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Libor

March 2016

  • Sarah Hayes, the wife of former trader Hayes, arrives at the Old Bailey courthouse in London, Britain<br>Sarah Hayes, the wife of former trader Tom Hayes, arrives at the Old Bailey courthouse in London, Britain March 14, 2016. The couple are both expected to give evidence to try to prevent the seizure of their entire estate, which prosecutors value at 3.8 million pounds ($5.4 million), including Sarah's jewellery, and which they allege has been paid for with proceeds of crime, after Tom Hayes was found guilty of conspiracy to rig Libor interest rates. REUTERS/Toby Melville

    Libor trader transferred his half of house to wife before court case

  • Tom Hayes with his wife Sarah

    Jailed Libor trader Tom Hayes seeks to keep Surrey home

  • Tom Hayes

    Jailed Libor trader blocked from supreme court appeal

  • File photo of a painted sign for 'The Banker' public house, seen in the financial district of the City of London<br>A painted sign for 'The Banker' public house is seen in the financial district of the City of London in this February 19, 2013 file photograph. European rules due to take force in January say bankers' bonuses cannot exceed annual salary, or twice that if shareholders approve. REUTERS/Toby Melville/Files (BRITAIN - Tags: BUSINESS FOOD)

    Withhold bankers' bonuses for a decade, says Barclays man

February 2016

  • Linda Burnip, head of Disabled People Against Cuts
Photo by David Sillitoe 
For Society

    Disability activists say LSE wrong to shelve welfare lecture

    Black Triangle among groups backing free speech, claiming college over-reacted to retorts about Adam Perkins benefits theory

January 2016

  • Noel Cryan, a former broker at Tellett Prebon, arrives at Southwark Crown in London on Janurary 27, 2016. A court cleared five City brokers who were accused of helping to rig a key lending rate used between banks. Noel Cryan, Danny Wilkinson, Colin Goodman, James Gilmour, and Terry Farr, were all found not guilty of conspiring to help UBS banker Tom Hayes, to manipulate the Libor rate that banks use to lend money to one another. The court has yet to reach a verdict for Darrell Read. / AFP / JUSTIN TALLISJUSTIN TALLIS/AFP/Getty Images

    US money blog
    ‘Lord Libor’ reveals financial system where bad apples have the midas touch

  • David Green, director of the Serious Fraud Office

    Serious Fraud Office back in the dock after Libor acquittals

  • Pedestrians pass a Lloyds Bank branch in London on 28 January 2016

    The Guardian view on the Lloyds sale: better never than late

  • Darrell Read

    Brokers found not guilty of Libor fraud label trial a farce

  • Five brokers found not guilty of helping Tom Hayes rig Libor rate

  • MPs question appointment of former bankers' lobbyist in senior tax role

  • Banking Standards Board yet to outline any banking standards

  • Government tax adviser 'sorry' for banking role during Libor crisis

  • Libor fraudster Tom Hayes describes prison life in series of letters

  • Business leader
    We need you, Andrew Tyrie. Without you, the bankers will get away with it

December 2015

  • Canary Wharf

    Banking culture review: Treasury defends FCA decision to scrap study

    Government denies it was involved in a move that MPs say will be seen as a softening of stance towards bankers
  • The Volkswagen tower in Hanover, Germany.

    From smoking diesels to Sports Direct: the business year in review

    Forget Wall Street – it was a semi in Hounslow, a warehouse in Derbyshire and a boardroom in Wolfsburg that provided some of 2015’s biggest shocks
    • Libor trader Tom Hayes loses appeal but has jail sentence cut to 11 years

    • Osborne criticised over Treasury job for former bank lobbyist

    • Jailed Libor trader Tom Hayes denied fair trial, says lawyer

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