Interest rate rigging nets $2.3B fine for global banks
Regulator doles out fines in ongoing probe into LIBOR, other rates
The European Commission has fined a group of major global banks a total of 1.7 billion euros ($2.3 billion) for colluding to profit from the interest rates market.
The banks, which include JP Morgan, Citigroup and HSBC, are accused of manipulating for years European and Japanese benchmark interest rates that affect hundreds of billions of dollars in contracts globally, from mortgages to credit card bills.
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The Commission, the EU's executive arm, is only the latest to punish banks for profiting from manipulating interest rates, after similar cases brought by U.S. and national European market regulators.
"We want to send a clear message that we are determined to find and punish these cartels," competition commissioner Joaquin Almunia said Wednesday.
Many banks named
The banks named as participating in cartels were Barclays, Deutsche Bank, Royal Bank of Scotland, Societe Generale, Credit Agricole, HSBC, JPMorgan, UBS and Citigroup.
In the first cartel, which operated from 2005 to 2008 and was focused on euro-denominated derivatives, Deutsche Bank received the largest fine, of 468 million euros, followed by Societe Generale with 445 million euros. RBS was fined 131 million euros. Barclays escaped fines because it was the bank that notified the commission of the cartel's existence, while JPMorgan, HSBC and Credit Agricole have as yet not settled. JPMorgan and HSBC denied wrongdoing Wednesday, though JPMorgan settled with the commission in a second cartel case.
"This is not the end of the story," Almunia said. He noted that further investigations are possible and the Commission, the EU's executive arm, is probing a cartel it believes manipulated derivatives denominated in Swiss francs.
In a response to the fine, Deutsche Bank Chief Executive Juergen Fitschen referred to the euro cartel as a "legacy issue" caused by "past practices of individuals" at the bank. Fitschen has worked there since 1987 and became CEO in 2012.
He acknowledged participating in the cartel had been a "gross violation" of the bank's ethics. But he said the fine wouldn't hurt the bank's profits as it has already made provisions for the fines it deemed likely from regulators.
A second group of cartels fined by the commission Wednesday operated from 2007 to 2010 and focused on yen-based derivatives. The largest fines went to RBS and Deutsche Bank, 260 million euros each, while UBS received immunity for revealing the existence of the cartels.