Showing posts with label United States. Show all posts
Showing posts with label United States. Show all posts

Thursday, 21 November 2013

Investors: AT&T and Verizon must say how much customer data goes to NSA

Phone companies' customers could switch networks if they feel their privacy is being compromised, say investment funds
Big investors in America's two largest mobile phone companies have demanded they disclose how much customer data they hand over to the US and foreign governments. Documents from the NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden show AT&T and Verizon have installed equipment to copy, scan and filter large amounts of the traffic that passes through their networks.
AT&T and Verizon Communications, which owns Verizon Wireless, will face votes at their annual shareholder meetings following formal requests from one of New York's biggest public sector pension funds and a large private investment firm. The $161bn New York State Common Retirement Fund, which manages the pensions of more than 1 million state workers, and Trillium Asset Management, a Boston-based investment management firm with $1.3bn under management, havelodged demands with both networks to publish the number of requests they receive for customer information every six months.
The investors said customers could switch to other networks if they think their privacy has been compromised.
AT&T has also been warned that its willingness to co-operate with state-sponsored surveillance could hamper its ambitions to expand its business into Europe. The company is reported to be considering a bid for Vodafone, the British-based mobile network with outposts across Europe, Africa and Asia.
The Verizon chief executive, Lowell McAdam, when asked about the company's legal obligations, recently stated: "We are the largest telecommunications provider to the United States government, and you have to do what your customer tells you."
A Verizon spokesman said: "We've received the proposal and we're currently evaluating it." A spokesman for AT&T stated: "As standard practice we look carefully at all shareholder proposals but at this point in the process we do not expect to comment on them."
Article Source : http://www.guardian.co.uk
Azure Global’s vision is to be widely recognized as a reputed firm of financial business advisors, achieving real growth for ambitious companies and to become the first choice for F&A outsourcing for accountancy practices and businesses alike and if u want to Setup ur business in United Kingdom then  its not difficult in this modern age for more info visit our site Azure Global and join us also On Facebook

Thursday, 26 September 2013

Icap fined £55m as ex-staff charged over Libor rigging

Former Tory treasurer Michael Spencer runs into political row as firm he founded given stiff penalty and ex-employees charged
The City dealer run by former Conservative party treasurer Michael Spencer has been fined £55m by regulators and three of its former employees charged with criminal offences in the United States as part of the global investigation into Libor rigging.
Spencer said he regretted the actions of the three – one of whom was known to colleagues as "Lord Libor". Regulators hit the Icap money broking firm he runs with huge fines and released pages of embarrassing email exchanges showing offers of a curry night out, a Ferrari and "bubbly on its way" in return for moving the yen Libor rate.
One of the City's highest profile figures, Spencer was drawn into a political row as the Labour MP John Mann called for his donations to the Conservative party to be handed to the armed forces charities where Libor fines are sent.
Labour's vice-chairman Michael Dugher also called for the money to be returned. "David Cameron fought tooth and nail to avoid launching a proper inquiry into the scandal of rigging interest rates, the very scandal which has now engulfed one of his big donors – a man who has given him nearly £5m," Dugher said. "It just goes to show what we already knew. In the end it's a privileged few whose voices he hears, and whose interests he acts in."
Each of the one-time employees – Darrell Read, who lives in New Zealand, Daniel Wilkinson and "Lord Libor", Colin Goodman – face 30 years in jail for each of the three charges levelled against them by the US department of justice (DoJ). They have been charged with conspiracy to commit wire fraud and two counts of wire fraud. In the US a criminal complaint is not evidence and a defendant is presumed innocent until convicted.
Spencer's tenure as treasurer of the Conservative party overlapped with the period of the fines – between July 2006 and December 2010 – but he claimed that this was not relevant. Even if he had not been holding the senior political role Spencer said: "I can't believe I'd have been able to pick it up."
A Tory official said the demands to repay Spencer's donations were "nonsense".
Spencer has attended a series of dinners in Downing Street and close links with the party since leaving his post as co-treasurer. Last year he was described as a personal friend of the prime minister by cabinet minister Francis Maude.
Spencer described the 10 former and current employees as "rotten apples" but acknowledged the desk on which they worked had never been audited during the relevant four-year period.
Announcing the latest development in the Libor scandal, which erupted in June 2012 when Barclays was fined £290m, Scott Hammond, deputy assistant attorney general for the antitrust division's criminal enforcement programme, said: "In exchange for bigger bonus checks, the three defendants undermined financial markets around the world by compromising the integrity of globally used interest rate benchmarks."
Icap, in which Spencer and his family own a 16% stake worth £400m, will pay £14m to the Financial Conduct Authority. It is the FCA's fourth fine for Libor rigging and first against a non-bank. The remainder of the £55m will go the US authorities.
According to the FCA one of the brokers received £5,000 every quarter in "corrupt bonus payments".
The regulators link the activities to those of UBS, the Swiss bank which has so far faced the largest Libor fine of £940m. The DoJ's complaint names former UBS trader Tom Hayes as a "co-conspirator" in its charges against former Icap employees along with "others known and unknown".
According to the FCA, which does not name individuals, there were 300 written requests to change Libor rates to brokers at Icap, and more orally which were harder to chart.
Libor – the London interbank offered – is a benchmark rate based on submissions by major banks about the price they think rivals would charge them to borrow money over different periods of time. It in turn is used a benchmark against which £300tn of financial contracts around the world are set.
According to the DoJ, Goodman distributed a daily email to individuals outside of Icap, including derivatives traders at several large banks as well as those responsible for providing Libor submissions to the British Bankers' Association. The BBA is now being stripped of its involvement in the rate.
Goodman's email contained what were termed his "SUGGESTED LIBORS", purported predictions of where yen Libor ultimately would fix each day across eight specified borrowing periods. Read and Wilkinson, along with Goodman himself, often referred to Goodman as "Lord Libor"," the DoJ said.
Spencer did not rule out taking a bonus for this year but said top executive payouts would be affected. "None of the three individuals at the centre of the activity remains with the firm. Others are either no longer with the company or are being disciplined," he added. "We deeply regret and strongly condemn the inexcusable actions of the brokers who sought to assist certain bank traders in their efforts to manipulate yen Libor. Their conduct contravenes all that Icap stands for."

'Will buy you a Ferrari if you move 3 month up' 

Desk head: "Lord Baliff, I would suggest a lunch over golden week. Monday or Tuesday, if you are around ... As for kickbacks etc, we can discuss that at lunch and I will speak to [senior yen trader] about it next time he comes up for a chat."
Trader: "OK with an annual champagne shipment, a few p*** ups … and a small bonus every now and then."
Broker: "How about some form of performance bonus per quarter from your b bonus [sic] pool to me for the Libor service …"
Derivatives broker: "Morning Lad, on the scrounge again, if possible keep 3 [months] the same and get 6 [months] as high as you can. My guy … will want it has high possible. Waiting for my credit card to get returned to me from a drunken night out bowling but will be supplying you with copious amounts of curry on it's imminent return.
Derivatives broker: "Make 6m go lower! They r going up. [Trader] will buy you a Ferrari next year you move 3 [month] up and no change 6 [month]"
Derivatives broker: "brooliant!! they are making fortunes with these high fixings!!! :-)
Trader told broker that he "need[ed] high at the start of Oct". Broker replied: "Gotcha … just give me a 'wish list' at the start of each day."
Article Source : http://www.guardian.co.uk
Azure Global’s vision is to be widely recognized as a reputed firm of financial business advisors, achieving real growth for ambitious companies and to become the first choice for F&A outsourcing for accountancy practices and businesses alike and if u want to Setup ur business in United Kingdom then  its not difficult in this modern age for more info visit our site Azure Global and join us also On Facebook

Thursday, 19 September 2013

Federal Reserve maintains bond-buying stimulus in surprise move

Markets cheered as federal open markets committee says US recovery is too fragile to cut back on $85bn-a-month stimulus
US stock markets hit record highs Wednesday as the Federal Reserve surprised investors by announcing that the economic recovery was too fragile to cut back on its massive $85bn-a-month stimulus program.
After a two-day meeting, the federal open market committee (FOMC) said it required "more evidence that progress will be sustained". The news delighted the markets which had sunk ahead of the news on fears that the Fed was preparing to "taper" the so-called quantitative easing (QE) program. Even the threat of a slight reduction in the stimulus spooked the markets in July.
But the news also underlined the precarious state of the wider economy as a row over the US's debt limit threatens a government shutdown. In a press conference Ben Bernanke, Fed chairman, warned that the current row could have "very serious consequences".
Analysts had expected the Fed to announce that it was preparing to trim back QE, a huge bond-buying scheme aimed at keeping interest rates down and encouraging business investment.
Bernanke signalled in July that the scheme would be cut back and that such a move could be announced in September. But the FOMC concluded to leave the scheme intact for now.
The committee said it saw "improvement in economic activity and labor market conditions". But it added: "However, the committee decided to await more evidence that progress will be sustained before adjusting the pace of its purchases."
It would continue to closely monitor economic and financial developments in coming months and continue its purchases of Treasury and mortgage-backed securities "until the outlook for the labor market has improved substantially in a context of price stability".
Bernanke warned that the political clash over the US's debt limit and the threat of a government shutdown were all likely to harm the economy. "A government shutdown and failure to raise the debt limit could have very serious consequences for financial markets and the economy," he said.
The FOMC said fiscal policy was "restraining economic growth" and expressed concern about rising mortgage rates and the still high unemployment rate. Bernanke said the FOMC's ability to mitigate the impact of a debt ceiling crisis was "very limited".
Bernanke has linked any tapering of the QE policy to a sustained decline in the unemployment rate. US unemployment dipped to 7.3% last month, down from 8.1% a year ago. But the pace of job recovery remains sluggish and the latest drop was driven in part by people deciding to leave the workforce. The labour force participation rate slumped to 63.2%, its worst reading in 35 years.
Only one member of the FOMC, Esther George, chief executive of the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City, voted against the decision not to cut back on QE. She has been a persistent critic of the scheme. According to the Fed, George "was concerned that the continued high level of monetary accommodation increased the risks of future economic and financial imbalances and, over time, could cause an increase in long-term inflation expectations".
US stock markets soared to record highs shortly after its release. Both the Dow Jones and S&P 500 set new records after the news. The Dow closed up over 147 points at 15676.94, the 31st time this year it has set a new record. Oil and gold prices also rose. The yields for the benchmark 10-year Treasury note sunk and the dollar slumped to a seven month low against the euro.
President Barack Obama is now assessing potential successors and Bernanke's second term ends in January. On Sunday former Treasury secretary Larry Summers withdrew from the race leaving vice-chairman Janet Yellen seen as most likely to succeed to the post. Bernanke declined to comment on the succession. "I'd prefer not to talk about my plans at this point," he said.
The Fed's move comes as the US faces a potentially disastrous row over increasing its borrowing limits. In 2011 a standoff in Congress over the debt ceiling led to a historic downgrade of US debt and panic on the financial markets.
Obama accused Republicans of trying to "extort" him Tuesday by holding up negotiations unless he is prepared to amend or scarp his landmark healthcare reforms, the Affordable Care Act. Republican House speaker John Boehner hit back Wednesday calling Obamacare "a train wreck", as other party leaders set out further terms and conditions for raising the limit. The two sides are now at an impasse just days before the 30 September deadline to pass a government funding bill.
The government reached its $16.7tn debt limit in May and has been employing emergency measures to manage its cash, such as suspending investments in pension funds for federal workers, to stay below the line. But Treasury secretary Jack Lew has warned that the government will run out of room to manoeuvre in October and will be unable to meet its obligations.
On Tuesday Lew warned Congress again that a prolonged argument over the debt limit could do lead the US to default on its debts and irrevocably damage to the economy. "We cannot afford for Congress to gamble with the full faith and credit of the United States," Lew told the Economic Club of Washington.
A default would likely cause turmoil on world stock markets and a sharp rise in interest rates. Lew repeated a warning he made last month that the Treasury would soon be left with only around $50bn in cash on hand. The Treasury pays investors about $100bn to investors every Thursday that investors immediately lend back to the government, a process known as rolling over the debt.
"If US bondholders decided that they wanted to be repaid rather than continuing to roll over their investments, we could unexpectedly dissipate our entire cash balance," Lew said.
Default could come soon after that and would likely rock Wall Street and lead to a sharp rise in interest rates.
Article Source : http://www.guardian.co.uk
Azure Global’s vision is to be widely recognized as a reputed firm of financial business advisors, achieving real growth for ambitious companies and to become the first choice for F&A outsourcing for accountancy practices and businesses alike and if u want to Setup ur business in United Kingdom then  its not difficult in this modern age for more info visit our site Azure Global and join us also On Facebook