Everything Is Rigged: The Biggest Price-Fixing Scandal Ever
The Illuminati were amateurs. The second huge financial scandal of the year reveals the real international conspiracy: There's no price the big banks can't fix
Matt
Tabibi
April
27th, 2013
Conspiracy
theorists of the world, believers in the hidden hands of the
Rothschilds and the Masons and the Illuminati, we skeptics owe you an
apology. You were right. The players may be a little different, but
your basic premise is correct: The world is a rigged game. We found
this out in recent months, when a series of related corruption
stories spilled out of the financial sector, suggesting the world’s
largest banks may be fixing the prices of, well, just about
everything.
You
may have heard of the Libor scandal, in which at least three – and
perhaps as many as 16 – of the name-brand too-big-to-fail banks
have been manipulating global interest rates, in the process messing
around with the prices of upward of $500 trillion (that’s trillion,
with a “t”) worth of financial instruments. When that sprawling
con burst into public view last year, it was easily the biggest
financial scandal in history – MIT professor Andrew Lo even said it
“dwarfs by orders of magnitude any financial scam in the history of
markets.”
That
was bad enough, but now Libor may have a twin brother. Word has
leaked out that the London-based firm ICAP, the world’s largest
broker of interest-rate swaps, is being investigated by American
authorities for behavior that sounds eerily reminiscent of the Libor
mess. Regulators are looking into whether or not a small group of
brokers at ICAP may have worked with up to 15 of the world’s
largest banks to manipulate ISDAfix, a benchmark number used around
the world to calculate the prices of interest-rate swaps.
Interest-rate
swaps are a tool used by big cities, major corporations and sovereign
governments to manage their debt, and the scale of their use is
almost unimaginably massive. It’s about a $379 trillion market,
meaning that any manipulation would affect a pile of assets about 100
times the size of the United States federal budget.
It
should surprise no one that among the players implicated in this
scheme to fix the prices of interest-rate swaps are the same
megabanks – including Barclays, UBS, Bank of America, JPMorgan
Chase and the Royal Bank of Scotland – that serve on the Libor
panel that sets global interest rates. In fact, in recent years many
of these banks have already paid multimillion-dollar settlements for
anti-competitive manipulation of one form or another (in addition to
Libor, some were caught up in an anti-competitive scheme, detailed in
Rolling Stone last year, to rig municipal-debt service auctions).
Though the jumble of financial acronyms sounds like gibberish to the
layperson, the fact that there may now be price-fixing scandals
involving both Libor and ISDAfix suggests a single, giant mushrooming
conspiracy of collusion and price-fixing hovering under the
ostensibly competitive veneer of Wall Street culture.
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