Barclays posts record annual profits
Banking giant Barclays has today reported a 92% rise in full-year profits to £11.6 billion, compared with £6.07 billion in 2008.
The bank said the strong figures were the result of its sale of its fund management division, Barclays Global Investors, for £8.2 billion last summer.
Barclays is one of the few banks not to have received any financial help from the Government, opting to go it alone by raising billions from investors in Qatar and Abu Dhabi during the financial crisis.
Meanwhile, despite the good performance, chief executive John Varley and president Bob Diamond have agreed to sacrifice bonuses for the second year in a row, in view of the “intense public interest and concern” over bankers’ pay.
Furthermore, the bank said other senior executives would take all their bonuses in shares over a three-year period.
Commenting in a statement about pay, chairman Marcus Agius said: “The bond of trust between banks and their stakeholders has been significantly weakened by the events of the last three years.
“We believe that when the behaviour of banks is assessed by their stakeholders to see whether we have genuinely learnt from the experiences of the last years, we will be judged mostly by how we conduct our business and, in particular today, by how we lend and how we pay,” he added.
For some time now, bank bonuses have sparked public anger and have been the subject of heavy criticism since many believe their risks led to the recession.
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