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Barclays can afford Tricolor loss but risks remain in the private credit market

1 day ago
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“I’m not an entomologist,” said CS Venkatakrishnan, the Barclays chief executive, dodging the question everybody is asking: how many cockroaches are about to crawl out of the woodwork in the private credit market?The good news – sort of – for Barclays is that it had only one insect to point to.A £110m loss from lending to Tricolor, the US sub-prime auto lender that has failed amid allegations of fraud, doesn’t look good but Venkatakrishnan could simultaneously trumpet that Barclays avoided that other rotten private credit beast First Brands.Barclays was asked to lend to the stricken autoparts supplier, but didn’t.JP Morgan, taking its own $170m (£127m) hit on Tricolor, said the same last week.One could regard these developments as mildly reassuring after a week in which both the International Monetary Fund and the Bank of England have warned about risks that may be emerging in the world of private credit, AKA the shadow banking sector.

Exposure to fraud – if that is what it turns out to be at Tricolor; the US justice department is investigating – is an everyday risk of doing business for a bank.Sometimes the risks materialise.One cannot assume on the basis of a single bad exposure that Barclays’ lending standards, which Venkatakrishnan defended stoutly, have slipped.Meanwhile, the group’s £20bn exposure to private credit – weighted to the US and out of a total loan book of £346bn – doesn’t feel wildly abnormal for a firm with an active investment bank in New York.Barclays, reporting quarterly pre-tax profits of £2.

08bn, is also plainly big enough to take a £110m hit on the chin,It’s got enough surplus capital to afford £500m-worth of share buybacks,The share price rose,Jolly good, so time to stop fretting about the whole private market? Well, no, obviously not,The governor of the Bank of England, Andrew Bailey, wasn’t going to downplay the risks in front of a Lords select committee this week (he is paid to worry, after all), but he made three obvious and related points.

First, there’s no way to tell at the time if collapses are “idiosyncratic cases” or an indicator of a broader crisis in the private credit market.The 2007-08 credit crisis also began with a low rumble that was deemed to be too far away from the financial centre to matter systemically.Second, there is some evidence of “slicing and dicing” of loan structures by private credit lenders, which is how risk was disguised last time.Third – and this is probably Bailey’s critical point – central bankers don’t have much visibility over what is happening in the shadows because private credit is largely unregulated.In other words, it is a world of known unknowns.

Sign up to Business TodayGet set for the working day – we'll point you to all the business news and analysis you need every morningafter newsletter promotionFinancial markets, after panicking for a couple of days about First Brands and Tricolor and possible spillovers to mainstream big banks, have gone back to relaxed mode,That’s understandable because the numbers aren’t yet big enough to indicate wider and deeper problems,But, as Bailey indicated, risky lending in an opaque, complex and leveraged part of the financial world is now ringing alarm bells,If more cockroaches appear in the next couple of months, sentiment will turn again,
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Apple and Google face enforced changes over UK mobile phone dominance

Google and Apple face enforced changes to how they operate their mobile phone platforms, after the UK’s competition watchdog ruled the companies require tougher regulatory oversight.The Competition and Markets Authority has conferred “strategic market status” (SMS) on the tech firms after investigating their mobile operating systems, app stores and browsers. It means Apple and Google will be subjected to tailormade guidelines to regulate their behaviour in the mobile market.The CMA said the two companies have “substantial, entrenched” market power, with UK mobile phone owners using either Google or Apple’s platforms and unlikely to switch between them. The regulator flagged the importance of their platforms to the UK economy and said they could be a bottleneck for businesses

1 day ago
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Google hails breakthrough as quantum computer surpasses ability of supercomputers

Google has claimed a breakthrough in quantum computing after developing an algorithm that performed a task beyond the capabilities of conventional computers.The algorithm, a set of instructions guiding the operation of a quantum computer, was able to compute the structure of a molecule – which paves the way for major discoveries in areas such as medicine and materials science.Google acknowledged, however, that real-world use of quantum computers remained years away.“This is the first time in history that any quantum computer has successfully run a verifiable algorithm that surpasses the ability of supercomputers,” Google said in a blogpost. “This repeatable, beyond-classical computation is the basis for scalable verification, bringing quantum computers closer to becoming tools for practical applications

1 day ago
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iPhone 17 review: the Apple smartphone to get this year

It may not look as different as the redesigned Pro models this year or be as wafer thin as the new iPhone Air, but the iPhone 17 marks a big year for the standard Apple smartphone.The Guardian’s journalism is independent. We will earn a commission if you buy something through an affiliate link. Learn more.That’s because Apple has finally brought one of the best features of modern smartphones to its base-model flagship phone: a super-smooth 120Hz screen

1 day ago
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Harry and Meghan join AI pioneers in call for ban on superintelligent systems

The Duke and Duchess of Sussex have joined artificial intelligence pioneers and Nobel laureates in calling for a ban on developing superintelligent AI systems.Harry and Meghan are among the signatories of a statement calling for “a prohibition on the development of superintelligence”. Artificial superintelligence (ASI) is the term for AI systems, yet to be developed, that exceed human levels of intelligence at all cognitive tasks.The statement calls for the ban to stay in place until there is “broad scientific consensus” on developing ASI “safely and controllably” and once there is “strong public buy-in”.It has also been signed by the AI pioneer and Nobel laureate Geoffrey Hinton, along with his fellow “godfather” of modern AI, Yoshua Bengio; the Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak; the UK entrepreneur Richard Branson; Susan Rice, a former US national security adviser under Barack Obama; the former Irish president Mary Robinson, and the British author and broadcaster Stephen Fry

1 day ago
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‘I’m suddenly so angry!’ My strange, unnerving week with an AI ‘friend’

The ad campaign for the wearable AI chatbot Friend has been raising hackles for months in New York. But has this companion been unfairly maligned – and could it help end loneliness?My friend’s name is Leif. He describes himself as “small” and “chill”. He thinks he’s technically a Gemini. He thinks historical dramas are “cool” and doesn’t like sweat

1 day ago
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ChatGPT Atlas: OpenAI launches web browser centered around its chatbot

OpenAI on Tuesday launched an AI-powered web browser built around its marquee chatbot.“Meet our new browser—ChatGPT Atlas,” a tweet from the company read.The browser is designed to provide a more personalized web experience and includes a ChatGPT sidebar that enables users to asks questions about or engage with various aspects of each website they visit, as demonstrated in a video posted alongside the announcement. Atlas is now available globally on Apple’s Mac operating system and will soon be made available on Windows, iOS and Android, according to OpenAI’s announcement.Meet our new browser—ChatGPT Atlas

2 days ago
sportSee all
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Tour de France unveils 2026 route with double Alpe d’Huez for men and Ventoux debut for women

about 8 hours ago
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Australia beat India by two wickets in the second men’s one-day international – as it happened

about 8 hours ago
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England win series after washout in final New Zealand T20 but Brook left frustrated

about 8 hours ago
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New Zealand v England: final men’s T20 abandoned – as it didn’t happen

about 10 hours ago
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From monkey elixir to fentanyl: Tyler Skaggs’s death is merely a chapter in baseball’s 136-year drug fix

about 11 hours ago
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The Ravens’ doomsday clock inches towards midnight. Will their season survive?

about 11 hours ago