LONDON, Jan 9: The banking sector “needs to change” after it became “too arrogant” in the run-up to the infamous Libor rate-rigging scandal, the head of the investment bank division of Swiss lender UBS told British lawmakers here on Wednesday.

“We all got probably too arrogant, too self-convinced that things were correct the way they were. I think the industry needs to change,” Andrea Orcel told the Parliamentary Commission on Banking Standards, which was set up to examine the Libor crisis.

“There are certainly elements of our cultures which are negative and that we need to root out. We are in the process of rooting out,” he told the Commission, which is a scrutiny panel composed of lawmakers from parliament’s upper and lower houses.

The Commission, established by British finance minister George Osborne, is looking into banking standards and culture in the wake of the Libor rate-rigging scandal that has rocked Barclays and UBS.

The US, British and Swiss authorities last month hit Switzerland’s largest bank with $1.5 billion in fines — the second-largest banking penalty ever — for massive misconduct in the setting of the Libor rate.

“We are very focused on recovering the honour and standing the organisation had in the past,” Orcel added on Wednesday.

“I am convinced that we have made a lot of progress. I am also convinced that we still need to do more.” The Libor rate is used as a benchmark for global financial contracts worth about $300 trillion, and revelations that it had been rigged have harmed the reputation of the City of London financial centre, though the misconduct is believed to have occurred elsewhere as well.

The crisis erupted last June after British bank Barclays was fined £290 million by British and the US regulators for attempted manipulation of Libor and Euribor interbank rates between 2005 and 2009. Libor is calculated daily, using estimates from banks of their own rates.

However, the system has been found to be open to abuse, with some traders lying about borrowing costs to boost trading positions or make their bank seem more secure.—AFP

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