loading...
Published on June 11, 2018
Property Alliance Group v RBS (Court of Appeal)

English Court of Appeal confirms possibility of implied representation when banks offer benchmark-linked products.

The Court of Appeal (the “CoA”) has recently confirmed an expanded scope for implied representations regarding non-manipulation of LIBOR by banks proffering LIBOR linked interest rate swaps. The CoA also confirmed that, for the purpose of demonstrating the falsity of such a representation, if a bank has manipulated LIBOR in one currency and one tenor (e.g. 3 month Swiss Franc LIBOR) it may be assumed that it has also manipulated LIBOR across other tenors within that same currency (e.g. 1, 2, 6 and 12 month Swiss Franc LIBOR). 

However, the CoA declined to expand this to include other LIBOR currencies. The court noted that: “The idea that RBS could contemplate manipulating some of the tenors of sterling LIBOR and not others seems to us peculiarly far-fetched and would call into question RBS’s honesty in connection with sterling across the board.”

The case therefore marks an expansion of the scope for implied representations regarding non-manipulation when banks proffer benchmark-linked products, and has the potential to be used in relation to FX-linked transactions with banks.

The decision that there could not be assumed to have been cross-contamination between currencies was based on the evidence before the court that LIBOR submissions in different currencies were made by different people in different offices. Given different evidence – for example, any evidence of overlap between the submitters for different currencies – that decision could well be different in another case.

Principles arising from the Court of Appeal decision

The Court of Appeal decision confirmed:

  1. By proffering a swap linked to LIBOR, the bank had impliedly represented that it was not itself seeking to manipulate LIBOR and did not intend to do so in the future.
  2. However, a claimant will still be required to prove the falsity of that claim to succeed in a claim for negligent or fraudulent misrepresentations, and regulatory findings are not of themselves adequate proof.

The full judgment can be accessed here

News
Apr 25, 2024
UK Supreme Court confirms anti-suit relief in favour of foreign-seated arbitration proceedings
In the most significant decision in the arbitration world since Enka v Chubb, the Supreme Court has confirmed this week...
Apr 10, 2024
The big freeze: Unitel SA v Unitel International Holdings BV & Anor
Mr Justice Bright has provided a useful reminder as to the hurdles that need to be overcome to secure a...
Mar 6, 2024
English High Court hands down significant judgment regarding an online auction of a blockchain-based NFT
The High Court has handed down judgment in Amir Soleymani v Nifty Gateway LLC. The background In 2021, Mr Soleymani,...
Feb 6, 2024
Anna Brownrigg speaking at Thought Leaders 4 Disputes: Financial Institutions Litigation
Anna Brownrigg will be speaking alongside a panel on Analysing the Rise of ESG Risks in Financial Institutions Litigation at...