Compliance
Barclays' Group Finance Director, General Counsel To Step Down

Barclays, the UK bank, today confirmed that group finance director Chris Lucas was stepping down from the post, following media reports over the weekend that he was to leave. The bank also announced that Mark Harding, group general counsel, has decided to retire.
Lucas has left while UK
investigators probe the circumstances of the bank’s £7 billion
($10.9 billion) capital-raising
that allowed it to avoid state support in the 2008 crisis,
Sky News reported yesterday.
Lucas has been in the post for almost six years.
"Barclays has today announced that the group finance director
Chris Lucas, and the group general counsel Mark Harding, have
decided to retire from the company. Chris and Mark have agreed to
remain in their roles until
their successors have been appointed and an appropriate
handover
completed. The search for these appointments is now underway.
Given the
seniority of the roles, and the importance of securing the
right
candidates, we expect that process to take a considerable time
to
complete," Barclays said in a statement.
"Chris and Mark both expressed to me late last year that
they were considering stepping down from their roles at Barclays.
The
rationale which each shared with me was consistent and,
typically,
grounded in wanting to do what is best for the bank. Their
decision to
retire was theirs alone," Antony Jenkins, group chief executive,
said.
"Barclays is at an inflection point in our journey towards
becoming the 'Go-To' Bank. We will shortly unveil the outcome of
our
strategic review, to which they have both made a major
contribution. The
execution of our change programme will take place over the next
5-10
years, and both Chris and Mark feel that now is the right time
for them,
personally and professionally, to pass the baton on in their
respective
roles to executives who can commit to seeing that programme
to
completion," Jenkins continued.
"Chris and Mark have given tremendous service to Barclays. The
chairman, the board and all my executive committee colleagues and
I shall
be very sorry to see them go. I know they join me in recognising
the
quality of their contributions, the sacrifices they have both
made in
what have often been challenging times, and their unfailing
collegiality," he added.
The Financial Times
reported last week that one issue under investigation was whether
the bank lent
money to Qatari investors which was then used to acquire
Barclays' shares. The
bank has been probed by the Financial Services Authority and the
Serious Fraud
Office.
Barclays declined to comment on the Qatar issue
late last week when contacted by this publication about the
matter.
Sky News, in its report at the weekend, said
there was “no suggestion” that Lucas or any of the three others
under
investigation - Richard Boath, a senior investment banker
who still works at
the bank; Roger Jenkins, the former head of Barclays' lucrative
tax-structuring
operations; and John Varley, Barclays' former chief executive -
are guilty of
any wrongdoing. The report added that “insiders” stressed that
Lucas's
retirement was unconnected to the inquiries.
The individuals are being investigated by the FSA, while the
SFO is looking at the bank.