Preview

Barclays and the LIBOR scandal

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
2062 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Barclays and the LIBOR scandal
ADMN-2306 Sec: 825

Assignment #2

1) There were many individuals that benefitted from the manipulation of LIBOR. The Barclays derivatives traders, Money Market Desk, Bob Diamond and senior management and other banks all had some sort of gain from the LIBOR scandal.Let’s start with the people that had the most monetary gain - the Barclays derivative traders. It is said that LIBOR has been manipulated since the early 90s. Since then, there has been trillions of money made by derivate traders as they influence LIBOR. The traders communicated with the Money Market Desk, the individuals who submitted LIBOR rates, in order to manipulate the rate to their favour. In fact, the investigation found the derivate traders were not at all quiet about their discussions to the Desk regarding the manipulation of LIBOR. One conversation between a trader and a submitter went public and the submitter basically ensured the trader he would submit one less basis point from what he should actually submit.i A calculation derived from Galen Burghardt’s The Eurodollar Futures and Options Handbook shows that a manipulation of one basis point for a low 3-month fix can earn the trader over $2million dollars from an $80 billion deal. For a deal that is often settled, the derivative traders made their fair share of money by manipulating LIBOR. According to the Barclays and the LIBOR Scandal article, the derivative traders and the Desk was located on the same trading floor, which if you asked me, says a lot about Barclays internal control regarding LIBOR rate submissions in itself. The Desk benefitted from manipulating LIBOR in my opinion although nothing has been published. This is because nobody will do anything for someone unless they receive something in return. And the fact that submitting altered rates can earn a trader millions of dollars. In my opinion, the submitters received sums of money from the traders they ‘helped’. Bob Diamond and Barclays senior management

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Satisfactory Essays

    Six different regulatory agencies conducted extensive independent investigations into the JP Morgan London Whale scandal. On September 19, 2013, JP Morgan received a total of $921 million of fines and penalties administered by the OCC, The UK Financial Conduct Authority (FCA), The Federal Reserve, and the Securities Exchange Commission (SEC). The OCC handed JP Morgan a $300 million fine, followed by the FCA’s fine of 137.6 million pounds ($221 million), and finally the Federal Reserve and the SEC both executed a penalty of $200 million each (Kopecki, 2013).…

    • 88 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Bank Julius Baer Case

    • 2223 Words
    • 9 Pages

    Before the arrival and leadership of Stuart Adam (“Adam”), Bank Julius Baer, North America (“BJB-NA” or the “Company”), the largest independently-owned European private bank in the United States, faced financial difficulties. By mid-2001, a worldwide market downturn caused a significant decline in Julius Baer Group’s (“JB” or the “Parent”) performance. In 2001, JB’s stock price was down by over 40% while the Parent experienced a 39% decline in net profits, 9% increase in operating expenses and an increase of 14% in employee headcount. BJB-NA, the “crown jewel” of JB, was barely profitable but no one inside the Company knew its true financial condition.…

    • 2223 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Better Essays

    Intro: how Dimon reacted when the senate was trying to pursue greater capital markets.(When, How, Why?) – His changed reaction after the announcement that JPM has lost by betting on a thinly slice of derivatives markets. – Reasons for the loss – Was it reasonable loss or not?…

    • 839 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    The entire purpose of this documentary The Untouchables was to seek an answer to an abbreviated question: why has no Wall Street executive been criminally prosecuted for fraud tied to the sale of mortgages. But the unabbreviated question and the one that infuriates us as Americans is: why has no executive of a major Wall Street firm been criminally prosecuted for anything. Containing interviews with top prosecutors of the DOJ, government officials and industry whistleblowers, Frontline reports allegations that Wall Street bankers ignored pervasive fraud when buying pools of mortgage loans. Tom Leonard, a supervisor who examined the quality of loans for major investment banks like Bear Stearns, said bankers instructed him to disregard clear evidence of fraud. “Fraud was the F-word, or the F-bomb. You didn’t use that word,” says Leonard. “By your terms and my terms, yes, it was fraud. By the industry's terms, it was something else.” Hearing these statements infuriated me more for Leonard was trying to even inform his supervisors of what was going on what some points but they continued to ignore this as well. All the bankers were interested in was profit and money; this is a clear enough view for criminal intent, which the DOJ had been having trouble proving this without a reasonable doubt. If the U.S. Justice Department was serious about doing its job, it has a cornucopia of crimes to pick from: Wall Street CEOs and CFOs attesting to fraudulent financial filings with the SEC, money laundering, lying in prospectuses, illegal foreclosures, rigging the Libor interest rate benchmark and then selling interest rate swaps based on a rigged index to school districts, cities and counties across America, manipulating the futures market with a rigged Libor interest rate, and so forth. From this documentary alone it strikes me as odd that not a single Wall Street CEO or CFO is sitting behind bars serving time for any of these crimes that are so blatantly obvious. The closes…

    • 389 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Bernie Ebbers should have gone to jail. I disagree with the 25 year length of his sentence but he is at least partially to blame for the WorldCom fiasco. I think the government used the length of the sentence to prove a point and the only prior sentence comparable to this was John J. Rigas from Adelphia Communications earlier in the year . I think the CFO Scott Sullivan got a light sentence and consciously knew what he was doing and could have put a stop to it. He should have been the good advisor telling Ebbers not to proceed with this fraud. Ebbers probably could not have figured out how to produce this type of fraud without financial experts doing the dirty work. Even if Ebbers was the one telling his accountants to cook the books, his accountants and the auditors should have put a stop to it. There were too many people that knew what was going on. Somebody should have said this is not right and I could not live with myself if I did this.…

    • 1452 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    The Wells Fargo Bank’s stock price was climbing higher and higher in that period. The lawmakers began to wonder why this was happening so drastically. Also people were receiving credit cards and bank statements in the mail that they never signed up for. The court brought them on falsely creating account according to this article, “A search warrant released Wednesday by the state Department of Justice shows that agents sought evidence related to allegations that bank employees created up to 2 million bank and credit card accounts without customers' approval in order to meet sales goals.” This lead lawmakers to bringing the Wells Fargo Bank all the way up to the Supreme Court. Where they had put new…

    • 249 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    This proposal discusses the scandal that occurred with Wells Fargo Financial Services Company. Provides banking, investments, insurance, consumer and commercial finance along with mortgages. The scandal started to get investigated in 2011. The Wells Fargo account fraud scandal is a corruption scandal that was very controversial because there were literally millions of fraudulent bank accounts that were created on behalf of Wells Fargo employees. These accounts were created without the consent of the Wells Fargo customers. This led to huge profits for the banking and financial giant Wells Fargo but it hurt customers by dropping their credit scores and even accumulating fees that they were not even aware of at times. This was truly an in justice to the customers of Wells Fargo.…

    • 571 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    It has been argued that the UK banking system is an oligopoly ( http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/newsbysector/banksandfinance/8266582/Big-banks-running-an-oligopoly-says-Virgin-Money-chief.html# ) .…

    • 1742 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Rogue Trader

    • 753 Words
    • 4 Pages

    In the movie Rogue Trader, Nick Leeson, a trader on behalf of the Barings Bank of England, made a series of financial fraud to cover the loss he incurred in trading—up to £800 million—in the Singapore International Monetary Exchange which ultimately led to the fall of Barings Bank. This tragedy was a mixed result of the personal greed and the lack of control in Barings Bank’s system. Most of the COSO internal control frameworks were violated with the “Control Environment” and “Information and Communication” being the most critical.…

    • 753 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    The Haymarket Affair

    • 1273 Words
    • 6 Pages

    The Haymarket Affair was a series of conflicts between labor protestors and police officers in Chicago that resulted in violence and bloodshed, but it certainly did not end there. The outcome of this incident resonated with supporters of the protests, and dramatically changed the course of history for workers; not only in Illinois but across the entire nation. The aftermath of this conflict can still be felt and even seen to this very day, due to the construction of two separate monuments in recognition of both the protestors and the law enforcement agents involved; this is referred to as the Haymarket Police Memorial Statue and Haymarket Martyrs’ Monument. This paper will trace the history of the Haymarket Affair and these two monuments created…

    • 1273 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Fa

    • 584 Words
    • 2 Pages

    4. Should the SEC and the Department of Justice have tried Andersen as a firm or should they have targeted specific individuals who had engaged in acts the two bodies believed to be unlawful?…

    • 584 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    The definition of corporates social responsibility (CSR) previously given by the commission of Europe was: *Company’s concept of incorporating the social and environmental preoccupation in their business running and also in their interference with their stakeholders willingly *.…

    • 2412 Words
    • 10 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Market Abuse

    • 2535 Words
    • 11 Pages

    We live in an information-led society. Information and knowledge have become more important than ever. It cannot be argued that the first one with information or knowledge is likely to confer an advantage. It has been argued that market abuse through insider trading and market manipulations are victimless2 and not immoral crimes as some see it as ‘the sharper market participants simply making a well earned shilling due to their shrewd knowledge of the markets and the people in it3’. But it is clear on a closer inspection that it is the society, which bears the loss. Market abuses through insider trading4 and market manipulations (market manipulation includes techniques like ‘Pump & Dump5’, ‘Trash & Cash6’ etc.) have a negative impact on the other players in the market. In R v Hannes7, the courts viewed the investors as victims of insider trading transactions. Moreover, the court stated that ‘the defendant’s act had undermined the integrity of the securities market and noted…

    • 2535 Words
    • 11 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Hsbc and Lloyds

    • 2835 Words
    • 12 Pages

    Focusing on the reasons showing significance, it can be observed that X4 and X6 are very significance.…

    • 2835 Words
    • 12 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Just like the Enron case, it comes down to a matter of greed. The traders and executives who were the masterminds in this scandal were very greedy and thought of only themselves. In relation to economic and social development, the libor scandal lowered the level of development. The level of employment reduced since a lot of careers were destroyed. A lot of people were affected; taxpayers paid more than they were supposed to pay on interests, students who went for student loans were also affected because the interests they will pay/paid on the loans had not been the true values. Investors who lent their money to the banks by buying short term bonds were also affected. The banks paid them less interest than they should have been paid. Despite all these people who have been affected, there is little done about the situation. It comes back to the economic inequality; if you do not have money to get a good lawyer for yourself, your case will not be persecuted.…

    • 469 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays

Related Topics