UK financial watchdog bans, fines ex-RBS Libor trader

Reuters  |  LONDON 

By Emma and Ridley

(Reuters) - Britain's financial watchdog fined ex-Royal of 250,000 pounds ($338,000) on Monday and barred him from working in

The (FCA) said in a statement it had found that between 2007 and 2010 Danziger, who traded products referenced to the Japanese Yen variant of Libor (Interbank Offered Rate), was knowingly involved in the bank's manipulation of the benchmark rate.

Danziger disputes the FCA's findings and feels he is being "scapegoated for the systemic problems related to Libor", his lawyer, Ben Rose, a at firm Hickman and Rose, said.

However, the ex-is too emotionally and financially drained to fight further, Rose said in a statement, adding: "He leaves it to others, better resourced, to press the FCA for answers, hopeful that, one day, the real truth will come out."

Danziger was dismissed over Libor-rigging at the end of 2011, after just over nine years with RBS, which was fined 390 million pounds by and U.S. authorities for its part in the global scandal that engulfed some of the world's biggest banks.

"Mr Danziger's reckless disregard of these standards (of market conduct) has no place in the industry," Mark Steward, executive at the FCA, said.

Libor underpins hundreds of trillions of dollars of transactions and is used to set rates on credit cards, student loans and mortgages.

'WASH TRADES'

The FCA said Danziger had routinely made requests to RBS's primary Libor submitters to benefit his trading positions, and took those positions into account when acting as a substitute submitter. On two occasions, it said, he enlisted help from brokers to manipulate Libor.

Between 2008 and 2009, the watchdog said he entered into 28 "wash trades", two identical trades that cancel each other out.

The trades had no legitimate purpose other than to pay two firms as thanks for personal hospitality Danziger had received, the FCA said in its statement.

Danziger has denied that the trades and hospitality were connected.

In a notice of its decision on Danziger, the FCA detailed a phone call that one made to a colleague of Danziger's at on June 26, 2009.

The said he had been out with Danziger the previous evening, and asked whether Danziger was in the office. He "owes me a little switchy today", the is alleged to have said.

The FCA said that in a separate phone call with another individual on the same day, the said he had run up a 2,000 pound drinks bill that evening and that Danziger had told him to "put a switch through".

The FCA said 'switch' was a term used for wash trade, and that Danziger executed one later that day.

The regulator first proposed action against Danziger in 2014, but this was put on hold due to a then ongoing investigation by the

(Reporting by Emma and Ridley; Editing by and Alexander Smith)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Mon, January 08 2018. 19:18 IST