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Unfair trade: banker who took rap for Libor walks free
Unfair trade: banker who took rap for Libor walks free

Yahoo

time3 days ago

  • Yahoo

Unfair trade: banker who took rap for Libor walks free

'The first nine to 12 months of prison is survival. A sort of surreal out-of-body experience, almost like it's not happening to you. The moment I got my conviction overturned, it felt very similar.' In 2015, at the age of 35, the former City trader Tom Hayes was sentenced to 14 years in prison after being found guilty of manipulating Libor, which was the world's most widely used interest rate benchmark. Last week the Supreme Court overturned the ruling. Five judges unanimously found Hayes's conviction was unsafe and said that the history of his case raised serious concerns about the effectiveness of the criminal justice system and, in particular, the process of appeal. The quashing of Hayes's conviction and that of Carlo Palombo, a former Barclays trader, threatens to reopen a Pandora's box of recriminations that arose in the wake of the 2008 financial crisis, when banks and regulators were seeking to rebuild creditworthiness in the eyes of the public. It also calls into question the cases of seven other traders convicted of Libor rigging, four of whom have already said they intend to appeal following the Supreme Court's decision. Hayes says that every one of these convictions now 'needs to go'. Sitting in an office in Temple, wearing a T-shirt emblazoned with a quote from the crime drama The Gambler, it's evident that Hayes is worn out from the ordeal. Hayes got out in January 2021, but during the five and half years he spent in Belmarsh high-security prison, the ex-UBS trader underwent the end of his marriage, mental health struggles, a conversion to God and the pain of having to watch his son become a teenager through a piece of Perspex. Once released, he says it was the experience of watching Time, the hyper-realistic BBC TV series with Sean Bean depicting life inside, that made it all real again: 'That it made me sob once again as a free man is the greatest compliment I can pay to that show,' he says. Libor, or the London interbank offered rate, was a benchmark used to reflect the rates at which banks could borrow from each other. Every day, in order to calculate an average, 16 banks submitted answers to the question: 'At what rate could the bank borrow funds by asking for and accepting interbank offers in a reasonable market size just prior to 11am?' In 2012 the Serious Fraud Office (SFO) launched criminal investigations into whether traders were making higher or lower requests – colloquially known as 'low-balling' – for the benefit of the bank's commercial position. Hayes's alleged crime was to encourage his employer to make dishonest answers. His trial revolved around the question not of whether he had asked, but whether it was legal for him to have done so. He has argued that he was simply doing his job within the framework of what managers expected. In the febrile aftermath of the financial crisis, a scalp was required. In comments to parliament, Clive Efford MP said that traders' actions could be considered 'treason'. Mark Carney, governor of the Bank of England from 2013, called for harsher prison sentences for bankers found guilty of malfeasance. 'He knew that my trial was going on. It was hugely prejudicial,' says Hayes. 'I have questioned whether I did the right thing for my son ... I was on the edge of cooperating' More than £7bn was eventually paid out in fines by banks including Deutsche, UBS, Royal Bank of Scotland, Barclays and Citigroup – but it wasn't enough to settle the score. 'Institutions had a vested interest in settling early with the regulator and paying a fine. What that does is it potentially throws individuals under the bus… it cuts the knees out from under the defence,' says Ellen Gallagher, a lawyer who represented Peter Johnson, a banker who blew the whistle on low-balling at Barclays and ended up spending four years in jail. In some ways, it was widespread misunderstanding of Libor that felled Hayes and Palombo. This lack of expertise was revealed in particular by one of the witnesses called by the SFO for the prosecution of two Barclays traders. Saul Haydon Rowe, a supposed expert on Libor, admitted texting friends mid-trial to ask them basic questions. 'This case, in common with the case of Lucy Letby, had the real problem of so-called expert evidence,' says David Davis MP. He points to a finding in a 2022 case heard in the US Second Circuit Court of Appeals – which deals frequently with technical legal matters on Wall St – which found that there was no fraud if the submitted Libor rate was one that the bank could actually borrow at, regardless of motivation. The irony is that if Hayes had decided not to fight extradition to the US, he might have served less time – or never been convicted at all. 'I have many times questioned whether I did the right thing for my son, because I was on the edge of cooperating… I would have spent very little time in prison. I probably would have kept far more of my money. I'd have been in and out. My family unit might have stayed together, and I wouldn't have spent five and a half years away from my son.' The SFO, which was given special funding by the Treasury to pursue investigations, faces questions about how it carried them out. Politicians might do some soul searching too. 'The government subcontracted a great deal of the prosecutorial function to the banks and their lawyers, allowing them, in effect, to pick the victims and serve them up as scapegoats,' in Davis's opinion. Ultimately, the overturning of Hayes's case relied on a technicality. Jurors were told by the presiding judge that a set Libor rate would inherently not have been 'genuine or honest' if it was 'influenced by trading advantage'. This question, which should have been determined by a jury, was taken as a matter of law. To Hayes's annoyance, the five appeal judges said there was still 'ample evidence' that might have formed a basis for conviction. 'It frustrates me because I'd rather have had a retrial. That would have put that sentence to bed,' he claims. Photograph by Antonio Olmos/The Observer

Tom Hayes has industry ban dropped after rate-rigging appeal
Tom Hayes has industry ban dropped after rate-rigging appeal

Times

time5 days ago

  • Business
  • Times

Tom Hayes has industry ban dropped after rate-rigging appeal

Britain's financial regulator has ended its attempt to ban Tom Hayes from working in the financial services industry after the Supreme Court overturned a conviction of the former star trader associated with the Libor rigging scandal. The Financial Conduct Authority said on Friday that it would take no further action against Hayes, 45, the first trader ever jailed for interest rate rigging. The regulator also said that it would end a trading ban it previously imposed on Carlo Palombo, 46, a former Barclays trader who was separately sent to prison in 2019 following a trial for manipulating Euribor, another rate. Both former traders had their convictions overturned this week. • Love, Libor and loss: the Kafkaesque ordeal of Tom Hayes The UK Supreme Court unanimously allowed Hayes's appeal on Wednesday, quashing his 2015 conviction of eight counts of conspiracy to defraud by manipulating Libor, a now-defunct benchmark interest rate. Hayes, a former star trader at UBS and Citigroup, became the face of the affair when in 2015 he was sentenced to 14 years, reduced to 11 on appeal, after being convicted of rigging Libor. He spent about five and a half years in prison and had fought over the past decade to clear his name. Palombo was sentenced to four years in 2019 for manipulating Euribor and left prison in 2021. 'I always believed that it would happen,' Hayes said after the Supreme Court overturned his conviction. 'This wasn't a gamble for me.' The court quashed the conviction after deciding that the judge who presided over his trial misdirected the jury about a central element of the case. The judge had incorrectly said the jury was not allowed to consider commercial interests in the submissions, the Supreme Court said, and that 'undermined the fairness of the trial'. The traders argued that they were wrongly prosecuted for what were normal commercial practices in order to appease public anger towards the banking system over the 2008 financial crisis. The FCA had sought to ban Hayes from trading but the ban was postponed after the regulator was ordered by the Upper Tribunal to stay its move. The regulator said it was ending action against Hayes and overturning a ban on Palombo because the overturned convictions formed the basis upon which the regulator took its action.

Tom Hayes' Industry Ban Dropped by FCA After UK Conviction Tossed
Tom Hayes' Industry Ban Dropped by FCA After UK Conviction Tossed

Bloomberg

time5 days ago

  • Business
  • Bloomberg

Tom Hayes' Industry Ban Dropped by FCA After UK Conviction Tossed

The UK Financial Conduct Authority dropped an attempt to ban former Libor trader Tom Hayes from the banking industry days after the country's top court overturned his criminal conviction. In a statement Friday, the FCA said that the conviction had formed the basis of its civil case against Hayes. The regulator also said it was dropping a similar suit against Carlo Palombo, another trader whose conviction was overturned along with Hayes'.

UK regulator drops cases against Libor scandal traders after court ruling
UK regulator drops cases against Libor scandal traders after court ruling

Reuters

time5 days ago

  • Business
  • Reuters

UK regulator drops cases against Libor scandal traders after court ruling

July 25 (Reuters) - Britain's financial regulator said on Friday that it was dropping proceedings against Tom Hayes and revoking Carlo Palombo's ban from the financial service industry, after the country's top court overturned convictions of both former traders. Hayes, the first trader ever jailed for interest rate rigging, became the face of the global Libor scandal. He challenged his conviction at the Supreme Court, along with Palombo, a former Barclays trader (BARC.L), opens new tab who was found guilty in 2019 of manipulating Euribor, Libor's euro equivalent. The Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) said it would take no further action against either individual.

Ex-trader Tom Hayes wins UK court appeal to overturn rate-rigging conviction
Ex-trader Tom Hayes wins UK court appeal to overturn rate-rigging conviction

Free Malaysia Today

time6 days ago

  • Business
  • Free Malaysia Today

Ex-trader Tom Hayes wins UK court appeal to overturn rate-rigging conviction

Tom Hayes had initially received a 14-year prison sentence, later reduced to 11 years on appeal. (EPA Images pic) LONDON : Tom Hayes, the first trader ever jailed for interest rate rigging, had his conviction overturned by Britain's top court today after a years-long fight to clear his name. The UK Supreme Court unanimously allowed Hayes' appeal, overturning his 2015 conviction of eight counts of conspiracy to defraud by manipulating Libor, a now-defunct benchmark interest rate. Hayes had initially received a 14-year prison sentence, later reduced to 11 years on appeal. He served five and a half years before being released on licence in 2021. A former star Citigroup and UBS trader, Hayes became the face of the global Libor scandal and challenged his conviction during three days of hearings at the UK Supreme Court along with Carlo Palombo, 46, a former Barclays trader who was found guilty in 2019 of skewing Libor's euro equivalent, Euribor. The court also quashed Palombo's conviction. He was given a four-year sentence in 2019. Hayes and Palombo had argued that their convictions depended on a definition of Libor and Euribor which assumes there is an absolute legal bar on a bank's commercial interests being taken into account when setting rates. The Libor rate, phased out in 2023, was designed to reflect banks' short-term funding costs and based on daily estimates from a group of banks as to how much they would expect to pay to borrow funds from each other for a range of currencies and periods. Hayes' challenge at the Supreme Court followed a landmark US court decision in 2022 which overturned the Libor rigging convictions of two former Deutsche Bank traders.

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