About a-team Marketing Services
The knowledge platform for the financial technology industry
The knowledge platform for the financial technology industry

A-Team Insight Blogs

Talking Intelligent Trading with Sarah Underwood: The Scapegoat of the Libor Scandal

Subscribe to our newsletter

The conviction of former UBS and Citigroup trader Tom Hayes on eight counts of conspiring to rig the Libor benchmark and the handing down of a 14-year jail sentence hit the headlines big time. The judge said Hayes was the centre of the conspiracy, the Serious Fraud Office acting as prosecutor said he was motivated by greed, the defence said he simply wanted to do a good job, and comments from market participants suggested he has been made a scapegoat.

In some respects they are all right, but the suggestion that Hayes has been made a scapegoat needs a little more attention. Like Navinder Singh Sarao, the trader blamed for the 2010 Flash Crash, Hayes cannot be held entirely responsible for the benchmark rigging and, indeed, trials against some of his alleged co-conspirators are due to start late this year and early next. What seems to be missing is any acknowledgement from the banks that Hayes worked for that they knew what he was doing, suspected malfeasance, or tacitly condoned his activities.

This information is unlikely to be volunteered, and it is possible that the banks didn’t know what Hayes was doing, but it begs the far larger question of whether banks are in control of their traders and the data contributions that are made to benchmarks such as Libor. At a basic level, banks would no doubt argue that they are in control of activities within their infrastructure, but the conviction of Hayes, the first individual to be charged with Libor rigging, and the multi-billion dollar fines already meted out by regulators to banks found to have manipulated benchmarks paints a very different picture.

During a recent A-Team webinar, Bracing for the Wave – or Sailing Ahead of it? Reducing Risk through Benchmark Data Controls – you can listen to the webinar here , we talked to Professor Michael Mainelli, Executive Chairman of Z/Yen Group and an expert on Libor. He described the importance of the benchmark, which by the time the scandal broke in 2012 had about $300 trillion worth of contracts tied to it, but also the failure of regulators that were notified of benchmark rigging as early as 2005 to take any action until 2012.

A white paper by Skyler, Getting a Grip on Benchmark Contributions – you can read more here – also tells the story of the scandal, the fines imposed on banks and the initial regulatory response outlining principles for benchmark setting and guidelines for participating banks’ data contribution processes, including methodologies, governance and responsibility for enforcing controls over the contribution process. Since the Skyler report was published late in 2013, the European Commission has continued to push forward with benchmark regulation and although it is not yet final or effective, it is expected to require best practices around bank contributed data, including strong controls and an audit trail. The aim of the regulation is to make benchmarks more reliable and less at risk of manipulation. The outcome will be pressure on banks to understand and account for not only data contributions, but also the actions of their employees.

All a little too late for Hayes, but a clear indication that benchmark rigging is not the preserve of individuals, but a much broader malaise that banks and regulators have only recently chosen to investigate with any rigour.

Subscribe to our newsletter

Related content

WEBINAR

Recorded Webinar: How to automate entity data management and due diligence to ensure efficiency, accuracy and compliance

Requesting, gathering, analysing and monitoring customer, vendor and partner entity data is time consuming, and often a tedious manual process. This can slow down customer relationships and expose financial institutions to risk from inaccurate, incomplete or outdated data – but there are solutions to these problems. This webinar will consider the challenges of sourcing and...

BLOG

Banks’ PRIIPS Headache Set to Intensify as Capital Markets Union Regulation Ramps Up

By Kifaya Belkaaloul, head of regulatory at NeoXam. Over the past decade, the European Union has rolled out a host of new regulations aimed at fostering more competitive capital markets and mobilising private investment towards critical goals including the digital transition and climate emergency. One of the EU’s core levers for enacting change has been...

EVENT

RegTech Summit New York

Now in its 8th year, the RegTech Summit in New York will bring together the regtech ecosystem to explore how the North American capital markets financial industry can leverage technology to drive innovation, cut costs and support regulatory change.

GUIDE

Regulatory Data Handbook 2023 – Eleventh Edition

Welcome to the eleventh edition of A-Team Group’s Regulatory Data Handbook, a popular publication that covers new regulations in capital markets, tracks regulatory change, and provides advice on the data, data management and implementation requirements of more than 30 regulations across UK, European, US and Asia-Pacific capital markets. This edition of the handbook includes new...