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UPDATE: Barclays fires group CEO Antony Jenkins

Cape Town - Barclays CEO Antony Jenkins has been fired after falling out with the board over the pace of cost cutting and the size of its investment bank, according to the BBC.

BBC business editor Kamal Ahmed, who broke the story on Wednesday, wrote: "Make no mistake (Jenkins) ... has been fired after falling out with the board over the size of the investment bank and the pace of cost cutting." 

Barclays chairperson John McFarlane told Ahmed that he "fired" Jenkins, according to a tweet by the journalist.

Barclays deputy chairperson Sir Michael Rake wanted "Barclays to retain its global presence as a major investment bank whilst Mr Jenkins felt it should be cut back", he wrote on BBC.

South African bank Absa [JSE:ABSP] is a part of Barclays Africa [JSE:BGA], which is a part of the British bank.

Business journalist Bruce Whitfield tweeted on Wednesday: "Whoa! This is big. What implications for Barclays Africa AKA Absa and SA operations under Maria Ramos?"

In a full statement on its website, Barclays announced the departure of Jenkins as chief executive and the appointment of John McFarlane as executive chairperson pending the appointment of a new chief executive. 

Rake said "it became clear to all of us that a new set of skills were required for the period ahead".

"This development does not signal any major change in strategy," the bank said on Wednesday.

Ahmed wrote that Jenkins was told in the last few days that the board no longer had confidence that he was the right man to lead the organisation.

“Senior sources have told me that... Rake approached... McFarlane to say that a number of board members were unhappy with the speed of change at the bank.

“They wanted cost cutting to go further and more attention paid to the investment bank, which is seen as under-performing," he wrote on BBC.

Under Jenkins, the bank pledged to eliminate some 7 000 jobs at the investment bank, cut the division’s share of group assets to 30% from about 50% and set up a bad bank to sell assets including complex derivatives, according to Bloomberg.

"His efforts failed to have a quick impact, with the securities unit reporting a 2.7% return on equity in 2014, down from 8.2% a year earlier and below Jenkins’s group target of 12%. It also made it the least profitable of four units.

"Barclays shares have increased about 3.6% this year, making them the third-worst performers among major British lenders," Bloomberg reported.

Jenkins will continue to receive massive pay

Jenkins is entitled to 12 months’ notice from the company under his contract of employment and will therefore continue to receive his current salary (£1 100 000 per annum), role based pay (delivered in Barclays shares) (£950 000 per annum), pension allowance (£363 000 per annum) and other benefits until July 7 2016, Barclays said.

This is a total package of R46.6m for the year.

Barclays said "the committee has determined that Jenkins will remain eligible to be considered for a pro rated 2015 bonus for time in role as Group Chief Executive, subject to an assessment of the relevant performance measures relating to his 2015 bonus and the general discretion of the Committee. Jenkins will not be eligible to be considered for a 2016 incentive award or a 2016-18 LTIP award."

Looking back on his tenure since 2012, Jenkins said "it is easy to forget just how bad things were three years ago both for our industry and even more so for us". 

"While the external environment has continued to be, and will remain, challenging the group now has the resilience to overcome these challenges.”

Update from Bloomberg:

“There’s a new sheriff in town and he’s got the board’s backing to make sweeping changes,” said Sandy Chen, an analyst at Cenkos Securities in London. “We have long advocated an aggressive pruning of the investment bank. The time for this, it appears, is now.”

McFarlane, 67, replaced David Walker, 75, with the bank mired in misconduct scandals. By becoming executive chairperson, he is assuming a similar role to what he held at Aviva, where he helped restructure the UK insurer, replacing most of the board and boosting returns.

McFarlane told BBC Radio in an interview on Wednesday that the bank isn’t efficient and may eliminate more jobs.

Barclays remains committed to its international investment bank, he said.

The shares jumped as much as 3.3%, the most since May 20, and traded 3.1% higher at 08:30 in London. The stock has risen about 6.7% this year.

“The CEO has not acted fast enough on restructuring non- core and capital generation and that the group is too bureaucratic,” said Joseph Dickerson, an analyst at Jefferies International. “While Mr McFarlane is CEO we would expect some acceleration of non-core rundown initiatives.”

Jenkins joins CEOs Anshu Jain and Brady Dougan who left Deutsche Bank AG and Credit Suisse Group AG respectively this year. The moves mark the passing of an era when trading profits paved the way to the top job at Europe’s largest banks.

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