While banks appear to be brushing off record fines for
rigging interbank interest rates, investors are starting to worry about a
rising tide of civil lawsuits from disgruntled customers, according to
Reuters.
Reuters.
UBS shares touched 18 month highs after U.S., Swiss and British
regulators on Wednesday fined the bank a near record $1.5 billion for fiddling
interest rates, the second regulatory fine for manipulating the London
interbank offered rate (Libor) and its euro equivalent Euribor. But the "big unknown" cost of repairing
the damage caused by the fixing of rates used as a benchmark for pricing
trillions of dollars worth of financial contracts is civil litigation, said
Paras Anand, European equities head at Fidelity Worldwide Investment.
"That is one thing at the back of our minds that we
have to be cognizant of," Anand said. Fidelity Worldwide holds around 1.2
percent of UBS stock….
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