Pricing Supplement dated November
24, 2020
(To the Prospectus dated August 1,
2019, the Prospectus Supplement dated August 1, 2019, the
Underlying Supplement dated August 1, 2019 and the Prospectus
Addendum dated May 11, 2020)
|
Filed Pursuant to Rule
424(b)(2)
Registration No. 333–232144
|
 |
$750,000
Buffered Notes due November 29,
2023
Linked to the Least Performing of
the Russell 2000® Index and Nasdaq-100
Index®
Global Medium-Term
Notes, Series A
|
Terms used in this pricing supplement,
but not defined herein, shall have the meanings ascribed
to them in the prospectus supplement.
Issuer:
|
Barclays
Bank PLC
|
Denominations:
|
Minimum
denomination of $1,000, and integral multiples of $1,000 in excess
thereof
|
Initial
Valuation Date:
|
November
24, 2020
|
Issue
Date:
|
November
30, 2020
|
Final
Valuation Date:*
|
November
24, 2023
|
Maturity
Date:*
|
November
29, 2023
|
Reference Assets:
|
The
Russell 2000® Index (the “RTY Index”) and the
Nasdaq-100 Index® (the “NDX Index”), as set forth in the
following table:
|
Reference Asset
|
Bloomberg Ticker
|
Initial Value
|
Coupon Barrier Value
|
Buffer Value
|
RTY Index
|
RTY <Index>
|
1,853.53
|
1,390.15
|
1,668.18
|
NDX Index
|
NDX <Index>
|
12,079.81
|
9,059.86
|
10,871.83
|
|
The RTY Index and the
NDX Index are each referred to herein as a “Reference Asset” and,
collectively, as the “Reference Assets.” |
Payment
at Maturity:
|
If you hold the Notes to maturity, you will receive on the Maturity
Date a cash payment per $1,000 principal amount Note that you hold
(in each case, in addition to any Contingent Coupon that may be
payable on such date) determined as follows:
§
If the Final Value of the Least
Performing Reference Asset is greater than or equal
to its Buffer Value, you will receive a payment of $1,000 per
$1,000 principal amount Note
§
If the Final Value of the Least
Performing Reference Asset is less than its Buffer Value,
you will receive an amount per $1,000 principal amount Note
calculated as follows:
$1,000 + [$1,000 × (Reference Asset Return of the Least Performing
Reference Asset + Buffer Percentage)]
If
the Final Value of the Least Performing Reference Asset is less
than its Buffer Value, you will lose 1.00% of the principal amount
of your Notes for every 1.00% that the Reference Asset Return of
such Reference Asset falls below
-10.00%. You may lose up to 90.00% of the
principal amount of your Notes at maturity.
Any
payment on the Notes,
including any repayment of principal, is not
guaranteed by any third party and is subject to (a) the
creditworthiness of Barclays Bank PLC and (b) the risk of exercise
of any U.K. Bail-in Power
(as described on page PS– 2 of this
pricing supplement) by the relevant U.K. resolution
authority. If Barclays Bank PLC were to default on
its payment obligations or become subject to the exercise of any
U.K. Bail-in
Power (or any other resolution measure)
by the relevant U.K. resolution
authority, you might not receive any amounts owed to
you under the Notes. See “Consent to U.K. Bail-in
Power” and “Selected Risk
Considerations” in this pricing supplement
and “Risk Factors” in the accompanying
prospectus supplement for more information.
|
Consent
to U.K. Bail-in Power:
|
Notwithstanding
any other agreements, arrangements or understandings between
Barclays Bank PLC and any holder or beneficial owner of the Notes,
by acquiring the Notes, each holder and beneficial owner of the
Notes acknowledges, accepts, agrees to be bound by, and consents to
the exercise of, any U.K. Bail-in Power by the relevant U.K.
resolution authority. See “Consent to U.K. Bail-in Power”
on page PS–2 of
this pricing supplement.
|
|
|
|
|
[Terms of the Notes Continue on the Next Page]
|
Initial
Issue Price(1)(2)
|
Price to Public
|
Agent’s
Commission(3)
|
Proceeds to Barclays Bank PLC
|
Per Note
|
$1,000
|
100%
|
2.50%
|
97.50%
|
Total
|
$750,000
|
$750,000
|
$18,750
|
$731,250
|
|
(1) |
Because dealers who purchase the Notes for sale to
certain fee-based advisory accounts may forgo some or all selling
concessions, fees or commissions, the public offering price for
investors purchasing the Notes in such fee-based advisory accounts
may be between $975.00 and $1,000 per Note. Investors that hold
their Notes in fee-based advisory or trust accounts may be charged
fees by the investment advisor or manager of such account based on
the amount of assets held in those accounts, including the
Notes. |
|
(3) |
Barclays Capital Inc. will receive commissions
from the Issuer of $25.00 per $1,000 principal amount Note.
Barclays Capital Inc. will use these commissions to pay selling
concessions or fees (including custodial or clearing fees) to other
dealers. |
Investing
in the Notes involves a number of risks. See “Risk
Factors” beginning on page
S–7 of the prospectus supplement and “Selected Risk
Considerations”
beginning on page PS– 9 of this pricing supplement.
We may use this pricing supplement in the initial sale of Notes.
In addition, Barclays Capital Inc. or another of our affiliates may
use this pricing supplement in market resale transactions in any
Notes after their initial sale. Unless we or our agent informs you
otherwise in the confirmation of sale, this pricing supplement is
being used in a market resale transaction.
The
Notes will not be listed on any U.S. securities exchange or quotation
system. Neither the U.S.
Securities and Exchange Commission (the “SEC”) nor any state
securities commission has approved or disapproved of these Notes or
determined that this pricing supplement is truthful or
complete. Any
representation to the contrary is a criminal offense.
The Notes constitute our unsecured and unsubordinated obligations.
The Notes are not deposit liabilities of Barclays Bank PLC and are
not covered by the U.K. Financial Services Compensation
Scheme or insured by the U.S. Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation or any other governmental agency or deposit
insurance agency of the United States, the United Kingdom or
any other jurisdiction.
Terms of the
Notes, Continued
Contingent Coupon:
|
$12.50 per $1,000 principal amount Note, which is 1.25% of the
principal amount per Note (based on 5.00% per annum rate)
If the Closing Value of each Reference Asset
on an Observation Date is greater than or equal to
its respective Coupon Barrier Value, you will receive a Contingent
Coupon on the related Contingent Coupon Payment Date. If the
Closing Value of any Reference Asset on an
Observation Date is less than its Coupon Barrier Value, you
will not receive a Contingent Coupon on the related Contingent
Coupon Payment Date.
|
Observation Dates:*
|
The 24th calendar day of each February, May, August and
November during the term of the Notes, beginning in February 2021,
provided that the final Observation Date will be the Final
Valuation Date
|
Contingent Coupon Payment Dates:*
|
With respect to any Observation Date, the fifth business day after
such Observation Date, provided that the Contingent Coupon
Payment Date with respect to the Final Valuation Date will be the
Maturity Date
|
Buffer
Percentage:
|
10.00%
|
Initial
Value:
|
With
respect to each Reference Asset, the Closing Value on the Initial
Valuation Date, as set forth in the table above
|
Coupon
Barrier Value:
|
With
respect to each Reference Asset, 75.00% of its Initial Value
(rounded to two decimal places), as set forth in the table
above
|
Buffer
Value:
|
With
respect to each Reference Asset, 90.00% of its Initial Value
(rounded to two decimal places), as set forth in the table
above
|
Final
Value:
|
With
respect to each Reference Asset, the Closing Value on the Final
Valuation Date
|
Reference Asset Return:
|
With
respect to each Reference Asset, an amount calculated as
follows:
Final
Value – Initial Value
Initial Value
|
Least
Performing Reference Asset:
|
The
Reference Asset with the lowest Reference Asset Return, as
calculated in the manner set forth above
|
Closing
Value:
|
The term “Closing Value” means the closing level of the applicable
Reference Asset, as further described under “Reference
Assets—Indices—Special Calculation Provisions” in the prospectus
supplement, rounded to two decimal places (if applicable).
|
Calculation Agent:
|
Barclays
Bank PLC
|
CUSIP /
ISIN:
|
06747QPX9 / US06747QPX96
|
|
* |
Subject to postponement,
as described under “Additional Terms of the Notes”
in this pricing supplement |

ADDITIONAL DOCUMENTS RELATED TO THE OFFERING OF THE
NOTES
You should read this pricing supplement together with the
prospectus dated August 1, 2019, as supplemented by the documents
listed below relating to our Global Medium-Term Notes, Series A, of
which these Notes are a part. This pricing supplement, together
with the documents listed below, contains the terms of the Notes
and supersedes all prior or contemporaneous oral statements as well
as any other written materials including preliminary or indicative
pricing terms, correspondence, trade ideas, structures for
implementation, sample structures, brochures or other educational
materials of ours. You should carefully consider, among other
things, the matters set forth under “Risk Factors” in the
prospectus supplement and “Selected Risk Considerations” in this
pricing supplement, as the Notes involve risks not associated with
conventional debt securities. We urge you to consult your
investment, legal, tax, accounting and other advisors before you
invest in the Notes.
You may access these documents on the SEC website at www.sec.gov as
follows (or if such address has changed, by reviewing our filings
for the relevant date on the SEC website):
|
§ |
Prospectus dated August 1, 2019: |
http://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/312070/000119312519210880/d756086d424b3.htm
|
§ |
Prospectus Supplement dated August 1,
2019: |
http://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/312070/000095010319010190/dp110493_424b2-prosupp.htm
|
§ |
Underlying Supplement dated August 1,
2019: |
http://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/312070/000095010319010191/dp110497_424b2-underlying.htm
|
· |
Prospectus Addendum dated May 11,
2020: |
http://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/312070/000110465920059376/a20-19169_1424b3.htm
Our SEC file number is 1–10257. As used in this pricing supplement,
“we,” “us” or “our” refers to Barclays Bank PLC.
consent to
u.k. bail-in power
Notwithstanding any other
agreements, arrangements or understandings between us and any
holder or beneficial owner of the Notes, by acquiring the Notes,
each holder and beneficial owner of the Notes acknowledges,
accepts, agrees to be bound by, and consents to the exercise of,
any U.K. Bail-in Power by the relevant U.K. resolution
authority.
Under the
U.K. Banking Act 2009, as amended, the relevant U.K. resolution
authority may exercise a U.K. Bail-in Power in circumstances in
which the relevant U.K. resolution authority is satisfied that the
resolution conditions are met. These conditions include that a U.K.
bank or investment firm is failing or is likely to fail to satisfy
the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000 (the “FSMA”) threshold
conditions for authorization to carry on certain regulated
activities (within the meaning of section 55B FSMA) or, in the case
of a U.K. banking group company that is a European Economic Area
(“EEA”) or third country institution or investment firm, that the
relevant EEA or third country relevant authority is satisfied that
the resolution conditions are met in respect of that
entity.
The U.K.
Bail-in Power includes any write-down, conversion, transfer,
modification and/or suspension power, which allows for (i) the
reduction or cancellation of all, or a portion, of the principal
amount of, interest on, or any other amounts payable on, the Notes;
(ii) the conversion of all, or a portion, of the principal amount
of, interest on, or any other amounts payable on, the Notes into
shares or other securities or other obligations of Barclays Bank
PLC or another person (and the issue to, or conferral on, the
holder or beneficial owner of the Notes such shares, securities or
obligations); and/or (iii) the amendment or alteration of the
maturity of the Notes, or amendment of the amount of interest or
any other amounts due on the Notes, or the dates on which interest
or any other amounts become payable, including by suspending
payment for a temporary period; which U.K. Bail-in Power may be
exercised by means of a variation of the terms of the Notes solely
to give effect to the exercise by the relevant U.K. resolution
authority of such U.K. Bail-in Power. Each holder and beneficial
owner of the Notes further acknowledges and agrees that the rights
of the holders or beneficial owners of the Notes are subject to,
and will be varied, if necessary, solely to give effect to, the
exercise of any U.K. Bail-in Power by the relevant U.K. resolution
authority. For the avoidance of doubt, this consent and
acknowledgment is not a waiver of any rights holders or beneficial
owners of the Notes may have at law if and to the extent that any
U.K. Bail-in Power is exercised by the relevant U.K. resolution
authority in breach of laws applicable in England.
For more information, please see “Selected Risk Considerations—You
May Lose Some or All of Your Investment If Any U.K. Bail-in Power
Is Exercised by the Relevant U.K. Resolution Authority” in this
pricing supplement as well as “U.K. Bail-in Power,” “Risk
Factors—Risks Relating to the Securities Generally—Regulatory
action in the event a bank or investment firm in the Group is
failing or likely to fail could materially adversely affect the
value of the securities” and “Risk Factors—Risks Relating to the
Securities Generally—Under the terms of the securities, you have
agreed to be bound by the exercise of any U.K. Bail-in Power by the
relevant U.K. resolution authority” in the accompanying prospectus
supplement.
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
REGARDING OUR ESTIMATED VALUE OF THE NOTES
Our internal pricing models take into account a number of variables
and are based on a number of subjective assumptions, which may or
may not materialize, typically including volatility, interest
rates, and our internal funding rates. Our internal funding
rates (which are our internally published borrowing rates based on
variables such as market benchmarks, our appetite for borrowing,
and our existing obligations coming to maturity) may vary from the
levels at which our benchmark debt securities trade in the
secondary market. Our estimated value on the Initial Valuation Date
is based on our internal funding rates. Our estimated value of the
Notes may be lower if such valuation were based on the levels at
which our benchmark debt securities trade in the secondary
market.
Our estimated value of the Notes
on the Initial Valuation Date is less than the initial issue price
of the Notes. The difference between the initial issue price of the
Notes and our estimated value of the Notes is a result of several
factors, including any sales commissions to be paid to Barclays
Capital Inc. or another affiliate of ours, any selling concessions,
discounts, commissions or fees (including any structuring or other
distribution related fees) to be allowed or paid to non-affiliated
intermediaries, the estimated profit that we or any of our
affiliates expect to earn in connection with structuring the Notes,
the estimated cost which we may incur in hedging our obligations
under the Notes, and estimated development and other costs which we
may incur in connection with the Notes.
Our estimated value on the Initial Valuation Date is not a
prediction of the price at which the Notes may trade in the
secondary market, nor will it be the price at which Barclays
Capital Inc. may buy or sell the Notes in the secondary market.
Subject to normal market and funding conditions, Barclays Capital
Inc. or another affiliate of ours intends to offer to purchase the
Notes in the secondary market but it is not obligated to do so.
Assuming that all relevant
factors remain constant after the Initial Valuation Date, the price
at which Barclays Capital Inc. may initially buy or sell the Notes
in the secondary market, if any, and the value that we may
initially use for customer account statements, if we provide any
customer account statements at all, may exceed our estimated value
on the Initial Valuation Date for a temporary period expected to be
approximately six months after the Issue Date because, in our
discretion, we may elect to effectively reimburse to investors a
portion of the estimated cost of hedging our obligations under the
Notes and other costs in connection with the Notes which we will no
longer expect to incur over the term of the Notes. We made such
discretionary election and determined this temporary reimbursement
period on the basis of a number of factors, which may include the
tenor of the Notes and/or any agreement we may have with the
distributors of the Notes. The amount of our estimated costs which
we effectively reimburse to investors in this way may not be
allocated ratably throughout the reimbursement period, and we may
discontinue such reimbursement at any time or revise the duration
of the reimbursement period after the initial Issue Date of the
Notes based on changes in market conditions and other factors that
cannot be predicted.
We urge
you to read the “Selected Risk
Considerations” beginning on page PS–9 of this pricing
supplement.
Selected Purchase
Considerations
The Notes are not suitable for
all investors. The Notes may be a suitable investment for you if
all of the following statements are true:
|
· |
You
do not seek an investment that produces fixed periodic interest or
coupon payments or other non-contingent sources of current income,
and you can tolerate receiving few or no Contingent Coupons over
the term of the Notes in the event the Closing Value of any
Reference Asset falls below its Coupon Barrier Value on one or more
of the specified Observation Dates. |
|
· |
You
understand and accept that you will not participate in any
appreciation of any Reference Asset, which may be significant, and
that your return potential on the Notes is limited to the
Contingent Coupons, if any, paid on the Notes. |
|
· |
You
can tolerate a loss of up to 90.00% of the principal amount of your
Notes, and you are willing and able to make an investment that may
have the full downside market risk of an investment in the Least
Performing Reference Asset. |
|
· |
You
do not anticipate that the Closing Value of any Reference
Asset will fall below its Coupon Barrier Value on any Observation
Date or below its Buffer Value on the Final Valuation
Date. |
|
· |
You
understand and accept that you will not be entitled to receive
dividends or distributions that may be paid to holders of any
Reference Asset or any securities to which any Reference Asset
provides exposure, nor will you have any voting rights with respect
to any Reference Asset or any securities to which any Reference
Asset provides exposure. |
|
· |
You
are willing and able to accept the individual market risk of each
Reference Asset and understand that any decline in the value of one
Reference Asset will not be offset or mitigated by a lesser decline
or any potential increase in the value of any other Reference
Asset. |
|
· |
You
understand and accept the risks that (a) you will not receive a
Contingent Coupon if the Closing Value of any Reference Asset is
less than its Coupon Barrier Value on an Observation Date and (b)
you will lose some of your principal at maturity if the Final Value
of any Reference Asset is less than its Buffer Value. |
|
· |
You
understand and accept the risk that the payment at maturity will be
based solely on the Reference Asset Return of the Least
Performing Reference Asset. |
|
· |
You
understand and are willing and able to accept the risks associated
with an investment linked to the performance of the Reference
Assets. |
|
· |
You
can tolerate fluctuations in the price of the Notes prior to
scheduled maturity that may be similar to or exceed the downside
fluctuations in the values of the Reference Assets. |
|
· |
You
do not seek an investment for which there will be an active
secondary market, and you are willing and able to hold the Notes to
maturity. |
|
· |
You
are willing and able to assume our credit risk for all payments on
the Notes. |
|
· |
You
are willing and able to consent to the exercise of any U.K. Bail-in
Power by any relevant U.K. resolution authority. |
The Notes may not be a
suitable investment for you if any of the following
statements are true:
|
· |
You
seek an investment that produces fixed periodic interest or coupon
payments or other non-contingent sources of current income, and/or
you cannot tolerate receiving few or no Contingent Coupons over the
term of the Notes in the event the Closing Value of any Reference
Asset falls below its Coupon Barrier Value on one or more of the
specified Observation Dates. |
|
· |
You
seek an investment that participates in the full appreciation of
any or all of the Reference Assets rather than an investment with a
return that is limited to the Contingent Coupons, if any, paid on
the Notes. |
|
· |
You
seek an investment that provides for the full repayment of
principal at maturity, and/or you are unwilling or unable to accept
the risk that you may lose some of the principal amount of your
Notes in the event that the Final Value of the Least Performing
Reference Asset falls below its Buffer Value. |
|
· |
You
anticipate that the Closing Value of at least one Reference
Asset will decline during the term of the Notes such that the
Closing Value of at least one Reference Asset will fall
below its Coupon Barrier Value on one or more Observation Dates
and/or the Final Value of at least one Reference Asset will
fall below its Buffer Value. |
|
· |
You
are unwilling or unable to accept the individual market risk of
each Reference Asset and/or do not understand that any decline in
the value of one Reference Asset will not be offset or mitigated by
a lesser decline or any potential increase in the value of any
other Reference Asset. |
|
· |
You
do not understand and/or are unwilling or unable to accept the
risks associated with an investment linked to the performance of
the Reference Assets. |
|
· |
You
seek an investment that entitles you to dividends or distributions
on, or voting rights related to any Reference Asset or any
securities to which any Reference Asset provides
exposure. |
|
· |
You
are unwilling or unable to accept the risk that the negative
performance of only one Reference Asset may cause you to not
receive Contingent Coupons and/or suffer a loss of principal at
maturity, regardless of the performance of any other Reference
Asset. |
|
· |
You
cannot tolerate fluctuations in the price of the Notes prior to
scheduled maturity that may be similar to or exceed the downside
fluctuations in the values of the Reference Assets. |
|
· |
You
seek an investment for which there will be an active secondary
market, and/or you are unwilling or unable to hold the Notes to
maturity. |
|
· |
You
prefer the lower risk, and therefore accept the potentially lower
returns, of fixed income investments with comparable maturities and
credit ratings. |
|
· |
You
are unwilling or unable to assume our credit risk for all payments
on the Notes. |
|
· |
You
are unwilling or unable to consent to the exercise of any U.K.
Bail-in Power by any relevant U.K. resolution
authority. |
You
must rely on your own evaluation of the merits of an investment in
the Notes. You
should reach a decision whether to invest in the Notes after
carefully considering, with your advisors, the suitability of the
Notes in light of your investment objectives and the specific
information set out in this pricing supplement and the documents
referenced under “Additional Documents Related to the Offering of
the Notes” in this pricing supplement. Neither the Issuer nor
Barclays Capital Inc. makes any recommendation as to the
suitability of the Notes for investment.
ADDITIONAL TERMS OF THE
NOTES
The Observation Dates (including the Final Valuation Date), the
Contingent Coupon Payment Dates and the Maturity Date are subject
to postponement in certain circumstances, as described under
“Reference Assets—Indices—Market Disruption Events for Securities
with an Index of Equity Securities as a Reference Asset,”
“Reference Assets—Least or Best Performing Reference
Asset—Scheduled Trading Days and Market Disruption Events for
Securities Linked to the Reference Asset with the Lowest or Highest
Return in a Group of Two or More Equity Securities, Exchange-Traded
Funds and/or Indices of Equity Securities” and “Terms of the
Notes—Payment Dates” in the accompanying prospectus supplement.
In addition, the Reference Assets and the Notes are subject to
adjustment by the Calculation Agent under certain circumstances, as
described under “Reference Assets—Indices—Adjustments Relating to
Securities with an Index as a Reference Asset” in the accompanying
prospectus supplement.
HYPOTHETICAL EXAMPLES OF
AMOUNTS PAYABLE ON A SINGLE CONTINGENT coupon PAYMENT
DATE
The following examples demonstrate the circumstances under which
you may receive a Contingent Coupon on a hypothetical Contingent
Coupon Payment Date. The numbers appearing in these tables are
purely hypothetical and are provided for illustrative purposes
only. These examples do not take into account any tax consequences
from investing in the Notes and make the following key
assumptions:
|
§ |
Hypothetical Initial Value
of each Reference Asset: 100.00* |
|
§ |
Hypothetical Coupon
Barrier Value for each Reference Asset: 75.00 (75.00% of the
hypothetical Initial Value set forth above)* |
|
* |
The hypothetical
Initial Value of 100.00 and the hypothetical Coupon
Barrier Value of 75.00 for each Reference Asset have been chosen
for illustrative purposes only. The actual Initial Value and
Coupon Barrier Value for each Reference Asset are as set forth
on the cover of this pricing supplement. |
Example
1: The Closing Value of each Reference Asset is greater
than its Coupon Barrier Value on the relevant Observation Date.
Reference Asset
|
Closing Value on Relevant
Observation Date
|
RTY Index
|
95.00
|
NDX Index
|
105.00
|
Because the Closing Value of each Reference Asset is greater than
its respective Coupon Barrier Value, you will receive a Contingent
Coupon of $12.50 (1.25% of the principal amount per Note) on the
related Contingent Coupon Payment Date.
Example
2: The Closing Value of one Reference Asset is greater
than its Coupon Barrier Value on the relevant Observation Date and
the Closing Value of at least one Reference Asset is less than its
Coupon Barrier Value on the relevant Observation Date.
Reference Asset
|
Closing Value on Relevant
Observation Date
|
RTY Index
|
135.00
|
NDX Index
|
55.00
|
Because the Closing Value of at least one Reference Asset is less
than its Coupon Barrier Value, you will not receive a Contingent
Coupon on the related Contingent Coupon Payment Date.
Example
3: The Closing Value of each Reference Asset is less
than its Coupon Barrier Value on the relevant Observation Date.
Reference Asset
|
Closing Value on Relevant
Observation Date
|
RTY Index
|
50.00
|
NDX Index
|
45.00
|
Because the Closing Value of at least one Reference Asset is less
than its Coupon Barrier Value, you will not receive a Contingent
Coupon on the related Contingent Coupon Payment Date.
Examples 2 and 3
demonstrate that you may not receive a Contingent Coupon on a
Contingent Coupon Payment Date. If the Closing Value
of any Reference Asset is below its Coupon Barrier Value on each
Observation Date, you will not receive any Contingent
Coupons during the term of your Notes.
Hypothetical Examples of
Amounts Payable at maturity
The following table illustrates the hypothetical payment at
maturity under various circumstances. The numbers appearing in the
following table and examples have been rounded for ease of
analysis. The hypothetical examples below do not take into account
any tax consequences from investing in the Notes and make the
following key assumptions:
|
§ |
Hypothetical Initial Value
of each Reference Asset: 100.00* |
|
§ |
Hypothetical Coupon
Barrier Value for each Reference Asset: 75.00 (75.00% of the
hypothetical Initial Value set forth above)* |
|
§ |
Hypothetical Buffer Value
for each Reference Asset: 90.00 (90.00% of the hypothetical Initial
Value set forth above)* |
|
§ |
You hold the Notes to
maturity. |
|
* |
The hypothetical
Initial Value of 100.00, the hypothetical Coupon
Barrier Value of 75.00 and the hypothetical Buffer
Value of 90.00 for each Reference Asset have been chosen for
illustrative purposes only. The actual Initial Value, Coupon
Barrier Value and Buffer Value for each Reference Asset are as set
forth on the cover of this pricing supplement. |
Final Value
|
|
Reference Asset Return
|
|
|
RTY Index
|
NDX Index
|
|
RTY Index
|
NDX Index
|
|
Reference Asset
Return of the Least
Performing Reference
Asset
|
Payment
at Maturity**
|
150.00
|
175.00
|
|
50.00%
|
75.00%
|
|
50.00%
|
$1,000.00
|
145.00
|
140.00
|
|
45.00%
|
40.00%
|
|
40.00%
|
$1,000.00
|
130.00
|
150.00
|
|
30.00%
|
50.00%
|
|
30.00%
|
$1,000.00
|
125.00
|
120.00
|
|
25.00%
|
20.00%
|
|
20.00%
|
$1,000.00
|
110.00
|
120.00
|
|
10.00%
|
20.00%
|
|
10.00%
|
$1,000.00
|
110.00
|
100.00
|
|
10.00%
|
0.00%
|
|
0.00%
|
$1,000.00
|
95.00
|
102.50
|
|
-5.00%
|
2.50%
|
|
-5.00%
|
$1,000.00
|
102.00
|
90.00
|
|
2.00%
|
-10.00%
|
|
-10.00%
|
$1,000.00
|
100.00
|
80.00
|
|
0.00%
|
-20.00%
|
|
-20.00%
|
$900.00
|
95.00
|
70.00
|
|
-5.00%
|
-30.00%
|
|
-30.00%
|
$800.00
|
60.00
|
85.00
|
|
-40.00%
|
-15.00%
|
|
-40.00%
|
$700.00
|
50.00
|
90.00
|
|
-50.00%
|
-10.00%
|
|
-50.00%
|
$600.00
|
150.00
|
40.00
|
|
50.00%
|
-60.00%
|
|
-60.00%
|
$500.00
|
30.00
|
45.00
|
|
-70.00%
|
-55.00%
|
|
-70.00%
|
$400.00
|
40.00
|
20.00
|
|
-60.00%
|
-80.00%
|
|
-80.00%
|
$300.00
|
10.00
|
95.00
|
|
-90.00%
|
-5.00%
|
|
-90.00%
|
$200.00
|
102.00
|
0.00
|
|
2.00%
|
-100.00%
|
|
-100.00%
|
$100.00
|
**
per $1,000 principal amount Note, excluding the final Contingent
Coupon that may be payable on the Maturity Date
The
following examples illustrate how the payments at maturity set
forth in the table above are calculated:
Example
1: The Final Value of the RTY Index is 125.00
and the Final Value of the NDX Index is 120.00.
Because
the NDX Index has the lowest Reference Asset Return, the NDX Index
is the Least Performing Reference Asset. Because the Final
Value of the Least Performing Reference Asset is greater than or
equal to its Buffer Value, you will receive a payment at maturity
of $1,000 per $1,000 principal amount Note that you hold
(plus the Contingent Coupon that will otherwise be payable
on the Maturity Date).
Example
2: The Final Value of the RTY Index is 95.00
and the Final Value of the NDX Index is 102.50.
Because
the RTY Index has the lowest Reference Asset Return, the RTY Index
is the Least Performing Reference Asset. Because the Final
Value of the Least Performing Reference Asset is greater than or
equal to its Buffer Value, you will receive a payment at maturity
of $1,000 per $1,000 principal amount Note that you hold
(plus the Contingent Coupon that will otherwise be payable
on the Maturity Date).
Example
3: The Final Value of the RTY Index is 100.00
and the Final Value of the NDX Index is 80.00.
Because
the NDX Index has the lowest Reference Asset Return, the NDX Index
is the Least Performing Reference Asset. Because the Final
Value of the Least Performing Reference Asset is less than its
Buffer Value, you will receive a payment at maturity of $900.00 per
$1,000 principal amount Note that you hold (plus the
Contingent Coupon that will otherwise be payable on the Maturity
Date), calculated as follows:
$1,000 + [$1,000 × (Reference Asset Return of the Least Performing
Reference Asset + Buffer Percentage)]
$1,000 + [$1,000 × (-20.00% + 10.00%)] = $900.00
Example
4: The Final Value of the RTY Index is 60.00
and the Final Value of the NDX Index is 85.00.
Because
the RTY Index has the lowest Reference Asset Return, the RTY Index
is the Least Performing Reference Asset. Because the Final
Value of the Least Performing Reference Asset is less than its
Buffer Value, you will receive a payment at maturity of $700.00 per
$1,000 principal amount Note that you hold, calculated as
follows:
$1,000 + [$1,000 × (Reference Asset Return of the Least Performing
Reference Asset + Buffer Percentage)]
$1,000 + [$1,000 × (-40.00% + 10.00%)] = $700.00
In addition, because the Final Value of the Least Performing
Reference Asset is less than its Coupon Barrier Value, you will not
receive a Contingent Coupon on the Maturity Date.
Example
5: The Final Value of the RTY Index is 40.00
and the Final Value of the NDX Index is 20.00.
Because
the NDX Index has the lowest Reference Asset Return, the NDX
Index is the Least Performing Reference Asset. Because the Final
Value of the Least Performing Reference Asset is less than its
Buffer Value, you will receive a payment at maturity of $300.00 per
$1,000 principal amount Note that you hold, calculated as
follows:
$1,000 + [$1,000 × (Reference Asset Return of the Least Performing
Reference Asset + Buffer Percentage)]
$1,000 + [$1,000 × (-80.00% + 10.00%)] = $300.00
In addition, because the Final Value of at least one Reference
Asset is less than its Coupon Barrier Value, you will not receive a
Contingent Coupon on the Maturity Date.
Examples 4 and 5 demonstrate that if the Final Value of the Least
Performing Reference Asset is less than its Buffer Value, you will
lose 1.00% of the principal amount of your Notes for every 1.00%
that the Reference Asset Return of such Reference Asset falls below
-10.00%. You will not benefit in any way from the Reference Asset
Return of any other Reference Asset being higher than the Reference
Asset Return of the Least Performing Reference Asset.
You
may lose up to 90.00% of the principal amount of your Notes. Any
payment on the Notes, including the repayment of principal, is
subject to the credit risk of Barclays Bank PLC.
Selected Risk
Considerations
An investment in the Notes involves significant risks. Investing in
the Notes is not equivalent to investing directly in the Reference
Assets or their components, if any. Some of the risks that apply to
an investment in the Notes are summarized below, but we urge you to
read the more detailed explanation of risks relating to the Notes
generally in the “Risk Factors” section of the prospectus
supplement. You should not purchase the Notes unless you understand
and can bear the risks of investing in the Notes.
|
· |
Your Investment in the Notes May Result in a
Significant Loss—The Notes differ from ordinary debt securities
in that the Issuer will not necessarily repay the full principal
amount of the Notes at maturity. If the Final Value of the Least
Performing Reference Asset is less than its Buffer Value, you will
lose 1.00% of the principal amount of your Notes for every 1.00%
that the Reference Asset Return of the Least Performing Reference
Asset falls below -10.00%. You may lose up to 90.00% of the
principal amount of your Notes. |
|
· |
Potential Return is Limited to the Contingent
Coupons, If Any, and You Will Not Participate in Any Appreciation
of Any Reference Asset—The potential positive return on the
Notes is limited to the Contingent Coupons, if any, that may be
payable during the term of the Notes. You will not participate in
any appreciation in the value of any Reference Asset, which may be
significant, even though you will be exposed to the depreciation in
the value of the Least Performing Reference Asset if Final Value of
the Least Performing Reference Asset is less than its Buffer
Value. |
|
· |
You May Not Receive Any Contingent Coupon
Payments on the Notes—The Issuer will not necessarily make
periodic coupon payments on the Notes. You will receive a
Contingent Coupon on a Contingent Coupon Payment Date only
if the Closing Value of each Reference Asset on the related
Observation Date is greater than or equal to its respective Coupon
Barrier Value. If the Closing Value of any Reference Asset on an
Observation Date is less than its Coupon Barrier Value, you will
not receive a Contingent Coupon on the related Contingent Coupon
Payment Date. If the Closing Value of at least one Reference
Asset is less than its respective Coupon Barrier Value on each
Observation Date, you will not receive any Contingent Coupons
during the term of the Notes. |
|
· |
Because the Notes Are Linked to the Least
Performing Reference Asset, You Are Exposed to Greater Risks of No
Contingent Coupons and Sustaining a Significant Loss of Principal
at Maturity Than If the Notes Were Linked to a Single Reference
Asset—The risk that you will not receive any Contingent Coupons
and lose a significant portion or all of your principal amount in
the Notes at maturity is greater if you invest in the Notes as
opposed to substantially similar securities that are linked to the
performance of a single Reference Asset. With multiple Reference
Assets, it is more likely that the Closing Value of at least one
Reference Asset will be less than its Coupon Barrier Value on the
specified Observation Dates or less than its Buffer Value on the
Final Valuation Date, and therefore, it is more likely that you
will not receive any Contingent Coupons and that you will suffer a
significant loss of principal at maturity. Further, the performance
of the Reference Assets may not be correlated or may be negatively
correlated. The lower the correlation between multiple Reference
Assets, the greater the potential for one of those Reference Assets
to close below its Coupon Barrier Value on an Observation Date or
have a Final Value below its Buffer Value on the Final Valuation
Date, respectively. |
It is impossible to predict what the correlation among the
Reference Assets will be over the term of the Notes. The Reference
Assets represent different equity markets. These different equity
markets may not perform similarly over the term of the Notes.
Although the correlation of the Reference Assets’ performance may
change over the term of the Notes, the Contingent Coupon rate is
determined, in part, based on the correlation of the Reference
Assets’ performance calculated using our internal models at the
time when the terms of the Notes are finalized. A higher Contingent
Coupon is generally associated with lower correlation of the
Reference Assets, which reflects a greater potential for missed
Contingent Coupons and for a loss of principal at maturity.
|
· |
You Are Exposed to the Market Risk of Each
Reference Asset—Your return on the Notes is not linked to a
basket consisting of the Reference Assets. Rather, it will be
contingent upon the independent performance of each Reference
Asset. Unlike an instrument with a return linked to a basket of
underlying assets in which risk is mitigated and diversified among
all the components of the basket, you will be exposed to the risks
related to each Reference Asset. Poor performance by any Reference
Asset over the term of the Notes may negatively affect your return
and will not be offset or mitigated by any increases or lesser
declines in the value of any other Reference Asset. To receive a
Contingent Coupon, the Closing Value of each Reference Asset must
be greater than or equal to its Coupon Barrier Value on the
applicable Observation Date. In addition, if the Final Value of any
Reference Asset is less than its Buffer Value, you will lose 1.00%
of the principal amount of your Notes for every 1.00% that the
Reference Asset Return of the Least Performing Reference Asset
falls below -10.00%. Accordingly, your investment is subject to the
market risk of each Reference Asset. |
|
· |
The Notes Are Subject to Volatility
Risk—Volatility is a measure of the degree of variation in the
price of an asset (or level of an index) over a period of time. The
amount of any coupon payments that may be payable under the Notes
is based on a number of factors, including the expected volatility
of the Reference Assets. The amount of such coupon payments will be
paid at a per annum rate that is higher than the fixed rate that we
would pay on a conventional debt security of the same tenor and is
higher than it otherwise would have been had the expected
volatility of the Reference Assets been lower. As volatility of a
Reference Asset increases, there will typically be a greater
likelihood that (a) the Closing Value of that Reference Asset on
one or more Observation Dates will be less than its Coupon Barrier
Value and (b) the Final Value of that Reference Asset will be less
than its Buffer Value. |
Accordingly, you should understand that a higher coupon payment
amount reflects, among other things, an indication of a greater
likelihood that you will (a) not receive coupon payments with
respect to one or more Observation Dates and/or (b) incur a loss of
principal at maturity than would have been the case had the amount
of such coupon payments been lower. In addition, actual volatility
over the term of the Notes may be significantly higher than the
expected volatility at the time the terms of the Notes were
determined. If actual volatility is higher than expected, you will
face an even greater risk that you will not receive coupon payments
and/or that you will lose some of your principal at maturity for
the reasons described above.
|
· |
The Payment at Maturity is Based Solely on the
Closing Value of the Least Performing Reference Asset on the Final
Valuation Date—The Final Value of a Reference Asset will be
based solely on its Closing Value on the Final Valuation Date, and
your payment at maturity will be determined based solely on the
performance of the Least Performing Reference Asset from the
Initial Valuation Date to the Final Valuation Date. Accordingly, if
the value of the Least Performing Reference Asset drops on the
Final Valuation Date, the payment at maturity on the Notes may be
significantly less than it would have been had it been linked to
the value of the Reference Asset at any time prior to such drop. If
the Final Value of the Least Performing Reference Asset is less
than its Buffer Value, you will lose up to 90.00% of the principal
amount of your Notes. Your losses will not be offset in any way by
virtue of the Reference Asset Return of any other Reference Asset
being higher than the Reference Asset Return of the Least
Performing Reference Asset. |
|
· |
Credit of Issuer—The Notes are unsecured
and unsubordinated debt obligations of the Issuer, Barclays Bank
PLC, and are not, either directly or indirectly, an obligation of
any third party. Any payment to be made on the Notes, including any
repayment of principal, is subject to the ability of Barclays Bank
PLC to satisfy its obligations as they come due and is not
guaranteed by any third party. As a result, the actual and
perceived creditworthiness of Barclays Bank PLC may affect the
market value of the Notes, and in the event Barclays Bank PLC were
to default on its obligations, you may not receive any amounts owed
to you under the terms of the Notes. |
|
· |
You May Lose Some or All of Your Investment If
Any U.K. Bail-in Power Is Exercised by the Relevant
U.K. Resolution Authority—Notwithstanding any
other agreements, arrangements or understandings between Barclays
Bank PLC and any holder or beneficial owner of the Notes, by
acquiring the Notes, each holder and beneficial owner of the Notes
acknowledges, accepts, agrees to be bound by, and consents to the
exercise of, any U.K. Bail-in Power by the relevant U.K. resolution
authority as set forth under “Consent to U.K. Bail-in Power” in
this pricing supplement. Accordingly, any U.K. Bail-in Power may be
exercised in such a manner as to result in you and other holders
and beneficial owners of the Notes losing all or a part of the
value of your investment in the Notes or receiving a different
security from the Notes, which may be worth significantly less than
the Notes and which may have significantly fewer protections than
those typically afforded to debt securities. Moreover, the relevant
U.K. resolution authority may exercise the U.K. Bail-in Power
without providing any advance notice to, or requiring the consent
of, the holders and the beneficial owners of the Notes. The
exercise of any U.K. Bail-in Power by the relevant U.K. resolution
authority with respect to the Notes will not be a default or an
Event of Default (as each term is defined in the senior debt
securities indenture) and the trustee will not be liable for any
action that the trustee takes, or abstains from taking, in either
case, in accordance with the exercise of the U.K. Bail-in Power by
the relevant U.K. resolution authority with respect to the Notes.
See “Consent to U.K. Bail-in Power” in this pricing supplement as
well as “U.K. Bail-in Power,” “Risk Factors—Risks Relating to the
Securities Generally—Regulatory action in the event a bank or
investment firm in the Group is failing or likely to fail could
materially adversely affect the value of the securities” and “Risk
Factors—Risks Relating to the Securities Generally—Under the terms
of the securities, you have agreed to be bound by the exercise of
any U.K. Bail-in Power by the relevant U.K. resolution authority”
in the accompanying prospectus supplement. |
|
· |
Contingent Repayment of Any Principal Amount
Applies Only at Maturity—You should be willing to hold your
Notes to maturity. Although the Notes provide for the contingent
repayment of the principal amount of your Notes at maturity,
provided that the Final Value of the Least Performing Reference
Asset is greater than or equal to its Buffer Value, if you sell
your Notes prior to such time in the secondary market, if any, you
may have to sell your Notes at a price that is less than the
principal amount even if at that time the value of each Reference
Asset has increased from its Initial Value. See “Many Economic and
Market Factors Will Impact the Value of the Notes”
below. |
|
· |
Owning the Notes is Not the Same as Owning Any
Reference Asset or Any Securities to which Any Reference Asset
Provides Exposure—The return on the Notes may not reflect the
return you would realize if you actually owned any Reference Asset
or any securities to which any Reference Asset provides exposure.
As a holder of the Notes, you will not have voting rights or rights
to receive dividends or other distributions or any other rights
that holders of any Reference Asset or any securities to which any
Reference Asset provides exposure may have. |
|
· |
Historical Performance of the Reference Assets
Should Not Be Taken as Any Indication of the Future Performance of
the Reference Assets Over the Term of the Notes—The value of
each Reference Asset has fluctuated in the past and may, in the
future, experience significant fluctuations. The historical
performance of a Reference Asset is not an indication of the future
performance of that Reference Asset over the term of the Notes. The
historical correlation among the Reference Assets is not an
indication of the future correlation among them over the term of
the Notes. Therefore, the performance of the Reference Assets
individually or in comparison to each other over the term of the
Notes may bear no relation or resemblance to the historical
performance of any Reference Asset. |
|
· |
Each Reference Asset Reflects the Price Return
of the Securities Composing that Reference Asset, Not the Total
Return—The return on the Notes is based on the performance of
the Reference Assets, which reflects changes in the market prices
of the securities composing the Reference Assets. The Reference
Assets are not “total return” indices that, in addition to
reflecting those price returns, would also reflect dividends paid
on the securities composing that Reference Asset. Accordingly, the
return on the Notes will not include such a total return
feature. |
|
· |
Adjustments to Any Reference Asset Could
Adversely Affect the Value of the Notes—The sponsor of any
Reference Asset may add, delete, substitute or adjust the
securities composing that Reference Asset or make other
methodological changes to that Reference Asset that could affect
its value. The Calculation Agent will calculate the value to be
used as the Closing Value of that Reference Asset in the event of
certain material changes in or modifications to that Reference
Asset. In addition, the sponsor of any Reference Asset may also
discontinue or suspend calculation or publication of that Reference
Asset at any time. Under these circumstances, the Calculation Agent
may select a successor index that the Calculation Agent determines
to be comparable to that Reference Asset or, if no successor index
is available, the Calculation Agent will determine the value to be
used as the Closing Value of that Reference Asset. Any of these
actions could adversely affect the value of any Reference Asset
and, consequently, the value of the Notes. See “Reference
Assets—Indices—Adjustments Relating to Securities with an Index as
a Reference Asset” in the accompanying prospectus
supplement. |
|
· |
The Notes Are Subject to Risks Associated with
Non-U.S. Securities Markets—Certain component
securities of the Nasdaq-100 Index are issued by non-U.S. companies
in non-U.S. securities markets. Investments in securities linked to
the value of such non-U.S. equity securities, such as the Notes,
involve risks associated with the securities markets in the home
countries of the issuers of those non-U.S. equity securities,
including risks of volatility in those markets, governmental
intervention in those markets and cross shareholdings in companies
in certain countries. Also, there is generally less publicly
available information about companies in some of these
jurisdictions than there is about U.S. companies that are subject
to the reporting requirements of the SEC, and generally non-U.S.
companies are subject to accounting, auditing and financial
reporting standards and requirements and securities trading rules
different from those applicable to U.S. reporting companies. The
prices of securities in non-U.S. markets may be affected by
political, economic, financial and social factors in those
countries, or global regions, including changes in government,
economic and fiscal policies and currency exchange
laws. |
|
· |
The Notes Are Subject to Risks Associated with
Small Capitalization Stocks—The RTY Index tracks companies that
are considered small-capitalization companies. These companies
often have greater stock price volatility, lower trading volume and
less liquidity than large-capitalization companies, and therefore
securities linked to the RTY Index may be more volatile than an
investment linked to an index with component stocks issued by
large-capitalization companies. Stock prices of
small-capitalization companies are also more vulnerable than those
of large-capitalization companies to adverse business and economic
developments. In addition, small-capitalization companies are
typically less stable financially than large-capitalization
companies and may depend on a small number of key personnel, making
them more vulnerable to loss of personnel. Small-capitalization
companies are often subject to less analyst coverage and may be in
early, and less predictable, periods of their corporate existences.
Such companies tend to have smaller revenues, less diverse product
lines, smaller shares of their product or service markets, fewer
financial resources and less competitive strengths than
large-capitalization companies and are more susceptible to adverse
developments related to their products. |
|
· |
The Estimated Value of Your Notes is Lower
Than the Initial Issue Price of Your Notes—The estimated value
of your Notes on the Initial Valuation Date is lower than the
initial issue price of your Notes. The difference between the
initial issue price of your Notes and the estimated value of the
Notes is a result of certain factors, such as any sales commissions
to be paid to Barclays Capital Inc. or another affiliate of ours,
any selling concessions, discounts, commissions or fees (including
any structuring or other distribution related fees) to be allowed
or paid to non-affiliated intermediaries, the estimated profit that
we or any of our affiliates expect to earn in connection with
structuring the Notes, the estimated cost which we may incur in
hedging our obligations under the Notes, and estimated development
and other costs which we may incur in connection with the
Notes. |
|
· |
The Estimated Value of Your Notes Might be
Lower if Such Estimated Value Were Based on the Levels at Which Our
Debt Securities Trade in the Secondary Market—The estimated
value of your Notes on the Initial Valuation Date is based on a
number of variables, including our internal funding rates. Our
internal funding rates may vary from the levels at which our
benchmark debt securities trade in the secondary market. As a
result of this difference, the estimated value referenced above
might be lower if such estimated value were based on the levels at
which our benchmark debt securities trade in the secondary
market. |
|
· |
The Estimated Value of the Notes is Based on
Our Internal Pricing Models, Which May Prove to be Inaccurate and
May be Different from the Pricing Models of Other Financial
Institutions—The estimated value of your Notes on the Initial
Valuation Date is based on our internal pricing models, which take
into account a number of variables and are based on a number of
subjective assumptions, which may or may not materialize. These
variables and assumptions are not evaluated or verified on an
independent basis. Further, our pricing models may be different
from other financial institutions’ pricing models and the
methodologies used by us to estimate the value of the Notes may not
be consistent with those of other financial institutions which may
be purchasers or sellers of Notes in the secondary market. As a
result, the secondary market price of your Notes may be materially
different from the estimated value of the Notes determined by
reference to our internal pricing models. |
|
· |
The Estimated Value of Your Notes Is Not a
Prediction of the Prices at Which You May Sell Your Notes in the
Secondary Market, if any, and Such Secondary Market
Prices, If Any, Will Likely be Lower Than the Initial
Issue Price of Your Notes and May be Lower Than the Estimated Value
of Your Notes—The estimated value of the Notes will not be a
prediction of the prices at which Barclays Capital Inc., other
affiliates of ours or third parties may be willing to purchase the
Notes from you in secondary market transactions (if they are
willing to purchase, which they are not obligated to do). The price
at which you may be able to sell your Notes in the secondary market
at any time will be influenced by many factors that cannot be
predicted, such as market conditions, and any bid and ask spread
for similar sized trades, and may be substantially less than our
estimated value of the Notes. Further, as secondary market prices
of your Notes take into account the levels at which our debt
securities trade in the secondary market, and do not take into
account our various costs related to the Notes such as fees,
commissions, discounts, and the costs of hedging our obligations
under the Notes, secondary market prices of your Notes will likely
be lower than the initial issue price of your Notes. As a result,
the price at which Barclays Capital Inc., other affiliates of ours
or third parties may be willing to purchase the Notes from you in
secondary market transactions, if any, will likely be lower than
the price you paid for your Notes, and any sale prior to the
Maturity Date could result in a substantial loss to
you. |
|
· |
The Temporary Price at Which We May Initially
Buy The Notes in the Secondary Market And the Value We May
Initially Use for Customer Account Statements, If We Provide
Any Customer Account Statements At All, May Not Be Indicative of
Future Prices of Your Notes—Assuming that all relevant factors
remain constant after the Initial Valuation Date, the price at
which Barclays Capital Inc. may initially buy or sell the Notes in
the secondary market (if Barclays Capital Inc. makes a market in
the Notes, which it is not obligated to do) and the value
that we may initially use for customer account statements, if we
provide any customer account statements at all, may exceed our
estimated value of the Notes on the Initial Valuation Date, as well
as the secondary market value of the Notes, for a temporary period
after the initial Issue Date of the Notes. The price at
which Barclays Capital Inc. may initially buy or sell the Notes in
the secondary market and the value that we may initially use for
customer account statements may not be indicative of future prices
of your Notes. |
|
· |
We
and Our Affiliates May Engage in Various Activities or Make
Determinations That Could Materially Affect the Notes in Various
Ways and Create Conflicts of Interest—We and our affiliates
play a variety of roles in connection with the issuance of the
Notes, as described below. In performing these roles, our and our
affiliates’ economic interests are potentially adverse to your
interests as an investor in the Notes. |
In
connection with our normal business activities and in connection
with hedging our obligations under the Notes, we and our
affiliates make markets in and trade various financial
instruments or products for our accounts and for the account of our
clients and otherwise provide investment banking and other
financial services with respect to these financial instruments and
products. These financial instruments and products may include
securities, derivative instruments or assets that may relate to the
Reference Assets or their components, if any. In any such market
making, trading and hedging activity, and other financial services,
we or our affiliates may take positions or take actions that are
inconsistent with, or adverse to, the investment objectives of the
holders of the Notes. We and our affiliates have no obligation to
take the needs of any buyer, seller or holder of the Notes into
account in conducting these activities. Such market making, trading
and hedging activity, investment banking and other financial
services may negatively impact the value of the Notes.
In
addition, the role played by Barclays Capital Inc., as the
agent for the Notes, could present significant conflicts of
interest with the role of Barclays Bank PLC, as issuer of the
Notes. For example, Barclays Capital Inc. or its representatives
may derive compensation or financial benefit from the distribution
of the Notes and such compensation or financial benefit may serve
as incentive to sell the Notes instead of other
investments. Furthermore, we and our affiliates establish the
offering price of the Notes for initial sale to the public, and the
offering price is not based upon any independent verification or
valuation.
In addition to the activities described above, we will also act as
the Calculation Agent for the Notes. As Calculation Agent, we will
determine any values of the Reference Assets and make any other
determinations necessary to calculate any payments on the Notes. In
making these determinations, the Calculation Agent may be required
to make discretionary judgements relating to the Reference Assets,
including determining whether a market disruption event has
occurred or whether certain adjustments to the Reference Assets or
other terms of the Notes are necessary, as further described in the
accompanying prospectus supplement. In making these discretionary
judgments, our economic interests are potentially adverse to your
interests as an investor in the Notes, and any of these
determinations may adversely affect any payments on the Notes.
|
· |
Lack of Liquidity—The Notes will not be
listed on any securities exchange. Barclays Capital Inc. and other
affiliates of Barclays Bank PLC intend to make a secondary market
for the Notes but are not required to do so, and may discontinue
any such secondary market making at any time, without notice.
Barclays Capital Inc. may at any time hold unsold inventory, which
may inhibit the development of a secondary market for the Notes.
Even if there is a secondary market, it may not provide enough
liquidity to allow you to trade or sell the Notes easily. Because
other dealers are not likely to make a secondary market for the
Notes, the price at which you may be able to trade your Notes is
likely to depend on the price, if any, at which Barclays Capital
Inc. and other affiliates of Barclays Bank PLC are willing to buy
the Notes. The Notes are not designed to be short-term trading
instruments. Accordingly, you should be willing and able to hold
your Notes to maturity. |
|
· |
Tax Treatment—Significant aspects of the
tax treatment of the Notes are uncertain. You should consult your
tax advisor about your tax situation. See “Tax Considerations”
below. |
|
· |
Many Economic and Market Factors Will Impact
the Value of the Notes—The value of the Notes will be affected
by a number of economic and market factors that interact in complex
and unpredictable ways and that may either offset or magnify each
other, including: |
|
o |
the
market price of, dividend rate on and expected volatility of the
Reference Asset or the components of the Reference Asset, if
any; |
|
o |
the
time to maturity of the Notes; |
|
o |
interest and yield rates in the market
generally; |
|
o |
a
variety of economic, financial, political, regulatory or judicial
events; |
|
o |
supply and demand for the Notes; and |
|
o |
our
creditworthiness, including actual or anticipated downgrades in our
credit ratings. |
Information Regarding
the Reference Assets
Nasdaq-100 Index®
The
Nasdaq-100 Index is a modified market capitalization-weighted index
of stocks of the 100 largest non-financial companies listed on The
Nasdaq Stock Market. For more information about the
Nasdaq-100 Index, see “Indices—The Nasdaq-100 Index®” in
the accompanying underlying supplement.
Historical Performance of the Nasdaq-100 Index
The graph below sets forth the historical performance of the
Nasdaq-100 Index based on the daily Closing Value from January 2,
2015 through November 24, 2020. We obtained the Closing
Values shown in the graph below from Bloomberg
Professional® service (“Bloomberg”). We have not
independently verified the accuracy or completeness of the
information obtained from Bloomberg.
Historical Performance of the Nasdaq-100
Index®

PAST PERFORMANCE IS NOT INDICATIVE OF FUTURE
RESULTS
Russell
2000® Index
The RTY Index measures the capitalization-weighted price
performance of 2,000 small-capitalization stocks and is designed to
track the performance of the small capitalization segment of the
U.S. equity market. For more information about the RTY Index, see
“Indices—The Russell Indices” in the accompanying underlying
supplement.
Historical Performance of the RTY Index
The graph
below sets forth the historical performance of the RTY Index
based on the daily Closing Values from January 2, 2015 through
November 24, 2020. We obtained the Closing Values shown in
the graph below from Bloomberg. We have not independently verified
the accuracy or completeness of the information obtained from
Bloomberg.
Historical Performance of the Russell 2000® Index

PAST PERFORMANCE IS NOT
INDICATIVE OF FUTURE RESULTS
TAX CONSIDERATIONS
You should review carefully the sections in the accompanying
prospectus supplement entitled “Material U.S. Federal Income Tax
Consequences—Tax Consequences to U.S. Holders—Notes Treated as
Prepaid Forward or Derivative Contracts with Associated Contingent
Coupons” and, if you are a non-U.S. holder, “—Tax Consequences to
Non-U.S. Holders.” The following discussion supersedes the
discussion in the accompanying prospectus supplement to the extent
it is inconsistent therewith.
In determining our reporting responsibilities, if any, we intend to
treat (i) the Notes for U.S. federal income tax purposes as prepaid
forward contracts with associated contingent coupons and (ii) any
Contingent Coupon payments as ordinary income, as described in the
section entitled “Material U.S. Federal Income Tax Consequences—Tax
Consequences to U.S. Holders—Notes Treated as Prepaid Forward or
Derivative Contracts with Associated Contingent Coupons” in the
accompanying prospectus supplement. Our special tax counsel, Davis
Polk & Wardwell LLP, has advised that it believes this
treatment to be reasonable, but that there are other reasonable
treatments that the Internal Revenue Service (the “IRS”) or a court
may adopt.
Sale, exchange or redemption of a Note. Assuming the treatment
described above is respected, upon a sale or exchange of the Notes
(including redemption at maturity), you should recognize capital
gain or loss equal to the difference between the amount realized on
the sale or exchange and your tax basis in the Notes, which should
equal the amount you paid to acquire the Notes (assuming Contingent
Coupon payments are properly treated as ordinary income, consistent
with the position referred to above). This gain or loss should be
long-term capital gain or loss if you hold the Notes for more than
one year, whether or not you are an initial purchaser of the Notes
at the issue price. The deductibility of capital losses is subject
to limitations. If you sell your Notes between the time your right
to a Contingent Coupon payment is fixed and the time it is paid, it
is likely that you will be treated as receiving ordinary income
equal to the Contingent Coupon payment. Although uncertain, it is
possible that proceeds received from the sale or exchange of your
Notes prior to an Observation Date but that can be attributed to an
expected Contingent Coupon payment could be treated as ordinary
income. You should consult your tax advisor regarding this
issue.
As noted above, there are other reasonable treatments that the IRS
or a court may adopt, in which case the timing and character of any
income or loss on the Notes could be materially affected. In
addition, in 2007 the U.S. Treasury Department and the IRS released
a notice requesting comments on the U.S. federal income tax
treatment of “prepaid forward contracts” and similar instruments.
The notice focuses in particular on whether to require investors in
these instruments to accrue income over the term of their
investment. It also asks for comments on a number of related
topics, including the character of income or loss with respect to
these instruments and the relevance of factors such as the nature
of the underlying property to which the instruments are linked.
While the notice requests comments on appropriate transition rules
and effective dates, any Treasury regulations or other guidance
promulgated after consideration of these issues could materially
affect the tax consequences of an investment in the Notes, possibly
with retroactive effect. You should consult your tax advisor
regarding the U.S. federal income tax consequences of an investment
in the Notes, including possible alternative treatments and the
issues presented by this notice.
Non-U.S. holders. Insofar as we have responsibility as a
withholding agent, we do not currently intend to treat Contingent
Coupon payments to non-U.S. holders (as defined in the accompanying
prospectus supplement) as subject to U.S. withholding tax. However,
non-U.S. holders should in any event expect to be required to
provide appropriate Forms W-8 or other documentation in order to
establish an exemption from backup withholding, as described under
the heading “—Information Reporting and Backup Withholding” in the
accompanying prospectus supplement. If any withholding is required,
we will not be required to pay any additional amounts with respect
to amounts withheld.
Treasury regulations under Section 871(m) generally impose a
withholding tax on certain “dividend equivalents” under certain
“equity linked instruments.” A recent IRS notice excludes from the
scope of Section 871(m) instruments issued prior to January 1, 2023
that do not have a “delta of one” with respect to underlying
securities that could pay U.S.-source dividends for U.S. federal
income tax purposes (each an “Underlying Security”). Based on our
determination that the Notes do not have a “delta of one” within
the meaning of the regulations, our special tax counsel is of the
opinion that these regulations should not apply to the Notes with
regard to non-U.S. holders. Our determination is not binding on the
IRS, and the IRS may disagree with this determination. Section
871(m) is complex and its application may depend on your particular
circumstances, including whether you enter into other transactions
with respect to an Underlying Security. You should consult your tax
advisor regarding the potential application of Section 871(m) to
the Notes.
SUPPLEMENTAL PLAN OF DISTRIBUTION
We have agreed to sell to Barclays Capital Inc. (the “Agent”), and
the Agent has agreed to purchase from us, the principal amount of
the Notes, and at the price, specified on the cover of this pricing
supplement. The Agent commits to take and pay for all of the Notes,
if any are taken.
Validity of
the Notes
In the opinion of Davis Polk
& Wardwell LLP, as special United States products counsel to
Barclays Bank PLC, when the Notes offered by this pricing
supplement have been executed and issued by Barclays Bank PLC and
authenticated by the trustee pursuant to the indenture, and
delivered against payment as contemplated herein, such Notes will
be valid and binding obligations of Barclays Bank PLC, enforceable
in accordance with their terms, subject to applicable bankruptcy,
insolvency and similar laws affecting creditors’ rights generally,
concepts of reasonableness and equitable principles of general
applicability (including, without limitation, concepts of good
faith, fair dealing and the lack of bad faith) and possible
judicial or regulatory actions giving effect to governmental
actions or foreign laws affecting creditors’ rights, provided that
such counsel expresses no opinion as to the effect of fraudulent
conveyance, fraudulent transfer or similar provision of applicable
law on the conclusions expressed above. This opinion is given as of
the date hereof and is limited to the laws of the State of New
York. Insofar as this opinion involves matters governed by English
law, Davis Polk & Wardwell LLP has relied, with Barclays Bank
PLC’s permission, on the opinion of Davis Polk & Wardwell
London LLP, dated as of August 3, 2020, filed as an exhibit to a
report on Form 6-K by Barclays Bank PLC on August 3, 2020, and this
opinion is subject to the same assumptions, qualifications and
limitations as set forth in such opinion of Davis Polk &
Wardwell London LLP. In addition, this opinion is subject to
customary assumptions about the trustee’s authorization, execution
and delivery of the indenture and its authentication of the Notes
and the validity, binding nature and enforceability of the
indenture with respect to the trustee, all as stated in the letter
of Davis Polk & Wardwell LLP, dated August 3, 2020, which has
been filed as an exhibit to the report on Form 6-K referred to
above.
iPath Series B S&P 500 V... (AMEX:VXX)
Historical Stock Chart
From Dec 2020 to Jan 2021
iPath Series B S&P 500 V... (AMEX:VXX)
Historical Stock Chart
From Jan 2020 to Jan 2021