Bob Diamond questioned by Treasury Select Committee
- I see that Paul Tucker of the Bank of England has just asked to appear soonest at the same committee of UK politicos that we are blogging off today.
- Bank of England Deputy Governor Paul Tucker has indeed requested a hearing before parliament's Treasury Committee "as soon as possible" to clarify his position after allegations over his role in the Barclays Bank ate-fixing scandal.
"Mr Tucker is keen to give evidence to the Committee in order to clarify the position with regard to the events involving the Bank of England, including the telephone conversation with Bob Diamond on 29 October 2008," the Bank of England said in a statement.
On Tuesday, Barclays published a 2008 internal memo from Diamond refering to a telephone conversation with Tucker. A senior manager had understood the memo to mean that the Bank of England and government might approve if they gave artificially low estimates of their borrowing costs at the height of the banking crisis to avoid giving the impression that Britain's banks were in difficulty. (Reporting by David Miliken and Fiona Shaikh). - Hello everyone. Bob Diamond's appearance in front of the Treasury Select Committee will begin in just under an hour. My colleague Matt Scuffham sets the scene:
Bob Diamond squares up to critical British MPs on Wednesday, a day after quitting as Barclays' chief executive over the Libor interest rate scandal, potentially dragging the Bank of England, government and rival banks deeper into the affair.
Diamond's testimony to a parliamentary inquiry could prove politically explosive; on Tuesday, Barclays published a 2008 internal memo from him which fellow managers understood to mean that the Bank and government might approve if they manipulated the Libor rate at the height of the banking crisis.
The American banker is scheduled to appear before the cross-party Treasury Select Committee at 2 p.m..
Though his compatriots across the Atlantic will be celebrating a holiday marking their independence from Britain, Diamond said he "looked forward to fulfilling" his appointment with the parliament in London, despite having already resigned.
Barclays' defence tactic of claiming official sanction for manipulating a rate at a time of market crisis drew a sceptical response on Tuesday from the man who was British chancellor at the time. Alistair Darling said he could not imagine the central bank asking Barclays to take such action and said his department would never "suggest wrongdoing like this".
Britain's third-biggest bank was fined nearly half a billion dollars for its part in manipulating a key interest rate, the London Interbank Offered Rate, or Libor, which underpins financial transactions worth an estimated $360 trillion (229.52 trillion pounds).
Diamond is the third senior Barclays official to quit over the affair this week, following fines the bank agreed to pay last week of $453 million to British and U.S. authorities.
Barclays said in its submission that it was "ironic" that there had been such an intense focus on it alone, because the company had been the first to settle with authorities over Libor in the midst of a global investigation of the banking industry. - Thankfully, it’s not just me keeping you up-to-date with today’s events. We’ll also be joined by Breakingviews Assistant Editor Robert Cole, Reuters columnist and CEO of Marcus Venture Consulting Lucy P. Marcus , Cardiff University Business School professor Laurence Copeland, Forex.com’s Research Director Kathleen Brooks and CEO of IT Decisions Mark Hillary.
My colleague George Hay is at the hearing, and you can follow his Twitter updates via @gfhay. - Bob Diamond will appear before the Parliamentary Treasury Committee. Here's who is on the committee t.cocomment by lucymarcus via twitter 7/4/2012 12:19:40 PM
- Bob Diamond will appear before the Parliamentary Treasury Committee. Here's what the committee's role is t.cocomment by lucymarcus via twitter 7/4/2012 12:19:42 PM
- We want to hear from you too, of course. Join the discussion by sending us your comments and questions throughout the hearing and we’ll try to publish/answer as many of them as we can.
- Bank executives forced to resign over an interest rate-rigging scandal should not receive big pay offs, Prime Minister David Cameron said at today's PMQs.
The PM told parliament: "I think it would be completely wrong if people who were leaving under these circumstances were given some vast pay off. It would be completely inexplicable to the British public and would not be right." - Reuters Breakingviews Editor Hugo Dixon was on BBC Radio 4’s Today programme this morning. Asked for his thoughts on the suggestion that Barclays had been encouraged to rig the borrowing rate by the Bank of England, Hugo said:
“There are really two different phases of the rigging, there was the sort of rigging that was happening in the good days in the boom times where traders, reasonably junior people in the bank were manipulating the rate in order to boost their profits … as far as we know that was fairly low down in the organisation.
“The rigging, or the false submissions, that took place in and around the crisis were because Barclays was concerned that it would seem it was an outlier by having higher rates, it was having to pay more to get money than other banks and therefore the market would focus on it and say ‘My God that is a really troubled bank’. So that’s the second phase and it’s a very different phase. And that phase, as we now know, involved Bob Diamond, and it also involved in a way that’s not still clear, this rather odd telephone conversation between Bob Diamond and Paul Tucker.”
Host John Humphrys then asked Hugo what he took from that phone call. Was Bob Diamond being leaned on by the BoE to do what he did?
Hugo said: “If this is an accurate representation of the conversation … and as you said it’s only one side of the conversation … it’s difficult to conclude that the Bank of England in the form of Paul Tucker wasn’t hinting that Barclays could lower its rate … You don’t always have to be higher was what the message essentially was.” Did Diamond jump, or was he pushed?
- We'll also have a live stream of Diamond's grilling by MPs right here on this page.
- Barclays set out its defence in the Libor rigging scandal by releasing a nine-page document on its website which details how it thought British authorities had indicated they were happy for it to make a lower submission to the London interbank offered rate when markets were in turmoil and confidence in banks fraying.
Here's a link to that document. 
A police officer stands on duty as protestors from the Move Your Money group stick up posters on a branch of Barclays Bank in Westminster central London, July 4, 2012. REUTERS/Olivia Harris
- Up to a point the politicians are under scrutiny here as well as Diamond. Will they impress in their questioning?
- Would Barclays have secured funds from Middle East investors, avoided nationalisation and protected its bosses’ bonuses if it hadn't lowered Libor submissions? Reuters Breakingviews Editor Hugo Dixon ponders this very question in this piece.
- Not long to go now, folks. Bob Diamond will begin giving evidence to the hearing in just a few minutes.

Barclays former Chief Executive Bob Diamond arrives at Portcullis House to attend a Treasury select committee hearing in Westminster, London July 4, 2012. REUTERS/Luke MacGregor

Barclays former Chief Executive Bob Diamond arrives at Portcullis House to attend a Treasury select committee hearing in Westminster, London July 4, 2012. REUTERS/Luke MacGregor
- I'd say I'm watching for three key things in this grilling. Will Diamond try shifting the blame to the Bank of England or the general City culture (as in every major bank was doing it), will he personally apologise, and will he volunteer to surrender his golden parachute? It's not often you get £20m+ for resigning is such circumstances...

Barclays former Chief Executive Bob Diamond arrives at Portcullis House to attend a Treasury select committee hearing in Westminster, London July 4, 2012. REUTERS/Luke MacGregor

RT @CapitalCityIFR: Are they building gallows for anyone in particular at the Aldgate entrance to The City in London? yfrog.com
by matthewjdavies via twitter 7/4/2012 1:05:58 PM- I wonder if the MPs will remind Mr Diamond if he still thinks the time for apologising is over...
- Sky reporting Barclays DOES have recording of Tucker-Diamond call. One easy way to settle this spat, fellas. Release the tape.by gareth_gore via twitter 7/4/2012 1:06:45 PM
- Limerick making the rounds in the City today (author?): There's a man at the Bank called Tucker/ Who Bob tried to treat like a sucker...by CapitalCityIFR via twitter 7/4/2012 1:06:59 PM
- Is the real concern for Barclays that it chose to "settle" first, hence all of the attention is on them. Would Diamond have left his post if all of the banks involved had been outed at the same time?
- (cont') Bob launched an attack/ but Tucker struck back/ now none of us know who's the... ... nice guyby CapitalCityIFR via twitter 7/4/2012 1:07:38 PM
- RT @ChrisGiles_: Interesting irrelevant fact. Paul Tucker will be in the MPC meeting for most of BD's testimony. Expect many notes to be ...by gareth_gore via twitter 7/4/2012 1:08:06 PM
- Barclays say they have a recording of the conversation between Paul Tucker and Bob Diamondby lucymarcus via twitter 7/4/2012 1:08:09 PM
Mr Andrew Tyrie (Chairman) Conservative
Michael Fallon Conservative Mark Garnier Conservative
Stewart Hosie Scottish National Party
Andrea Leadsom Conservative
Rt Hon Pat McFadden Labour
Mr Andy Love Labour Co-Operative
John Mann Labour
Mr George Mudie Labour
Jesse Norman Conservative
Teresa Pearce Labour
Mr David Ruffley Conservative
John Thurso Liberal Democrat- Hurry up and file into Portcullis house alreadyby spencerand via twitter 7/4/2012 1:08:29 PM
- Paul Tucker keen to appear before the Treasury Committee to put his own case forward.by lucymarcus via twitter 7/4/2012 1:08:52 PM
- RT @SkyNewsBreak: Barclays says it has a recording of 2008 phone call between Bob Diamond and Paul Tuckerby gareth_gore via twitter 7/4/2012 1:09:33 PM
- This story is not just about Libor. That was a tipping point for other concerns and discontent around pay, performance & feeling of distrustby lucymarcus via twitter 7/4/2012 1:10:07 PM
- RT @IFR_Owen: RT @skynewsbreak: Barclays says it has a recording of 2008 phone call between Bob Diamond and Paul Tuckerby CapitalCityIFR via twitter 7/4/2012 1:10:15 PM
- @lucymarcus @Reuters So has it started?comment by DGWilkinson via twitter 7/4/2012 1:11:08 PM
- Kelly Evans at CNBC poses an interesting question: why is Libor (the rate banks charge to lend to each other) used to price thousands of consumer financial products anyway?
- @DGWilkinson Looks like it's running a few minutes late. Shouldn't be long now though.
- Evans suggests that something like t he Fed Funds rate in the US or the base rate at the Bank of England, something the BOE actively controls, should be used instead. A good point...
- Hi there ! just heard Tucker wants to appear too
- Bank of England's Paul #Tucker has asked for swift appearance in front of MPs. Smart move.comment by Hugo Dixon via twitter 7/4/2012 1:12:31 PM
- don't understand why LibDems aren't calling for a judicial inquiry into banking industry. they would have most to win.comment by Hugo Dixon via twitter 7/4/2012 1:12:32 PM
- @Hugodixon this wasn't in the coalition agreement so it would be within their rights to argue that but they are still too in awe of the citycomment by Big__Kev via twitter 7/4/2012 1:12:42 PM
- What an entrance!by spencerand via twitter 7/4/2012 1:12:42 PM
- The select committee was due to begin at 1400, but as Barclays are involved it changed by a few basis points to 1415
- Thirsty Bob?by spencerand via twitter 7/4/2012 1:13:49 PM
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