While FX misconduct investigations began regarding attempts to rig daily spot fixes, it has broadened to additional areas. Now the Financial Times reports that Barclays is near a settlement of over $100 million with the New York Department of Financial Services (NYDFS) regarding the misuse of the last look feature on its FX trading platform, BARX. Last look gives a bank the ability to quickly back out of a trade if there is a significant spot move against them. Those trading on a last look platform would expect to see tighter spreads in exchange for the proper usage of the last look provision.
The FT also reports on several FX investigations into Deutsche. These include the NYSDFS looking into Deutsche's trading platform, Autobahn, a report that there is evidence the bank intentionally set up algorithms to rig the currency markets,and that NYDFS, the Justice Department and other federal agencies have evidence that the bank profited by front running client FX orders. The new CEO at Deutsche may be more willing to try to settle these FX, and other investigations of past misconduct, quickly so that they can concentrate on the changing banking environment.
Wednesday, November 18, 2015
Sunday, October 25, 2015
Now a Crime In Venezuela - Publishing FX Rates
It would be funny if not true - similar to Argentina's fining consultants who tried to calculate the true rate of inflation a few years ago, the Venezuelan central bank is now suing a web site for publishing black market fx rates. To state the obvious, the problems in Venezuela are not related to people knowing the current black market rates but instead, the economic policies of the government. Of course, a lawsuit provides the illusion that it is otherwise.
Tuesday, October 6, 2015
Investigations of Electronic FX Trading Continue
Reuters reports that the New York Department of Financial Services (NYDFS) investigation of several money center banks for FX rate manipulation on electronic trading platforms is continuing. They report that NYDFS has interviewed dozens of traders and executives at Barclay's, Deutche Bank and Credit Suisse among other banks (NYDFS has its strongest remit with foreign banks) over the past several months. Subpoenas have also been sent to BNP, Goldman Sachs and Societe Generale according to Reuters sources.
NYDFS has already been known to be investigating FX algorithms on these platforms at the banks to determine if there is an attempt by the banks to advantage themselves at their clients' expense during the time between a rate being posted and then being accepted by a client. The concern is that this period may be used to front run client orders or otherwise manipulate FX rates. Earlier bank settlements with regulators covered spot market trading, but NYDFS agreements particularly, did not cover electronic trading. The Department of justice is also investigating FX electronic trading.
No information is available on how these investigations will play out against the various banks involved. The fact that they continue and appear to have widened from initial reports limited to Barclay's and Deutche, may indicate that regulators have found potential issues worthy of investigation, but do not provide clues as to the outcome.
NYDFS has already been known to be investigating FX algorithms on these platforms at the banks to determine if there is an attempt by the banks to advantage themselves at their clients' expense during the time between a rate being posted and then being accepted by a client. The concern is that this period may be used to front run client orders or otherwise manipulate FX rates. Earlier bank settlements with regulators covered spot market trading, but NYDFS agreements particularly, did not cover electronic trading. The Department of justice is also investigating FX electronic trading.
No information is available on how these investigations will play out against the various banks involved. The fact that they continue and appear to have widened from initial reports limited to Barclay's and Deutche, may indicate that regulators have found potential issues worthy of investigation, but do not provide clues as to the outcome.
Labels:
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bank regulators,
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investigation,
manipulation,
NYDFS,
rate setting
Thursday, October 1, 2015
FSB Updates FX Benchmark Progress
The Financial Stability Board (FSB), created in 2009 by the G20 to reform international financial regulation, includes as part of its mandate a role in standard setting and in promoting members’ implementation of international standards. In September 2014 it issued a report highlighting recommended solutions to prevent a repeat of the FX benchmark scandal. Today it released an update to look at progress made since that report.
The update is fairly positive ("having moved the market in a favourable direction"), highlighting improvements, but also mentioning areas where it believes that more work needs to be done.
The points made include:
1) There have been useful reforms in the methodology used in the WM Reuters (WMR) fix but that more can do done, and mentions certain central banks adjusting their fix methodologies as well. The FSB reiterates that all fixes need to be reviewed, not just the WMR fix.
2) "Recommendations suggested to increase transparency in pricing for fix transactions have seen good implementation among the largest market participants and for the most used benchmarks, but that elsewhere there is scope for further improvement".
3) "Steps to separate dealers’ fixings business from other activities are being taken by the larger participants and in the most active markets, but again there is room for further implementation in other areas of the FX market. For the execution of benchmark transactions, industry-led initiatives to promote greater use of independent netting and execution facilities are seeing welcome progress".
4) "Work is underway to improve market conduct practices, both within individual firms and through market-wide initiatives, including the global effort underway to develop a single code of conduct for the foreign exchange market through the Bank for International Settlements (BIS) Markets Committee working group on FX markets".
5) "While many index providers and end-users have increased their focus on the due diligence around FX benchmark use, there is scope for greater follow-through on this on the part of some market participants".
All in all, it appears that while some additional fix changes may be seen, for the most part fix reform will primarily involve broadening the changes already made to cover additional fixes and additional market participants. The probable exception will be the new international code of conduct being created by the BIS. This will replace the many different codes currently in force in markets around the world and will impact bank behavior.
The update is fairly positive ("having moved the market in a favourable direction"), highlighting improvements, but also mentioning areas where it believes that more work needs to be done.
The points made include:
1) There have been useful reforms in the methodology used in the WM Reuters (WMR) fix but that more can do done, and mentions certain central banks adjusting their fix methodologies as well. The FSB reiterates that all fixes need to be reviewed, not just the WMR fix.
2) "Recommendations suggested to increase transparency in pricing for fix transactions have seen good implementation among the largest market participants and for the most used benchmarks, but that elsewhere there is scope for further improvement".
3) "Steps to separate dealers’ fixings business from other activities are being taken by the larger participants and in the most active markets, but again there is room for further implementation in other areas of the FX market. For the execution of benchmark transactions, industry-led initiatives to promote greater use of independent netting and execution facilities are seeing welcome progress".
4) "Work is underway to improve market conduct practices, both within individual firms and through market-wide initiatives, including the global effort underway to develop a single code of conduct for the foreign exchange market through the Bank for International Settlements (BIS) Markets Committee working group on FX markets".
5) "While many index providers and end-users have increased their focus on the due diligence around FX benchmark use, there is scope for greater follow-through on this on the part of some market participants".
All in all, it appears that while some additional fix changes may be seen, for the most part fix reform will primarily involve broadening the changes already made to cover additional fixes and additional market participants. The probable exception will be the new international code of conduct being created by the BIS. This will replace the many different codes currently in force in markets around the world and will impact bank behavior.
Monday, September 14, 2015
FX Scandal Not Blowing Away
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.
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.
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, September 3, 2015
FX Investigations Widen Beyond WM Fix
When Bloomberg's initial story hit the wires in June 2013, the allegations, later confirmed to be true, were primarily limited to banks manipulating the WM benchmark rates. Since then regulators in the US, UK and Switzerland have instituted over $10 billion in fines on major banks related to FX, and in many cases, banks have acknowledged criminal wrongdoing. These fines related primarily to collusion by the banks in attempting to manipulate the fix, on the back of transcripts of chat room conversations by bank FX traders that clearly showed their collusion and attempts to profit at the expense of market participants. (For other wrongdoings acknowledged in bank settlements earlier this year, please see our blog post from June 1, 2015, FX Bank Settlements — More Misconduct than the Fix)
These regulatory and criminal matters relating to the fix are at least partially behind us now (individual traders and local emerging market fixes remain under scrutiny), although a class action civil lawsuit in the US related to these same matters is ongoing, with 9 banks having settled so far. In addition, law firms around the world are reported to be attempting to institute civil lawsuits in other jurisdictions as well, particularly in the UK. There, in the largest FX market in the world, new laws as of October 1 will allow suits similar to class action suits in the US (and will allow non-UK residents to participate). With over $2 billion in settlements to date in the US (with 7 banks remaining in the suit), there may be several billion pounds of additional settlements in the UK. Regulators in Australia, South Africa, Brazil and South Korea (and possibly others) are investigating benchmark rate rigging as well.
Banks fined by regulators and those settling the US class action have agreed to cooperate with regulators and the parties bringing the suit. Lawyers from the suit are reported to have said that evidence from the cooperation in the US points to bank manipulation of the bid-offer spread on currency trades through the rest of the day, not having to do with the fix. How this may have been done is not clear, but if true would dramatically increase the scope of bank wrongdoing. It would mean that the rates on many more trades are not entirely market driven and all such trades would have the bank gaining at client expense, while the benchmark manipulation had some clients gaining and some losing from each manipulated rate.
Until more information is released it is hard to know if there was additional rate-rigging in FX markets. Should it be shown to have occurred, a further move toward exchange-type trading should be expected, as well as further criminal prosecutions and civil suits. Bank traders and investors beware.
These regulatory and criminal matters relating to the fix are at least partially behind us now (individual traders and local emerging market fixes remain under scrutiny), although a class action civil lawsuit in the US related to these same matters is ongoing, with 9 banks having settled so far. In addition, law firms around the world are reported to be attempting to institute civil lawsuits in other jurisdictions as well, particularly in the UK. There, in the largest FX market in the world, new laws as of October 1 will allow suits similar to class action suits in the US (and will allow non-UK residents to participate). With over $2 billion in settlements to date in the US (with 7 banks remaining in the suit), there may be several billion pounds of additional settlements in the UK. Regulators in Australia, South Africa, Brazil and South Korea (and possibly others) are investigating benchmark rate rigging as well.
Banks fined by regulators and those settling the US class action have agreed to cooperate with regulators and the parties bringing the suit. Lawyers from the suit are reported to have said that evidence from the cooperation in the US points to bank manipulation of the bid-offer spread on currency trades through the rest of the day, not having to do with the fix. How this may have been done is not clear, but if true would dramatically increase the scope of bank wrongdoing. It would mean that the rates on many more trades are not entirely market driven and all such trades would have the bank gaining at client expense, while the benchmark manipulation had some clients gaining and some losing from each manipulated rate.
Until more information is released it is hard to know if there was additional rate-rigging in FX markets. Should it be shown to have occurred, a further move toward exchange-type trading should be expected, as well as further criminal prosecutions and civil suits. Bank traders and investors beware.
Labels:
bank fines,
bank regulators,
bank settlements,
benchmark,
class action,
fix,
foreign exchange,
FX,
fx fines,
FX fix,
fx settlements,
FX trader,
manipulation,
regulators,
rigging,
traders
Friday, August 14, 2015
FX Manipulation Class Action Spreads to more Banks in US, Possibly Around the World
It is now reported by Reuters that four additional banks, HSBC, Barclays, BNP Paribas and Goldman Sachs, have agreed to settle the US FX benchmark manipulation class action suit. In addition to bank settlements announced previously, this brings total settlements over $2 billion. Individual bank settlement amounts have not yet been announced. These banks plus five banks that settled previously have all agreed to "substantial cooperation" against the remaining 7 bank defendants, including recently added defendants (Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ, RBC Capital Markets, Société Générale and Standard Chartered were added August 1). Counsel referred to these settlements as "just the beginning" and mentioned that they are consulting on bringing additional cases against banks in larger Asian and European markets.
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