Compliance
Ex-UBS CEO Blames LIBOR Scandal On "Mercenaries"; Prompts Scorn From Lawmaker
A former chief executive of UBS, Marcel Rohner, has blamed
"mercenaries" for the Swiss bank’s role in the global
interest-rate
rigging scandal, media reports said.
UBS was fined a record $1.5 billion in December last year
for its involvement in manipulating LIBOR interest rates,
becoming the second
major bank, after Barclays, to have been punished for the affair.
(In the case of Barclays, the scandal led to the resignation of
its high-flying CEO, Robert Diamond.) Zurich-listed UBS, which
has been looking to revive its fortunes after suffering major
losses in the credit crunch, in late 2011 also disclosed $2.3
billion of losses caused by a rogue trader in a
separate affair. The trader has been subsequently convicted and
jailed.
As far as the latest affair is concerned, Rohner told the
Parliamentary Commission on
Banking Standards yesterday: "In these pockets where we had
these
problems it wasn't probably a bad culture, but it was a lack of
culture.”
"When you grow a business too quickly you hire people
from many different places and some of them ... you really have
to qualify as
mercenaries," he told the panel of lawmakers, according to a
report by Reuters.
Panel members reportedly accused Rohner and three other
former UBS executives of gross negligence and incompetence for
failing to
detect the manipulation, which stretched back to 2005 and
occurred when each of
them had been in charge of the bank's investment business.
"The level of ignorance seems staggering to the point
of incredulity," Andrew Tyrie, who heads up the PCBS, was quoted
as saying.
"Not only were you ignorant of what was going on, but you were
out of your
depth," he said.
All four executives said the first they had heard of UBS' involvement in rigging the inter-bank interest rate system was from press reports in 2011.
To view a recent WealthBriefing editorial on the
implications for UBS, click here.