LIBOR fallout: EU may criminalize rate-rigging

CBS/iStockphoto
(AP) BRUSSELS - The European Union proposed Wednesday to make manipulating key global interest rates a criminal offence.
European Commission vice president Viviane Reding said public confidence in the financial sector had nose-dived after the latest revelations about manipulations by banks of key lending rates, such as the London interbank offered rate, or LIBOR.
The London rate and the related European interbank offered rate (EURIBOR) are benchmarks for over $500 trillion in global contracts, including loans and mortgages.
Barclays CEO Bob Diamond resigns amid rate-fixing scandal
LIBOR 101: Why you should care
Reding said EU action "was needed to put an end to criminal activity in the banking sector and criminal law can serve as a strong deterrent."
The EU did not propose what specific sanctions rate-rigging would take, saying that would be up to member states.
The legislative proposal comes after Britain's Barclays bank admitted last month that it had submitted false information to keep the rate low. The bank agreed to pay a $453 million fine.
A number of major banks, including Citigroup and JPMorgan Chase, are also being investigated.
The EU has expressed serious concerns about the impact of false submissions of the interbank lending rates, equating it with insider-dealing and market manipulation
Michel Barnier, the European commissioner responsible for the internal market, said the EU's executive commission wanted to make sure that "outrages" such as the abuse of the LIBOR system are clearly prohibited.
"That is why I have discussed this with the European Parliament and acted quickly to amend our proposals, to ensure that manipulation of benchmarks is clearly illegal and is subject to criminal sanctions in all countries," he said.
Popular on MoneyWatch
- Reverse cell phone lookup service is free and simple
- Student loan defaults rising despite a way out
- Forbes names most powerful women 2013 10 Photos
- How to stop the mediocrity pandemic
- Rent the cake? Unusual tips to cut your wedding bill
- Top 10 professional life coaching myths
- How to organize your job hunt
- Top five 529 college plans















That's exactly the two different standards that the poor/middle verse rich are talking about.
The poor/middle class have to play by the rules and if they don't, they get thrown under the bus without hesitation.
The Rich on the other hand, have to enter lengthy debates on the matter to even decide if what they did can even be considered criminal. They are so used to breaking the rules they need committees to decide which ones they will admit too.
Unbelievable.