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Intro: "Barclays was just the first bank implicated in the LIBOR rate-manipulation scandal. New reports say seven banks are being subpoenaed in the investigation."

A man walks past the headquarters of JPMorgan Chase on Park Avenue in midtown Manhattan in New York City. (photo: John Moore/Getty Images)
A man walks past the headquarters of JPMorgan Chase on Park Avenue in midtown Manhattan in New York City. (photo: John Moore/Getty Images)



LIBOR Scandal Widens to Include 7 Banks

By Alex Klein, The Daily Beast

16 August 12

 

Barclays was just the first bank implicated in the LIBOR rate-manipulation scandal. New reports say seven banks are being subpoenaed in the investigation.

hen Barclays copped to manipulating LIBOR (the London Interbank Offered Rate), benchmark rates that underpin trillions in assets worldwide, most observers were left waiting for the other shoe to drop. To be sure, the British bank has fired executives. It faces a $450 million settlement, not to mention questions about collusion with the Bank of England. And there is the questionable response on the part of the New York Federal Reserve. But even a cursory reading of the LIBOR figures strongly suggested that it would take more than a few traders at one bank to shift the rates around, and rip off millions.

Now, according to Bloomberg, subpoenas are coming down on seven banks, all subjects of a New York and Connecticut investigation into the manipulation. David McLaughlin reports that three banks-JP Morgan Chase, UBS, and the American arm of Barclays-have already been subpoenaed.

For the house that Jamie Dimon built, the news couldn't come at a worse time. JP Morgan Chase has already been suffering from terrible publicity (and disappointing earnings figures) over its $5.8 billion "London Whale" loss earlier this year. And CEO Dimon has spent weeks trying to distance himself from the LIBOR issue. Asked about the investigation in his most recent earnings call, he said, "Not all companies are in the same position." Now, at least when it comes to the federal search for wrongdoing, seven of them are.

It's also disastrous timing for UBS, who just yesterday was forced to deny media reports that it helped clients dodge taxes by moving money from Switzerland to Singapore, in advance of a planned U.S. tax crackdown. UBS paid a $780 million fine for similar charges in early 2009 and, according to Financial Times Deutschland, this year paid millions of euros for stolen data from Swiss banks. Complicity in LIBOR-fixing would undermine both banks' already-ailing balance sheets and reputations, while exposing them to multiplying legal pitfalls. Any municipality-from Baltimore to Nassau-that traded interest-rate swaps based on LIBOR would have an opportunity to sue. There are thousands.

The alleged London Whale and Switzerland-to-Singapore gambits were, if they occurred, very complicated. But as the lurid emails between guilty Barclays traders showed, LIBOR-fixing is very simple. All it takes is getting a few friends at different banks together to submit fake figures. In the rate-setting system-now under review by the British Financial Services Authority (FSA)-all cooperation was voluntary, and all data, self-submitted. Given how easy it is to lie about LIBOR, it shouldn't come as a surprise that so many are under investigation.

The past two weeks have been some of the worst in recent memory for Wall Street scandal. Beyond the metastasizing LIBOR case, there was the Morgan Stanley electricity rip-off, the Goldman prosecution dodge, and Standard Chartered's $340 million settlement for Iranian money laundering. News of an expanded investigation-with a subpoenaed paper trail-may be welcome. But with so many other troubling threads to follow, LIBOR investigation and reform may just be scratching the surface.

 

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+15 # Activista 2012-08-16 08:47
used to have home loan with JP Morgan Chase banksters - their schema how to rip customers were numerous and unbelievable - late fees - insurance etc.
Can not believe how anybody sane can do business with them.
 
 
+26 # HowardMH 2012-08-16 09:02
Why bather to subpoena them? They just going to end up with a love fest with all the politicians that have been totally bought and paid for by the banks for years.

Until there are two hundred thousand really, really pissed off people on Capital Hill (all at the same time) raising some serious hell absolutely nothing is ever, ever going to happen to these totally bought and paid for by the richest 50 people in the world that are becoming more and more powerful with each passing rigged election thanks to the stupid people.
 
 
+15 # jwb110 2012-08-16 09:11
This is the sort of thing that no Bailout can fix. Perhaps the "self-regulatio n" of the banking industry will be the downfall that should have happened when the crooks were in trouble the first time. I have long since started banking with a small credit union in my home town. I sleep better because I feel safe and less compromise ethically. For those small savers in the big banks we should remember that you might as well eat the devil as drink his blood.
 
 
+8 # dick 2012-08-16 09:19
BIG trouble for Obama. He met with Banksters & promised to protect them from the "pitchfork" mob, i.e., US. Then he went on tv & proCLAIMed the Banksters had done nothing illegal. AFTER his Nixonesque Preemptive Pardon of the Banksters, for "any & all crimes", he ordered hapless lapdog Holder to conduct a fake investigation to clear the Banksters who are financing Obama-the-BETRA YER. But LIBOR threatens to upset their apple cart, starting with Barry's bosom buddy & bag man Jamie Dimond.
 
 
+3 # RLF 2012-08-17 04:15
The gov. will just use this as an excuse to get a little extra doe and let the crooks walk. There is no justice for the rich, only prison and taxes for the rest of us!
 
 
+7 # rockieball 2012-08-16 09:38
Well now we know where the trade off is concerning Julian and his extradition. The US government get him to be put on trial (most likely in secret and military), while the UK gets to indite charge and American banks and their CEO, who with their power will no doubt pay a meaningless fine and pay for it by raising their credit card and other interest rates.
 
 
+3 # DPM 2012-08-16 20:55
Does anyone reading this have any confidence that these banks and corporate "leaders" will face charges and be convicted? I don't. What do you think; business as usual? I think you can bet on it! How many "straws" until the camels back breaks?
 
 
+1 # erogers 2012-08-17 05:18
Not one bank will face charges. These crooks own Wall Street, DOJ, Congress and the White House. No new regulations will be put in place, nothing will change but the further crushing down of the working class to insure the cooks make more. I wonder when the crooks demand an end to the minimum wage.
 

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