Yorkshire Post

Probe call as Bank linked to Libor rate scandal

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POLITICIAN­S ARE calling for a Government probe following reports that the Bank of England may have been involved in Libor manipulati­on.

The BBC’s Panorama programme claims to have uncovered a 2008 recording between a senior Barclays manager and its Libor submitter that suggests the Bank was exerting pressure on lenders to lowball the rate.

Mark Dearlove, a senior manager at Barclays, reportedly told the submitter that he needed to lower his Libor rate, saying: “The bottom line is you’re going to absolutely hate this ... but we’ve had some very serious pressure from the UK government and the Bank of England about pushing our Libors lower.”

Libor – the London Interbank Offered Rate – is the rate at which banks lend to each other, and is used to set millions of pounds worth of financial deals including car loans and mortgages.

It is also used in complex overseas financial transactio­ns.

The BBC said the recordings raise questions about evidence given by former Barclays boss Bob Diamond and Paul Tucker, who was the central bank’s deputy governor, to the Treasury Select Committee in 2012, regarding a call between the two men in 2008.

Mr Diamond maintained that an email note based on that conversati­on, which discussed how Barclays had consistent­ly been near the top end of Libor pricing, was not an instructio­n to artificial­ly lower Barclays’ rate. He quit Barclays nearly a week after the bank’s £290m Libor-rigging settlement in 2012.

A Bank of England spokespers­on said: “Libor and other global benchmarks were not regulated in the UK or elsewhere during the period in question. Nonetheles­s, the Bank of England has been assisting the SFO’s (Serious Fraud Office) criminal investigat­ions into Libor manipulati­on by employees at commercial banks and brokers by providing, on a voluntary basis, documents and records requested by the SFO.”

The spokespers­on said that while the Bank is “committed” to publishing material related to the investigat­ion when appropriat­e, it is “not in a position” to do so until the SFO lays that investigat­ion to rest.

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