receipts, record dates, legal, regulatory or practical problems in, or under the laws of, any territory or the requirements of any regulatory body or stock exchange or any other matter; and

(b) to the allotment of equity securities, pursuant to the authority granted by paragraph (a) of resolution 21 and/or an allotment which constitutes an allotment of equity securities by virtue of section 560(3) of the Act (in each case otherwise than in the circumstances set out in paragraph (a) of this resolution) up to a nominal amount of £204,411,532 representing no more than 5% of the issued ordinary share capital as at 7 March 2014; compliance with that limit shall be calculated, in the case of equity securities which are rights to subscribe for, or to convert securities into, ordinary shares (as defined in section 560 of the Act) by reference to the aggregate nominal amount of relevant shares which may be allotted pursuant to such rights,

such powers to apply (unless previously renewed, varied or revoked by the Company in general meeting) until the end of the Company’s next AGM after this resolution is passed (or, if earlier, until the close of business on 30 June 2015) but so that the Company may make offers and enter into agreements before the power expires which would, or might, require equity securities to be allotted after the power expires and the Directors may allot equity securities under any such offer or agreement as if the power had not expired.

If we allot new equity securities or sell treasury shares for cash (other than in connection with an employee share scheme), we are required by the Act to first offer the securities to existing shareholders in proportion to their existing holdings (known as pre-emption rights) but we may seek shareholder approval to disapply pre-emption rights or issue equity securities on a non-pre-emptive basis.

The effect of this resolution is to renew the authority given to us in previous years to allot equity securities (which for these purposes includes the sale of treasury shares) on a non-pre-emptive basis to ordinary shareholders by way of a rights issue, for example where legal or practical difficulties in jurisdictions outside the UK may prevent the allocation of shares on a pro rata basis. It would also allow us to allot a limited number of equity securities for cash (up to approximately 5% of the current issued ordinary share capital) without first offering them to existing shareholders. In addition, the Company is again seeking authority under resolution 24 for the issuance of ECNs, or shares to be issued upon conversion or exchange of ECNs, without first offering those equity securities to existing shareholders.

The authority in this resolution 22 would remain in force until the end of the AGM in 2015 or the close of business on 30 June 2015, whichever is the earlier.

We seek annual renewal of this authority in accordance with best practice. We have no current plans to make use of the authority contemplated by this resolution 22 but wish to ensure that the Company has maximum flexibility in managing the Group’s capital resources. The Company does not intend to issue more than 7.5% of its issued ordinary share capital on a non-pre-emptive basis in any three-year period in exercise of the authority contemplated by this resolution 22. However, if passed, resolutions 23 and 24 would allow this level to be exceeded for the issuance of ECNs, or conversion or exchange of ECNs.

Additional general authority to allot equity securities in relation to the issuance of contingent Equity Conversion Notes (ECNs)

23. That, in addition to any authority granted pursuant to resolution 21 (if passed), the Directors be and are hereby generally and unconditionally authorised pursuant to section 551 of the Act to exercise all the powers of the Company to allot shares (as defined in section 540 of the Act) in the Company or grant rights to subscribe for or to convert any security into shares in the Company up to an aggregate nominal amount of £825,000,000 in relation to any issue by the Company or any member of the Barclays Group of ECNs that automatically convert into or are exchanged for ordinary shares in the Company in prescribed circumstances where the Directors consider that such an issuance of ECNs would be desirable in connection with, or for the purposes of, complying with or maintaining compliance with the regulatory capital requirements or targets applicable to the Barclays Group from time to time, such authority to apply (unless previously renewed, varied or revoked by the Company in general meeting) until the end of the AGM of the Company to be held in 2015 (or, if earlier, until the close of business on 30 June 2015) but so that the Company may make offers and enter into agreements before the authority expires which would, or might, require shares to be allotted or rights to subscribe for, or to convert any security into, shares to be granted after the authority expires and the Directors may allot shares or grant such rights under any such offer or agreement as if the authority had not expired.

The effect of this resolution 23 is to give the Directors the authority to allot ECNs, or shares issued upon conversion or exchange of ECNs up to an aggregate nominal amount of £825,000,000, representing approximately 20% of the Company’s issued ordinary share capital as at 7 March 2014. As at 7 March 2014, the Company did not hold any shares in treasury. Please see Appendix 2 for more information on the ECNs.

The authority sought in this resolution 23 renews (and is in the same form as) the authority granted by the Company’s shareholders at the AGM in 2013 in relation to ECNs. Appendix 2 explains how we have calculated the size of the authorities we are seeking. This authority is in addition to the authority proposed in resolution 21, which is the usual authority sought on an annual basis in line with guidance issued by the ABI. Although this authority is not contemplated by the guidance issued by the ABI, it has been discussed previously with the ABI. The authority sought in this resolution 23 will be utilised as considered desirable to comply with or maintain compliance with regulatory capital requirements or targets applicable to the Barclays Group. The authority will remain in force until the end of the AGM in 2015 or the close of business on 30 June 2015, whichever is earlier. The Company is intending to seek a similar authority on an annual basis.

Authority to allot equity securities for cash other than on a pro rata basis to shareholders in relation to the issuance of contingent Equity Conversion Notes (ECNs)

24. That, in addition to the power granted pursuant to resolution 22 (if passed), and subject to the passing of resolution 23, the Directors be generally empowered pursuant to section 570 of the Act to allot equity securities (as defined in section 560 of the Act) for cash pursuant to the authority granted by resolution 23, free of the restriction in section 561 of the Act, such power to apply (unless previously renewed, varied or revoked by the Company in general meeting) until the end of the AGM of the Company to be held in 2015 (or, if earlier, until the close of business on 30 June 2015) but so that the Company may make offers and enter into agreements before the power expires which would, or might, require equity securities to be allotted after the power expires and the Directors may allot equity securities under any such offer or agreement as if the power had not expired.

 

 

 

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The effect of this resolution 24 is to give the Directors authority to allot ECNs, or shares issued upon conversion or exchange of ECNs, without first offering them to existing shareholders. This will allow the Company to manage its capital in the most efficient and economic way for the benefit of shareholders. If passed, this resolution will authorise the Directors to allot shares and grant rights to subscribe for or to convert any security into shares in the Company on a non-pre-emptive basis up to an aggregate nominal amount of £825,000,000, representing approximately 20% of the Company’s issued ordinary share capital as at 7 March 2014, such authority to be exercised in connection with the issue of ECNs. The authority sought in this resolution 24 renews (and is in the same form as) the authority granted by the Company’s shareholders at the AGM in 2013 in relation to ECNs. Appendix 2 contains more information on the ECNs, including how we have calculated the size of the authorities we are seeking. Should a Trigger Event occur, the ECNs will convert into or be exchanged for Barclays ordinary shares. The Directors intend to give shareholders the opportunity to purchase the ordinary shares created on conversion or exchange of any ECNs on a pro rata basis, where practicable and subject to applicable laws and regulations.

The authority sought in this resolution 24 will be utilised as considered desirable to comply with or maintain compliance with regulatory capital requirements or targets applicable to the Barclays Group. The authority will remain in force until the end of the AGM in 2015 or the close of business on 30 June 2015, whichever is earlier. The Company is intending to seek a similar authority on an annual basis.

Purchase of own shares

25. That the Company be generally and unconditionally authorised for the purposes of section 701 of the Act to make market purchases (within the meaning of section 693 of the Act) on the London Stock Exchange of up to an aggregate of 1,635,292,262 ordinary shares of 25p each in its capital, and may hold such shares as treasury shares, provided that:

(a) the minimum price (exclusive of expenses) which may be paid for each ordinary share is not less than 25p;

(b) the maximum price (exclusive of expenses) which may be paid for each ordinary share shall not be more than the higher of:

(i)  105% of the average of the market values of the ordinary shares (as derived from the Daily Official List of the London Stock Exchange) for the five business days immediately preceding the date on which the purchase is made; and

(ii) that stipulated by Article 5(1) of the Buy-back and Stabilisation Regulation (EC 2273/2003); and

(c) unless previously renewed, varied or revoked by the Company in general meeting, the authority conferred by this resolution shall expire at the end of the AGM of the Company to be held in 2015 or the close of business on 30 June 2015, whichever is the earlier (except in relation to any purchase of shares the contract for which was concluded before such date and which would or might be executed wholly or partly after such date).

This resolution would enable the Company to buy back its own ordinary shares in the market. We consider it desirable to have the general authority to do this in order to provide maximum flexibility in the management of the Group’s capital resources. However, we would only use the authority if we were satisfied at the time that to do so would be in the interests of shareholders and would lead to an increase in the Group’s earnings per share.

The authority would be restricted to a maximum of 1,635,292,262 ordinary shares. This is not more than 10% of the issued share capital as at 7 March 2014.

Should we decide to purchase some of the Company’s own shares, existing rights to subscribe for shares would represent a marginally increased proportion of the current issued share capital. Details are as follows:

 

¡   The total number of ordinary shares that may be issued on the exercise of outstanding options as at 7 March 2014 is 152,308,542, which represents approximately 0.93% of the issued share capital at that date. As at 7 March 2014 there were no warrants over ordinary shares outstanding.

 

¡   If the Company were to purchase shares up to the maximum permitted by this resolution, the proportion of ordinary shares subject to outstanding options would represent approximately 1.03% of the issued share capital as at 7 March 2014.

Under the Act, the Company may hold any shares bought back in treasury, which may then either be sold for cash, transferred for the purposes of an employees’ share scheme (subject, if necessary, to approval by shareholders at a general meeting) or cancelled. The Company therefore has the choice of either cancelling or holding in treasury any of its shares which it purchases. If the Company buys any of its shares under the authority given by this resolution, we will decide at the time of purchase whether to cancel them immediately or to hold them in treasury. In relation to treasury shares, we would also have regard to any investor guidelines in relation to the purchase of shares intended to be held in treasury or in relation to their holding or resale which may be in force at the time of any such purchase, holding or resale.

 

General meetings

26. That the Directors be authorised to call general meetings (other than an AGM) on not less than 14 clear days’ notice, such authority to expire at the end of the AGM of the Company to be held in 2015 or the close of business on 30 June 2015, whichever is the earlier.

The Act requires listed companies to call general meetings on at least 21 clear days’ notice unless shareholders have approved the calling of general meetings at shorter notice. Barclays wishes to retain the option of calling general meetings, other than an AGM, on 14 clear days’ notice and the effect of this resolution is to continue to give the Directors the power to call general meetings on a notice period of not less than 14 clear days. However, as Barclays has a global shareholder base, in practice, we would always aim to give a longer notice period to ensure overseas shareholders in particular are able to participate fully. The 14-day notice period would therefore only be used in exceptional circumstances where the flexibility is merited by the business of the meeting and is thought to be to the advantage of shareholders as a whole. The resolution is valid up to the end of the next AGM or the close of business on 30 June 2015, whichever is the earlier, and it is our intention to renew the authority at each AGM. The Company offers the facility for all shareholders to vote by electronic means. This is accessible to all shareholders and would be available if the Company was to call a meeting on 14 clear days’ notice. The Company also provides the ability to appoint proxies electronically through CREST and shareholders can vote online at Barclays.com/investorrelations/vote.

 

By order of the Board

 

LOGO

Lawrence Dickinson

Company Secretary

13 March 2014

1 Churchill Place

London E14 5HP

Registered in England, Company No. 48839

 

 

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Appendix 1

 

 

 

Your questions answered on resolution 4, seeking authority to allow us to increase the maximum ratio of fixed to variable remuneration

What are shareholders being asked to approve in resolution 4?

The EU Capital Requirements Directive IV (CRD IV), together with rules made by the Prudential Regulation Authority (PRA) that implement CRD IV in the UK, introduce a limit on the ratio of the fixed to variable components of total remuneration for Remuneration Code Staff (as defined in the PRA’s Remuneration Code). This new limit applies to variable remuneration in respect of performance years beginning in 2014.

Under CRD IV and the relevant PRA rules, banks and other institutions that are subject to CRD IV are, as a basic rule, prevented from paying Remuneration Code Staff an amount of variable remuneration that is more than 100% of their fixed remuneration. However, the rules permit these institutions to pay such staff an amount of variable remuneration that is up to 200% of their fixed remuneration where shareholder approval is obtained. Shareholders are therefore being asked to approve resolution 4, which would give Barclays the flexibility to pay variable remuneration to its Remuneration Code Staff of up to a maximum limit of 200% of their fixed remuneration.

Why is Barclays seeking authority to apply a ratio of fixed to variable remuneration above 1:1?

Barclays needs to be market competitive in how it pays its people to ensure that it has the right mix of skills and experience to deliver its business aims and objectives. The CRD IV limit on the ratio of fixed to variable remuneration impacts Barclays globally. This is not the case for Barclays’ non-EU headquartered competitors (for example, US financial services firms). For these firms, the CRD IV ratio only applies to their EU operations and not, in general terms, to their non-EU operations. Accordingly, the CRD IV ratio creates a competitive disadvantage for Barclays in the global market for talent, particularly in the US, Asia and Africa. Against this background, it should be noted that around 60% of Barclays’ Remuneration Code Staff in 2014 are expected to be based outside the EU. We also anticipate that most of Barclays’ main UK and European competitors who are subject to the variable remuneration limit imposed by CRD IV will seek shareholder approval to apply the higher maximum level of variable remuneration.

To remain globally competitive in light of CRD IV, Barclays has implemented changes to its pay structure for affected employees. Barclays’ approach of using a new class of fixed remuneration, called Role Based Pay (RBP), complies with the requirements of CRD IV. The introduction of RBP will lead to a reduction in maximum levels of total compensation opportunity for executive Directors, as against previous levels. Further details of RBP are set out in the Directors’ Remuneration Report for the year ended 31 December 2013, which appears on pages 89 to 125 of the 2013 Annual Report (available at Barclays.com/annualreport).

However, despite the introduction of RBP, variable remuneration remains a key feature of remuneration practice in the highly competitive and mobile market for talent within the financial services sector. For us to remain globally competitive and to limit the need to further increase our fixed remuneration cost base, it is essential that we retain an ability to pay our employees in the form of variable remuneration where appropriate and have as much flexibility in this regard as possible.

The ability to recognise performance through variable remuneration further enables the Group to more flexibly control its cost base (and, therefore, its capital base) as well as to react more effectively to events and changed market conditions. If we obtain shareholder approval to apply a fixed to variable remuneration ratio of up to 1:2, we will be better able to control overall fixed levels of remuneration, and hence our fixed cost (and capital) base. A greater proportion of total remuneration will also remain subject to individual and business performance as well as ex-post risk adjustments.

Which employees are affected by resolution 4?

The CRD IV limit on the ratio of fixed to variable remuneration, as implemented by the PRA, applies only to Remuneration Code Staff. Remuneration Code Staff include categories of staff whose professional activities have a material impact on the Company’s risk profile, such as Directors and senior management, risk takers, staff engaged in control functions and employees receiving total remuneration that takes them into the same remuneration bracket as senior management and risk takers.

Barclays had 530 Remuneration Code Staff in 2013. While the number of affected employees will still be a small proportion of total employees, we expect this figure to increase in 2014 if, as anticipated, the definition of Remuneration Code Staff is widened by the PRA following final guidance from the European Banking Authority. The current estimate of our Remuneration Code Staff for 2014, based on this broader definition, is between 1,100 and 1,400. This includes Directors and senior management, risk takers and staff engaged in control functions across all businesses of the Group. The number of Group employees who are Remuneration Code Staff will vary each year so this estimate should only be used as a guide as to how CRD IV and the relevant PRA rules could impact the Group during 2014 and beyond.

What will be the impact on the requirement to maintain a sound capital base if resolution 4 is passed?

We are committed to maintaining a sound capital base in line with the Group’s current and expected regulatory requirements. We do not anticipate that, if resolution 4 is passed, there will be any material impact on the Group’s ability to maintain a sound capital base. Indeed, as explained above, if resolution 4 is passed, this will help limit the impact on our capital base.

What will happen if resolution 4 is not passed?

If we do not obtain approval under resolution 4 for the flexibility to apply the higher maximum ratio of fixed to variable remuneration, it is likely that further changes to our pay structure will have to be implemented in order for us to remain competitive – with the potential for further increases in fixed remuneration.

Who can vote on resolution 4?

For the purpose of determining whether resolution 4 is passed, we shall inform Barclays Remuneration Code Staff (other than non-executive Directors, who do not have an interest in the resolution) that they should not exercise, directly or indirectly, any voting rights they may have as shareholders or owners or members of the Company in respect of the approval sought under resolution 4 and, where possible, any votes cast by them will be disregarded. This restriction will therefore apply, among others, to the executive Directors, Antony Jenkins and Tushar Morzaria.

 

 

 

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Appendix 2

 

 

 

Your questions answered on Equity Conversion Notes (ECNs)

Why is Barclays seeking renewed authority to issue ECNs?

To continue to operate as a bank, Barclays must meet minimum regulatory capital requirements in the countries in which it operates. To maintain an efficient capital structure that protects the interests of ordinary shareholders under new prudential regulatory requirements (introduced under CRD IV and PRA guidelines from 1 January 2014), Barclays currently anticipates it will need to hold around 2.0% of its Risk-Weighted Assets (RWAs) in the form of Additional Tier 1 Capital (AT1). AT1 must be in the form of Contingent Capital, sometimes called CoCos. The capital issued to meet this requirement can currently be in the form of Permanent Write Down Notes or ECNs and may be issued by the Company or another member of the Barclays Group. The Company issued £2.1 billion equivalent of AT1 ECNs in 2013 at a £1.65 equivalent conversion price (which would, in the circumstances described below, result in the issue of ordinary shares of an aggregate nominal value of £315 million). Shareholder approval is once again being sought in resolutions 23 and 24 (in an amount equal to last year’s annual authority) to authorise the issue of further ECNs (and shares to be issued on conversion or exchange of ECNs) and to provide flexibility to Barclays in managing its capital structure efficiently. Barclays has no current intention to use CoCo’s as part of compensation structures.

What is a ‘Trigger Event’ and what will happen?

Should Barclays’ fully-loaded CRD IV Common Equity Tier 1 (CET1) ratio fall below 7% (the Trigger Event), the current outstanding ECNs would be converted into, or exchanged for, new Barclays ordinary shares. Permanent Write Down Notes would cease to have any value upon a Trigger Event.

What steps can Barclays take before or on a Trigger Event?

In advance of and after a Trigger Event, Barclays’ management can be expected to take certain actions:

(i)  Recovery planning – Barclays is required by its regulators to have in place a Recovery Plan in case Barclays’ capital position should come under pressure. Should Barclays’ capital ratios fall, Barclays would be required to commence those planned recovery actions to improve its capital position (e.g., by reducing RWAs, through a rights issue of ordinary shares or by seeking financial support from certain investors) well in advance of a Trigger Event. In the case of the launch of a rights issue, Barclays’ ordinary shareholders would be offered the opportunity to acquire new ordinary shares in proportion to their existing Barclays shareholding (subject to legal, regulatory or practical restrictions).

(ii) Shareholder participation – should a Trigger Event occur (despite taking recovery actions), the Directors intend to give shareholders the opportunity to purchase the ordinary shares issued on conversion or exchange of any ECNs on a pro rata basis, where practicable and subject to applicable laws and regulations, at the same conversion price as the holders of the ECNs would have acquired the ordinary shares. This mechanism for shareholder participation has been written into the terms and conditions of the ECNs.

The circumstances in which a Trigger Event might be expected to occur are considered to be remote given the level of capital Barclays holds in excess of the trigger level and the recovery actions it would take should such a situation seem likely to arise.

Will all ECNs be in the form of AT1 Capital?

Yes. It is not Barclays’ current intention to issue Tier 2 ECNs.

How does AT1 Capital provide a more efficient capital structure?

Barclays is required to hold Tier 1 Capital to meet regulatory requirements. Tier 1 Capital may constitute CET1 and AT1. At the time of its 2013 preliminary results announcement, Barclays announced a target CET1 ratio target of 11.5% to 12.0%, with an additional 2.0% of AT1, implying a total Tier 1 target of 13.5% to 14.0%. Meeting this Tier 1 target with a proportion of AT1 is expected to be cheaper than issuing the total target amount in CET1, therefore resulting in a lower weighted-average cost of capital for shareholders. Holding AT1 also allows Barclays to reduce the risk that it is restricted in its ability to make certain discretionary distributions, including paying dividends to ordinary shareholders.

At what price will ECNs be converted into or exchanged for ordinary shares?

The terms and conditions for ECNs specify a conversion price or a mechanism for setting a conversion price, which is the rate at which the ECNs will be exchanged for ordinary shares. Barclays has £2.1 billion equivalent of ECNs currently outstanding, which were issued in 2013 at a £1.65 equivalent conversion price. The resolutions continue to give the Directors authority to set the specific terms and conditions of the ECNs (including a conversion price or mechanism for setting a conversion price) after considering market conventions and conditions at the time of issuance.

How have you calculated the size of the authorities you are seeking?

The size of the authorities reflected in resolutions 23 and 24 has been calculated based on Barclays’ target end-state capital structure designed to meet the expected capital requirements under new prudential regulatory requirements. That structure assumes around 2.0% of RWAs in AT1 form, which includes Barclays’ current additional 0.5% requirement for the impact of Pillar 2A (Barclays’ ‘Pillar 2A’ requirement is a point in time assessment made at least annually by the PRA. It is expected to vary over time in accordance with individual capital guidance). These authorities are set at a level to provide maximum flexibility to Barclays in managing its capital structure efficiently given the uncertainties that remain in both the precise regulatory requirements and the market for this relatively new form of capital instrument.

 

 

barclays.com/annualreport    Barclays PLC Notice of Meeting 2014  >  11


Table of Contents

Notes

 

 

 

(a) Entitlements under CREST

Pursuant to Regulation 41 of the Uncertificated Securities Regulations 2001, the Company specifies that only those holders of shares registered in the register of members at 6.00pm on Tuesday, 22 April 2014 shall be entitled to attend or vote at the meeting in respect of the number of shares registered in their name at that time. Changes to entries on the register after 6.00pm on Tuesday, 22 April 2014 shall be disregarded in determining the rights of any person to attend or vote at the meeting.

(b) Appointing a proxy

A shareholder who is entitled to attend, speak and vote at the meeting is entitled to appoint one or more people (called proxies) to attend, speak and vote on his/her behalf. They need not be Barclays shareholders. If more than one proxy is appointed, each proxy must be appointed to exercise the rights attached to different shares. A proxy will have the same number of votes on a show of hands as if the member who appointed the proxy was at the meeting.

(c) Corporate representatives

A corporate shareholder can appoint one or more corporate representatives who may exercise, on its behalf, all its powers as a member provided that no more than one corporate representative exercises powers over the same share.

(d) Persons nominated by shareholders

The right to appoint a proxy does not apply to persons whose shares are held on their behalf by another person and who have been nominated to receive communications from the Company in accordance with section 146 of the Act (‘nominated persons’). Nominated persons may have a right under an agreement with the registered shareholder who holds the shares on their behalf to be appointed (or to have someone else appointed) as a proxy. Alternatively, if nominated persons do not have such a right, or do not wish to exercise it, they may have a right under such an agreement to give instructions to the person holding the shares as to the exercise of voting rights.

(e) Documents available for inspection

The following documents, which are available for inspection during usual business hours on any weekday (Saturdays, Sundays and public holidays excluded) at the Company’s registered office, 1 Churchill Place, London E14 5HP, will also be available for inspection at the Royal Festival Hall from 10.30am on Thursday, 24 April 2014 until the end of the meeting: (i) copies of the executive Directors’ service contracts; and (ii) copies of the non-executive Directors’ letters of appointment.

(f) Total shares and voting rights

As at 7 March 2014 (being the latest practicable date before publication of this document) the Company’s issued share capital comprised 16,352,922,627 ordinary shares of 25 pence each. Each ordinary share carries the right to vote at a general meeting of the Company and, therefore, the total number of voting rights in the Company as at 7 March 2014 was 16,352,922,627.

(g) Forward-looking statements

The appendices to the Notice of AGM contain certain forward-looking statements with respect to Barclays’ expectations of the impact of these resolutions on its regulatory capital requirements. Barclays cautions readers that no forward-looking statement is a guarantee of future events and circumstances and that the actual impact of the resolutions could differ materially from its expectations. Any forward-looking statements made herein speak only as of the date they are made. Except as required by the Prudential Regulation Authority, the Financial Conduct Authority, the London Stock Exchange plc (LSE) or applicable law, Barclays expressly disclaims any obligation or undertaking to release publicly any updates or revisions to any forward-looking statements contained herein to reflect any change in Barclays’ expectations with regard thereto. The reader should, however, consult any additional disclosures that Barclays has made or may make in documents it has published or may publish via the Regulatory News Service of the LSE and/or has filed or may file with the US Securities and Exchange Commission.

(h) Shareholder information

A copy of this Notice of AGM and other information required by section 311A of the Act can be found at Barclays.com/agm.

(i)  Shareholder right to ask a question

Any shareholder attending the meeting has the right to ask questions. The Company must cause to be answered any such question relating to the business being dealt with at the meeting but no such answer need be given if: (i) to do so would interfere unduly with the preparation for the meeting or involve the disclosure of confidential information, (ii) the answer has already been given on a website in the form of an answer to a question, or (iii) it is undesirable in the interests of the Company or good order of the meeting that the question be answered.

(j)  Members’ statement of audit concerns

Section 527 of the Act allows shareholders who meet the threshold requirements of that section to require the Company to publish a statement on its website setting out any matter relating to: (i) the audit of the accounts to be laid at the meeting (including the auditor’s report and the conduct of the audit); or (ii) any circumstances connected with the auditor ceasing to hold office since the last meeting at which annual accounts and reports were laid in accordance with section 437 of the Act. This is known as a ‘members’ statement of audit concerns’. If such a request is received, the Company cannot require those shareholders requesting publication of the statement to meet its costs of complying with that request. The Company must also forward a copy of the statement to the auditor at the same time that it makes it available on the website. Where a members’ statement of audit concerns is received it will be included in the business of the meeting at which the accounts are laid.

(k) Electronic communication

You may not use any electronic address provided in either this Notice of AGM or any related documents (including the Proxy Form) to communicate with the Company for any purposes other than those expressly stated.

 

 

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Table of Contents

Shareholders’ Questions and Answers

 

 

 

Voting arrangements

Who is entitled to vote?

Shareholders who want to attend, speak and vote at the AGM must be entered on the Company’s register of members by no later than 6.00pm on Tuesday, 22 April 2014, or if the AGM is adjourned, no later than 6.00pm two days before the time fixed for the adjourned meeting.

How do I vote?

There are four ways in which you can vote:

 

¡   You can vote in person at the AGM;

 

¡   You can appoint a proxy online to vote on your behalf on our website at Barclays.com/investorrelations/vote. You will need your Voting ID, Task ID and Shareholder or Sharestore Reference Number, which are shown on your Proxy Form or Shareholder Voting Instruction Card. Alternatively, you can log into or register at Barclays e-view (www.eviewsignup.co.uk). A proxy appointment made electronically will not be valid if sent to any address other than those provided or if received after 11.00am on Tuesday, 22 April 2014;

 

¡   You can sign and return your Proxy Form appointing the Chairman or another person to vote for you. You should return your form to The Registrar to Barclays in the enclosed pre-paid envelope so that it is received by no later than 11.00am on Tuesday, 22 April 2014; or

 

¡   If you are a CREST member, you may choose to use the CREST electronic proxy appointment service in accordance with the procedures set out in the explanatory notes on the Proxy Form.

You will find details below of how to withdraw your proxy if you change your mind. Completion and return of the Proxy Form will not preclude members from attending and voting at the meeting should they wish to do so.

Voting on resolutions at the AGM will be by poll. This means that you will be asked to complete a Poll Card if you attend in person. We believe that a poll is the best way of representing the views of as many shareholders as possible in the voting process.

What if I plan to attend the AGM and vote in person?

If you want to vote in person at the AGM there is no need to complete your Proxy Form or appoint a proxy online using your Shareholder Voting Instruction Card. Attached to the Proxy Form and on the rear of the Shareholder Voting Instruction Card is a Poll Card for use by those attending the AGM. You should bring the Poll Card with you to the meeting.

If my shares are held in Barclays Sharestore how do I vote?

All Sharestore members can choose to attend, speak and vote at the AGM. If you are a Sharestore member and do not want to attend but do want to vote, you must return your Proxy Form so that Equiniti Corporate Nominees Limited can appoint whichever person you name on the Proxy Form to attend and vote on your behalf. If you return the Proxy Form but do not insert the name of your proxy then the Chairman of the meeting will vote on your behalf. Alternatively, you can appoint a proxy to vote on your behalf on our website at Barclays.com/investorrelations/vote. To be valid, proxy appointments must be received no later than 11.00am on Tuesday, 22 April 2014.

I have chosen not to receive hard copy shareholder documents, how can I vote?

If you have chosen not to receive hard copy shareholder documents and would like to vote, you can appoint a proxy online at Barclays e-view (www.eviewsignup.co.uk). Alternatively, if you would like to vote by appointing a proxy using a Proxy Form, please contact The Registrar to Barclays.

I have been nominated by a shareholder to enjoy information rights, can I vote?

No. If you are not a shareholder you do not have a right to vote or to appoint a proxy. However, the agreement that you have with the person who nominated you to enjoy information rights may give you the right to be appointed as their proxy, or to have someone else appointed as a proxy for the AGM and to attend, speak and vote on their behalf. If you have any questions you should contact the registered shareholder (the custodian or broker) who looks after your investment on your behalf.

How will my shares be voted if I appoint a proxy?

The person you name on your Proxy Form must vote in accordance with your instructions. If you do not give them any instructions, a proxy may vote or not vote as he or she sees fit on any business of the AGM. Please see the explanatory notes on the reverse of the Proxy Form.

Can I appoint anyone to be a proxy?

Yes. You can appoint your own choice of proxy or you can appoint the Chairman as your proxy. Your proxy does not need to be a Barclays shareholder.

Can I appoint more than one proxy?

Yes. You may appoint more than one proxy, provided that each proxy is appointed to exercise rights attached to different shares. You may not appoint more than one proxy to exercise rights attached to the same share. To appoint more than one proxy you should photocopy the Proxy Form and indicate in the box that this is one of multiple instructions.

Can I change my mind once I have appointed a proxy?

Yes. If you change your mind, you can send a written statement to that effect to The Registrar to Barclays, The statement must arrive with The Registrar by 11.00am on Tuesday, 22 April 2014, or you should bring it along to the AGM.

How will the votes be counted?

Each of the resolutions set out in the Notice of AGM will be voted upon on a poll. The passing of resolutions 1 to 3, 5 to 21 and 23 are determined by a majority of votes. Resolutions 22 and 24 to 26 are being proposed as special resolutions and will therefore require a 75% majority of the votes cast for them to be passed. Resolution 4 must be approved by shareholders holding a majority of at least 66% of the shares represented (in person or by proxy) at the AGM, provided that at least 50% of the total shares are represented (in person or by proxy) at the AGM. If the latter condition is not met, at least 75% of the shares represented (in person or by proxy) at the AGM must be voted in favour of resolution 4 in order for it to be passed.

Our Registrar counts the proxy votes received before the AGM and then counts the votes cast at the AGM. An independent third party, Electoral Reform Services, has been appointed by Barclays to monitor the shareholder voting process.

When will the results of the voting be declared?

The preliminary results of voting on the resolutions to be proposed at the AGM will be displayed in the meeting room shortly after the AGM. The final results will be announced to the London Stock Exchange and will appear on our website at Barclays.com/agm.

 

 

 

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Table of Contents

Shareholders’ Questions and Answers >

continued

 

 

Corporate shareholders

I am a corporate shareholder – what do I need to do to attend the AGM?

Representatives of shareholders that are corporations will have to produce evidence of their proper appointment when attending the AGM. Please contact our Registrar if you need further guidance on this.

Questions

Can I ask a question at the AGM?

Yes, however, questions should only be asked on the specific business of the AGM. If you would like to ask a question at the AGM, you can register your question at the Question Registration Points in the Exhibition Area before the AGM starts. You can also register your question once the AGM has started. Any questions raised but not answered at the meeting will be reviewed by the Chairman after the AGM and a reply will be sent out within 14 days. Shareholders who are unable to attend the meeting still have the opportunity to submit a question to the Board by writing to Shareholder Relations at Barclays PLC, 1 Churchill Place, London E14 5HP or emailing privateshareholderrelations@barclays.com

 

 

 

Please try to keep your questions short and relevant to the business of the AGM. We want all shareholders to have the opportunity to ask questions.

 

 

Can I ask a question about customer issues?

If you would like to ask a question about a personal customer matter at the AGM you should go to the Customer Relations Point in the Exhibition Area, which is staffed by Senior Customer Relations personnel.

Can I ask a question about my personal shareholding?

If you would like to ask a question about your personal shareholding you should go to the Shareholder Enquiry Point in the Exhibition Area. This is staffed by The Registrar to Barclays and Barclays Stockbrokers and will be open both before and after the AGM.

General questions

If you have any further questions about the AGM or your shareholding, please contact The Registrar to Barclays on 0871 384 2055* (in the UK) or on +44 121 415 7004 (from overseas) or by email at questions@share-registers.co.uk

*Calls to this number cost 8p per minute plus network extras. Lines are open 8.30am to 5.30pm UK time, Monday to Friday, excluding UK public holidays.

 

 

 

LOGO

 

 

Do you provide this Notice

   

in alternative formats?

 

 

Copies of this Notice are available in large print, Braille or on audio CD. If you would like a copy in any of these forms, please contact The Registrar to Barclays.

 

 

 

Shareholder information >

If you need help, contact The Registrar to Barclays

 

  LOGO   Telephone   LOGO     Email   LOGO     Postal address  
    0871 384 2055* (in the UK)     questions@share-registers.co.uk     The Registrar to Barclays  
    +44 121 415 7004 (from overseas)         Aspect House, Spencer Road  
            Lancing, West Sussex BN99 6DA  
 

*Calls cost 8p per minute plus network extras. Lines are open from 8.30am to 5.30pm, Monday to Friday, excluding UK public holidays.

 

        United Kingdom  

 

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Table of Contents

Additional information for shareholders attending the Annual General Meeting

 

 

 

The AGM will be held at the

Royal Festival Hall, Southbank Centre,

Belvedere Road, London SE1 8XX

 

LOGO

Travelling to the AGM

The nearest tube stations are Waterloo on the Bakerloo, Northern, Jubilee and Waterloo & City lines, Embankment on the District and Circle lines and Charing Cross on the Northern and Bakerloo lines. The nearest overground train stations are Waterloo and Charing Cross. Buses stop on Waterloo Bridge, York Road, Belvedere Road and Stamford Street.

A map showing the location of the venue can be found above or you can find more information at

www.southbankcentre.co.uk/visiting-us/royal-festival-hall

Date

Thursday, 24 April 2014

Time

The AGM will start promptly at 11.00am

You should allow 15 to 20 minutes for security and registration formalities.

AGM schedule

10.00am

 

¡   Registration desks open
¡   Tea and coffee available
¡   Q&A registration opens

11.00am

 

¡   The AGM starts in the Meeting Room

1.00pm (approximately)

 

¡   Light refreshments available

    (after the conclusion of the AGM)

The final poll results are expected to be released to the London Stock Exchange on Thursday, 24 April 2014.

Security

For safety reasons, security checks will be carried out on entry to the Royal Festival Hall. Please note that you will be asked to leave large bags in the cloakroom and small bags may be searched. Cameras, video recorders or tape recorders should not be used during the AGM. Mobile phones and other electronic communication devices should be turned off.

Cloakroom facilities

Cloakroom facilities will be available in the registration area.

Registration

Attendance Cards should be presented to The Registrar’s staff who will be available as you arrive at the venue. Corporate representatives, proxies and guests and Barclays Stockbrokers clients should register at the registration desks, which will be clearly signposted.

Persons with special needs

The Royal Festival Hall is easily accessible by wheelchair users and has lift access. Barclays staff will be on hand to guide you to the lifts.

Speech to text and hearing induction loop facilities will be available at the AGM. The AGM will also be signed.

An audio CD containing extracts from the 2013 Strategic Report is available, free of charge, either on request in writing from The Registrar to Barclays or at the AGM.

First aid

First aid facilities will be available. Please approach any member of Barclays staff.

Refreshments

Tea and coffee will be available before the AGM. After the business of the AGM has been concluded, light refreshments will be available.

Go online

 

LOGO

 

 

Further information on our Annual Report

 

barclays.com/annualreport

 

 

 

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Table of Contents

 

 

 

 

This report is printed on paper made in the UK using FSC® certified fibre.

The printer and manufacturing mill are both accredited with the ISO 14001 Environmental Management System Standards and are both FSC® certified. The mill operates a low carbon policy in accordance with the Government Climate Change Agreement (CCA), helping to reduce the carbon footprint of this document.

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Barclays PLC>

Proxy Form for the Annual General Meeting (AGM)

The AGM will be held at the Royal Festival Hall, Southbank Centre,

Belvedere Road, London SE1 8XX on Thursday, 24 April 2014 at 11.00am

+ +

Voting ID:

Task ID:

Shareholder Reference Number:

You can vote your Barclays shares online at Barclays.com/investorrelations/vote or by completing and sending this form back in the enclosed pre-paid envelope. Before completing this form, please read the explanatory notes on the rear.

I/We hereby appoint the Chairman of the meeting, or as my/our proxy to attend, speak and vote on my/our behalf at the AGM of Barclays PLC (the Company) to be held on Thursday, 24 April 2014 and at any adjournment of that meeting.

Resolutions

The full wording of the resolutions and brief biographical details of all Directors standing for appointment and reappointment at the 2014 AGM are in the Notice of Annual General Meeting which has been sent to you with this form. Please write an X in the For, Against or Vote Withheld box for each resolution below. If you do not complete the boxes below, the person you appoint as proxy can decide whether, and how, he or she votes in relation to any matter which is properly put before the meeting.

Important: fold along this line

Vote

For

Against

Withheld

1. To receive the Reports of the Directors and Auditors and the audited accounts for the year ended 31 December 2013.

¨ ¨ ¨

2. To approve the Directors’ Remuneration Report (other than the part containing the Directors’ Remuneration Policy) for the year ended 31 December 2013.

¨ ¨ ¨

3. To approve the Directors’ Remuneration Policy.

¨ ¨ ¨

4. To approve a fixed to variable remuneration ratio of 1:2 for ‘Remuneration Code Staff’.

¨ ¨ ¨

5. To appoint Mike Ashley as a Director of the Company.

¨ ¨ ¨

6. To appoint Wendy Lucas-Bull as a Director of the Company.

¨ ¨ ¨

7. To appoint Tushar Morzaria as a Director of the Company.

¨ ¨ ¨

8. To appoint Frits van Paasschen as a Director of the Company.

¨ ¨ ¨

9. To appoint Steve Thieke as a Director of the Company.

¨ ¨ ¨

10. To reappoint Tim Breedon as a Director of the Company.

¨ ¨ ¨

11. To reappoint Reuben Jeffery III as a Director of the Company.

¨ ¨ ¨

12. To reappoint Antony Jenkins as a Director of the Company.

¨ ¨ ¨

13. To reappoint Dambisa Moyo as a Director of the Company.

¨ ¨ ¨

14. To reappoint Sir Michael Rake as a Director of the Company.

¨ ¨ ¨

15. To reappoint Diane de Saint Victor as a Director of the Company.

¨ ¨ ¨

Vote

For

Against

Withheld

16. To reappoint Sir John Sunderland as a Director of the Company.

¨ ¨ ¨

17. To reappoint Sir David Walker as a Director of the Company.

¨ ¨ ¨

18. To reappoint PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP as Auditors of the Company.

¨ ¨ ¨

19. To authorise the Directors to set the remuneration of the Auditors.

¨ ¨ ¨

20. To authorise the Company and its subsidiaries to make political donations and incur political expenditure.

¨ ¨ ¨

21. To authorise the Directors to allot securities.

¨ ¨ ¨

22. To authorise the Directors to allot equity securities for cash or to sell treasury shares other than on a pro rata basis to shareholders.

¨ ¨ ¨

23. To authorise the Directors to allot equity securities in relation to the issuance of contingent Equity Conversion Notes.

¨ ¨ ¨

24. To authorise the Directors to allot equity securities for cash other than on a pro rata basis to shareholders in relation to the issuance of contingent Equity Conversion Notes.

¨ ¨ ¨

25. To authorise the Company to purchase its own shares.

¨ ¨ ¨

26. To authorise the Directors to call general meetings (other than an AGM) on not less than 14 clear days’ notice.

¨ ¨ ¨

¨ Please indicate with an X if this Proxy Form is one of multiple instructions being given. Please refer to note 4 overleaf.

Signature(s)

Date

Please note that your votes must be received by The Registrar to Barclays no later than 11.00am on Tuesday, 22 April 2014.

2674-134-S

++

Barclays PLC. Registered in England. Registered No. 48839. Registered office: 1 Churchill Place, London E14 5HP

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Barclays PLC >

Attendance Card

Information for shareholders attending the 2014 AGM The AGM will be held at the Royal Festival Hall, Southbank Centre, Belvedere Road, London SE1 8XX on Thursday, 24 April 2014 at 11.00am

If you plan to attend the AGM, please bring this card with you. This card will allow you entry to the meeting with a minimum of formality. You will be given full instructions on what to do with this card at the appropriate time during the meeting.

Travelling to the AGM

The nearest tube stations are Waterloo on the Bakerloo, Northern, Jubilee and Waterloo & City lines, Embankment on the District and Circle lines and Charing Cross on the Northern and Bakerloo lines. The nearest overground train stations are Waterloo and Charing Cross. Buses stop on Waterloo Bridge, York Road, Belvedere Road and Stamford Street.

How to ask a question at the AGM

If you intend to ask a question relating to the business of the meeting

You should register your question at one of the Question Registration Points in the Exhibition Area before the meeting starts. There is also provision to register your question once the meeting has started. Any questions raised but not answered at the meeting will be reviewed personally by the Chairman following the meeting and a reply will be sent out to you within 14 days.

If you would like to ask a question about a personal customer matter

You should go to the Customer Relations Point in the Exhibition Area. This is staffed by Senior Customer Relations personnel who will be available before, during and after the meeting.

Receive your dividend in shares through the Barclays PLC Scrip Dividend Programme (the Programme)

Shareholders approved the introduction of the Programme at the Barclays PLC 2013 Annual General Meeting.

Eligible shareholders can, if they wish, increase their shareholding in Barclays through the Programme. Shareholders who join the Programme will receive new ordinary shares in Barclays instead of a cash dividend, without incurring dealing costs or stamp duty. Barclays retains cash, which would otherwise have been paid as a dividend, for reinvestment in the business.

If you wish to join the Programme, please carefully read the Terms and Conditions available at Barclays.com/dividends. You will need to complete and return a Scrip Dividend Programme Mandate Form, also available at Barclays.com/dividends, to The Registrar to Barclays.

If you would like more information about the Programme or if you have any questions, please contact The Registrar to Barclays using the contact details overleaf.

Barclays PLC. Registered in England. Registered No. 48839. Registered office: 1 Churchill Place, London E14 5HP

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Barclays PLC >

Poll card for the Annual General Meeting (AGM)

The AGM will be held at the Royal Festival Hall, Southbank Centre, Belvedere Road, London SE1 8XX on Thursday,

24 April 2014 at 11.00am

This card should only be completed during the meeting

Holders of ordinary shares as well as proxies and authorised representatives of corporations are entitled to vote.

Please write an X in the For, Against or Vote Withheld box for each resolution below. If you wish to cast your votes partly for, partly vote withheld or partly against a resolution, you should write the number of votes cast For, Against or Vote Withheld in the appropriate box.

Signature(s)

Date

Resolutions

Vote

For

Against

Withheld

1. To receive the Reports of the Directors and Auditors and the audited accounts for the year ended 31 December 2013.

¨ ¨ ¨

2. To approve the Directors’ Remuneration Report (other than the part containing the Directors’ Remuneration Policy) for the year ended 31 December 2013.

¨ ¨ ¨

3. To approve the Directors’ Remuneration Policy.

¨ ¨ ¨

4. To approve a fixed to variable remuneration ratio of 1:2 for ‘Remuneration Code Staff’.

¨ ¨ ¨

5. To appoint Mike Ashley as a Director of the Company.

¨ ¨ ¨

6. To appoint Wendy Lucas-Bull as a Director of the Company.

¨ ¨ ¨

7. To appoint Tushar Morzaria as a Director of the Company.

¨ ¨ ¨

8. To appoint Frits van Paasschen as a Director of the Company.

¨ ¨ ¨

9. To appoint Steve Thieke as a Director of the Company.

¨ ¨ ¨

10. To reappoint Tim Breedon as a Director of the Company.

¨ ¨ ¨

11. To reappoint Reuben Jeffery III as a Director of the Company.

¨ ¨ ¨

12. To reappoint Antony Jenkins as a Director of the Company.

¨ ¨ ¨

13. To reappoint Dambisa Moyo as a Director of the Company.

¨ ¨ ¨

14. To reappoint Sir Michael Rake as a Director of the Company.

¨ ¨ ¨

15. To reappoint Diane de Saint Victor as a Director of the Company.

¨ ¨ ¨

Vote

For

Against

Withheld

16. To reappoint Sir John Sunderland as a Director of the Company.

¨ ¨ ¨

17. To reappoint Sir David Walker as a Director of the Company.

¨ ¨ ¨

18. To reappoint PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP as Auditors of the Company.

¨ ¨ ¨

19. To authorise the Directors to set the remuneration of the Auditors.

¨ ¨ ¨

20. To authorise the Company and its subsidiaries to make political donations and incur political expenditure.

¨ ¨ ¨

21. To authorise the Directors to allot securities.

¨ ¨ ¨

22. To authorise the Directors to allot equity securities for cash or to sell treasury shares other than on a pro rata basis to shareholders.

¨ ¨ ¨

23. To authorise the Directors to allot equity securities in relation to the issuance of contingent Equity Conversion Notes.

¨ ¨ ¨

24. To authorise the Directors to allot equity securities for cash other than on a pro rata basis to shareholders in relation to the issuance of contingent Equity Conversion Notes.

¨ ¨ ¨

25. To authorise the Company to purchase its own shares.

¨ ¨ ¨

26. To authorise the Directors to call general meetings (other than an AGM) on not less than 14 clear days’ notice.

¨ ¨ ¨

Barclays PLC. Registered in England. Registered No. 48839. Registered office: 1 Churchill Place, London E14 5HP

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Barclays PLC >

Explanatory notes

1. Voting

If you want to attend and vote at the Barclays AGM, you must be entered on the Company’s register of members by no later than 6.00pm on Tuesday,

22 April 2014, or if the meeting is adjourned, no later than 6.00pm two days before the time fixed for the adjourned meeting.

2. Vote online

You can appoint a proxy to vote your shares online at

Barclays.com/investorrelations/vote. To log on you will need your

Voting ID, Task ID and Shareholder Reference Number which are printed on the front of this form. Your votes must be registered by no later than 11.00am on Tuesday, 22 April 2014.

3. Proxy

You are entitled to attend, speak and vote at the AGM or you can appoint one or more people (called proxies) to attend, speak and vote on your behalf. A proxy need not be a Barclays shareholder but must attend the meeting in person.

Write the full name of the person you have chosen as your proxy in the box on the Proxy Form unless you wish to appoint the Chairman of the meeting. If no name is inserted, the Chairman of the meeting will be authorised to vote on your behalf.

Unless you complete the Proxy Form to show how you want them to vote, your proxy or proxies can vote, or not vote, as they see fit, on any matter which is put before the meeting.

4. Multiple proxies

You can appoint more than one proxy, but if more than one proxy is appointed, each proxy must be appointed to exercise the rights attached to different shares. To appoint more than one proxy, please photocopy the Proxy Form and indicate the number of shares that you are authorising them to act as your proxy for. Mark the box on the Proxy Form to show that you have appointed more than one proxy.

5. Revoking your proxy

If you complete the Proxy Form to appoint a proxy or proxies, this will not stop you from attending and voting at the meeting if you later find you are able to do so.

6. Authority and timing

To be valid, you must return this Proxy Form, together with a certified copy of the power of attorney or other authority (if any) under which it is executed, to The Registrar to Barclays, Aspect House, Spencer Road, Lancing, West Sussex BN99 8JF United Kingdom, in the pre-paid envelope provided, so that it is received by no later than 11.00am on Tuesday, 22 April 2014.

7. Joint shareholders

The signature of any one of the joint holders will be enough to appoint either the Chairman or one or more proxies to attend, speak and vote at the meeting.

8. Vote Withheld

The ‘Vote Withheld’ option is given to enable you to abstain on any particular resolution. The ‘Vote Withheld’ is not a vote in law and will not be counted in the calculation of the proportion of votes ‘For’ or ‘Against’ a resolution.

9. Corporate shareholders

In the case of a corporation, this proxy must be given under its common seal or be signed on its behalf by an officer of the company, an attorney for the company or other persons authorised to sign.

If you are attending as a representative of a shareholder that is a corporation, you will need to show our Registrars evidence that you have been properly appointed as a corporate representative to gain entry to the AGM.

10. Euroclear electronic proxy appointment service (CREST)

If you are a user of the CREST system (including a CREST Personal Member), you may appoint one or more proxies or give an instruction to a proxy by having an appropriate CREST message transmitted. To be valid, the CREST message must be received by the receiving agent (ID RA19) no later than 11.00am on Tuesday, 22 April 2014. For this purpose the time of receipt will be taken to be the time (as determined by the timestamp generated by the CREST system) from which the receiving agent is able to retrieve the message. After this time, changes of instructions to proxies appointed through CREST should be communicated to the proxy by other means. If you are a CREST personal member or other CREST sponsored member, you should contact your CREST sponsor for help with appointing proxies via CREST. For further information on CREST procedures, limitations and system timings, please refer to the CREST Manual (available via www.euroclear.com). The Company may treat as invalid a proxy appointment sent by CREST in the circumstances set out in Regulation 35(5)(a) of the Uncertificated Securities Regulations 2001.

Shareholder information >

If you need help, contact The Registrar to Barclays

Email

questions@share-registers.co.uk

Telephone

0871 384 2055* (in the UK)

+44 121 415 7004 (from overseas)

Postal address

The Registrar to Barclays

Aspect House, Spencer Road

Lancing, West Sussex BN99 6DA

United Kingdom

*Calls cost 8p per minute plus network extras. Lines are

open from 8.30am to 5.30pm, Monday to Friday, excluding

public holidays.

IS0 14001

EMAS-Verified Environmental Management. Produced at an EMAS registered mill

The paper used throughout this document is produced from Elemental Chlorine Free (ECF) pulps. The wood for these is sourced from fully sustainable forests. Additionally, the manufacturing mill is certified to ISO 9002 Quality Assurance standard, the ISO 14001 Environmental Management standard, and registered with EMAS (the Eco-Management and Audit Scheme).

Barclays PLC. Registered in England. Registered No. 48839. Registered office: 1 Churchill Place, London E14 5HP

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Barclays PLC Sharestore >

Proxy Form for the Annual General Meeting (AGM)

The AGM will be held at the Royal Festival Hall, Southbank Centre,

Belvedere Road, London SE1 8XX on Thursday, 24 April 2014 at 11.00am

+ +

Voting ID:

Task ID:

Sharestore Reference Number:

You can vote your Barclays shares online at Barclays.com/investorrelations/vote or by completing and sending this form back in the enclosed pre-paid envelope. Before completing this form, please read the explanatory notes on the rear.

I/We hereby instruct Equiniti Corporate Nominees Limited to appoint the Chairman of the meeting, or to attend, speak and vote on my/our behalf at the AGM of Barclays PLC (the Company) to be held on Thursday, 24 April 2014 and at any adjournment of that meeting.

Resolutions

The full wording of the resolutions and brief biographical details of all Directors standing for appointment and reappointment at the 2014 AGM are in the Notice of Annual General Meeting which has been sent to you with this form. Please write an X in the For, Against or Vote Withheld box for each resolution below. If you do not complete the boxes below, the person you appoint as proxy can decide whether, and how, he or she votes in relation to any matter which is properly put before the meeting.

Important: fold along this line

Vote

For Against Withheld

1. To receive the Reports of the Directors and Auditors and the ¨ ¨ ¨

audited accounts for the year ended 31 December 2013.

2. To approve the Directors’ Remuneration Report (other than ¨ ¨ ¨

the part containing the Directors’ Remuneration Policy) for

the year ended 31 December 2013.

3. To approve the Directors’ Remuneration Policy. ¨ ¨ ¨

4. To approve a fixed to variable remuneration ratio of 1:2 ¨ ¨ ¨

for ‘Remuneration Code Staff’.

5. To appoint Mike Ashley as a Director of the Company. ¨ ¨ ¨

6. To appoint Wendy Lucas-Bull as a Director of the Company. ¨ ¨ ¨

7. To appoint Tushar Morzaria as a Director of the Company. ¨ ¨ ¨

8. To appoint Frits van Paasschen as a Director of the Company. ¨ ¨ ¨

9. To appoint Steve Thieke as a Director of the Company. ¨ ¨ ¨

10. To reappoint Tim Breedon as a Director of the Company. ¨ ¨ ¨

11. To reappoint Reuben Jeffery III as a Director of the Company. ¨ ¨ ¨

12. To reappoint Antony Jenkins as a Director of the Company. ¨ ¨ ¨

13. To reappoint Dambisa Moyo as a Director of the Company. ¨ ¨ ¨

14. To reappoint Sir Michael Rake as a Director of the Company. ¨ ¨ ¨

15. To reappoint Diane de Saint Victor as a Director of the Company. ¨ ¨ ¨

Vote

For Against Withheld

16. To reappoint Sir John Sunderland as a Director ¨ ¨ ¨

of the Company.

17. To reappoint Sir David Walker as a Director of the Company. ¨ ¨ ¨

18. To reappoint PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP

as Auditors of the Company.

19. To authorise the Directors to set the remuneration ¨ ¨ ¨

of the Auditors.

20. To authorise the Company and its subsidiaries to make ¨ ¨ ¨

political donations and incur political expenditure.

21. To authorise the Directors to allot securities. ¨ ¨ ¨

22. To authorise the Directors to allot equity securities ¨ ¨ ¨

for cash or to sell treasury shares other than on a pro rata

basis to shareholders.

23. To authorise the Directors to allot equity securities ¨ ¨ ¨

in relation to the issuance of contingent Equity

Conversion Notes.

24. To authorise the Directors to allot equity securities for cash ¨ ¨ ¨

other than on a pro rata basis to shareholders in relation to

the issuance of contingent Equity Conversion Notes.

25. To authorise the Company to purchase its own shares. ¨ ¨ ¨

26. To authorise the Directors to call general meetings

(other than an AGM) on not less than 14 clear days’ notice.

Please indicate with an X if this Proxy Form is one of multiple instructions being given. Please refer to note 4 overleaf.

Signature(s)

Date

Please note that your votes must be received by The Registrar to Barclays no later than 11.00am on Tuesday, 22 April 2014.

2674-135-S

+ +

Equiniti Financial Services Limited. Registered in England and Wales. Registered No. 6208699. Registered office: Aspect House, Spencer Road, Lancing, West Sussex BN99 6DA, United Kingdom. Barclays PLC. Registered in England. Registered No. 48839. Registered office: 1 Churchill Place, London E14 5HP


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Barclays PLC Sharestore >

Attendance Card

Information for shareholders attending the 2014 AGM The AGM will be held at the Royal Festival Hall, Southbank Centre, Belvedere Road, London SE1 8XX on Thursday, 24 April 2014 at 11.00am.

If you plan to attend the AGM, please bring this card with you. This card will allow you entry to the meeting with a minimum of formality. You will be given full instructions on what to do with this card at the appropriate time during the meeting.

Travelling to the AGM

The nearest tube stations are Waterloo on the Bakerloo, Northern, Jubilee and Waterloo & City lines, Embankment on the District and Circle lines and Charing Cross on the Northern and Bakerloo lines. The nearest overground train stations are Waterloo and Charing Cross. Buses stop on Waterloo Bridge, York Road, Belvedere Road and Stamford Street.

How to ask a question at the AGM

If you intend to ask a question relating to the business of the meeting

You should register your question at one of the Question Registration Points in the Exhibition Area before the meeting starts. There is also provision to register your question once the meeting has started. Any questions raised but not answered at the meeting will be reviewed personally by the Chairman following the meeting and a reply will be sent out to you within 14 days.

If you would like to ask a question about a personal customer matter

You should go to the Customer Relations Point in the Exhibition Area. This is staffed by Senior Customer Relations personnel who will be available before, during and after the meeting.

Receive your dividend in shares through the Barclays PLC Scrip Dividend Programme (the Programme)

Shareholders approved the introduction of the Programme at the Barclays PLC 2013 Annual General Meeting.

Eligible shareholders can, if they wish, increase their shareholding in Barclays through the Programme. Shareholders who join the Programme will receive new ordinary shares in Barclays instead of a cash dividend, without incurring dealing costs or stamp duty. Barclays retains cash, which would otherwise have been paid as a dividend, for reinvestment in the business.

If you wish to join the Programme, please carefully read the Terms and Conditions available at Barclays.com/dividends. You will need to complete and return a Scrip Dividend Programme Mandate Form, also available at Barclays.com/dividends, to The Registrar to Barclays.

If you would like more information about the Programme or if you have any questions, please contact The Registrar to Barclays using the contact details overleaf.

Equiniti Financial Services Limited. Registered in England and Wales. Registered No. 6208699. Registered office: Aspect House, Spencer Road, Lancing, West Sussex BN99 6DA, United Kingdom. Barclays PLC. Registered in England. Registered No. 48839. Registered office: 1 Churchill Place, London E14 5HP


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Poll card for the Annual General Meeting (AGM)

The AGM will be held at the Royal Festival Hall, Southbank Centre, Belvedere Road, London SE1 8XX on Thursday, 24 April 2014 at 11.00am This card should only be completed during the meeting

Members of Barclays Sharestore, their proxies and authorised representatives of corporations are entitled to vote.

Please write an X in the For, Against or Vote Withheld box for each resolution below. If you wish to cast your votes partly for, partly vote withheld or partly against a resolution, you should write the number of votes cast For, Against or Vote Withheld in the appropriate box.

Signature(s)

Date

Resolutions

Vote

For Against Withheld

1. To receive the Reports of the Directors and Auditors and the ¨ ¨ ¨

audited accounts for the year ended 31 December 2013.

2. To approve the Directors’ Remuneration Report (other than ¨ ¨ ¨

the part containing the Directors’ Remuneration Policy) for

the year ended 31 December 2013.

3. To approve the Directors’ Remuneration Policy. ¨ ¨ ¨

4. To approve a fixed to variable remuneration ratio of 1:2 ¨ ¨ ¨ for ‘Remuneration Code Staff’.

5. To appoint Mike Ashley as a Director of the Company. ¨ ¨ ¨

6. To appoint Wendy Lucas-Bull as a Director of the Company. ¨ ¨ ¨

7. To appoint Tushar Morzaria as a Director of the Company. ¨ ¨ ¨

8. To appoint Frits van Paasschen as a Director of the Company. ¨ ¨ ¨

9. To appoint Steve Thieke as a Director of the Company. ¨ ¨ ¨

10. To reappoint Tim Breedon as a Director of the Company. ¨ ¨ ¨

11. To reappoint Reuben Jeffery III as a Director of the Company. ¨ ¨ ¨

12. To reappoint Antony Jenkins as a Director of the Company. ¨ ¨ ¨

13. To reappoint Dambisa Moyo as a Director of the Company. ¨ ¨ ¨

14. To reappoint Sir Michael Rake as a Director of the Company. ¨ ¨ ¨

15. To reappoint Diane de Saint Victor as a Director of the Company. ¨ ¨ ¨

Vote

For Against Withheld

16. To reappoint Sir John Sunderland as a Director ¨ ¨ ¨ of the Company.

17. To reappoint Sir David Walker as a Director of the Company. ¨ ¨ ¨

18. To reappoint PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP ¨ ¨ ¨ as Auditors of the Company.

19. To authorise the Directors to set the remuneration ¨ ¨ ¨ of the Auditors.

20. To authorise the Company and its subsidiaries to make ¨ ¨ ¨ political donations and incur political expenditure.

21. To authorise the Directors to allot securities. ¨ ¨ ¨

22. To authorise the Directors to allot equity securities ¨ ¨ ¨ for cash or to sell treasury shares other than on a pro rata basis to shareholders.

23. To authorise the Directors to allot equity securities ¨ ¨ ¨ in relation to the issuance of contingent Equity Conversion Notes.

24. To authorise the Directors to allot equity securities for cash ¨ ¨ ¨ other than on a pro rata basis to shareholders in relation to the issuance of contingent Equity Conversion Notes.

25. To authorise the Company to purchase its own shares. ¨ ¨ ¨

26. To authorise the Directors to call general meetings ¨ ¨ ¨ (other than an AGM) on not less than 14 clear days’ notice. Equiniti Financial Services Limited. Registered in England and Wales. Registered No. 6208699. Registered office: Aspect House, Spencer Road, Lancing, West Sussex BN99 6DA, United Kingdom. Barclays PLC. Registered in England. Registered No. 48839. Registered office: 1 Churchill Place, London E14 5HP

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Explanatory notes

1. Voting

If you want to attend and vote at the Barclays AGM, you must be entered on the Barclays Sharestore register of members by no later than 6.00pm on Tuesday, 22 April 2014, or if the meeting is adjourned, no later than 6.00pm two days before the time fixed for the adjourned meeting.

2. Vote online

You can appoint a proxy to vote your shares online at

Barclays.com/investorrelations/vote. To log on you will need your Voting ID, Task ID and Sharestore Reference Number which are printed on the front of this form. Your votes must be registered by no later than 11.00am on Tuesday, 22 April 2014.

3. Proxy

You are entitled to attend, speak and vote at the AGM or you can appoint one or more people (called proxies) to attend, speak and vote on your behalf. A proxy need not be a Barclays shareholder but must attend the meeting in person.

Write the full name of the person you have chosen as your proxy in the box on the Proxy Form unless you wish to appoint the Chairman of the meeting. If no name is inserted, the Chairman of the meeting will be authorised to vote on your behalf.

Unless you complete the Proxy Form to show how you want them to vote, your proxy or proxies can vote, or not vote, as they see fit, on any matter which is put before the meeting.

4. Multiple proxies

You can appoint more than one proxy, but if more than one proxy is appointed, each proxy must be appointed to exercise the rights attached to different shares. To appoint more than one proxy, please photocopy the Proxy Form and indicate the number of shares that you are authorising them to act as your proxy for. Mark the box on the Proxy Form to show that you have appointed more than one proxy.

5. Revoking your proxy

If you complete the Proxy Form to appoint a proxy or proxies, this will not stop you from attending and voting at the meeting if you later find you are able to do so.

6. Authority and timing

To be valid, you must return this Proxy Form, together with a certified copy of the power of attorney or other authority (if any) under which it is executed, to The Registrar to Barclays, Aspect House, Spencer Road, Lancing, West Sussex BN99 8JF United Kingdom, in the pre-paid envelope provided, so that it is received by no later than 11.00am on Tuesday, 22 April 2014.

7. Joint Sharestore members

The signature of any one of the joint holders will be enough to appoint either the Chairman or one or more proxies to attend, speak and vote at the meeting.

8. Vote Withheld

The ‘Vote Withheld’ option is given to enable you to abstain on any particular resolution. The ‘Vote Withheld’ is not a vote in law and will not be counted in the calculation of the proportion of votes ‘For’ or ‘Against’ a resolution.

9. Corporate Sharestore members

In the case of a corporation, this proxy must be given under its common seal or be signed on its behalf by an officer of the company, an attorney for the company or other persons authorised to sign.

If you are attending as a representative of a shareholder that is a corporation, you will need to show our Registrars evidence that you have been properly appointed as a corporate representative to gain entry to the AGM.

Shareholder information >

If you need help, contact The Registrar to Barclays

Email Telephone Postal address

questions@share-registers.co.uk 0871 384 2055* (in the UK) The Registrar to Barclays

+44 121 415 7004 (from overseas) Aspect House, Spencer Road

Lancing, West Sussex BN99 6DA

United Kingdom

*Calls cost 8p per minute plus network extras. Lines are

open from 8.30am to 5.30pm, Monday to Friday, excluding

public holidays.

ISO-14001 EMAS- Verified Environmental Management. Produced at an EMAS registered mill The paper used throughout this document is produced from Elemental Chlorine Free (ECF) pulps. The wood for these is sourced from fully sustainable forests. Additionally, the manufacturing mill is certified to ISO 9002 Quality Assurance standard, the ISO 14001 Environmental Management standard, and registered with EMAS (the Eco-Management and Audit Scheme).

Equiniti Financial Services Limited. Registered in England and Wales. Registered No. 6208699. Registered office: Aspect House, Spencer Road, Lancing, West Sussex BN99 6DA, United Kingdom. Barclays PLC. Registered in England. Registered No. 48839. Registered office: 1 Churchill Place, London E14 5HP

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