Three fund giants are assessing how clients have been affected by Libor manipulation, and also weigh whether legal action is necessary.
Bloomberg reports that
BlackRock [
profile],
Fidelity [
profile] and
Vanguard [
profile], which manage a total of $7 trillion assets, can take cues from
Charles Schwab [
profile], which filed suit against lenders for artificially suppressing Libor.
“On behalf of our clients and shareholders, we have been following developments in the Libor market and the related litigation activity for some time," Vincent Loporchio, Fidelity spokesperson, told
Bloomberg said in an emailed statement. "We have noted recent news with interest and continue to evaluate our options.”
Meanwhile, BlackRock spokeswoman Bobbie Collins said that "it will be some time before greater clarity emerges," as the Libor issue is complex.
According to
John Coates, a law professor at Harvard Law School, [litigation on Libor related matters] "has the potential to be the biggest single set of cases coming out of the financial crisis because Libor is built into so many transactions, and Libor is so central to so many contracts. It’s like saying reports about the inflation rate were wrong.”
The British Bankers' Association called the Libor "the world's most important number," as it is the basis for pricing securities that include short-term variable rate of return and Eurodollar futures and options pricing and settlement. 
Edited by:
HFD
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