THE UK government has announced the terms of a review into the deepening London Interbank Offered Rate (Libor) crisis.
The review was commissioned by Chancellor George Osborne, and will be led by Martin Wheatley, managing director of the Financial Services Authority (FSA) and chief executive-designate of the Financial Conduct Authority.
Libor is a daily rate covering 10 currencies and is supposed to measure the average cost of short-term loans between major banks. It is set in London by 16 banks and is run by the British Bankers’ Association. The interest rates for tens of trillions of dollars in home mortgages, student loans and credit cards are pegged to Libor, as are derivatives valued at $350 trillion and euro-dollar futures worth $564 trillion.
Last month, Barclays Bank was fined a total of $455 million for illegally manipulating its daily Libor submissions between 2005 and 2009.
The Wheatley Review is a damage limitation exercise, proposing only to “undertake a review of the framework for the setting of LIBOR.”
While it is to examine “The potential for alternative rate-setting processes”, the interests of the banks will be prioritised, as its remit will also consider “The financial stability consequences of a move to a new regime and how a transition could be appropriately managed.”
Wheatley has acknowledged that the rigging of Libor was ‘extremely serious’, but instead of calling for any criminal action to be taken against those found guilty he declared it showed that ‘urgent reform of the Libor compilation process is required’.
The Wheatley Review avoids dealing with any of the illegal practices of Barclays that gave rise to it in the first place. The termsof the review state that it “will not consider any issues relating to the actions or alleged actions of specific financial institutions in attempting to manipulate LIBOR or other benchmark rates. These issues will continue to be investigated by the FSA and otherregulators around the world.”
The review is to conclude in just four weeks in order for any recommended legislation to be included in the Financial Services Bill, currently going through Parliament.
Last monh it emerged that the offices of Barclays in Milan, Italy had been raided in relation to the Libor crisis. Italian police officers seized documents, emails and other electronic communications during the raid. According to the Financial Times, the raid was “part of an investigation that seeks to see if Italian consumers were hurt by the British bank’s manipulation of Libor, the London Interbank Offered Rate, and its euro equivalent Euribor.”
Two consumer watchdogs have estimated that 2.5 million Italian families with mortgages linked to Euribor were financially damaged—to the tune of three billion euros by the rigging of Euribor.
Each day sees a global spread of the crisis.
This week German-based Deutsche Bank acknowledged the involvement of some of its employees in rigging Libor rates. It claimed that only a ‘limited number, were involved and said an internal inquiry had cleared its senior management of any wrongdoing. Deutsche Bank is currently being sued over claims it manipulated the yen Libor rate and the price of derivatives tied to the Euro-yen benchmark by US litigants.
Over the weekend speculation mounted that the Swiss-based global financial services operation UBS was also involved in manipulating Libor. Last month, Reuters reported that traders employed by Barclays, RBS and UBS ‘played a central role’ in rigging rates. Based on a review of court documents and other sources, Reuters said, “Between them, the three banks employed more than a dozen traders who sought to influence rates in either dollar, euro or yen rates. Some of the traders who are being probed have worked for several banks under scrutiny, raising the possibility that the rate fixing became more ingrained as traders changed jobs.”
One former Barclays employee under scrutiny is Jay V. Merchant, who oversaw the US dollar swaps trading desk at Barclays inNew York from March 2006 to October 2009. He now holds a similar position at UBS in Stamford, Connecticut, Reuters states.
UBS’s role in relation to Libor rigging is being investigated by attorneys general in several US states as well as by the federal Department of Justice.
On Tuesday Deutsche Bank and UBS increased their estimates for un-provisioned litigation risk by a combined 580 million euros. By the end of June, Deutsche Bank had increased its estimate from 2.1 billion to 2.5 billion euros. UBS added a further SFr 210 million to its litigation and regulatory provisions estimates.
The exposure of the main banks involved to potential payouts resulting from legal action, including numerous class actions, according to several plaintiff firms, could reach $1 trillion.
On Monday last it emerged that New York-based Berkshire Bank is suing 21 banks including Bank of America, Barclays and Citigroup for damages over alleged Libor manipulation. Berkshire’s claim alleges that the rigging of Libor had a detrimental impact on its interest payments. Its legal complaint states, “Tens, if not hundreds, of billions of dollars of loans are originated or sold within this state each year with rates tied to [U.S. dollar] Libor.”
New York banks “were unable to collect the full measure of interest income to which they were entitled”.
Harvard Law School professor John Coates said that litigation resulting from the Libor crisis “has the potential to be the biggest single set of cases coming out of the financial crisis, because Libor is built into so many transactions and Libor is so central to so many contracts. It’s like saying reports about the inflation rate were wrong.”
The banks could only have engaged in such illegal practices because they were given carte blanche to do so by the political establishment and the so-called banking regulators internationally. As the June report indicting Barclays demonstrated, the UK’s Financial Services Authority was nothing more than a facilitator for whatever practices the bank deemed necessary to make a quick buck. On Monday Osborne told Parliament that the FSA’s criminal powers did not actually extend to Libor, or the trading in derivatives by financial institutions.—Courtesy: WSWS