Barclays may be “too big to fail” but it is also probably “too big to bail out”.
What went wrong in
The origins of this disaster lie in the collapse of
Barclays decided to become a debt trading investment house. About half of its profits now come from the sort of activity that Lehman does.
“Our 2008 performance continues to benefit from the diversification of our business in recent years. In Global Retail and Commercial Banking, our UK businesses performed well. There was very strong profit growth in Barclaycard and we continued to expand our international businesses rapidly. Our Investment Banking and Investment Management businesses were profitable in challenging market conditions. ”
I know they offered guaranteed bonuses – so when they slow this beast down the staff costs do not go away.
Having employed all these people and told them to trade. Unsurprisingly they did. Now I am just going to extract a few things from the annual reports. Here is the derivatives exposure from the 2007 annual:
I encourage you to click for detail.
These numbers are as they seem. The total gross derivative exposure is 29 trillion pounds. I deal with banks – but I am not used to dealing in trillions of pounds. I don’t think anyone is.
The gross credit swaps are 2.4 trillion pounds – but mysteriously the fair values (both assets and liabilities) are low. Only the fair values go in the consolidated balance sheet so if you were to mark these like some people do the balance sheet would be much larger. (There is mismarking in someones book - but it may not be Barclays).
The CDS are up from a mere 1.2 trillion at year end 2006.The scale of the growth is best seen by looking at the same disclosure in say the 2003 table (snipped from the 2004 annual report):
It is not just the derivatives that they grew. The on balance sheet exposures grew to astronomical size too. Here is the summary from the Barclays annual report of Barcap.
Lets stress how weird this is. You have 3.8 billion pounds of “trading income” and only 42 million pounds of “value at risk”. The balance sheet however – and this is ON BALANCE SHEET exposure is a mere 840 billion pounds. That is about the same size as the whole of Citigroup! In the income statement they took a net 795 million pounds of charges against
Oh, and you got all this income with a trading team you hired with guaranteed bonuses into the most crazy-for-talent market that has ever happened. When I saw the bonuses some of my friends were being promised - well I wondered why I wasn't going to Barclays.
They were pretty good traders all up too. Unlike anything I do they made money almost daily. Below is the value at risk over 2005-2006 with the number of positive and negative trading days.I love this - almost EVERY day they made money.
It was a little rougher in 2007 - as the 2007 annual makes clear
Analysis of trading revenueOh well - in bad times you get some losing days at Barclays.
The histograms show the distribution of daily trading revenue for Barclays Capital in 2007 and 2006. Revenue includes net trading income, net interest income and net fees and commissions relating to primary trading. The average daily revenue in 2007 was £26.2m (2006: £22.0m) and there were 224 positive revenue days out of 253 (2006: 243 out of 252). The number of negative revenue days increased in 2007 largely as a result of volatile markets in the second half of the year. The number of large positive revenue days also increased but these were spread across the year
Of course it all depends on how you mark the exposures. Barclays held - and continues to hold lots of nasty stuff. Their marks on the super-senior CDOs are implying only a fraction of the problems at Ambac or AIG. How do I put it? When is it mark to model and when is it mark to myth?
They put out a interim trading report. Its here. You look at the marks - and see if they make sense to you. The statement is here (warning pdf).
They got the true subprime thing happening here. They own Equifirst - a true subprime lender. Or at least it was a true subprime lender - it now does FHA loans and the like. They purchased in March 2007 when it was early in distress. They got a few billion pounds of loans with the acqusition that they meant to securitise if the market reopened. Oops.
I got much more on this thing. But this is a blog and meant to be light hearted. Enjoy.
John
I love the interim Management Statement -- "solid income growth."
ReplyDeleteWell, at leats this sort of stuff isn't limited to the US -- I somehow feel better knowing its in the UK also...