By Huw Jones | LONDON (Reuters) - Britain's government is expected to spell out on Monday the scope of a root and branch reform of Libor, the interest rate benchmark that was rigged by Barclays in a widening scandal that has damaged London's standing as a finance center.
The UK Treasury is
set to announce the remit for a review of the rate at which banks are
willing to lend to one other that is being carried out by Martin Wheatley, a top official at the UK's Financial Services Authority regulator.
Wheatley will look at how Libor is set and whether it
should be based in future on actual transactions. He will also look to
reform how the rate setting process is governed and how it should be
supervised in future.
Currently, the rate
is self-regulated by its sponsor, the British Bankers' Association, a
situation which has sparked a transatlantic blame game.
Regulators have
been fending off accusations from policymakers that they failed to take
action when the rate did not appear to work during the 2008 financial
market meltdown, one of the periods covered in a settlement with the
authorities under which Barclays paid a record fine.
Wheatley has said
he would look at other market benchmarks which are not directly
supervised, without mentioning names.
Market participants
say he could look at benchmarks in the energy markets, which the
European Union's executive European Commission said this week it will
also review as part of its own deepening probe into interest rate
benchmarks.
The BBA was already
reviewing Libor before the Barclays fine was announced. That review is
set to be folded into Wheatley's work. He is expected to come forward
with draft recommendations around August 10 to a short public
consultation.
His final
proposals, due at the end of the summer, are expected to be inserted
into the financial services bill now working its way through parliament
to put in place next year a new system of financial supervision in
Britain.
The overhaul will
see the FSA being replaced with a prudential regulator at the Bank of
England and a new stand alone Financial Conduct Authority that Wheatley
will head.
FSA Chairman Adair
Turner said this week that Libor setting was now as honest as it could
get but that the structure of the rate setting needed changing.
(Additional reporting by Matt Falloon; editing by James Jukwey)
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