By Jonathan Stempel
NEW YORK (Reuters) -A U.S. judge ruled on Friday that Barclays must face a proposed class action by shareholders who accused the British bank of securities fraud related to its sale of $17.7 billion more debt than regulators allowed.
U.S. District Judge Katherine Polk Failla in Manhattan said shareholders adequately alleged that Barclays' failure to disclose the absence of internal controls that might have caught five years of errant debt sales was a material omission of fact.
She also let shareholders try to prove that Barclays and several officials including former CEO Jes Staley were «actionably reckless» in assuring that the bank complied with federal securities laws even as it «blindly» sold the debt.
Bank executives subsequently characterized the overissuance as an «entirely avoidable» and «self-inflicted» problem that would not have required «rocket science» to avert.
Barclays declined to comment. Staley's lawyers did not immediately respond to requests for comment. Lawyers for shareholders led by the Boston Retirement System pension fund did not immediately respond to similar requests.
The lawsuit followed Barclays' revelation in March 2022 that it had sold $15.2 billion more structured and exchange-traded notes in the prior five years than the $20.8 billion that U.S. regulators had authorized.
Four months later, the bank increased the oversold amount to $17.7 billion. It offered to repurchase the excess, and set aside 1.59 billion pounds ($2 billion) for the overissuance.
In a 57-page decision, Failla said shareholders could sue Barclays for statements including that the bank was «committed to operating within a strong system of internal control» and had policies and procedures that met
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