The UKs banking regulator, the Financial Services Authority, got very excited in March when rumours that HBOS might be facing a liquidity squeeze led to a 19% drop in the mortgage lenders share price and set off worries of yet another bank failure.
In the event, HBOS was not pushed over the edge. But Sally Dewar, director of the wholesale and institutional division of the FSA, was bouncing around on her seat as she scolded the market over a series of unfounded rumours, sometimes accompanied by short selling. What, one wonders, might have persuaded sensible people that a bank should be in trouble? Perhaps the Bank of England auctioning £5 billion of liquidity that same week and getting hit by bids for £23 billion of it.
No matter: the FSA wont stand for market participants taking advantage of market conditions to commit abuse by spreading false rumours and dealing on the back of them. Oh no.
Theres no word yet from the FSA on how it will deal with those bank executives who spread false rumours that building large long-term loan books financed on short-term capital markets borrowing was a sustainable business. Nor has it said how it will crack down on those spreading false rumours that their highly sophisticated risk management systems and cutting-edge risk-modeling skills qualified them to derive earnings from leveraged portfolios of high loan-to-value credits extended against collateral trading at historical highs with minimal evidence of borrowers own earnings.
And we positively shudder at the thought of what it might do to those guilty of maliciously spreading false rumours that the UKs banking system, which saw its first run on a high street bank since the 1860s last year, has been adequately monitored and rigorously regulated by a competent public authority.
We can but wait.