Lloyds
Banking Group has dismissed eight staff members following an investigation into
the manipulation of some key interest rates set in London.
The
move follows the bank's £218m fine in July for "serious misconduct"
over the setting of Libor.
Chair
Lord Blackwell said the actions of those responsible for the misconduct were
"completely unacceptable".
Lloyds,
which is 24.9% owned by the government, said the individuals had also forfeited
£3m in unpaid bonuses.
The
bank said its remuneration committee would now ensure the outcome of the
disciplinary process was "fully and fairly reflected" in other staff
bonus payments.
Regulators
found that Lloyds manipulated the London interbank offered rate (Libor) for yen
and sterling and tried to rig the rate for yen, sterling and the US dollar.
It
was also found to have
manipulated submissions for another short-term rate
linked to the value of UK government debt.
'Highest integrity'
Lloyds
said Monday's disciplinary action followed July's fine by the UK-based
Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) and a US-based trading commission, the
Commodity Futures Trading Commission
However,
it said it had been unable to take disciplinary action against " a number
of individuals" who had already left the bank before the settlements.
Lloyds
Banking Group chief executive Antonio Horta-Osorio said the bank was committed
to preventing this type of behaviour happening again.
"We
are determined to make Lloyds Banking Group a company of the highest integrity
and standards," he added.
In
July, Bank of England Governor Mark Carney said the attempted manipulation was
"highly reprehensible" and could lead to criminal action against
those involved.
Lloyds
also said it had shared the outcome of its disciplinary process with City
regulator the Financial Conduct Authority and other relevant authorities.
'Fix it higher'
In
July, the US trading commission said the "unlawful conduct" of Lloyds
had "undermined the integrity" of Libor.
It
said Lloyds had acted to benefit its trading positions and protect its
reputation by manipulating the rate when it was in the process of buying HBOS
during the financial crisis.
The
commission also released a transcript detailing examples of requests to
manipulate the sterling and US dollar Libor rate.
They
included an employee from Lloyds telling their counterpart at HBOS: "Oh
mate, I always have loads of loans going out at the end of the month so I
always try to fix it higher".
The
trader added: "They keep calling it lower... I can't work out why it is
going down all the time... I will leave it at 67 and I won't go any lower,
right?"
A
sterling submitter at HBOS responded with: "Yeah".
BBC
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