First of all, the rest of the world is looking at the US class action suit in which over $2 billion in settlements have already been made by 9 large banks, and lawyers and investors are planning additional suits in several countries. A $1 billion suit has just been filed in Canada relating to benchmark currency fixes.
Secondly, a Citi FX trader who had been dismissed in the UK relating to his sharing of client information with FX traders from other banks on chat rooms, is fighting his dismissal. He is claiming that it was a market practice at the time to share such information, especially regarding the trading of central banks. He mentions one M&A deal in which Citi front run the client's trade and made a profit of $35 million. He states that the very top Citi FX management actually had a hand in this deal.
There are other FX traders who were dismissed relating to similar charges who are also planning on disputing their firings.
Showing posts with label UK. Show all posts
Showing posts with label UK. Show all posts
Monday, September 14, 2015
FX Scandal Not Blowing Away
Labels:
bank settlements,
benchmark,
Citi,
Citibank,
class action,
currency,
fix,
foreign exchange,
front running,
FX,
FX fix,
fx settlements,
FX trader,
lawsuits,
litigation,
manipulation,
trader,
UK,
WM,
WM Reuters
Thursday, January 8, 2015
Will the Banks be Hit by a Wave of FX Manipulation Lawsuits?
An article in yesterday's Telegraph reports that UK farmers were hurt by the FX benchmark rigging scandal, as there is a 2.6 billion pound EU subsidy that first has to be converted from euros before paid to British farmers. An unclear reference in the article cites one day's manipulation that cost the farmers 16 million pounds in one year.
Regardless of the details here, what struck us at FinancialPests, was the wide range of potential suits with which the banks could be hit. Beyond all of the financial players, who we would expect to be more likely to file suits now that JPMorgan has settled one US suit, there may be many others as well. UK farmers would not have been on our radar screen as potential litigants(although no suit was mentioned in the article). Europe is, of course, less litigious than the US, and slower to file suits, but this reinforced to us that potentially, there may be a landslide of suits filed around the world during 2015.
Labels:
antitrust,
currency,
EU,
European Union,
farmers,
FX,
FX fix,
JPMorgan,
lawsuits,
litigation,
manipulation,
rigging,
UK,
WM,
WM Reuters
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