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Nomi Prins and Paul Craig Roberts
NationofChange / Op-Ed
Published: Monday 16 July 2012
“The last thing the banks want is a rise in interest rates that would drive down the values of their holdings and reveal large losses masked by rigged interest rates.”

The Real Libor Scandal

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According to news reports, UK banks fixed the London interbank borrowing rate (Libor) with the complicity of the Bank of England (UK central bank) at a low rate in order to obtain a cheap borrowing cost. The way this scandal is playing out is that the banks benefitted from borrowing at these low rates. Whereas this is true, it also strikes us as simplistic and as a diversion from the deeper, darker scandal.

Banks are not the only beneficiaries of lower Libor rates. Debtors (and investors) whose floating or variable rate loans are pegged in some way to Libor also benefit. One could argue that by fixing the rate low, the banks were cheating themselves out of interest income, because the effect of the low Libor rate is to lower the interest rate on customer loans, such as variable rate mortgages that banks possess in their portfolios. But the banks did not fix the Libor rate with their customers in mind. Instead, the fixed Libor rate enabled them to improve their balance sheets, as well as help to perpetuate the regime of low interest rates. The last thing the banks want is a rise in interest rates that would drive down the values of their holdings and reveal large losses masked by rigged interest rates.

Indicative of greater deceit and a larger scandal than simply borrowing from one another at lower rates, banks gained far more from the rise in the prices, or higher evaluations of floating rate financial instruments (such as CDOs), that resulted from lower Libor rates. As prices of debt instruments all tend to move in the same direction, and in the opposite direction from interest rates (low interest rates mean high bond prices, and vice versa), the effect of lower Libor rates is to prop up the prices of bonds, asset-backed financial instruments, and other "securities." The end result is that the banks' balance sheets look healthier than they really are.

On the losing side of the scandal are purchasers of interest rate swaps, savers who receive less interest on their accounts, and ultimately all bond holders when the bond bubble pops and prices collapse.

We think we can conclude that Libor rates were manipulated lower as a means to bolster the prices of bonds and asset-backed securities. In the UK, as in the US, the interest rate on government bonds is less than the rate of inflation. The UK inflation rate is about 2.8%, and the interest rate on 20-year government bonds is 2.5%. Also, in the UK, as in the US, the government debt to GDP ratio is rising. Currently the ratio in the UK is about double its average during the 1980-2011 period.

The question is, why do investors purchase long term bonds, which pay less than the rate of inflation, from governments whose debt is rising as a share of GDP? One might think that investors would understand that they are losing money and sell the bonds, thus lowering their price and raising the interest rate.

Why isn’t this happening?

PCR’s June 5 column, “Collapse at Hand,” explained that despite the negative interest rate, investors were making capital gains from their Treasury bond holdings, because the prices were rising as interest rates were pushed lower. 

What was pushing the interest rates lower?

The answer is even clearer now. First, as PCR noted, Wall Street has been selling huge amounts of interest rate swaps, essentially a way of shorting interest rates and driving them down. Thus, causing bond prices to rise.

Secondly, fixing Libor at lower rates has the same effect. Lower UK interest rates on government bonds drive up their prices.

In other words, we would argue that the bailed-out banks in the US and UK are returning the favor that they received from the bailouts and from the Fed and Bank of England’s low rate policy by rigging government bond prices, thus propping up a government bond market that would otherwise, one would think, be driven down by the abundance of new debt and monetization of this debt, or some part of it.

How long can the government bond bubble be sustained? How negative can interest rates be driven?

Can a declining economy offset the impact on inflation of debt creation and its monetization, with the result that inflation falls to zero, thus making the low interest rates on government bonds positive?

According to his public statements, zero inflation is not the goal of the Federal Reserve chairman. He believes that some inflation is a spur to economic growth, and he has said that his target is 2% inflation. At current bond prices, that means a continuation of negative interest rates.

The latest news completes the picture of banks and central banks manipulating interest rates in order to prop up the prices of bonds and other debt instruments. We have learned that the Fed has been aware of Libor manipulation (and thus apparently supportive of it) since 2008. Thus, the circle of complicity is closed. The motives of the Fed, Bank of England, US and UK banks are aligned, their policies mutually reinforcing and beneficial. The Libor fixing is another indication of this collusion.

Unless bond prices can continue to rise as new debt is issued, the era of rigged bond prices might be drawing to an end. It would seem to be only a matter of time before the bond bubble bursts.

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ABOUT Paul Craig Roberts

Paul Craig Roberts has had careers in scholarship and academia, journalism, public service, and business. He is chairman of The Institute for Political Economy.

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9 comments on "The Real Libor Scandal "

alex s gabor

July 18, 2012 6:59pm

The writers and commenters are missing the whole point. Money is an invention of the mind. Math is a servo mechanism of the mind. Interest bearing instruments are created out of thin air through the sales processes of getting ignorant people to sign promissory notes which are then traded like currency. If money is created out of thin air then what right does any man have to charge interest first of all? Second, if you have a zero interest rate regime after an interest bearing regime eventually every amount of money ever borrowed must vanish into thin air, unless the whole planet wakes up and realizes that we don't need money to run the global economy because all the forms of currency invented cannot replace honest cooperation among mankind as the best long term investment and solution to bubbles and economic collapses. Banking criminals are only criminals until they are enlightened by the truth and education surrounding the basic idea of money and currencies and trade. Before then they are usually just doing the bidding of the world's elite families who are behind all of the illusory wealth called the united states dollar and a thousand other forms of currency trading around the universes.

Rich Nau

July 17, 2012 2:27pm

This story has me confused. I understood that the price fixing was only to lower the rate on certain days when the bank was trading its derivatives or valuing it portfolio of same, to gain market advantage on those bets.

Charles Thomas

July 17, 2012 6:49am

As just a regular working guy my next purchase will be a small used travel trailer with a solar power set-up--I have a feeling I'm going to need it.

alex s gabor

July 18, 2012 7:03pm

Yes but if you spend any money on gas and oil you are feeding the Octodragon via the oil company who borrowed from the banks to drill and distribute the oil to you. If you and a hundred million other people just started riding bikes to and fro instead of spending billions of your hard earned pennies on gasoline and oil, you would drive the price of gasoline to a penny a gallon. But that is not going to happen because most people are brainwashed into believing that cars and travel are necessary. Safe journey in your vehicle lest it be solar powered.

alex s gabor

July 18, 2012 7:14pm

Yes but if you spend any money on gas and oil you are feeding the Octodragon via the oil company who borrowed from the banks to drill and distribute the oil to you. If you and a hundred million other people just started riding bikes to and fro instead of spending billions of your hard earned pennies on gasoline and oil, you would drive the price of gasoline to a penny a gallon. But that is not going to happen because most people are brainwashed into believing that cars and travel are necessary. Safe journey in your vehicle lest it be solar powered.

bladtheimpailer

July 16, 2012 7:19pm

What this also means is that the central banks are trying to save their hosts (as in parasites) who they have almost killed with debt and their greed, and who's debt they and they're member banks are holding. If interest rates rise and bond prices drop who in hell wants to purchase the debt of the U.S,U.K., let alone Italy's. The banks are trying to fend off a chapter 11 type of scenario with the national debts of these huge economies. Hence the losses at J.P. Morgan on interest rate swaps. When the bubble bursts a depression may be inevitable as money has already been contracted into the vaults and governments are all borrowed out with few that will be interested in loaning via bonds which in turn are propping up their currencies, in turn are also held up by interest rate swaps in the mega trillions of dollars. Bet that the international central banks will have a solution all in their favour. I do believe that the fractional reserve system has just about run it's course. How much more suffering of the masses at the hands of bankers must the world endure?

William Bednarz

July 16, 2012 4:18pm

A takeover of te World's Financial systems........787 billion dollar SELL OUT...FORECLOSURES...UNEMPLOYMENT....and look at who's walking away with what....SECRET ??? SUPER PACS n0 names please

William W Haywood

July 16, 2012 2:14pm

And when that bond bubble bursts? This is messing around with the value of all of our money big time. It would really seem that the banks have given up, completely, on their traditional means of serving the public as banks, and have gone totally into personal wealth creation. It is all about wealth, and nothing to do with really being a public sector service corporation. Is all of this money theirs to just throw around at their whim? We need to see a lot of these felons behind bars really soon or there will be no faith left at all in anything these institutions claim. People should boycott this investment thing until these criminals are chased out of the bush and into the road. Until then, no one's money will ever be safe from being stolen. Investing is risky enough without having to worry about fraudulent, criminal, banking and investment tactics. I do not really think that there are any investments that are not affected.

Factkneader

July 16, 2012 3:06pm

Gives a whole new meaning to the term BANK ROBBERS!!