Serious Fraud Office poised for more Libor charges

A sign is displayed in an unmarked Serious Fraud Office vehicle parked outside a building, in Mayfair, central London March 9, 2011. REUTERS/Andrew Winning·Reuters

By Kirstin Ridley

LONDON (Reuters) - The Serious Fraud Office (SFO), is poised to charge more individuals in connection with a global investigation into the Libor interest rate rigging scandal.

To date, U.S. and British authorities have charged seven men and fined four financial firms about $2.7 billion (1.67 billion pounds) in the investigation into the manipulation of the London interbank offered rate (Libor), used as a benchmark for more than $300 trillion of products from derivatives to home loans.

David Green, who has led the SFO since April 2012, said the inquiry into Libor, a central cog in the global financial system, remains the largest and most complex case on his books - and he expected to be judged by its results.

"I anticipate there will be further (Libor) charges this autumn," he told Reuters in an interview on Thursday. "Thereafter, there will be further significant developments ... We're not finished by a long chalk."

Green said relations with the U.S. Department of Justice (DoJ), which has had a near three-year headstart in the Libor investigation, were "genuinely helpful and constructive".

Although the DoJ has been first to charge some British suspects in the scandal, Green said everyone understood that British suspects should be tried in Britain rather than extradited to the United States.

"So far as I'm concerned, alleged crimes committed by British suspects or banks should be tried here and that is the goal to which we would work," he said.

Green declined to divulge whether further Libor charges were likely to be announced before a London court hearing scheduled for the week of October 21, at which a list of alleged co-conspirators of former UBS and Citigroup trader Tom Hayes and two former brokers will be read out in court.

Hayes, who has also been charged by the DoJ, and former RP Martin brokers Terry Farr and James Gilmour are the first individuals to be brought to court over a scandal that has become a symbol for the financial industry's self-serving excesses.

U.S. prosecutors have also charged Swiss-based former UBS trader Roger Darin and three former staff at interdealer broker ICAP; New Zealand-based Darrell Read, his British-based supervisor Daniel Wilkinson and cash broker Colin Goodman.

Libor and similar benchmarks, set every day in different maturities and currencies, are designed to reflect each bank's own borrowing costs. But traders allegedly encouraged bank submissions that benefited their trading positions.

(Editing by David Evans)

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