That was just a month ago, at the beginning of October, and back then it 
seemed like the banks might somehow escape the Libor mess with their necks 
intact.

Now, a month later, yet another bank has been forced to cough up a billion 
dollars for Libor manipulation, Fannie Mae has filed a major suit on the 
same grounds, and the Guardian Care Homes case is not only alive but looking 
like a threat to cancel billions of dollars' worth of Libor-related 
contracts. Not only that, many of those same banks are being sucked into 
what potentially is an even uglier scandal involving currency manipulation.

One gets the feeling that governments in all the major Western democracies 
would like to sweep these manipulation scandals under the rug. The only 
problem is that the scale of the misdeeds in these various markets is so 
enormous that even the most half-assed attempt at regulation will cause a 
million-car pileup.

There's simply no way to do a damage calculation that won't wipe out the 
entire finance sector when you're talking about pervasive, ongoing 
manipulation of $5-trillion-a-day markets. That's the problem - there's no 
way to do a slap on the wrist in these cases. If they're guilty, they're 
done.

http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/blogs/taibblog/chase-isnt-the-only-bank-in-trouble-20131105

----------------

Taibbi's latest. We can pretty much count on no government attempts to 
regulate, and all governments to settle for fines to a greater or lesser 
scale, while the elected elite pray their financial constituencies come to 
their senses and make a slow turn around. I can't see that happening 
either...

Deny, detract, delay, and pray. That seems to be the policy.

CG

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