London: The News
London: The News
Follow the latest London news here

Britain opens formal criminal investigation into Libor scandal

Reported by Proactive Investors on Friday, 6 July 2012 (on July 6, 2012)
Proactive Investors
Britain's Serious Fraud Office announced Friday it would formally begin a criminal investigation into allegations that banks attempted to rig Libor, an important interest rate benchmark.

Libor, the London interbank offered rate, is used to price financial instruments around the globe. It is a global market benchmark published by the British Bankers’ Association (BBA) based on a survey of what banks tell its compilers they have to pay to borrow from their peers, in various currencies and for different periods.

UK bank Barclaysext (LON:BARC) (NYSE:BCS) last week paid around $450 million in fines to settle a probe by U.S. and British regulators for attempting to rig interbank lending rates, a scandal that has seen three senior officials of the bank resign, including CEO Bob Diamond.

During Diamond's testimony to Parliament, he said he was “physically ill” upon learning of the actions of Barclaysext traders, which led to the Libor rate-rigging that cost the bank a record £290 million in fines. He also said the bank has been scapegoated in the global scandal that involves some of the world's biggest lenders, because it was the first financial institution to settle.

He sought to separate the actions of a small minority of traders from the “hard work” by thousands of Barclaysext workers, adding that these traders “were acting on behalf of themselves”, not for the bank’s benefit.

MPs grilled the former bank boss Wednesday over a 2008 memo in which Diamond implied the Bank of England or government officials gave Barclaysext the green light to lower its lending rates to make its financials seem more robust.

Recently appointed chief operating officer, Jerry del Missier, also quit Tuesday, as well as chairman Marcus Agius earlier this week, but Agius is staying on to lead the search for a new CEO.

The incidents are alleged to have happened from 2005 through 2009 and Barclaysext has admitted to submitting falsely low estimates from late 2007 to May 2009, while Diamond was at the helm.

The UK's chancellor George Osborne said Barclaysext was “not alone” in its guilt of fixing the interest rates at which banks lend to each other.

The chancellor said four global banks are also being investigated: UBS, (NYSE:UBS) HSBC (LON:HSBA) Citigroup (NYSE:Cext) and Royal Bank of Scotland (LON:RBS).

Britain's FTSE 100 closed down 0.53% Friday.


Links: Open full story in new window Full news story 

Post this: FacebookFacebook  EmailE-mail  TwitterTwitter  MixxMixx  StumbleUponStumbleUpon  FriendFeedFriendFeed
Recent related news
guardian.co.uk
1 day ago

Petrol price rigging inquiry contacts oil traders

Glencore and Vitol among those receiving 'request for information' as part of cross-border...
Zero Hedge
5 days ago

Frontrunning: May 17

· Mine union threatens to bring South Africa to 'standstill' (Reuters) · Russia Raises Stakes in...
guardian.co.uk
5 days ago

SFO considers criminal inquiry into alleged price fixing by oil firms

Robert Halfon MP pushes for serious fraud investigation after European commission raids on BP, Shell...
guardian.co.uk
6 days ago

Companies guilty of oil price fixing will face charges, says David Cameron

Prime minister describes allegations as 'very serious' and says those who manipulate prices will feel...
Huffington Post
1 week ago

Richard (RJ) Eskow: Holder Says Leak Required "Very Aggressive Action"... Bank Crimes, Not So Much

Apparently it never occurred to Attorney General Eric Holder that the Associated Press might be "too...
DailyFinance
1 week ago

Shareholders Still Pay for Deutsche Bank's Scandals

Filed under: Investing Scandals related to *Deutsche Bank*'s alleged misconduct have cost...
© 2013 London: The News / londonthenews.com. All Rights Reserved.  |  Home Page  |  RSS Feed  |  Contact us  |  Bookmark