Yahoo – AFP,
Roland Jackson, 12 Nov 2014
British
bank HSBC and US peers Citigroup were among five banks fined
by regulators (AFP
Photo/Facundo Arrizabalaga)
|
The hefty
fines centred on London, the world's biggest hub for the $5.3-trillion-per-day
forex market, and the British government hailed a move to "clean up
corruption" in the City as the financial centre's reputation has been
badly damaged in recent years.
British
banks HSBC and Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS), US peers Citigroup and JPMorgan
Chase, and Swiss lender UBS have all been fined by Britain's Financial Conduct
Authority (FCA) and the US Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC).
JPMorgan is
one of five banks facing
huge fines over alleged foreign exchange
rigging (AFP
Photo/Timothy A. Clary)
|
The Swiss
Financial Market Supervisory Authority (FINMA) also announced a settlement of
134 million Swiss francs ($139 million) with UBS over the matter.
Barclays
uncertainty
However Barclays
-- which was at the heart of the 2012 Libor rate-rigging affair -- was not
included in the settlements and remains under investigation by authorities.
The
uncertainty sent Barclays' share price sliding 2.15 percent to 229.55 pence in
early afternoon deals on the falling FTSE 100 index. The bank had last month
set aside £500 million for a potential fine to settle forex allegations.
In recent
years, a string of scandals has damaged the reputation of major banks, which
sparked the notorious 2008 global financial crisis that led to a subsequent
worldwide recession.
The FCA
said that it found "ineffective controls" at the five banks between
2008 and 2013, allowing traders "to put their banks' interests ahead of
those of their clients, other market participants and the wider UK financial
system".
"The
traders put their own interests ahead of their customers. They attempted to
manipulate the market and abused the trust of the public and us as
regulators," FCA chief executive Martin Wheatley told reporters at a press
conference in London.
The FCA
said that it had proposed new rules for the 36 banks operating in the foreign
exchange market.
The investigation homed in on trading in the world's top 10 currencies, known as the "G10".
The investigation homed in on trading in the world's top 10 currencies, known as the "G10".
Traders at
the different banks "formed tight knit groups in which information was
shared about client activity", the British regulator said.
It added
that traders used code to identify clients without naming the them. They
referred to themselves with nicknames like "The 3 Musketeers",
"The Players" and "The A-team".
'Conflicts of interest'
"The
banks failed to manage obvious risks around confidentiality, conflicts of
interest and trading conduct," the FCA said.
At the same
time, the CFTC said in a separate statement that the five banks were being
punished for "attempted manipulation of, and for aiding and abetting other
banks' attempts to manipulate, global foreign exchange benchmark rates to
benefit the positions of certain traders."
It added
that Citi, HSBC, JPMorgan, RBS and UBS had "coordinated trading with other
banks in private chat rooms in their attempts to manipulate" the market.
The CFTC
also ordered the banks to "cease and desist from further violations, and
take specified steps to implement and strengthen their internal controls and
procedures."
Bank of
England governor Mark Carney expressed deep concern over the forex scandal.
Regulators
say banks attempted to
manipulate global foreign exchange
benchmark rates to benefit certain traders (AFP Photo/Scott Olson) |
News of the
FCA fine was welcomed by the British government.
"Today
we take tough action to clean up corruption by a few so that we have a
financial system that works for everyone," said finance minister George
Osborne.
"The
banks that employed them face big fines -- and I will ensure that these fines
are used for the wider public good."
The total
FCA fine is a record amount and eclipses the £532 million penalty it handed
down over the Libor scandal.
Christopher
Dembik, an economist at Saxo Bank in France, said the fines were
"extremely weak and perfectly manageable" compared to the banks'
holdings.
But he
added that it did show a "willingness" of regulators "not to
repeat the mistakes made in the last global financial crisis."
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