Past catches up with Barclays

The UK bank's decision to ask shareholders to stump up £5.8 billion in fresh equity marks a resounding defeat for the bank at the hands of regulators

The past has finally caught up with Barclays. The UK bank's decision to ask shareholders to stump up £5.8 billion ($8.9 billion) in fresh equity, alongside the £7 billion of capital it plans to free up through bond and asset sales, marks a resounding defeat for the bank at the hands of regulators.

It ends a five-year game of cat-and-mouse during which Barclays went to the outer limits of the regulatory and accounting rule books in an attempt to evade the consequences of its racy past.

WSJ Logo
U.S. Attack on Iran Injects Uncertainty Into Already Uncertain EconomyExternal link

U.S. Attack on Iran Injects Uncertainty Into Already Uncertain Economy