Legal
Former Rabobank Trader Pleads Guilty In LIBOR Case

A former trader of Rabobank has pleaded guilty for his role in conspiring to manipulate the yen LIBOR rate, becoming the second employee of the Dutc-based firm to admit guilt in the probe into the rigging of interest benchmarks worldwide.
A former trader of Rabobank has pleaded guilty
for his role in conspiring to manipulate the yen LIBOR rate,
becoming the second employee of the Dutch-based firm to admit
guilt in the probe into the rigging of interest benchmarks
worldwide.
Paul Robson, a UK citizen, pleaded guilty in a New York federal
court to one count of conspiracy to commit wire and bank fraud by
manipulating Rabobank’s yen LIBOR submissions to benefit trading
positions between 2006 to 2011, the Department of Justice said in
a statement.
Robson is the second former Rabobank trader to plead guilty this
year. In June, Takayuki Yagami, a Japanese national, pleaded
guilty to one count of conspiracy to commit wire and bank
fraud.
“The scope of the fraud was massive, but the scheme was simple.
By illegally influencing the LIBOR rates, Robson and his
co-conspirators rigged the markets to ensure that their trades
made money. Robson’s conviction demonstrates the Department of
Justice’s continued resolve to hold individuals and institutions
accountable for their involvement in fraud in the financial
markets,” said assistant attorney general Leslie Caldwell.
According to court documents, Robson worked as a senior trader at
Rabobank’s money markets and short-term forwards desk in London
and served as Rabobank’s primary submitter of yen LIBOR to the
British Banker’s Association. His main role in the conspiracy was
to submit yen LIBOR rates at the requests of traders who had
derivatives contracts containing yen LIBOR as a price
component.
According to the allegations, Robson made yen LIBOR submissions
requested by Yagami and other traders that were artificially high
or low.
The Justice Department said that, in 2007, Yagami asked Robson by
email for a higher LIBOR rate. Robson responded, “No prob mate
let me know your level.” After Yagami had made his request,
Robson confirmed, “Sure no prob…. I’ll probably get a few phone
calls, but no worries mate… there’s bigger crooks in the market
than us guys!”
Robson, along with former Rabobank yen LIBOR derivatives traders
Paul Thompson, of Australia, and Tetsuya Motomura, of Japan, was
charged with conspiracy to commit wire and bank fraud as well as
substantive counts of wire fraud.
The indictment also alleged that the conspiracy involved numerous
additional, unnamed individuals and entities.
In October last year, Rabobank agreed to pay more than $1 billion
in criminal and civil penalties to settle investigations by US,
UK and other regulatory authorities for its role in manipulating
LIBOR.
The fine included a $325 million criminal penalty to the US
Justice Department and $170 million to the UK’s Financial Conduct
Authority. Rabobank’s chief executive stepped down immediately
after the announcement.
Lloyds
Last month, partly state-owned Lloyds Banking Group was fined
$370 million by UK and US authorities for the manipulation of
LIBOR and other benchmark failings.
The manipulation of submissions covered by the settlements took
place between May 2006 and 2009. Lloyds said in a statement that
the individuals involved have either left the group, been
suspended or are subject to disciplinary proceedings. The penalty
makes the group the seventh company to be fined by UK and US
authorities in the LIBOR-rigging investigation.
As well as attempting to rig the US LIBOR rate, Lloyds also
colluded with Rabobank to influence the Japanese yen LIBOR
rate.
The penalty for Lloyds comes two years after Barclays was fined
$450 million by US and UK regulators for trying to manipulate
LIBOR, which led to the resignations of Barclays' chief executive
Bob Diamond and chairman Marcus Agius in the UK.
Following the LIBOR scandal in 2012, a number of other banks were
also fined, including UBS and Royal Bank of Scotland, for fixing
the rate in order to boost the profits of traders prior to the
financial crisis.
At the end of last year, the European Union also levied a record
fine of €1.7 billion ($2.3 billion) on six European and US banks,
including Deutsche Bank, Societe Generale, Royal Bank of
Scotland, and Citigroup.
LIBOR is based on the interest rates leading banks charge when
loaning money to other banks overnight, which is supposed to
represent the cost of a bank's lending activities.
As the primary benchmark for short-term interest rates globally,
LIBOR is used for many interest rate contracts, mortgages, credit
cards, student loans and other consumer-lending products.
The scandal arose both during and before the financial crisis
when it was discovered that banks were manipulating rates so as
to profit from trades or give the impression they were more
credit-worthy than they actually were.