Roundtable Discussion; The Future of Mineral Sands. Watch the video here.

Less Ads, More Data, More Tools Register for FREE

Pin to quick picksBarclays Share News (BARC)

Share Price Information for Barclays (BARC)

London Stock Exchange
Share Price is delayed by 15 minutes
Get Live Data
Share Price: 202.35
Bid: 202.15
Ask: 202.25
Change: 1.35 (0.67%)
Spread: 0.10 (0.049%)
Open: 202.50
High: 203.40
Low: 199.58
Prev. Close: 201.00
BARC Live PriceLast checked at -

Watchlists are a member only feature

Login to your account

Alerts are a premium feature

Login to your account

Banks pay for past sins as US, Europe levy record fines

Tue, 24th Dec 2013 00:01

* U.S. fines, settlements over $40 billion

* European fines top $3 billion after EU Libor charge

* Banks suffer from Libor, Whale, U.S. mortgages settlements

* International co-operation by regulators adds pressure

By Steve Slater

LONDON, Dec 24 (Reuters) - U.S. and European regulatorsfined banks record amounts this year, imposing penalties andsettlements of more than $43 billion as authorities work moreclosely across borders to clean up the financial sector.

Banks in the United States and Europe are paying formisconduct that includes mis-selling U.S. mortgage bonds, rigging interest rates, and risky transactions such asJPMorgan's "London Whale" trades.

Regulators across the globe are making banks dig far deeperthan in the past for their misdeeds, led by U.S. authorities whohave long been more aggressive and imposed penalties more than10 times those meted out in Europe.

Fines and settlements paid to U.S. federal and stateauthorities have cost banks more than $40 billion this year,according to Reuters estimates, led by JPMorgan's record $13billion payout last month to a number of regulators formis-selling mortgage bonds.

European authorities handed out record fines of more than $3billion. The bulk was due to the European Union's anti-trustregulator's record 1.7 billion euro ($2.3 billion) fine thismonth against six financial firms for manipulating Libor andEuribor benchmark interest rates.

Two trends are clear: regulators are slapping bigger fineson banks in an effort to clean up standards; and regulatorsappear to be working better with each other as they all striveto get a piece of any payouts.

"The level of cooperation and coordination betweeninternational regulators is an increasing threat to regulatedfirms," said Richard Burger, partner at British law firm RPC.

"There is enormous political pressure on every singleregulator to be seen to be taking their pound of flesh whenthere is a regulatory failing that crosses borders," he said.

Many firms are also more willing to settle early to avoidpolitical or public backlash and there is more reporting ofmisconduct and whistleblowing, industry sources said.

That is likely to leave banks facing the prospect of morebig fines and settlements next year.

Banks still face scrutiny over a long list of issues in theUnited States, and when the European Commission imposed itsinterest rate settlement it vowed to keep probing rate-rigging.

RISING TIDE

Britain has fined banks and other financial firms andindividuals 472 million pounds ($772 million) this year, up 50percent from 2012 and the third consecutive record year.

Almost three-quarters of the payments stemmed frominvestigations conducted with overseas regulators, mainly in theUnited States, who also imposed hefty penalties.

Britain fined 45 firms or individuals, the lowest since2009, but the average payment jumped to 10.5 million pounds,almost double a year ago and nine times the average of 2011.

Tracey McDermott, the British regulator's head ofenforcement and financial crime, said firms had been told theyneeded to take a long term view about how to serve customers andmarkets and the fines levied were part of achieving that goal.

"The financial services industry has to move on from aculture where it rewards revenue generation above all else," shesaid.

Few other European countries levied fines. The Swissfinancial regulator brought in 6.1 million Swiss francs ($6.8million) from the disgorgement of profits from two cases, andthe Dutch Public Prosecutor fined Rabobank 70 million euros ($95million) alongside a settlement with U.S. and UK authorities forthe manipulation of Libor.

Rabobank's payouts showed how countries differ. The bankpaid out 774 million euros in fines - three-quarters sent toU.S. regulators, 16 percent sent to Britain and 9 percent wasfor its home regulator.

Payments in the United States are swelled by the largenumber of watchdogs involved, including national authoritiessuch as Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the National Credit UnionAdministration (NCUA) and the energy market regulator, as wellas individual states.

JPMorgan's mortgage bond settlement, for example, included a$2 billion civil penalty with the Justice Department, $1.4billion to the NCUA, $4 billion in relief for consumers, andpayouts to five states, including $299 million for Californiaand $20 million for Delaware.

Its U.S. rivals Bank of America and Wells Fargo have also paid out billions of dollars and Europeanrivals UBS, Deutsche Bank and Royal Bank ofScotland have also had hefty U.S. fines.

More News
10 Jan 2024 17:07

European shares end lower, with miners and travel stocks leading losses

Norway's Dec core inflation lower than expected

*

Read more
10 Jan 2024 13:00

Global activist investors pressed companies to sell or spin in 2023 as M&A dropped off

NEW YORK, Jan 10(Reuters) - "Sell" or "split" was the favorite word for activist investors across the world last year when their demands for companies to pursue some form of mergers and acquisition-related activity hit a new record and appeared in roughly half of their 2023 campaigns even as M&A activity dropped off, according to new data from Barclays.

Read more
9 Jan 2024 07:44

LONDON BRIEFING: B&M to declare special payout; strong start for Unite

(Alliance News) - Stocks in London are tipped for a solid start on Tuesday, following a strong performance on Wall Street and in Asian markets.

Read more
5 Jan 2024 09:50

IN BRIEF: Prudential to buy back 4 million shares to offset awards

Prudential PLC - London-based, Asia-focused life and health insurer and asset manager - Contracts Barclays Capital Securities Ltd, part of Barclays PLC, to conduct a share buyback programme that will repurchase about 3.9 million shares at a maximum cost of GBP38 million. At the current market price, 3.9 million Prudential shares are worth GBP32.3 million. The buybacks are intended to offset the dilution that will be caused by the vesting of awards under Prudential's employee and agent share schemes.

Read more
21 Dec 2023 12:59

Barclays extends lease on Canary Wharf headquarters until 2039

LONDON, Dec 21 (Reuters) - Barclays has signed an agreement with Canary Wharf Group (CWG) to extend the lease on its British headquarters in the financial district until 2039, CWG said on Thursday.

Read more
20 Dec 2023 09:25

LONDON BROKER RATINGS: UBS cuts DS Smith; Kepler likes Genus

(Alliance News) - The following London-listed shares received analyst recommendations Wednesday morning and Tuesday:

Read more
20 Dec 2023 08:48

LONDON MARKET OPEN: Stocks feeling festive on UK, US rate cut hopes

(Alliance News) - Stock in London enjoyed a broad-based rally at Wednesday's open, as a surprise UK inflation print boosted risk sentiment, with investors pinning their hopes on UK and US interest rate cuts next year.

Read more
19 Dec 2023 16:06

UK banks face 'step change' rule to reimburse defrauded customers

LONDON, Dec 19 (Reuters) - Britain's banks and other payment firms must reimburse defrauded customers to a maximum of 415,000 pounds ($529,000) from October next year to help combat scams, the Payment Systems Regulator (PSR) said on Tuesday.

Read more
19 Dec 2023 15:11

UK banks face 'step change' rule to reimburse defrauded customers

LONDON, Dec 19 (Reuters) - Britain's banks must reimburse defrauded customers to a maximum of 415,000 pounds ($529,000) from October next year to help combat scams, the Payment Systems Regulator (PSR) said on Tuesday.

Read more
15 Dec 2023 18:12

Britain's Metro Bank decides not to sell mortgage book

LONDON, Dec 15 (Reuters) - Britain's Metro Bank said on Friday it had abandoned its planned sale of a 3 billion pound ($3.8 billion) mortgage portfolio, citing market conditions.

Read more
14 Dec 2023 12:00

Fnality completes 'world's first' blockchain payments at Bank of England

LONDON, Dec 14 (Reuters) - Fnality, a blockchain-based wholesale payments firm, said on Thursday that shareholders Lloyds Banking Group, Santander and UBS had completed the "world's first" live transactions that digitally represent funds held at a central bank.

Read more
14 Dec 2023 10:51

France's Credit Agricole to stop financing new fossil fuel projects

Vows to triple financing of renewable energy projects by 2030

*

Read more
12 Dec 2023 09:10

UK lenders face smaller impact from Basel rules than rivals, BoE says

LONDON, Dec 12 (Reuters) - The Bank of England said on Tuesday that implementing the final leg of the global Basel bank rules will increase capital requirements at UK banks by 3%, far less than for their European Union and U.S. peers.

Read more
12 Dec 2023 07:16

BoE says UK lenders to be hit less than EU, U.S. rivals by Basel capital rules

LONDON, Dec 12 (Reuters) - The Bank of England said on Tuesday that implementing the final leg of the global Basel bank rules will increase capital requirements at UK banks by 3%, less than for their European Union and U.S. peers.

Read more
7 Dec 2023 16:55

Director dealings: Barclays chair invests, York Holdings settles LSEG call options

(Sharecast News) - Nigel Higgins, the group chairman of Barclays, was on the buying side of the ledger on Thursday.

Read more

Login to your account

Don't have an account? Click here to register.

Quickpicks are a member only feature

Login to your account

Don't have an account? Click here to register.