Forgot password?  or  Join Forex.fo Community
  
Market Trends Charts and Indicators Webmaster Tools Economic Calendar Strategies Support Q&A Media
Follow us:

Forex.foForex Market News

Keywords:

People search: Ex-SE, RPT-TABLE-Reuters/U, Microsoft, Factory Orders , Universal, Conoco

U.S. judge in Libor cases puts new lawsuits on hold

08 Aug. 2012 (GMT)
 
Add Comment
By Basil Katz

NEW YORK, Aug 8 - A federal judge on Wednesday suspended several new lawsuits that allege banks rigged key interest rates, saying she first needed to sort through the issues in an earlier round of related lawsuits.

U.S. District Judge Naomi Reice Buchwald said from the bench in Manhattan federal court that she first needed to see the course of earlier litigation over the same issue before she would allow the new lawsuits to go forward. 'Defining new classes as each new complaint is filed... could result in the mismanagement' of these cases, Buchwald said at the crowded hearing. 'Ours is a landscape of shifting sands.'

Buchwald is overseeing several proposed class actions, some filed as early as April 2011, by plaintiffs that include some big investors and local governments, such as the city of Baltimore. The plaintiffs say they were harmed in different ways by the banks' suspected manipulation of the benchmark London interbank offered rate, commonly known as Libor. Citigroup Inc, Bank of America Corp, HSBC and UBS are among the banks being sued over Libor, which is determined in London and sets interest on more than $350 trillion of securities from mortgages to complex derivatives.

The banks have said in court papers that the plaintiffs have failed to show how they acted to restrict competition, even if rates were misstated.

Buchwald's decision puts on hold a lawsuit filed in May by the Community Bank & Trust of Sheboygan, two other proposed class-action complaints filed since then, as well as any new complaint that might be filed in the future.

In the meantime, Buchwald said, she would sort out ongoing motions filed by the defendants to dismiss the older lawsuits.

'I am assuming that this will work itself out in the next few weeks,' Buchwald said.

Charles Tompkins, a lawyer for Community Bank, did not immediately return a call seeking comment on Buchwald's ruling. The 11-branch bank, which has assets of about $554 million, had filed suit in late May seeking class-action status so other community banks can join the litigation.

The cases are consolidated under In Re: Libor-Based Financial Instruments Antitrust Litigation, U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York, No. 11-md-2262.

(Editing by Leslie Gevirtz)


 Add Comment

If you want to write a comment, please fill all fields you will be registered automatically. If you have are already registered, please login.

First name *

Last name *

Your email address *

Repeat email *

Choose password *

Repeat password *

Country *

City

Phone

Skype

Note: Your email address is not visible.

Today Market News Forex Quotes Economic Calendar Forex Brokers
Market Trend Charts and Indicators Currency Converter Pip Value Calculator
Margin Calculator Forex Articles Job & Careers Partners
About Forex.fo Contact us ImpressumTerms and Conditions
© Copyright 2008 - 2013 Forex.fo

Forex.fo is not responsible for any link published on its website or the content of any website these links may point to.
Request Callback