The next focusIR Investor Webinar takes places on 14th May with guest speakers from Blue Whale Growth Fund, Taseko Mines, Kavango Resources and CQS Natural Resources fund. Please register 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: 213.15
Bid: 213.05
Ask: 213.20
Change: 1.50 (0.71%)
Spread: 0.15 (0.07%)
Open: 215.00
High: 215.00
Low: 211.90
Prev. Close: 211.65
BARC Live PriceLast checked at -

Watchlists are a member only feature

Login to your account

Alerts are a premium feature

Login to your account

Libor trader Hayes loses appeal against rate-rigging conviction

Wed, 27th Mar 2024 13:44

LONDON, March 27 (Reuters) - Tom Hayes, the first trader in the world to be jailed for interest rate rigging, lost his appeal against his conviction on Wednesday, a decision he said he would seek to challenge at the UK's Supreme Court.

Hayes, a former star Citigroup and UBS trader, was convicted in 2015 of conspiracy to defraud by manipulating Libor, a benchmark rate once used to price trillions of financial products globally.

Prosecutors said Hayes and other traders were acting illegally by taking their or their employer's commercial interests into account when they made submissions on the London interbank offered rate (Libor).

Hayes was initially jailed for 14 years, with the sentencing judge telling him: "Probity and honesty are essential as is trust ... The Libor activities of which you took part puts all that in jeopardy."

His sentence was reduced on appeal to 11 years and he was released from prison in 2021 after serving half.

Hayes has always said that the Libor rates he requested fell within a permissible range – and that his conduct was common at the time and condoned by bosses.

His appeal against his conviction was heard alongside that of Carlo Palombo, a former Barclays trader convicted in 2019 of skewing Libor's euro equivalent, Euribor.

Their cases were referred to the Court of Appeal in London after a landmark U.S. court decision in 2022, in which two former Deutsche Bank traders' convictions for Libor rigging were overturned as there was no prohibition on banks considering their trading position when submitting Libor rates.

But Hayes and Palombo's appeals were dismissed on Wednesday, with the Court of Appeal ruling that it was illegal to take commercial interests into account when setting rates.

Judge David Bean said both Libor and Euribor "required the submission of what the individual bank 'could' borrow, which must mean the cheapest rate available to it".

SUPREME COURT

Hayes and Palombo have 14 days to apply for permission to appeal to the Supreme Court, which Hayes said he planned to do.

Hayes told reporters: "I've not fought for all of these years for nothing."

Susan Hawley, executive director of campaign group Spotlight on Corruption, said the case "should provoke some real soul searching about whether the right people are ending up in the dock in corporate crime cases".

"It's essential that there is now a really conscious shift in prosecution strategy to go after senior executives and far greater use of whistleblowers to gather the evidence against those at the very top of organisations," she said.

Libor was phased out in 2021 after the rigging scandal prompted global regulators to fine some of the world's biggest banks billions of dollars. No senior executives have been prosecuted.

Wednesday's ruling is a blow to Hayes, Palombo and other traders, some of whom had hired lawyers to look into the possibility of bringing their own appeals.

Hayes' lawyer Adrian Darbishire said earlier this month that the trial judge in the original court case wrongly told the jury it was prohibited to consider commercial interests when setting Libor rates.

But the Serious Fraud Office (SFO), which prosecuted 19 over benchmark rigging and secured nine convictions, said it was illegal to set Libor rates for commercial purposes.

"The Court of Appeal's judgment is clear that these convictions for fraud are still as relevant today as ten years ago," an SFO spokesperson said in a statement.

"No one is above the law and the court has recognised that these convictions stand firm." (Reporting by Sam Tobin; Editing by Sarah Young, Tomasz Janowski and Jane Merriman)

More News
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
7 Dec 2023 15:35

IN BRIEF: Barclays Chair Nigel Higgins buys 200,000 shares

Barclays PLC - London-based consumer, business and investment bank - Chair Nigel Higgins buys 200,000 shares at GBP1.3867 each, worth GBP277,340, in London on Thursday.

Read more
5 Dec 2023 15:26

London close: Stocks mixed as investors mull fresh data

(Sharecast News) - London's financial markets finished with a mixed performance on Tuesday as investors considered key economic data and developments from both sides of the Atlantic.

Read more
5 Dec 2023 09:05

LONDON MARKET OPEN: FTSE 100 struggles after Moody's warning on China

(Alliance News) - London's FTSE 100 got off to a slow start on Tuesday, with miners falling amid fears for the Chinese economy, while Barclays shares fell after Bloomberg reported Qatar is trimming its stake in the lender.

Read more
5 Dec 2023 08:01

Qatar almost halves stake in Barclays

(Sharecast News) - Banking giant Barclays was in the red early on Tuesday after its largest shareholder made moves to offload roughly £510.0m in shares.

Read more
5 Dec 2023 07:48

LONDON BRIEFING: Ashtead in record half-year; tinyBuild cuts outlook

(Alliance News) - London's FTSE 100 is called to open lower on Tuesday, continuing a lacklustre start to the week, after tepid trade in New York overnight.

Read more
30 Nov 2023 09:57

Lloyds to shut 45 branches

(Sharecast News) - Lloyds Banking Group is to shut another 45 branches, it was confirmed on Thursday, as lenders continue to downsize their estates.

Read more
28 Nov 2023 15:40

Barclays axes 900 staff in "disgraceful" pre-Christmas move - UK union

(Alliance News) - Banking firm Barclays PLC is cutting 900 jobs in its UK business as it looks to slash costs in a "disgraceful" pre-Christmas move, trade union Unite has said.

Read more
28 Nov 2023 15:30

London close: Stocks slip after mountain of broker notes

(Sharecast News) - London's stock markets finished in the red on Tuesday as investors deliberated over the latest shop price data, as well as a deluge of broker notes.

Read more
28 Nov 2023 08:52

PRESS: Barclays eyes dropping quarter of investment bank clients - FT

(Alliance News) - Barclays PLC is exploring the possibility of dropping thousands of its investment bank clients - a quarter of its total - amid a strategic overhaul to bolster its bottom line and cut GBP1 billion of costs, the Financial Times reported on Tuesday.

Read more
28 Nov 2023 07:56

Barclays considers dropping thousands of investment banking clients - report

(Sharecast News) - Barclays is reportedly exploring a plan to drop thousands of clients at its investment bank as part of a strategic overhaul that is meant to boost profits and cut £1bn of costs.

Read more
28 Nov 2023 07:42

LONDON BRIEFING: Rolls-Royce plans disposals, sets out 2027 targets

(Alliance News) - Stocks in London are called lower on Tuesday, with a stronger pound likely to weigh on the FTSE 100.

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.