Housing pop is no bubble: Trulia CEO
At the Reuters Tech Summit, Trulia chief executive Pete Flint says private equity investors are starting to pull back from buying U.S. real estate, while overseas buyers are coming on strong once again. Video
Read
- Angelina Jolie stunt double sues News Corp over hacking
- Kanye West wins over critics with 'daring' new album 'Yeezus'
- Shares choppy, dollar steady as Fed meets
- Massachusetts police search NFL player's home in homicide probe: report
- Journalist who brought down U.S. general is killed in Los Angeles car crash
Sponsored Links
Barclays flagged Libor problems to Fed in 2007
LONDON/NEW YORK |
LONDON/NEW YORK (Reuters) - Barclays alerted U.S. regulators as far back as 2007 to concerns that banks were rigging benchmark interest rates, according to documents released on Friday, but policymakers on both sides of the Atlantic did not appear to take decisive action, underscoring the chaos of the financial crisis.
The Federal Reserve Bank of New York was pushed to release the documents amid a furor that was touched off when Barclays late last month agreed to pay $453 million in fines for attempting to manipulate Libor.
Libor, or the London interbank offered rate, is calculated daily in London when panels of banks submit estimates of how much it costs them to borrow. It is a major index that helps judge the health of banks and influences rates from mortgages to student loans to credit cards.
Since Barclays' settlement, U.S. and UK lawmakers have demanded to know whether regulators were aware of Libor rigging and what they did about it.
The documents released by the New York Fed and other regulators late Thursday and on Friday paint a picture of banks desperate to under-report their borrowing rates in order to appear stronger, and of regulators aware of a broken system but overwhelmed by the financial crisis.
"You know, LIBORs being set too low anyway," a Barclays employee told a New York Fed analyst on December 17, 2007, according to a transcript of the phone call.
In a similar conversation dated April 11, 2008, a Barclays employee told another Fed analyst: "(W)e just fit in with the rest of the crowd, if you like... We know that we're not posting um, an honest Libor."
The employee said Barclays was under-reporting its borrowing costs, and believed other banks were doing the same, according to the New York Fed.
The document trove also showed communications between U.S. and UK regulators acknowledging weaknesses in how Libor is set.
U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner, then head of the New York Fed, sent an email to Bank of England Governor Mervyn King in June 2008, recommending six ways to enhance the credibility of Libor.
It said the measures were needed "to prevent accidental or deliberate misreporting."
The BoE passed on Geithner's thoughts in an email to the British Bankers Association (BBA) - the banking group responsible for Libor - which at that stage had already decided to launch a review of the rate.
"Both the Bank and the Federal Reserve were assured by the BBA that it would take on board the recommendations, either through actions or through questions on which it would consult," the BoE said in a news release.
While some tweaks have been made to how Libor is set, the more dramatic reform suggestions have not been implemented.
Karen Petrou, managing partner of Washington-based Federal Financial Analytics, said it is unclear what more regulators could have immediately done to halt any manipulation, without causing major market disruptions.
"In retrospect, could the Fed have intervened to bar use of Libor in the United States? Maybe. Were there are other steps that could have been taken within the Fed's jurisdiction? Perhaps," Petrou said. "But the markets were so unbelievably disrupted at the time that any steps to alter financial market indices strictly within the U.S. would have been at the very least, even more disruptive."
BEYOND BARCLAYS
More than a dozen banks, including Citigroup, JPMorgan Chase & Co and Deutsche Bank, are under investigation over suspected rigging of Libor.
Barclays is the only bank so far to admit any wrongdoing in giving false information as part of the complex process of setting the interest-rate benchmark, but the documents released on Friday indicate the practice may have been widespread during the financial crisis.
After the conversation with the Barclays employee on April 11, 2008, the Fed bank's Markets Group reported on the questions that had been raised about the accuracy of Libor. The briefing memo was circulated to top officials at the New York Fed, the Federal Reserve Board of Governors, and the Treasury Department.
The memo hinted at a widespread problem.
"Our contacts at LIBOR contributing banks have indicated a tendency to under-report actual borrowing costs when reporting to the BBA in order to limit the potential for speculation about the institutions' liquidity problems," the memo said.
April 2008 was just months before the peak of the financial crisis. A lack of liquidity in financial markets was putting upward pressure on bank borrowing costs, and central banks, including the Fed, acted to ensure commercial banks had ample liquidity.
U.S. PRESSURE INTENSIFIES
The scandal so far has been most acute in London, with public outcry that regulation in Britain was lax. But concern has grown about the wider impact on consumers and the involvement of U.S. regulators.
Richmond Fed President Jeffrey Lacker said in an interview with Reuters on Friday that the debacle is feeding public anger toward the banks.
"The revelations broadly are another episode that is damaging to people's confidence in the financial services industry and that's a shame," he said.
The New York Fed released the documents on Friday after Republican U.S. Representative Randy Neugebauer requested transcripts related to such conversations between the Fed bank and Barclays.
"We're reviewing the documents now, and once we've thoroughly examined them, we'll decide how to proceed," Neugebauer said in a statement. "We'll continue looking into this matter to determine who was involved in this practice and whether it could have been prevented by regulators."
A group of U.S. senators increased pressure on investigators and regulators on Thursday, asking for a vigorous probe into allegations that U.S. and foreign bank regulators were aware for years of wrongdoing in the setting of Libor.
U.S. state attorneys general are also jumping into the widening scandal, a move that could open a new front against the top global banks.
Since the height of the financial crisis, some small changes have been made to how Libor is set.
The BBA in a November 2008 policy paper proposed changes that were later implemented to improve the way Libor is managed that contained disciplinary procedures, and better scrutiny of the data collected for setting the rate.
The committee overseeing the rate was reorganized, and a full-time manager was appointed to supervise the way Libor is calculated and disseminated to the market, according to information provided by the BBA.
Thomson Reuters Corp is the British Bankers' Association's official agent for the daily calculation and publishing of Libor. The company said it had implemented all the changes in the November report from the BBA, adding that it "issues a weekly report to the BBA on what parties it has contacted about their submissions, and why."
(Additional reporting by Katya Wachtel and Emily Flitter in New York, Rachelle Younglai and Tim Ahmann in Washington, and Douwe Miedema in London; Editing by Karey Wutkowski and Tim Dobbyn)
- Tweet this
- Link this
- Share this
- Digg this
- Reprints
Were talking about “CRIME.”
What the bankers, politicians and many other people did to LIBOR rates was a crime.
What American banks did to municipal bond interest rates was a crime.
It was also based upon collusion… American banks fixed bond interest rates paid on the money float. Phone calls were made between American, British and EU Banks who then fixed interest rates on bond money being held in bank accounts for years until construction projects were completed (check out July / Rolling Stone/Matt Tabbi article). These supposed seal bids… with fixed interest rates and winner already chosen…robbed hard working Americans of tax money… robbed their states, cities, counties, school districts, colleges, library’s and other public projects of hundreds of billions of dollars.
The perpetrator of these crimes fixed bond money interest rates… for years…. the same way they fixed LIBOR rates Worldwide….
“FOR YEARS.”
Plus; American banks got caught fixing debit and credit card fees!
What the heck is wrong with governments in America and England? They slap wrists and levy small fines on instigators of this type of racketeering?
The mafia couldn’t get away with it… but CEO’s can?
Both countries routinely send people to prison for 5,10 or 20 years when they rob automated teller machines of a couple hundred dollars… yet let bankers, CEO’s, traders and corporations off…. after “they stole billions.”
To stop any crime… the “punishment must fit the crime”…. not the social status of the individual that commits the crime.
I would think people who knowingly stole tens of billions… or hundreds of billions… or indirectly aided in the theft of trillions of dollars…. and people who buy politicians… and people who change existing law to make their crimes legal… all need jail time…. “lots of it!”
It’s called “COLLUSION”….
What is wrong with the moral fiber of America, Europe and England?
Where is a voice of reason protesting and screaming… “What the hell is going on?” and “We want equal Justice… for all!”
Governments need to do four things to “corral” criminal activity on
Wall Street, big banks and in the London financial district—
#1. Bring back the Glass-Steagull Act.
Have Paul Volcker update the new regulations and include derivatives. No lobbyists involved… or 1000 page bill based upon political arm twisting… laced with dozens of amendments containing loop holes catering to Wall Street, big banks, hedge funds and corporations…. effectively neutralizing all regulations.
Just a simple 4 or 5 page bill… single lined spaced with wide margins… keep it simple.
#2. Add a 1/3% tax on all financial speculation (include $900 trillion worth of derivatives).
This would help control derivative trading and/or point shaving on Wall Street and London financial districts trillion dollar flow of money.
The billions created could be used to pay for additional regulation, finance public works programs, social programs, extend unemployment benefits, support “free” single payer healthcare, bailout people with mortgage problems and give housing a boost with another government rebate program for all home buyers. In other words spend the money doing something for the other 99%…. put them to work… in good paying jobs with benefits and pensions.
Both government and corporations by now should understand… if the middleclass doesn’t prosper the World economy goes in the toilet.
Soooo…. screw the elite, screw Wall Street, screw the London financial district and screw the big banks… their all parasites…“let them go under.” The world will not end… as regional businesses and banks will pick up the pieces… they always have in the past.
#3. Governments must prosecute white collar crime.
The new mafia… “Criminals”…. are CEO’s, lobbyists, traders, bankers and politicians… governments should prosecute them for crimes they have committed… “Not aid them in committing more.”
It seems in America …Wall Street and big bank CEO’s have lobbied politicians with the promise of private sector jobs and political contributions. All to change existing law… making Wall Street and big bank crime legal… and that in itself is inherently “wrong”… both morally and ethically. Even the American Supreme Court is corrupt as they signed off on a bizarre ruling called “Citizens United”….. and even they need to be impeached….. and “given jail time.”
“Prosecute them”…. all of them….
CEO’s and politicians need to spend 10, 20 or 30 years rooming with a guy named “big Bubba” on Rikers Island… or in some rat hole London prison… playing drop the soap in the shower every day…. to develop much needed character.
Let them all know…. “white collar crime equals 30 years with a personal trainer named big Bubba, a shower cap and a bar of soap.”
“No more country club prisons for the criminal elite”…. let them mingle with the prison common folk.
#4. Governments should stop issuing these token million/billion dollar fines for USA, England and European bank fraud.
They need to confiscate all profit made from any illegal act… for the entire length of that crime… just like they do with drug dealers and ATM robbers. It’s no different… crime is crime. Take CEO’s, bankers, traders and politicians ill gotten gains… all of it. Confiscate their businesses, salaries, bonuses, houses, cars, planes, boats and furniture etc … “all gains made from all illegal transactions.”
Governments will instantly be in the bank, trading, hedge fund, property and auction businesses until the newly acquired companies can be broken up and sold.
To stop any crime… the “punishment must fit the crime”…. not the social status of the individual that commits the crime.
When it comes to financial gain and law… it appears we have a two tier society… one for the common folk.. and another for the rich elite.




Follow Reuters