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Excerpt: "I have a friend who works on Wall Street who for years has been trolling through the stream of financial corruption stories with bemusement, darkly enjoying the spectacle as though the whole post-crisis news arc has been like one long, beautifully-acted, intensely believable sequel to Goodfellas. But even he is just stunned to the point of near-speechlessness by the LIBOR thing. 'It's like finding out that the whole world is on quicksand,' he says."

Matt Taibbi at Skylight Studio in New York, 10/27/10. (photo: Neilson Barnard/Getty Images)
Matt Taibbi at Skylight Studio in New York, 10/27/10. (photo: Neilson Barnard/Getty Images)



Why Is Nobody Freaking Out About the LIBOR Banking Scandal?

By Matt Taibbi, Rolling Stone

05 July 12

 

he LIBOR manipulation story has exploded into a major scandal overseas. The CEO of Barclays, Bob Diamond, has resigned in disgrace; his was the first of what will undoubtedly be many major banks to walk the regulatory plank for fixing the interbank exchange rate. The Labor party is demanding a sweeping criminal investigation. Mervyn King, Governor of the Bank of England, responded the way a real public official should (i.e. not like Ben Bernanke), blasting the banks:

It is time to do something about the banking system…Many people in the banking industry are hardworking and feel badly let down by some of their colleagues and leaders. It goes to the culture and the structure of banks: the excessive compensation, the shoddy treatment of customers, the deceitful manipulation of a key interest rate, and today, news of yet another mis-selling scandal.

The furor is over revelations that Barclays, the Royal Bank of Scotland, and other banks were monkeying with at least $10 trillion in loans (The Wall Street Journal is calculating that that LIBOR affects $800 trillion worth of contracts).

The banks gamed LIBOR for two semi-overlapping reasons. As noted here last week, there were instances of Barclays traders badgering the LIBOR submitters to "push down" rates in order to fatten their immediate bottom lines, depending on what they were trading or holding that day. They also apparently rigged LIBOR downward in order to produce a general appearance of better health, essentially tweaking their credit scores a few ticks upward.

Most intriguingly, or perhaps disturbingly, there were revelations last week that Bank of England deputy Governor Paul Tucker had a conversation with Diamond at the peak of the crisis in 2008. The conversation reportedly left Diamond, and subsequently his traders, with the impression that the bank had carte blanche to rig LIBOR downward in order to help allay spiraling public fears about the banks’ poor financial health.

British officials, and Tucker individually, deny that Tucker gave Diamond permission to rig rates. But a report by British regulators did conclude that the two were talking about Barclays LIBOR submissions on October 29, 2008, and that as a result of that conversation, Diamond came away with a “misunderstanding.” The Daily Mail quotes the Financial Services Authority report:

However, as the substance of the telephone conversation was relayed down the chain of command at Barclays, a misunderstanding or miscommunication occurred.

This meant that Barclays’ submitters believed mistakenly that they were operating under an instruction from the Bank of England (as conveyed by senior management) to reduce Barclays’ Libor submissions.

That is explosive stuff. Members of Parliament will be grilling Tucker tomorrow about those events in what is sure to be a far more combative and entertaining legislative inquiry than the Jamie Dimon dog-and-pony show we just went through here in the states in recent weeks.

The implications of that part of the story should be particularly chilling to Americans, who in recent years have been party to a number of revelations about strange and seemingly inappropriate contacts between senior regulatory officials and big bankers during the heat of the crisis.

We know that American officials in 2008-2009 were extremely concerned about the appearance of weakness in the financial markets, so much so that they may have resisted pursuing criminal prosecutions against big banks, and we also know that they spent a lot of time commiserating with Wall Street figures before and during the crisis.

If Bob Diamond and Paul Tucker were having these talks about LIBOR, is it fair to wonder what else Hank Paulson and Lloyd Blankfein were talking about in the 24 discussions they had in the six days following the AIG disaster? When Paulson had a secret meeting with the entire board of Goldman Sachs in, of all places, his hotel suite in Moscow, in June of 2008? Or what other material nonpublic information was exchanged when Paulson met with a gang of hedge fund chiefs at the offices of Eton Park management in July 2008, and laid out for them a possible scenario for putting Fannie and Freddie into receivership?

Anyway, the LIBOR story is leading the front pages of most of Britain’s dailies, it’s on TV, and it’s producing blistering editorials and howls of outrage amongst politicians and activists. But as compadre Yves Smith at Naked Capitalism put it, where’s the outrage here in America?

The big story on our shores in the last few weeks has been the health care ruling, which makes sense, but then after that… what? The heat? Tom and Katie? (There’s actually a story about how Katie can wear heels again, now that she’s not married to a short person). Joe Sandusky? Nightline’s big story tonight, which is already being hyped on the net, is about how fat Chris Christie is and why the hell he hasn’t done the bypass surgery yet:

New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie opened up about his weight problem in an interview with ABC News and stressed he is "trying" to lose weight, a battle he's waged for 30 years, but said he's never considered gastric bypass surgery because it's "too risky."

"I mean, see, listen, I think there's a fundamental misunderstanding among people regarding weight and regarding all those things that go into, to people being overweight," Christie said in an interview that will air Tuesday on "Nightline."

Glad to be informed! The New York Times, meanwhile, did chime in with a house editorial yesterday, and it was appropriately somber. And there has been some coverage in the financial press.

But to me what’s missing from all of this is the “Holy Fucking Shit!” factor. This story is so outrageous that it shocks even the most cynical Wall Street observers. I have a friend who works on Wall Street who for years has been trolling through the stream of financial corruption stories with bemusement, darkly enjoying the spectacle as though the whole post-crisis news arc has been like one long, beautifully-acted, intensely believable sequel to Goodfellas. But even he is just stunned to the point of near-speechlessness by the LIBOR thing. “It’s like finding out that the whole world is on quicksand,” he says.

So as far as the stateside press goes, I’ve got to assume the cavalry is coming soon. But when?


 

 

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+47 # erogers 2012-07-05 07:22
Keep up the great work Matt. You are the only journalist with the courage to go after Wall Street and the banks. You are also the only journalist who has the backing of their company to report the truth. As for the rest; and I include NPR in this gang, they are bought and paid for cowards. You finish your news story with a question: So as far as the stateside press goes, I’ve got to assume the cavalry is coming soon. But when? The cowards in the American press will go after this story when they get confirmation from their stupid bosses that Field Marshall von Paulus did indeed surrender at Stalingrad in January 1943 and is not returning. We will never again see your type of investigative journalism in America.
 
 
+6 # John Locke 2012-07-05 16:50
erogers: I also like Matt's articles, the sad thing is that after a while all is back to business as usual and will always be that way, until WE make the changes for ourselves. Obama won't and neither will Romney Puppets always just dance to the puppeteer...

Matt should also watch his back...anyone who goes after the Banks and their corruption, as he is doing becomes their prime target... some have accidents, others are attacked by the "media" Wall Street owns! He should always be careful of an FBI, CIA and or local police set ups with drugs! or child porn which they like to use!
 
 
+28 # lark3650 2012-07-05 07:28
Don't hold your breath if you are waiting for our press to report on this. It is not going to happen.
Alfred Lawson wrote back in his book "Know Business" in 1937: "Through this control by alien financiers of every avenue of publicity and learning, the American people are being denied their constitutitonal rights of freedom of the press. Little by little practical newspaper men are being strangled and humiliated by being forced to take orders from the half-witted relatives of alien financiers whose only interest in publicity is to use it to enslave the people."
Until the press in this country have the courage to put truth and principles over money, you will not hear from them.
 
 
+8 # paulrevere 2012-07-05 10:54
when Jack 'the traitor' Welch proudly stepped in front of the microphone and declared that he was now making the newsrooms he controlled 'profit centers', the media of this country "put truth and principles over money".

Disgusting egocentric braggart he is...
 
 
+3 # John Locke 2012-07-05 16:52
paulrevere: i hope that is not a real surprise, the Media has been a street walker for decades.
 
 
+6 # Vardoz 2012-07-05 14:33
I would say this is a real turning point in our nation and way of life. Pretty soon down will look like up to us. I'm not sure people have what it takes to turnout in big enough numbers to make an impression. But we should remember that Amy Goodman is still on the case.
 
 
+17 # Vardoz 2012-07-05 08:33
All the congress and senate are either bought off and totally corrupt or scared to death of Wall St and their mafia organization. The rule of law, regulations and protections are in the toilet and Wall St and the feds are going to ruin our economy and our lives to enrich themselves. Period end of story. And that's the way it is.
 
 
+14 # keziahs 2012-07-05 09:20
Matt, your articles are always engaging. Thanks for your frank and honest reporting.

It is undeniably frustrating to watch the U.S press devote so much time on fripperies while ignoring topics that matter. Could the pursuit for ratings between the various media outlets be the driving reason? Unfortunately, if that is the case the American viewers have to take ownership for driving the ratings which subsequently define the story de jour. Considering the U.S economy is still struggling from the recent financial debacle, one would hope Americans would want to remain engaged on scandals such as the LIBOR fixing.
 
 
+20 # hillwright 2012-07-05 09:32
A trillion here; a trillion there. Next thing you know you'll be talking about real money.

And, no wonder the banks want to get their hands on the Social Security funds...!
 
 
+22 # Michael_K 2012-07-05 09:52
The very sad reality is that governments (not just the US) have invested enormous time and money into "dumbing down" their populations. Consequently, it takes a while for a minority to have these facts "sink in" and come to the realisation that they shopuld be outraged, perhaps even violent in clamouring for reform.

It takes a while, but the powers that be seem to have become careless and unconcerned about "the people".. Unfortunately, this means the "reforms" will be violent and excessive and the everlasting cycles of right/left and boom/bust will continue, with too few learning anything useful from history.
 
 
+8 # readerz 2012-07-05 14:46
It's a broken record: history repeats itself again, and again, and again...
Philip K. Dick (SF writer: Total Recall, Paycheck, Minority Report, Bladerunner, etc.) said the Roman Empire never ended, and he felt that Nixon was an embodiment of all that was worst about the empire, which he also called "The Party" implying that both the right-wing and communists were the same. Interesting that Russians refer to communists as right-wing, and the current GOP PAC of billionaires are heavily invested in China.
 
 
+3 # readerz 2012-07-05 14:50
P.S.: Katie can wear heels? Some doctors say this increases inflammation in the body, leading to such things as arterial inflammation and rheumatoid arthritis. But heck, women can get RA without wearing them. Sorry, just some random attention deficit disorder, but that's the kind of thing that big media wants us to have. Or maybe I'm still griping about being denied medicine by my health insurance.
 
 
+8 # RobertMStahl 2012-07-05 10:25
Say it like it is, Matt.
 
 
+7 # readerz 2012-07-05 14:41
The article asks why no news about the London banking scandal. This is like a quadratic equation with two answers: London Olympics and Queen's Jubilee. Now as much as I enjoy pretty spectacles, the spectacle of Europe going down for the count (when they had respectable health care, pensions, vacations, higher education, etc.) is too horrifying for words. While the Queen stands up for the poor in Commonwealth nations, I would like to see more attention paid to the health and stability of their own. America has July 4th and some fireworks, but only England honors a holiday like Guy Fawkes' Day, which has been updated in the "V" masks. America can't bail out Europe with another Marshall Plan, because we have been scalped by our own banks.
 
 
+5 # tomo 2012-07-05 17:56
I'm not sure, Matt, the cavalry is ever coming. The cavalry came to kill American Indians. So far as I know there aren't many American Indians in the banking houses of England or America. On the contrary, the people in these houses are the descendant of the people for whom the cavalry came to kill Indians.
 
 
+2 # Firefox11 2012-07-06 14:42
This is not just a scandal; this is fraud, and as such, many financial people should be going to jail, both here and in the UK.
 

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