Weather Afternoon: 9°c Sunny spells Tonight: 5°c Partly Cloudy Night

Business

Frits Seegers
Last-minute: Seegers revealed £6 million deal just before the end of an FSA amnesty

Top Barclays man pledged shares to get private loan

Robert Lea
22 Jan 2009


A senior Barclays executive is the latest City boss to be named in the epidemic of top directors pledging company shares to raise money for their private use.

Frits Seegers, the head of retail banking at Barclays admitted today — one day before the end of a Financial Services Authority “come clean” amnesty — that he pledged £6 million of Barclays stock in 2007 to raise funds.

A Barclays statement said Seegers “granted a third-party bank security over 896,364 shares”. It has not been disclosed formally what Seegers did with the money raised from pledge. The third party has been identified as Citigroup, Seegers' former employer.

A spokesman for Barclays said the stock was used to raise money to buy 140,000 more shares in Barclays at a cost of £1 million. It is uncertain whether Seegers was forced to pledge the entire 896,364 shares to raise the £1 million or whether he pocketed substantial sums as part of the transaction.

What is apparent is he has lost hugely on the deal. The shares were bought at 680p. Today Barclays' bombed-out stock was trading at less than tenth of that, down 2.5p at 63.6p.

News of Seegers' admission comes amid more revelations of such deals, with Richard Harpin the boss of fast-growing emergency plumbing group Homeserve disclosing he has pledged a whopping £62 million of shares as security against personal loans.

The FSA offered a one-month amnesty on such deals after the issue exploded last month when Carphone Warehouse chairman David Ross lost his job, having admitted he offered £120 million as collateral to shore up his private property interests.

Since then, Icap boss Michael Spencer and Stagecoach chief executive Brian Souter have admitted pledging huge sums.

Barclays was today embroiled in a separate furore after its new Middle Eastern masters appeared to issue a “hands off” warning to any British Government plans to part-nationalise the High Street bank.

With shares in Barclays under severe pressure since Gordon Brown's second banking-industry bailout earlier this week, there has been increasing talk the bank will have to be rescued and part-nationalised by the Government.

But Barclays' new 32% owners, the Abu Dhabi royal family and Qatari government investment funds, appear to be behind the release of detail of documentation which reveals that if the UK Government were to make a move, it would trigger a clause which would not only deliver the bank into the hands of the Middle Easterners but also stipulates that the taxpayer would have to pay way over the current price for the new shares in the bank.

The detail of the deal brokered by British financier Amanda Staveley for the Middle East consortium fronted by Sheikh Mansour bin Zayed Al Nahyan, states: “If Barclays does have to issue new shares at a price which is, for example, half our agreed price, then you automatically get twice as many shares for the money you have already invested.

“If this provision comes into effect, you could end up owning significantly more of Barclays at no extra cost.”

Reader views (1)

 Add your view

Congratulation Mr.Frits Seegers for buying Barclays shares at the reported £6-80p. AS Head of Retail Banking, you and your immediate team have inflicted big suffering and losses on ordinary customers of the bank. Now with your reported losses on your Barclays shares, I hope you will learn how the bank's many customers have suffered.

- George, London, UK, 22/01/2009 22:07
Report abuse


Add your comment

 

Terms and conditions Make text area bigger You have  characters left.

We welcome your opinions. This is a public forum. Libellous and abusive comments are not allowed. Please read our House Rules.

For information about privacy and cookies please read our Privacy Policy.


 

 

  • Moody's threat to Europe's banks sparks fury in City Euro problem graph Moody's has sent shockwaves through the global banking system and sparked fury in the City, as the ratings agency threatened to slash the...
  • Bank's China bond call Peter Sands One of London's most senior bankers is calling on the government to issue a renminbi-denominated bond as part of a charm offensive to boost...
  • Seven Olympus bosses held over £1bn fraud Olympus "After going to hell and back this is a day to remember," said fired Olympus boss and whistle-blower Michael Woodford after seven executives...
  • Spain pays for rating cut Struggling Spain has managed to prise another €4 billion (£3.3 billion) from jittery bond markets today but was forced to pay more for the privilege
  • Kingfisher bonus time as targets are smashed B&Q Ian Cheshire, B&Q owner Kingfisher's chief executive, and his top team are set for bumper payouts after smashing its bonus scheme's targets
  • Greek impasse hits euro Greek protesters European stock markets were jittery and the euro has dropped to its lowest level in four weeks as the brinksmanship between Greece and its...
  • PPR thrives as luxury brands remain strong Add £1000 python skin Gucci handbags to the list of things that remain popular despite the economic gloom
  • BAE set to axe more jobs as profits go into retreat BAE BAE Systems has raised the prospect of further job cuts as Britain's biggest manufacturer announced a disappointing set of results for 2011...
  • Reed Elsevier sees growth despite tough economy Anglo-Dutch publishing and events group Reed Elsevier reported a rise in full year profit and said it expected to generate more revenue and profit growth in 2012
  • Frothy profits at Heineken Beer The economy might be in dire straits but Brits still love a pint down the pub
  •  
    Market Roundup
    WEDNESDAY UPDATE

    Barclaycard's exit leaves CPP with an identity crisis

    Bye bye Barclaycard. Nearly a year since the FSA started investigating CPP over its sales techniques, the identity theft protection firm touched a new, all-time low today after admitting it was losing one of its most high-profile clients

    More