ANZ,
one of Australia's biggest banks, has suspended seven traders as part of an
inquiry into the potential rigging of key interbank interest rates.
The
Australian Securities and Investment Commission (ASIC) has been investigating
the country's interbank market since mid-2012.
Nigel
Williams, chief risk officer of ANZ, said it was co-operating fully with ASIC.
The
bank has been also been conducting its own investigation.
Mr
Williams said:
"This is a complex issue and ASIC's investigation and ANZ's
internal review may not be complete for some time. In light of this, we are
taking the precaution of having seven staff involved in markets trading step
down pending completion of the investigation into practices to 2013."
ANZ
said it was not appropriate to comment further while the investigations were
completed.
Regulators
have been examining rate-setting mechanisms after banks including Barclays, RBS
and UBS were fined billions for rigging Libor, the London interbank offered
rate.
Earlier
this year, ASIC censured French lender, BNP Paribas and Royal Bank of Scotland.
This was after revealing that its traders tried to influence the setting of
Australia's interbank rate.
Australia
scrapped its interbank rate-setting system last year after several banks
decided to leave the panel. It was the first major market to dismantle the
structure.
Shares
in ANZ fell 0.2%, or 6 cents, to $31.77 in afternoon trading in Sydney. ANZ is
valued at 87.7bn Australian dollars ($76bn; £48.6bn) - more than either RBS or
Barclays.
Last
month it announced a record full-year net profit of A$7.3bn, up 15% from a year
earlier.
BBC
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