Compliance
Three Big Banks To Pay Out Over $132 Million To Settle Libor Case

To date, rate rigging has resulted in billions of dollars of regulatory fines being handed out to banks worldwide.
Citigroup, Deutsche Bank and
HSBC have agreed to pay a
combined $132 million fine to settle a US lawsuit filed by future
traders who accused them of rigging Libor, the inter-bank lending
benchmark rate.
Citigroup, Deutsche Bank and HSBC will pay $33.4 million, $80
million and $18.5 million, respectively. The money would go to
proposed classes comprising of anyone who traded in Eurodollar
futures on exchanges, including but not limited to the Chicago
Mercantile Exchange, between January 1, 2003 and May 31, 2011,
according to a court filing.
The London Interbank Offered Rate, or Libor, is used by banks to
set rates on credit card, mortgage, student loans and other
transactions, and to determine the cost of borrowing from each
other. Recent scandals about how the rate was rigged, leading to
fines and punishments for a raft of banks, have led to the UK's
financial regulator to call for an overhaul. A new way of setting
such a rate could take shape as soon as 2021. There have
been calls for alternatives to the LIBOR system, with the idea of
basing interest rates on transactions rather than bankers’
judgements.