Business

A not-for-profit company set up nearly a decade ago in the wake of the Libor rate-rigging scandal will this week appoint a veteran City banker as its next chair.

Sky News understands Jonathan Moulds has been lined up to head the Financial Markets Standards Board (FMSB), with an announcement expected to be made on Tuesday.

The FMSB acts as a standards-setting body for global wholesale financial markets.

Mr Moulds, who spent a long stint in senior roles at Bank of America, joined Barclays in 2015 under then CEO Antony Jenkins.

He is now chair of Citi’s international broker-dealer, CGML, is on the board of the London-listed financial spread-betting operator IG Group, and chairs Litigation Capital Management, the publicly traded litigation funding provider.

At the FMSB, Mr Moulds will replace Mark Yallop, a former UK CEO of UBS, the Swiss banking giant currently in the process of acquiring Credit Suisse in a rescue takeover.

The organisation was created in the wake of the Fair and Effective Markets Review commissioned by the Treasury, Financial Conduct Authority and Prudential Regulation Authority in response to a string of financial markets scandals.

Read more from business:
Why UBS-Credit Suisse merger was once unthinkable

Tesco chairman accused of inappropriate behaviour

These included the Libor rate-rigging crisis, which saw dozens of banks fined billions of pounds by regulators around the world.

Global banks were also fined substantial sums for their roles in manipulating gold prices and their use of ‘dark pool’ trading venues.

The FMSB, which counts dozens of banks and other market practitioners as members, could not be reached for comment.

Articles You May Like

Police to use life-size hologram of murdered sex worker to help ‘track down killer’
Texas to get 1 GW AI-powered virtual power plant, enough to power 200,000 homes
Elon Musk is $70 billion richer since Trump victory due to Tesla stock surge
Trump EPA pick says he’ll protect clean air… by making the air dirtier?
Diamond necklace linked to Marie Antoinette’s downfall sells for £3.7m