HSBC, Standard Chartered and
DBS were among 20 banks at which 133 traders tried to manipulate the
Singapore interbank offered rate (Sibor). Photo: Bloomberg
HSBC,
Standard Chartered, JP Morgan Chase, Barclays and DBS were among 20
banks at which 133 traders tried to manipulate the Singapore interbank
offered rate (Sibor), swap offered rates and currency benchmarks in the
city state, [the Monetary Authority of Singapore] said.
BANKING scandals are surfacing in Asia, this time in the form of a US$250mil (RM799mil) fine on
Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group Inc on claims that it had transferred money to countries facing US sanctions.
According to the
South China Morning Post, The
Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ Ltd,
the main lending unit of Japan's biggest bank by market value, moved an
estimated US$100bil through the state for government and privately
owned entities on the Specially Designated Nationals list.
This
list was issued by the US Treasury Department's Office of Foreign Assets
Control between 2002 and 2007, the New York State Department of
Financial Services and New York
Governor Andrew Cuomo said in a statement recently.
Just
about two weeks earlier, the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) had
cracked down on the rigging of the Singapore Interbank Offered Rate or
Sibor.
HSBC,
Standard Chartered,
JP Morgan Chase, Barclays and DBS were among 20 banks at which 133
traders had tried to manipulate the Sibor, swap offered rates and
currency benchmarks in the city-state, MAS said in a statement recently.
Greedy
These incidents within Asian banks are significant, as the European and US banks have been bearing the brunt of criticism.
The major UK banks have been fined for the Libor (the London equivalent of Sibor) rigging and the mis-selling of products.
Due
to their role in the churning of derivatives, these banks in the West
have been described as greedy, careless and manipulative.
The
recent scandals seem to involve only a few Asian banks, but it remains
to be seen how many more names will surface and what sort of rules have
been flouted.
In view of their important role in the economic
growth of Asia, they will be closely watched in terms of risk exposure
and ethical banking practices.
So, Asian banks, some of which have become very profitable, beware on all fronts.
In
Europe, overnight talks aimed at ensuring shareholders and bond holders
bear the brunt of bank failures collapsed after almost 20 hours of
discussion, reports
The Telegraph.
After investors, the
proposals would impose losses on savers with more than 100,000 euros in
their account, but France and non-eurozone countries want the ability to
tailor the rules, the report says.
Discussing possible bank
failures may not be the most urgent agenda, although extreme stress
testing and estimation of potential bank losses should be conducted.
This is tied to the capital position of the bank.
However,
there should be a constructive approach to boosting capital buffer and
ensuring that the bank does not fail rather than what to do if it fails.
It is like pointing a gun at a man's head even before the crime is committed.
Bond bubble
There
is said to be a “bond crisis” out there, where the bond bubble is about
to burst, with investors looking for other asset classes to invest in.
With
the impending halt to the US quantitive easing programme of additional
liquidity, this search for other asset classes has become more urgent.
Nevertheless,
'We see improving US gross domestic product as a positive support to
risk' assets such as shares, but would expect liquidity reductions to
remove some of the froth' from current valuations, including in
corporate bonds.
“Where we have the biggest concern is some of the riskier banks.
'Even
five years on from the financial crisis, we cannot with any confidence
say we are happy with the quality of their balance sheets; this is where
risks of capital losses are highest,'' says Chris Bowie, manager of
Ignis fund management.
Such is the reality of investing. It involves constant assessment of risk, changes in the markets and valuations.
Micromanagement is usually discouraged but may be useful in this case.
By Yap Leng Kuen
Columnist Yap Leng Kuen cautions on the headwinds.
Related post:
For the sake of money people will risk anything