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The BBA said the review was an "essential step" toward reforming Libor and signaled it would accept Wheatley's recommendation to hand oversight to a new administrator. Wheatley also proposed that banks submitting rates be subject to formal approval. More banks should be encouraged to submit rates to make the LIBOR benchmark more representative, while the publication of individual submissions should be held back for three months to help prevent manipulation, he said. He proposed that the FSA continue to be the main regulator. Britain's Treasury expressed support for the "comprehensive and practical recommendations" laid out in the review, while Bank of England governor Mervyn King called for a swift implementation of the proposals. So far, Barclays is the only bank which has been identified as submitting false reports of the rates it expected to pay to borrow from other banks, although several other banks
-- including Citigroup Inc., Royal Bank of Scotland and JPMorgan Chase & Co.
-- are known to be under investigation.
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2012 The Associated
Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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