Barclays Plc is preparing for a wave of dealmaking on both sides of the Atlantic as newly installed President Donald Trump ushers in a more business-friendly regulatory environment in the US and companies across Europe reach for growth.
Barclays is proposing to overhaul how it pays its chief executive CS Venkatakrishnan in a move that would slash his fixed pay but hand him £9mn if the lender hits its profitability targets.
Barclays' global head of securitised products Scott Eichel is leaving, the bank's spokesperson said on Tuesday.
Barclays warned of potential short-term volatility in markets in the coming weeks as investors assess the latest policies and political developments under the newly sworn-in Trump administration, with the President taking office on Monday.
Barclays, India Chief Economist, Aastha Gudwani said in a quest to support consumption, the finance minister should provide an effective personal income tax rate cut by further tweaking the tax slabs. This is unlikely to have a sizable fiscal cost.
Shares of Barclays PLC BARC advanced 1.40% to £2.96 Tuesday, on what proved to be an all-around positive trading session for the stock market, with the FTSE 100 Index UKX rising 0.33% to 8,548.29. Supported by world-class markets data from Dow Jones and FactSet,
If Banco Santander’s Ana Botín wants to sell her British retail business, there’s an obvious buyer: Barclays boss C. S. Venkatakrishnan. The biggest questions would be when the 42-billion-pound ($51 billion) UK bank decides to pounce – and whether its relatively new CEO,
Customers with the big four UK banks - Barclays, HSBC, Lloyds Bank, Natwest - have been warned they could be missing out on triple the returns on their savings. Experts at savings provider Sidekick Money say now is the time to look around for a better rate, as the base rate may change again soon and the market is "very dynamic and competitive".
The move by Barclays follows hot on the heels of mortgage rate rises from Santander, HSBC, TSB and Leeds Building Society.
A RENEWED push by Japan’s biggest banks and other global lenders in India is driving down loan prices with the new players having more appetite for riskier credit, according to the country head for Barclays.
A new report by Barclays has revealed that the average amount of money lost to fraud last year was an average of £650