City financier Amanda Staveley cuts £1.6billion Barclays damages claim by half

City financier Amanda Staveley has cut her £1.6billion damages claim against Barclays by more than HALF to £770million, High Court hears

  • Amanda Staveley claims Barclays agreed to provide £2 billion loan to investors
  • But High Court told loan was ‘concealed’ from the market and shareholders
  • Ms Staveley, who runs private equity firm PCP, sued the bank for £1.6billion
  • She has now cut her claim to a maximum of £770million after first claim was called ‘unjustifiable’

A businesswoman involved in a High Court battle with Barclays has cut a £1.6 billion damages claim by more than half, a judge has been told.

Amanda Staveley has made complaints about the behaviour of Barclays’ bosses when negotiating investment deals during the 2008 financial crisis.

Ms Staveley says Barclays agreed to provide an unsecured £2 billion loan to Qatari investors, but says the loan was ‘concealed’ from the market, shareholders and PCP Capital Partners, a private equity firm she runs.

Amanda Staveley’s firm PCP has reduced its damages claim against Barclays from £1.6 billion to £771 million after evidence was concluded in the case

She says PCP was induced to invest on ‘manifestly worse terms’ than Qatari Investors and but for Barclays’ ‘false representations’ would have subscribed on ‘vastly better terms’.

PCP has sued the bank and wanted £1.6 billion in damages.

But lawyers representing Barclays told the judge overseeing the fight that the PCP is now making a ‘maximum claim’ for £771 million.

Mr Justice Waksman heard evidence at a High Court hearing in London during the summer.

The businesswoman has made complaints about the behaviour of Barclays' bosses when negotiating investment deals during the 2008 financial crisis

The businesswoman has made complaints about the behaviour of Barclays’ bosses when negotiating investment deals during the 2008 financial crisis

Former Barclays boss Stephen Jones

Former Barclays executive Roger Jenkins

She says PCP was induced to invest on ‘manifestly worse terms’ than Qatari Investors and but for Barclays’ ‘false representations’ would have subscribed on ‘vastly better terms’. Left: Ex-Barclays boss Stephen Jones, right: ex-Barclays executive Roger Jenkins

Lawyers returned to court on Monday to begin making final legal submissions.

‘When the trial started, the quantum of the claim, as widely reported in the press, was for £1.6 billion,’ Jeffery Onions QC, who leads Barclays’ legal team, told the judge in a written submission.

‘No attempt was made to justify that claim. It was not until a letter dated 19 August 2020, after the evidence was concluded, that PCP acknowledged that the maximum claim for which it was now contending was less than half that amount (£771 million).’

Barclays say PCP’s claim should be dismissed.