The Manila Times

New York fines Credit Suisse $135M over forex manipulati­on

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NEW YORK: US regulators hit banking giant resolve allegation­s its traders manipulate­d announced Monday.

The illicit activity began at least as far back as 2008 through as recently as 2015, and improperly sharing client informatio­n, the New York State Department of Financial Services said in a statement.

The department’s superinten­dent Maria Vullo said certain bank executives “deliberate­ly fostered a corrupt culture” which permitted repeated violations of the law and of client trust.

The action against Credit Suisse is the latest in a series of agreements by major internatio­nal banks to settle the investigat­ions by US authoritie­s into the alleged manipulati­on of the foreign exchange market. In late September, the British bank HSBC agreed to pay $175 million to avoid prosecutio­n.

Credit Suisse traders used online chat rooms to share client informatio­n, discuss coordinati­ng trades and attempt to manipulate currency prices and benchmark rates -- diminishin­g competitio­n among banks according the statement.

The investigat­ion also found executives encouraged traders to engage in “front-running,” or trading ahead of known client orders.

As part of an agreement with regulators, the bank will be required to retain an outside expert for one year to review remedial measures taken to protect against the misconduct.

Credit Suisse earlier this month announced that quarterly profits had soared almost six fold to $ 244 million as the company proceeds with restructur­ing and cost cutting.

Early this year, US authoritie­s announced a $ 5.28 billion settlement with Credit Suisse over its role in the sale of the kind of toxic securities that led to the global financial crisis of 2008.

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