Oman Daily Observer

Top HSBC executive arrested in US for front-running trades

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Muscat ------------------------------------------------- 5,818.14 Abu Dhabi-------------------------------------------- 4,589.84 Dubai --------------------------------------------------- 3,544.21 Qatar ---------------------------------------------------- 2,916.22 Kuwait ------------------------------------------------- 5,391.20 Bahrain ------------------------------------------------ 1,160.34 Saudi --------------------------------------------------- 6,608.70 NEW YORK: US prosecutor­s announced charges against two top HSBC executives over a fraudulent foreign exchange trade front-running scheme that netted some $8 million at the expense of a bank client.

Mark Johnson, (pictured) the head of global foreign exchange cash trading, was arrested at John F Kennedy internatio­nal airport on Tuesday night in New York, the Justice Department said.

US officials also charged Stuart Scott, HSBC’s former head of foreign exchange cash trading for Europe. The Justice Department said the bank was hired in 2011 by a client to convert some $3.5 billion in proceeds from the planned sale of a foreign subsidiary into British pounds. Knowing about the confidenti­al plan, Johnson and Scott purchased pounds for HSBC’s accounts, which they held until the mammoth client order went through. They also caused the $3.5 billion transactio­n to be executed in a way that would spike the price of pound, benefittin­g HSBC at the client’s expense, the Justice Department said.

“As alleged, the defendants placed personal and company profits ahead of their duties of trust and confidenti­ality owed to their client, and in doing so, defrauded their client of millions of dollars,” said US Attorney Robert Capers. “When questioned by their client about the higher price paid for their significan­t transactio­n, the defendants wove a web of lies designed to conceal the truth and divert attention away from their fraudulent trades.”

Johnson is set to be presented before a federal judge on Wednesday in Brooklyn to face fraud charges. The arrests follow major enforcemen­t cases against big banks over rigging of the foreign exchange market. HSBC was one of six major US and European banks that were fined a total $4.2 billion by global regulators in a November 2014 crackdown for attempted manipulati­on of the foreign exchange market.

 ?? — Reuters ?? Mark Johnson, (L) HSBC’s global head of foreign exchange cash trading in London, exits the Brooklyn federal court in New York.
— Reuters Mark Johnson, (L) HSBC’s global head of foreign exchange cash trading in London, exits the Brooklyn federal court in New York.
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