Google – AFP, 18 Sep 2013
A chart at
the Frankfurt stock exchange on September 12, 2011
shows the level of the DAX
index (AFP/File, Daniel Roland)
|
BRUSSELS —
The European Commission unveiled plans Wednesday to closely regulate key
financial benchmarks used globally to price loans after a rate-rigging scandal
blew the lid off the clubby world of banking.
"Today's
proposals will ensure for the first time that all benchmark providers have to
be authorised and supervised; they will enhance transparency and tackle
conflicts of interest," EU Financial Markets Commissioner Michel Barnier
said in a statement.
The
measures cover not only the scandal-hit Libor, the flagship London reference
rate used all over the world to set the rate banks, businesses and individuals
pay to borrow money, but also "a broad variety" of benchmarks used in
commodity, energy and derivatives markets.
Michel Barnier gives a press
conference on September 18,
2013 at EU headquarters in
Brussels (AFP, John Thys)
|
"Benchmarks
are at the heart of the financial system: they are critical for our markets as
well as the mortgages and savings of millions of our citizens, yet until now
they have been largely unregulated and unsupervised," Barnier said.
Libor is
calculated daily, using trade quotes and estimates from banks of their own cost
of borrowing on the interbank market. The rate affects the pricing of more than
$300-trillion of contracts across the world, according to regulators.
But the
insular world of Libor imploded in 2012, undermined by revelations that major
banks, among them Barclays, Royal Bank of Scotland and UBS, had manipulated
Libor to their advantage, especially during the turmoil and aftermath of the
2008 global financial crisis.
"Certain
banks lied on their rates and that is why you have heard me for the past three
and a half years evoke the need to bring morals and ethics back into
banking," Barnier said at a news conference.
Some of
these manipulations were made before the financial crisis, he added, "so
that bankers could make more money."
Martin Wheatley in London on September
28, 2012 unveils the results of a British
probe into Libor (AFP/File, Carl Court)
|
Missing
from the proposals was an idea floated earlier this year that the fixing of
Libor would be moved to Paris for oversight by ESMA.
But Britain
balked at this plan and in July announced that NYSE Euronext, the owner of the
New York Stock Exchange, would take over management of Libor out of London
early next year.
And jealous
to preserve its standing in the global financial markets, Britain will also be
relieved that national oversight is spared.
London
believes its own reforms of the LIBOR have cleaned up the system.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.