{
"id": 1004,
"title": "Barclays' Libor Rate Fixing Leads to Resignations",
"slug": "barclays-libor-rate-fixing-leads-to-resignations",
"url": "https://cfi.co/banking/2012/07/barclays-libor-rate-fixing-leads-to-resignations/",
"author": "CFI.co Editorial",
"published": "2012-07-05 17:24:11",
"published_gmt": "2012-07-05 16:24:11",
"modified_gmt": "2012-10-01 20:50:43",
"categories": [
"Banking",
"Europe"
],
"classification": {
"content_class": "editorial_analysis",
"editorial_lens": "constructive_positive_lens",
"independence_status": "independent_editorial",
"sponsor_disclosure": "none",
"sponsor_name": "",
"article_status": "published",
"historical_status": "current_at_publication",
"correction_status": "none",
"archive_policy": "no_delete",
"provenance_layer": "github_versioned",
"wayback_status": "archived",
"wayback_first_snapshot": "20190818050041",
"wayback_snapshot_url": "http://web.archive.org/web/20190818050041/https://cfi.co/banking/2012/07/barclays-libor-rate-fixing-leads-to-resignations/",
"license": "CFI-OAAL-1.0"
},
"excerpt": "",
"content_html": "
Barclays last week agreed to pay $453 million to settle U.S. and British authorities' allegations that the British bank tried to fix and manipulate the London interbank offered rate, or Libor, which is the benchmark for interest rates on trillions of dollars of loans to individuals and businesses around the world.\n\nBarclays executives initially believed they could ride out any resulting fallout from the settlement and accompanying admission that Barclays had acted improperly. But by Tuesday, the scandal had prompted the resignations of Mr. Diamond, Barclays Chairman Marcus Agius and Chief Operating Officer Jerry del Missier, some of the British banking industry's most prominent figures. No individuals were charged.\n