Rechtszaken werpen donkere schaduwen over Liborbanken
Terwijl banken de opgelegde boetes voor manipulatie van de interbancaire
Liborrente reeds van zich af lijken te borstelen, beginnen beleggers
zich zorgen te maken over het opkomend tij van door ontevreden klanten
aangespannen civiele rechtszaken.
Lawsuits cast darker shadow over banks than Libor fines
(Reuters) - While banks
appear to be brushing off record fines for rigging interbank interest
rates, investors are starting to worry about a rising tide of civil
lawsuits from disgruntled customers.
UBS shares touched 18 month highs after U.S., Swiss and British regulators
on Wednesday fined the bank a near record $1.5 billion for fiddling
interest rates, the second regulatory fine for manipulating the London
interbank offered rate (Libor) and its euro equivalent Euribor.
But
the "big unknown" cost of repairing the damage caused by the fixing of
rates used as a benchmark for pricing trillions of dollars worth of
financial contracts is civil litigation, said Paras Anand, European
equities head at Fidelity Worldwide Investment.
"That is one thing at the back of our minds
that we have to be cognizant of," Anand said. Fidelity Worldwide holds
around 1.2 percent of UBS stock.
An early indication of the possible cost to the banking industry
came hours after UBS was fined when the U.S. federal watchdog estimated
mortgage lenders Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, which had to be bailed out
during the 2007/08 financial crisis, could have lost more than $3
billion as a result of Libor manipulation.
The watchdog urged the regulator to consider whether the losses warranted a lawsuit against the banks that set Libor.
Since
June, when the first fine for manipulation was levied on Britain's
Barclays, there have been a series of U.S. Libor-related claims.
Claims
have come from large investors, local governments like the city of
Baltimore, home owners claiming rate rigging made their mortgages more
expensive, and small U.S. banks that have filed lawsuits accusing their
big cousins of collusion.
In
August, New York lawyer Brian Murray filed a lawsuit on behalf of
investors in Alaska - as well as investors in Wyoming, North Dakota and
about 20 other states - accusing banks of rigging Libor.
In
Britain, the Financial Services Authority (FSA) has said Libor fiddling
could have caused "serious harm" to other market participants. Lawyers,
who are starting to circulate guides to Libor litigation, say potential
claims are trickling in.
"I think
there are going to be a large number of claims - and, more importantly,
a small number of those will be incredibly high-value claims," said Ali
Akram, senior lawyer at UK firm Lex Law.
LONG ROAD
The
manipulation of Libor casts doubt on every contract that has used it as
a reference point, including commercial borrowers with loans linked to
Libor, parties to interest rate derivatives such as swaps, investors
holding portfolios of floating rate securities, guarantors of borrowing
linked to Libor and savers being paid a rate of interest referencing
Libor.
There are also potential claims by shareholders for any falls in stock prices as the scandal escalates.
Lawyers
believe Libor manipulation has caused extensive losses to investors and
borrowers worldwide. The scale of payouts could run into tens of
billions of dollars, analysts estimate.
But
as Libor rates are calculated by averaging out bank submissions and
stripping out the highest and lowers outliers, calculating losses and
proving individual bank conduct caused a loss can be complex.
"We're
at the beginning of a long road," said Stephen Rosen, a lawyer for UK
firm Collyer Bristow, which has a handful of clients eyeing
Libor-related claims.
To date, just
one case has been brought in Britain against Barclays by Guardian Care
Homes, a residential care home operator. It is suing for up to 37
million pounds ($60 million) over the alleged mis-selling of interest
rate hedging products that were based on Libor rates.
ECONOMIC SPILLOVER
But the scandal is escalating.
Britain's
RBS is also expecting to be fined by next February, while more than a
dozen banks such as Deutsche Bank, Citigroup, J.P. Morgan and HSBC
remain under the spotlight as authorities in Europe, Japan and North America probe the Libor scandal.
Barclays, Citi,
J.P. Morgan, Deutsche Bank, HSBC, Lloyds, Rabobank and RBS have all
said in previous releases that they are subject to civil or private
lawsuits filed in the United States over Libor.
Barclays
said the first class action lawsuit filed was in April 2011, and the
complaints are similar and seek an unspecified amount of damages.
Regulators
and politicians are mindful of the impact of lawsuits on economic
recovery and stability, some experts say, coming on top of the fines.
While UBS was fined three times more than Barclays, fears of spiraling
settlements could be overdone as authorities seek to balance the
fallout.
"There will be a round of
going through pain before politicians get scared and step in ... At some
time politicians and regulators will wake up and see that it will hit
the economy," said Chirantan Barua, a senior banks analyst at Bernstein Research.
Baruna
estimated about 15-20 banks could be implicated in the Libor
manipulation once global investigations are completed, which could give
claimants plenty of fodder for lawsuits.
(Additional reporting by Sinead Cruise and Costas Pitas; Editing by Will Waterman)
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