Where Barclays sees a "generational shift", its investment bank rivals are smelling blood.
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The British bank, which under former chief Bob Diamond poached top staff and customers from competitors in trouble after the financial crisis, now risks suffering the same fate as it radically shrinks its investment banking business.
Mr Diamond's successor as chief executive, Antony Jenkins, says he does not expect a further exodus of top talent after departures from Barclays' US operation, but some trading staff at least are preparing for the exit as the bank pares back its ambitions to be a Wall Street powerhouse.
Barclays announced this week plans to shrink its debt trading business and axe a quarter of staff, focusing instead on US and British clients and products where it ranks in the top five in business such as selling government bonds, stocks and currencies and advising on deals.
Tom King, who made his career advising telecoms firms on takeover battles, is tasked with making the strategy work and hailed it as a "step change" that was needed in a new era of tougher regulations that have made some trades too expensive.
"We're really shifting the investment bank from one that was a business run for revenue to one that is being run for return," he said on Thursday.
The worry for Mr Jenkins and Mr King is that top staff and clients leave and the business slowly dies, echoing the problems of Credit Suisse First Boston when it bought Donaldson, Lufkin and Jenrette for $11 billion in 2000, only for many senior bankers there to depart.
Mr Jenkins, who previously ran Barclays' retail business and has no background in investment banking, admitted he feared a "death spiral" after an exodus of staff from its US business last year. This prompted him controversially to raise bonuses for 2013 despite a fall in profits.
Mr King himself left Citigroup for Barclays in 2009 because the bailed out US group was scaling back its investment bank while Barclays, under former debt trader Diamond, was vowing to take on Wall Street after its takeover of the US division of Lehman Brothers.
Even before Thursday's announcement, the atmosphere among Barclays' dealers was grim. People who feared the chop were already arriving to work late and leaving early, spending the time in-between sprucing up their CVs and talking to headhunters, said one person within the bank.
"Whenever this sort of thing happens the best people will be getting a lot of inbound calls. This won't be any different," a senior banker at a rival said.
Freeing up the top floors
Mr Jenkins wants his bank to be more balanced and with lower costs to boost profitability.
Cutting thousands of jobs could save the bank more than 1 billion pounds ($1.7 billion at ($1 = 0.5899 British pounds) a year based on average pay. Winding down large parts of its trading book will help to reduce the investment bank's use of capital to 30 per cent by 2016 from 51 per cent last year.
The result will be a dismantling of much of the bond trading powerhouse built up by Diamond in the decade prior to the 2008-09 financial crisis. Much of the former Lehman business, which includes the US equities and advisory desks, will stay at the heart of the smaller firm.
For Barclays, that means focusing on its strong "home" markets of the United States and Britain, which account for 60 per cent of global market business. It will cut back hard in Asia, largely serving only big clients' needs there and Asian customers who want help on overseas deals.
There have already been a series of high profile departures in the United States, including Hugh 'Skip' McGee, the head of its Americas business who was the most senior ex-Lehman banker. The bank also lost Ros Stephenson, Paul Parker and Larry Wieseneck.
"I'm not concerned at all about the level of departures. What we're seeing is a something of a generational shift," Mr Jenkins said on Thursday as he unveiled his plan.
"We're seeing some of the senior leadership saying it's the right time for them to move on," he said. "We're seeing low levels of attrition in the people that are going to be running the bank going forward, the next generation of MDs."
Senior sources at the bank concurred, and said many of the senior people had left after missing out on the top job taken by King, a US native who moved to London for a couple of years in 1999 and stayed for over a decade. He is now based in New York.
Industry sources said this is part of a wider trend in the industry.
"I feel that banks are in a mode to reduce the senior level," a source at another bank said. "The only way to protect and promote the mid-level talent is by freeing up the top."
Barclays has said it plans to cut 7,000 investment bank jobs in the next three years, with about 2,000 of those this year.
It plans to put 340 billion pounds of investment bank assets into a new "non-core" unit where they will be run down, so whole teams will be cut. Staff in those areas that the bank wants to keep may have bonuses based on hitting asset reduction targets - something which UBS did as it shrank its business after a bailout by the Swiss state.
At Barclays, Eric Bommensath - the former fixed income boss who became co-head of the investment bank with King a year ago - is in charge of the non-core business and no longer sits on the executive committee.
Cutting costs
Barclays faces risks in carrying out its plan. It will "meaningfully reduce" the number of clients, with most focus on the top 1,000 who deliver 75 per cent of the investment bank's revenues.
The investment bank will also still be left with 490 billion pounds of assets. While smaller than US players such as JP Morgan, it will remain the largest investment bank in Europe with more assets than the "core" businesses of Deutsche Bank and Credit Suisse after they also pruned operations.
Barclays is exiting most commodities business and is likely to retreat from areas including emerging markets and interest rate trading products, structured products, securitisation and cross currency swaps.
Areas where the bank is strong - such as rates in the G10 leading economies, foreign exchange and credit trading and debt capital markets - will be less affected. It is also sticking with its equities and advisory operations, which have expanded in the last three years, require less capital and appear set for yet stronger growth.
Bankers said that while Barclays lags some rivals with its plans, it will not be the last to take radical action.
"In the next year or two, more people will shrink or pull out. We've not seen anything meaningful other than UBS and RBS. Deutsche is going through some change and now Barclays, but there's still a lot more to come," a senior rival banker said.
"It's a painful process. The key questions are where do you pick your spots, and you need to be disciplined."
Copyright @ Thomson Reuters 2013