AP/ December 19, 2012, 1:59 AM

UBS to pay $1.5B in fines for LIBOR rate manipulation

Updated 4:30 a.m.

GENEVA Switzerland's UBS AG agreed Wednesday to pay some $1.5 billion in fines to international regulators following a probe into the rigging of a key global interest rate.

In admitting to fraud, Switzerland's largest bank became the second bank, after Britain's Barclays PLC, to settle over the rate-rigging scandal. The fine, which will be paid to authorities in the U.S., Britain and Switzerland, also comes just over a week after HSBC PLC agreed to pay nearly $2 billion for alleged money laundering.

The settlement caps a tough year for UBS and the reputation of the global banking industry. As well as being ensnared in the industry-wide investigation into alleged manipulations of the benchmark LIBOR interest rate, short for London interbank offered rate, UBS has seen its reputation suffer in a London trial into a multibillion dollar trading scandal and ongoing tax evasion probes.

As a result of the fines, litigation, unwinding of real estate investments, restructuring and other costs, UBS said it expects to post a fourth quarter net loss of between $2.2-2.7 billion.

Nevertheless, the Zurich-based bank maintained that it "remains one of the best capitalized banks in the world."

Other banks are expected to be fined for their involvement in the LIBOR scandal. LIBOR, which is a self-policing system and relies on information that global banks submit to a British banking authority, is important because it is used to set the interest rates on trillions of dollars in contracts around the world, including mortgages and credit cards.

UBS characterized the probes as "industry-wide investigations into the setting of certain benchmark rates across a range of currencies."

The UBS penalty is more than triple the $450 million in fines imposed by American and British regulators in June on Barclays for submitting false information between 2005 and 2009 to manipulate the LIBOR rates. Those fines exposed a scandal that led to the departure of Chief Executive Bob Diamond and the announcement that Chairman Marcus Agius would step down at the end of the year.

In accepting the fines, UBS said some of its employees tried to rig the LIBOR rate in several currencies, but that its Japan unit, where much of the manipulation took place, entered a plea to one count of wire fraud in an agreement with the U.S. Justice Department.

UBS said some of its personnel had "engaged in efforts to manipulate submissions for certain benchmark rates to benefit trading positions" and that some employees had "colluded with employees at other banks and cash brokers to influence certain benchmark rates to benefit their trading positions."

UBS added that "inappropriate directions" had been submitted that were "in part motivated by a desire to avoid unfair and negative market and media perceptions during the financial crisis."

Britain's financial regulator called the misconduct by UBS "extensive and broad" with the rate-fixing carried out from UBS offices in London and Zurich.

Different desks were responsible for different rate submissions. At least 2,000 requests for inappropriate submissions were documented -- an unquantifiable number of oral requests, which by their nature would not be documented, were also made, the U.K.'s Financial Services Authority said.

"Manipulation was also discussed in internal open chat forums and group emails, and was widely known," the FSA said. "At least 45 individuals including traders, managers and senior managers were involved in, or aware of, the practice of attempting to influence submissions."

Sergio Ermotti, who was appointed CEO of UBS AG in November 2012 in the wake of a major trading scandal, said the misconduct does not reflect the bank's values or standards.

"We deeply regret this inappropriate and unethical behavior. No amount of profit is more important than the reputation of the firm, and we are committed to doing business with integrity," he said.

With more than $2.4 trillion in invested assets, UBS is one of the world's largest managers of private wealth assets. At last count, the bank had 63,745 employees in 57 countries. It has said it aims for a headcount of 54,000 in 2015.

Along with Credit Suisse, the second-largest Swiss bank, UBS is on the list of the 29 "global systemically important banks" that the Basel, Switzerland-based Bank for International Settlements, the central bank for central banks, considers too big to fail.

It's not the first time that UBS has fallen afoul of regulators. Notably, in 2009, U.S. authorities fined UBS $780 million in 2009 for helping U.S. citizens avoid paying taxes.

The U.S. government has since been pushing Switzerland to loosen its rules on banking secrecy and has been trying to shed its image as a tax haven, signing deals with the United States, Germany and Britain to provide greater assistance to foreign tax authorities seeking information on their citizens' accounts.

In April, Ermotti called Switzerland's tax disputes with the United States and some European nations "an economic war" putting thousands of jobs at risk.

And in September 2011, the bank announced more than $2 billion in losses and blamed a 32-year-old rogue trader, Kweku Adoboli, at its London office for Britain's biggest-ever fraud at a bank.

Britain's financial regulator fined UBS, saying its internal controls were inadequate to prevent Adoboli, a relatively inexperienced trader, from making vast and risky bets. Adoboli has been sentenced to seven years in prison.

© 2012 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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Fed-Up_Patriot says:
Once again - why is NOBODY going to jail. The fine is nice - but that money needs to go to the victims. Penalizing the company with fines only hurts the investors - the perpetrators have once again been given the green light to commit more fraud.. People MUST GO TO JAIL. Also the banks licensing should be in question. Fraud and market rigging are too series and too damaging to the economy to allow the bank to go on. If a small bank did this - rest assured executives would GO TO JAIL and the banks licensing would be in question.
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ammo17 says:
with all the fines given out to these banks the country should be in the black.where does all these monies and fines go to if they collect them?these people will never go to jail because they tell our politicians how to run the country.our government is bought and sold like a prostitute being pimped by wall st.and the big banks and mortgage companies,have we all been sleeping for the past four years.
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Wingsfan1983 says:
Not enough. Crimal charges needed to be filed.
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TJphoto says:
A Financial Institution tries to rig the system?-Shocking! Let's not forget that behind the scenes in Washington our own financial industry is trying to repeal The Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act. They are throwing a boatload of money at a Congress that says they can't be bought. If that's the case why is the Federal Cap on interest rates Credit Card Companies set at 32% Mr Speaker, will you stand before the cameras and say that's right?
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Walter L. Johnson says:
Fines of $1.5 billion are little more than a slap on the wrist to banks than manipulated the LIBOR rate and do nothing to compensate borrowers who paid higher interest rates due to some of the LIBOR manipulations, which aqlso could have been done for other criminal purposes such as futures trading on interest rates.

$1.5 billion is less than 3 quarters of USB net income or looked at another way only less than one third of 2011 net income, which was no doubt enhanced by the falsified LIBOR rates.
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robert1129 says:
Fine, even ones as large as this, mean nothing to white collar types. What is desperately needed are fines and hard prision time. Once a few of these crooks go to jail, that will be a very powerful deterant.
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Walter L. Johnson replies:
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I agree the people responsible should all be sentenced to prison terms. The way this happens is that commonly people are honest, but they don't fill the personal obligation for honesty at work, expecially when telling the truth might risk their job. The pain of getting caught must be severe enough to set an example for all the smaller thefts by deception for all those involved. Their personal motivation was money, so let them lose if for a few years and not be able to keep what they gained from dishonesty.
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squaredance says:
The fine works out to about one-tenth of a percent of the company's on-hand assets.

In layman's terms, lets say the police catch you stealing a wad of cash. They open your wallet to find $100 in it. They ask you how much of that you stole, you say you don't know.

You are fined 10 cents for your crime. You get to keep the remainder $99.90 in your wallet. That is the comparison.

Clearly rate manipulation can be quite a profitable enterprise.
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marychgo says:
Given the HUGE volume of transactions based on LIBOR, I'm not at all sure $1.5 billion is ENOUGH...and I'm CERTAIN that individuals within UBS (and the other banks whose filings affected LIBOR during this period!) SHOULD be tried for CRIMES. I know it's hard to prove fraud, but LIBOR-fixing seems as close to a slam dunk as ANY fraud prosecution could be!
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