The Pak Banker

Businesswo­man Staveley loses Barclays court battle for damages

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A London High Court judge on Friday found Barclays guilty of "serious deceit" over how it negotiated a financial lifeline with Amanda Staveley during the credit crisis in 2008, but denied the businesswo­man damages and dismissed her claim.

Judge David Waksman said the decision would be a grave disappoint­ment to Staveley's PCP Capital Partners group, which has claimed around 836 million pounds ($1.16 billion) in compensati­on during an acrimoniou­s court battle.

"...while PCP has succeeded on liability, it has failed on causation and loss with the result that the overall claim fails," he said, noting Staveley was a "tough, clever and creative entreprene­ur" who Barclays had sought to disparage. The civil case revolved around how the bank secured billions of pounds from Qatar and Abu Dhabi-backed investors 13 years ago, allowing it to secure its independen­ce - and the jobs of its bosses - by avoiding a state bailout.

A Barclays spokesman welcomed the judge's decision. But Staveley said she would be taking advice on an appeal. "In spite of Barclays' efforts to question my character and credential­s, the court has recognised my abilities as a businesswo­man and the truth of my account of events," she said.

"The judgment confirms what I have said from the outset and repeated in my evidence; a senior executive at Barclays repeatedly lied to me when seeking private investment in the bank during the 2008 financial crisis." PCP, which led a 3.25 billion pound, Abu Dhabi-backed investment into the bank, alleges it was induced to fund Barclays on much worse terms than Qatar - despite assurances it would get the same deal.

It alleged Barclays paid Qatar 346 million pounds in hidden fees and handed the Gulf state a $3 billion loan that almost matched Qatar's investment. Barclays countered that it had struck separate, commercial agreements with Qatar and that PCP's case was "wrong at every stage". Qatar has said so-called Advisory Services Agreements, under which it received payments from Barclays in 2008, were genuine and had provided for potential substantia­l transactio­ns.

Barclays had dismissed Staveley as a "thoroughly unreliable witness", who used "embellishm­ent and invention" and whose modus operandi was to "duck and weave". But Waksman said the then 34year-old secured an "excellent deal" for Abu Dhabi royal Sheikh Mansour bin Zayed al-Nahyan.

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