Bank giants widen gap with state aid rivals
Nov 11 2009 by Peter McCusker, The Journal
Barclays said bonuses were accruing at a “broadly consistent“ rate to prior years, although it claimed this did not mean it was reverting to former bonus policies.
It has already signed up to international G20 rules on pay reforms which recommend clawback clauses and deferral over a number of years.
The bank is also talking to major investors over bonus pool levels ahead of its year-end decision.
“We will be fully compliant with the G20 rules in considering bonus amounts and we will be thinking of all our stakeholders - employees, shareholders and the broader community - and we will be taking into account all of their views,” said the bank.
HSBC, which has also agreed to the G20 recommendations, said it would pay “appropriate“ levels, “at the same time being conscious of the environment in which we are operating“.
Bad debt levels are showing encouraging signs, according to both HSBC and Barclays.
HSBC has been hit hard by the so-called impairment charges and was the first of the banks to flag up the start of the credit crunch, given its huge exposure to sub-prime mortgage borrowers in the US.
The group posted bad debt charges soaring by 39% to US $13.9bn (£8.4bn) in the first half and it has been slashing costs to counter market pressures - only last week announcing another 1,700 job cuts in the UK.
But it said today that its bad loans fell to the lowest quarterly level since the second quarter of 2008.
Barclays said it believes impairments will now peak sooner than first thought, at the end of 2009 or first quarter in 2010 as the global economy begins to recover.
While it is still seeing the impact of bad debts and credit market writedowns, with impairments totalling £6.2bn in the first nine months, quarterly figures show a marked improvement on the beginning of the year.