Close

LOGIN

Remember me
Not a member?
or
Connect using:
Why BS?

We encourage visitors to register on Business Standard. Registering on the site is absolutely Free and offers you the following benefits.

Free Daily E-newsletter

Breaking News Alerts in your Inbox

Post Comments and Share your Feedback

Your Personal Business Standard Page

Free Portfolio of Stocks, Equity and Commodities Derivatives

Access Premium Services

Receive Selective Offers from our Third Party Premium Advertisers

Get Invited to Business Standard Events

Close

FORGOT PASSWORD?

Not a member?

Diamonds aren't for ever

Related News

said “the buck stops with me”, in resigning after the interest-rate rigging scandal. But the buck shouldn’t stop with the Barclays chairman. It is appropriate that Agius has fallen on his sword because he hasn’t acted as a strong counterweight to Chief Executive . But the chief executive was responsible for the culture at the investment banking arm, where the manipulation took place, as well as other lapses.

Diamond has done an extraordinary job expanding BarCap. But it is hard to believe he is the right person to clean it up. In a BBC lecture last year, he said that “the evidence of culture is how people behave when no one is watching”.

Not only did several Barclays traders behave badly when he was not watching; he himself was somehow involved in a chain of discussions which led to the bank submitting an artificially low interest rate to disguise an appearance of vulnerability during the credit crisis.

The interest-rate rigging scandal isn’t the only black mark against Diamond. He received a hefty bonus for last year despite a performance he himself acknowledged was “unacceptable”. And he presided over a bank that concocted aggressive tax avoidance schemes. Barclays may hope that the blood-letting will stop with Agius. But the scandal has a dynamic which may make this hard. The next flashpoint will be on July 4, when Diamond has been summoned to appear in front of the House of Commons Treasury Select Committee. Given that politicians are competing with each other in anti-banker rhetoric, this will be an uncomfortable experience - even if Diamond can argue that Barclays was not alone in manipulating rates.

Beyond that, the spotlight will switch to Barclays’ new chairman. Sensibly, the bank is looking both externally and internally; the main inside candidate is , now promoted to deputy chairman. It needs to find someone who both understands banking and is tough enough to find a replacement for Diamond.

Read more on:   
|
|
|

Read More

Historical mistake

UK shouldn't quit the EU - it should join the euro

Back to Top

Quick Links

Have Your Say Rss icon




Image4

Will L K Advani's resignation weaken BJP's poll prospects in 2014?

Financial X-Ray Rss icon

Regulatory environment improving for telcos

Trai lowering of roaming tariffs likely to have negligible impact on financials as existing headline tariffs are lower

RBI opts for a strategic timeout on rate cuts

From inflation, central bank shifts focus to rupee stability and capital flows

Back to Top