Bernard L Madoff walks down Lexington Ave to his apartment in this
December 17, 2008 file photo in New York City. US banking giant JPMorgan
Chase will pay $1.7 billion to the victims of Bernard Madoff's Ponzi
scheme under an agreement with prosecutors, a US Attorney announced.
Photo/AFP
WASHINGTON, January 14, 2014 (AFP) -
Three former traders at Rabobank -- British, Australian and Japanese
citizens -- were charged in the United States Monday for manipulating
Libor benchmark interest rates.
The charges come less
than three months after the bank agreed to a deferred prosecution deal
with the US Justice Department as part of its Libor manipulation probe
and agreed to pay a $325 million penalty.
Briton Paul
Robson, Australian Paul Thompson and Tetsuya Motomura of Japan, were
charged in New York as conspirators in the rate-manipulation scheme.
They
were charged with conspiracy to commit wire fraud and bank fraud, as
well as substantive counts of wire fraud. If convicted, the men each
face up to 30 years in prison for each count.
SUBMITTED RATES TO OWN BENEFIT
The
three "deliberately submitted what they called 'obscenely high' or
'silly low' Libor rates in order to benefit their own trading
positions," said Acting Assistant Attorney General Mythili Raman.
"The illegal manipulation of this cornerstone benchmark rate undermines the integrity of the markets."
In
May 2006, Thompson informed Robson that his net exposure for his
three-month fixes was 125 billion yen, and then emailed to ask him to
"sneak your 3m libor down a cheeky 1 or 2 bp" because "it will make a
bit of diff for me."
Robson then replied: "No prob mate I mark it low."
Libor,
or the London Interbank Offered Rate, is a global benchmark that is
calculated daily, using estimates from banks of their own interbank
rates.
It underpins the terms of $500 trillion of contracts from mortgages to the cost of corporate lending.
However,
the system has been found to be open to abuse, with some traders lying
about borrowing costs to boost trading positions or make their bank seem
more secure.
For almost six years between May 2005 and
January 2011, Rabobank allowed money market traders to manipulate Libor
submissions to benefit foreign currency trading positions, according to
prosecutors.
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