The Morning Call

Barclays CEO steps down after Epstein report

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LONDON — The chief executive of British bank Barclays stepped down Monday following a report by United Kingdom regulators into his past links with the late financier and sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.

Jes Staley has previously said he “deeply regrets” his relationsh­ip with Epstein, who killed himself at a federal jail in New York in August 2019 while awaiting a sex traffickin­g trial. There is no suggestion that the 64-year-old Staley knew anything about Epstein’s alleged crimes.

Staley said he will contest regulators’ preliminar­y conclusion­s, which were shared with him and the bank Friday. The report by the Financial Conduct Authority and the Prudential Regulation Authority examined the way Staley characteri­zed his relationsh­ip with Epstein to Barclays when he was Epstein’s private banker in his previous job at U.S. investment bank J.P. Morgan.

Details of the report have not been released, and both regulators have declined to comment.

Barclays said in a statement Monday that the bank and Staley agreed he would resign in light of regulators’ preliminar­y findings and Staley’s decision to fight them.

The bank noted that the investigat­ion “makes no findings” that Staley saw or knew about any of Epstein’s alleged crimes, which it said was “the central question” behind its decision to back its chief executive after Epstein was arrested in 2019.

Staley said his last contact with Epstein was in fall 2015, when he and his wife sailed to Epstein’s private island for lunch. That trip occurred shortly before he joined Barclays. He said he had no contact with Epstein once he joined the bank in December 2015.

C.S. Venkatakri­shnan, head of global markets for the bank, will take over as chief executive. Barclays said succession planning has been in place for some time, and he had been identified as the preferred candidate more than a year ago.

Shares in Barclays fell 2% following the announceme­nt, as Staley had been widely credited with doing a good job at the bank.

Barclays credited him for running the company with “commitment and skill.”

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