Made-In-London Scandals Risk City’s Reputation As
Finance Center
By Kevin
Crowley and Ambereen Choudhury - Jul 6, 2012 4:31 AM GMT+0530
JPMorgan Chase & Co.
(JPM)’s trading loss of at least $2 billion, the alleged $2.3
billion fraud atUBS
AG (UBSN) and the
investigation of at least a dozen banks including Barclays Plc (BARC)for
rigging global interest rates all happened in London in the last year. The effect is taking
a toll on the capital of a country enduring its first double-dip recession
since the 1970s, which fired more financial-services workers than any other
country in 2011 and again this year………………
Barclays Corrupts Libor and Maybe a Lot More
If Barclays Plc (BARC) would
lie about its borrowing costs, what else would it lie about?
That question gets to the
heart of the damage Barclays did to itself by submitting false numbers for
years to the British Bankers’ Association as part of the surveys used to set
the London
interbank offered rate, the benchmark for $360 trillion of financial
instruments globally. The most important asset any bank has is trust --
especially when it comes to the figures on its own financial statements.
Whatever credibility Barclays had, it’s been poured down the drain like last
night’s suds. …………………http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-07-05/barclays-corrupts-libor-and-maybe-a-lot-more.html
Diamond Would Be Catch For Investment, Private
Equity
By Carol Hymowitz and
Ambereen Choudhury - Jul 4, 2012 12:30 PM GMT+0530
If Robert Diamond can’t recover in banking after resigning
as Barclays Plc (BARC)’s chief executive officer amid the firm’s
record regulatory fines, he would still be a sought-after prospect in another
field: investment funds.
Diamond, 60, could easily
start a new career at a private- equity firm or hedge fund, according to
executive recruiters in the U.S.
and the U.K.
It’s a path worn by ousted heads of financial firms including former Fannie Mae
CEO Daniel Mudd. Diamond’s chance of getting another job
leading a big, publicly traded bank is slim, the recruiters said.
“Private equity will snap him up because they’re not
regulated by the same rules as banks, and Diamond’s got the money and
experience to help them buy and run financial institutions,” said Pat Cook, who
heads search firm Cook & Co. in Bronxville,New
York. “I don’t
think a public company will touch him with a 10-foot pole,” she said
Diamond stepped down from Britain ’s second-biggest bank yesterday amid
mounting political furor over its 290 million- pound ($455 million) settlement
of U.K. and U.S. probes into attempting rigging of the London and euro interbank offered rates. He
joins at least two dozen top executives at the world’s largest financial firms
who’ve vacated corner offices following losses or accusations of mismanagement
since 2007.
Mudd, 53, who was
dismissed from Fannie Mae when the government seized control of
the mortgage-finance firm, went on to lead New York-based private-equity and
hedge-fund manager Fortress Investment Group LLC. He left that post in January
amid a government lawsuit stemming from his Fannie Mae tenure.………….
`A Lot More To
Come Out' On Libor Rigging, Skinner Says (Video)
Jul 5, 2012 5:37 AM GMT+0530
Chris Skinner, chairman of
the Financial Services Club and chief executive officer of Balatro Ltd., talks
about Barclays Plc (BARC) Chief
Executive Officer Robert Diamond's testimony yesterday.
Barclays, the U.K. ’s
second-largest bank by assets, was fined a record 290 million pounds ($453
million) on June 25 for rigging Libor, a global benchmark. Lawmakers sought to
determine precisely what Diamond, 60, knew about the affair. Skinner speaks
with Susan Li on Bloomberg Television's "First Up." (Source:
Bloomberg) http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-07-05/-a-lot-more-to-come-out-on-libor-rigging-skinner-says-video-.html