The Borneo Post

UK fines Merrill Lynch £34.5 mln

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LONDON: Britain’s financial watchdog said yesterday it had fined Merrill Lynch Internatio­nal a little over £ 34.5 million ( US$ 45.4 million) for failing to report tens of millions of trades.

The Financial Conduct Authority said in a statement that the fine relates to 68.5 million unreported transactio­ns over two years to February 2016 – and follows previous warnings and fines for similar offences.

The FCA added that this time around, it was “the first enforcemen­t action against a firm for failing to report details of trading in exchange traded derivative­s, under the European Markets Infrastruc­ture Regulation ( EMIR)” that was introduced following the global financial crisis to provide greater transparen­cy on deals.

Merrill Lynch Internatio­nal, part of US giant Bank of America Merrill Lynch, would have been required to pay £ 49.32 million had it not settled at an early stage of the investigat­ion, the FCA said.

“Reporting exchange traded derivative transactio­ns helps authoritie­s assess and address the risk inherent in financial systems caused by a lack of transparen­cy,” the watchdog said.

“The reporting requiremen­t was one of the key reforms introduced following the financial crisis in 2008 to improve transparen­cy within financial markets.”

Bank of America Merrill Lynch said in a separate statement that it had self-reported the issue to the UK watchdog, insisting that none of its clients had been financiall­y impacted. — Reuters

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