Arab Times

Australia govt cracks down on rate riggers

-

SYDNEY, Oct 4, (AFP): Manipulati­ng financial benchmarks will become a criminal offence in Australia, the government announced Tuesday, as the nation’s largest lender defended its huge profits in a grilling by lawmakers over its practices.

Treasurer Scott Morrison said the tough new rules would “ensure that past egregious conduct by the banks in manipulati­ng benchmarks is prevented in the future”. Criminal penalties, including jail time, could be imposed for manipulati­on of equity indexes and Treasury Bond Futures settlement prices.

They would also apply to bank bill swap rates (BBSW), which are used to set the price of financial products such as bonds, loans and derivative­s.

By providing false informatio­n to help set the BBSW, banks could potentiall­y make millions in profits.

Australia’s corporate regulator, like its counterpar­ts in the United States and Britain, has been probing multinatio­nal banks over benchmark interest rate-rigging.

Three of the country’s big four lenders — Westpac, ANZ, and National Australia Bank — are facing allegation­s they manipulate­d the interbank lending rate between 2010 and 2012. None of them has admitted any wrongdoing.

Package

“This package will ensure our regulatory regime is as modern and secure as any comparable regime found in equivalent foreign jurisdicti­ons, such as the United Kingdom and the European Union,” Morrison said of the new rules, which will come into effect in January 2018.

Criminal acts will include making false or misleading statements or engaging in dishonest conduct in relation to determinin­g a BBSW or other financial benchmark.

The new regulation­s came as Commonweal­th Bank chief executive Ian Narev Tuesday appeared before a parliament­ary committee for a new annual grilling of the country’s big banks designed to make them more accountabl­e.

The heads of Westpac, ANZ and NAB will answer questions by the House of Representa­tives economics committee later this week.

Narev said he welcomed the chance to “explain our decisions” and would listen carefully to suggestion­s about areas in which banks could improve.

He defended the bank’s huge net profits and executive pay, at a time when it was under scrutiny over the fees it charges customers and a failure to pass on in full interest rate cuts by the Reserve Bank of Australia.

“You can’t have a prosperous economy unless banks are strong,” he said.

“Our profits are at a level that will enable us to keep the confidence of global funders, who play a critical role in our ability to consistent­ly extend credit.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait