The speculation involving the fate of
Barclays Global Investors has hit the pages of the
Wall Street Journal. Friday morning, the Journal
reported that BGI's London-based parent,
Barclays PLC, could face a choice between selling shares to the state or selling profitable
assets should it decide to participate in a government insurance plan.
The cost of participation could be high, analysts said, and that could force Barclays to issue shares
to the government. It could also raise capital by selling San Francisco-based BGI, or a portion of its emerging-markets business, the Journal reported, citing analysts and "people familiar with the situation."
Analysts at Sanford Bernstein in London said that BGI could fetch between £5 billion and £5.5 billion ($7.01 billion to $7.71 billion). BGI ended 2008 with $1.5 trillion of assets under management.
Last month, FT.com's blog,
Alphaville, reported that Barclays was in "detailed discussions" with a consortium buyer to sell BGI for about £5 billion (see
The MFWire, 02/19/09). After that Alphaville item surfaced, an unnamed source told
Reuters that the bank was not looking to sell BGI. 
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