EU Commission fines banks Euro 1.7 billion for benchmark rigging

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Reuters
Last Updated : Dec 05 2013 | 12:27 AM IST
EU antitrust regulators vowed to keep investigating rate- rigging on Wednesday as they slapped a record Euro 1.7-billion (£1.4 billion) penalty on six financial institutions including Deutsche Bank, RBS and JPMorgan.

The fines by the Commission, which along with authorities around the globe has been examining the manipulation of London interbank offered rate (Libor) and its euro equivalent Euribor, takes the tally of penalties related to the scandal to almost $6 billion (£3 billion).

Confirming what a source familiar with the matter had previously told Reuters, EU Competition Commissioner Joaquin Almunia said he had been shocked at the scale of the scam and was sending a clear message that Brussels would fight and impose sanctions on cartels.

Deutsche Bank, which has yet to be fined by US and UK regulators as part of separate investigations into benchmark interest-rate fixing, received the highest fine of Euro 725.4 million.

Germany's largest lender and RBS were fined for their involvement in both the Euribor and Libor cartels.

Also fined were JPMorgan and Citigroup, France's Societe Generale and UK-based brokerage RP Martin.

Swiss bank UBS and Britain's Barclays avoided fines of 2.5 billion euros and 690 million respectively for revealing the existence of the cartel.

U.S. and French banks were penalised for the first time in a scandal in which traders fiddled rates used as a reference point to price around $400 trillion worth of products worldwide, from derivatives to mortgages and student loans.

Some banks declined to settle with the EU. France's Credit Agricole and UK-based HSBC are disputing allegations, while the role played by UK-based brokerage ICAP remains under investigation.

JPMorgan has only settled allegations relating to yen-denominated Libor, not Euribor.

Almunia said the Commission would continue to investigate collusion allegations in other benchmarks, including the Swiss Franc currency and foreign exchange markets.

"This will not be the end of the story, neither for interest rate derivatives nor for the manipulation of benchmarks," Almunia told a Brussels news conference.

"And one of the areas where, as you know, we have received some elements of information that we are looking at very, very carefully is forex, forex markets and the relations with forex benchmarks."
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First Published: Dec 04 2013 | 11:51 PM IST

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