Libor Fixing Scandal: UBS Faces $1 Billion Fine

December 13, 2012 4:14 PM GMT

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(Photo: Lianna Brinded)
(Photo: Lianna Brinded)

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Swiss bank UBS faces a combined fine of about $1 billion (£620m, euros 765m)  to settle charges of rigging the Libor interest rate benchmark early next week, a person familiar with the situation.

"The global settlement is about $1 billion. It's expected early next week, on Monday or Tuesday," the source said.

UBS declined to comment.

The news follows the arrest of three men have been arrested by the Serious Fraud Office as part of its probe into allegations of Libor fixing at some of Britain's biggest banks.

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Sky News reported one of the men as being a former UBS trader.

The men, aged 33, 41 and 47, were all taken to a London police station for interviews, the watchdog said on its website.

One arrest was made in Surrey and two were in Essex.

A Serious Fraud Office spokesman declined further comment.

Libor fixing at Barclays Bank was exposed by a Financial Services Authority (FSA) investigation which published its results in June.

Barclays traders and rate-submitters were found to be conspiring to misreport the interest rates at which they can borrow funds in the inter-bank lending market so as to manipulate the headline Libor rate and gain a financial advantage on their trading positions.

Emails released at the time showed the close relationships between some of the traders and submitters, with promises of coffees and wine for carrying out dodgy requests.

"Done for you, big boy," came one submitter's reply after obliging a trader.

As a result of the scandal, which also implicated the Bank of England's deputy governor Paul Tucker but who denied knowledge of Libor fixing, Barclays chief executive Bob Diamond quit.

Barclays was also slapped with a £290m fine - the City of London's biggest ever.

(Reporting by Huw Jones, editing by Steve Slater)

Copyright 2012 Thomson Reuters UK. All rights reserved.
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