Credit exposures: Barclays pays up for Protium protection

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Credit exposures: Barclays pays up for Protium protection

  Barclays chief executive John Varley

John Varley describes the deal as a step in its "efforts to manage down the quantum and volatility of our credit market exposures"

Barclays’ decision last month to move $12.3 billion of credit market assets to a Cayman Islands-registered fund prompted a frenzy of interest, combining as it did the twin bogeymen of toxic assets and off-balance-sheet vehicles. Barclays chief executive John Varley describes the deal as a further step in its "efforts to manage down the quantum and volatility of our credit market exposures" – already reduced by 30% in the first half of 2009. But it seems to be driven far more by concern about the monoline guarantors that wrapped many of these securities rather than the assets themselves. The transaction involves the sale of $2.3 billion of US RMBS, $1.8 billion of whole loans and $8.2 billion of assets wrapped with monoline guarantees to a fund, Protium Finance LP. Protium is a medicine frequently used to treat heartburn and acid reflux – not the most promising indicator of the desirability of the portfolio.

The fund is being managed by C12 Capital Management, an asset management firm run by the people who would have likely originated many of these assets in the first place: Stephen King (who joined Barclays Capital in 2005 from CSFB as director of north American ABS CDOs and ran the principal mortgage trading group) and Michael Keeley, a member of the management committee for European financial institutions.

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