HuffPo’s Mark Gongloff writes: So far Barclays has been the
sad, British face of the Libor scandal, but there could soon come a day when an
American bank could be the poster child for Libor manipulation. USA! USA!
Fortune's Stephen Gandel wrote on Friday about not one, not
two, but three different studies that use charts and math to show that, of all
the many banks just stone-cold manipulatin' Libor during the financial crisis,
the champion Libor-mangler of all was apparently, drumroll please, Citigroup.
Libor, for you Libor virgins who have somehow accidentally
stumbled into this story, is an interest rate at which banks lend money to each
other for short periods. It's the basis for hundreds of trillions of dollars'
worth of loans and derivative contracts. Kind of a big deal, then.
The funny thing about this super-important rate is that it
is almost completely bullshit. The banks who set Libor are on an honor system
to report their borrowing costs, so you can see where this is going. Barclays
was accused of manipulating Libor up and down, sometimes to help its traders
make more money, other times to make its financial condition look healthier.
Other banks are under investigation for allegedly having a cartel of Libor
manipulators, helping each other make money on trades.
During the financial crisis, no bank in its right mind
wanted to be seen as having to pay a high interest rate to borrow money, so
they lied and lied and lied when setting Libor. Pretty much everybody was doing
it, but according to the studies Gandel cites, including one by the Wall Street
Journal back in 2008, Citigroup was often the biggest liar of all.
This doesn't necessarily mean that Citi will end up paying
more than Barclays or other banks in fines or legal settlements, the high-end
estimate of which has recently risen to about $35 billion. As Gandel points
out, regulators may come down harder on banks that monkeyed with Libor purely for
profit, as Barclays did.
Read all about it at http://www.huffingtonpost.com/mark-gongloff/libor-scandal-citigroup_b_1689853.html
No comments:
Post a Comment