Showing posts with label Libor rate. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Libor rate. Show all posts

Thursday, 13 March 2014

EVERYBODY KNOWS THE DEAL IS ROTTEN . . .


It's Friday. It's financial. It's Friday Financial with JULIAN SAYER.

They're not bankers, they're gamblers and they are playing with a rigged deck of cards. Worse still they're playing with our money. Read on for the low down on how the banksters are fixing everything.


LOADED DICE IN THE WORLD CASINO!

As I have explained previously, banking and finance is at the very heart of this system we live in. It promotes economic growth and allows companies to conduct their business around the world, in a fair and honest way. Or so the story goes? Well that's alright then isn't it? But what if I told you that the whole system is rigged?

The entire financial world is governed by the central banks who oversee the large investment banks that make the markets of finance and commodities. There has always been rumours of rigging within the financial markets, but it is only just becoming clear what a toxic industry it is. It seems whatever the market is, they will fix it.

Conspiracy theorists of the world, we sceptics owe you an apology. You were right. The players may be a little different, but your basic premise is correct: The world is a rigged game. We found this out in recent months, when a series of related corruption stories spilled out of the financial sector, suggesting the world's largest banks may be fixing the prices of, well, just about everything.

Currency trading is the latest addition to the "rigged" column, here is a summary of the known market manipulation scandals (because it can be problematic keeping track of them all by now)

Libor - interest rates
ISDAfix - swaps
Platts - oil prices
WM/Reuters - FX
High-Frequency Trading - equities
Aluminium
Energy.

The latest to hit the headlines is the foreign exchange markets and this one is particularly troublesome because the Bank of England seems to have known about it for some time. A fair review of the foreign exchange scandal can be found here


The principal charges in this allege that currency traders at some banks made rigged trades designed to lose money — then took cash kickbacks from co-conspirators who made money on the deals. Yes, it's very easy to understand.  There's a lot of money involved and very, very few consequences.  If power corrupts then absolute power corrupts absolutely.