President Obama irked Wall Street bankers a few years ago by calling them âfat cats.â But one banker has embraced the name.
This week, Rich Ricci, the head of Barclays investment banking unit, is entering several horses in the Cheltenham Festival, including âFat Cat in the Hat.â
At 10/1 odds, Fat Cat in the Hat is one of the favorites at the four-day racehorse event in central England that attracts the countryâs high society. If the four-year-old horse wins, Mr. Ricci could take home more than $100,000 in prize money.
The race â" and Mr. Ricciâs horse â" is only stoking the long-simmering controversy surrounding the bank. Some lawmakers said it illustrated the gap between high-paid bankers and the wider public that continues to suffer from slow economic growth in Britain.
âIt shows how out of touch these bankers are,â the British politician John Mann told a local newspaper.
Last summer, the bank agreed to pay $450 million to American and British authorities over the rate-rigging scandal. Mr. Ricciâs name surfaced in a relation to the inquiry in which some of the firmâs senior managers altered Barclaysâ submissions to the London interbank offered rate, or Libor. The efforts were an attempt to mask the bankâs financial position at the height of the financial crisis. Mr. Ricci was not accused of any wrongdoing.
Barclays also came under fire last week after it announced that 428 of its employees still earned more than $1.5 million last year. Five of the bankâs staff members were paid more than $7.5 million in 2012. The compensation package of the American-born Mr. Ricci was not revealed as part of th! e bankâs annual disclosures.
His hobbies arenât nearly as rewarding, at least financially speaking.
Last year, a horse owned by the Barclays banker called Champagne Fever also took home the first prize at one of the eventâs most prominent races that had a total price purse of more than $80,000.