AMSTERDAM
- 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 manipulation
of key interest rates.
The
banks that received fines, which include JPMorgan, Citigroup and Deutsche Bank,
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.
Switzerland's
UBS bank escaped a whopping 2.5 billion-euro fine only because it informed the
Commission, the EU's executive arm, of a cartel's existence and co-operated
with the subsequent investigation.
"We
want to send a clear message that we are determined to find and punish these
cartels," competition commissioner Joaquin Almunia said Wednesday.
The
Commission 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.
The
banks regularly contribute data to help compile market interest rates, which
are then used as benchmarks for loans in the wider economy. The banks are
thought to have profited by co-operating to fix the rates higher or lower
depending on whether they — or their clients — held investments in derivatives
that stood to gain.
In
a 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. Royal Bank
of Scotland was fined 131 million euros.
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 fines it deems likely from regulators.
Professor
Martin Hellmich of the Frankfurt School of Finance & Management said it was
impossible to determine who was hurt by the rate-fixing based on the limited
amount of detail the Commission has so far released.
He
said the fines appeared to have been levied mostly on the basis of market
share, and their size was likely determined in part by pragmatism: "They
have to be big in order to be meaningful to these banks, but they shouldn't be
so high as to bring the banks into trouble," he said.
Barclays
escaped a 690 million-euro fine because it was the bank that notified the
Commission of the euro cartel's existence, while JPMorgan, HSBC and Credit
Agricole denied wrongdoing.
"This
is not the end of the story," Almunia said. The commission is also
investigating potential bank cartels in the credit default swaps and foreign
exchange markets.
A
second cartel fined by the Commission on Wednesday operated from 2007 to 2010
and focused on derivatives based on the Japanese yen. The largest fines went to
RBS and Deutsche Bank, 260 million euros each, while UBS received immunity from
fines amounting to 2.5 billion euros.
RBS,
which has previously been fined by the U.S. and British authorities in
rate-fixing cases, was apologetic.
"The
RBS board and new management team condemn the behaviour of the individuals who
were involved in these activities," said Chairman Philip Hampton.
"There is no place for it at RBS."
The Canadian Press
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