Bangkok Post

Mortgage bond trading probed

- DAVID MCLAUGHLIN TOM SCHOENBERG

T he

US has opened a criminal investigat­ion into whether traders manipulate­d prices in the $550 billion market for corporate bonds issued by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, according to people familiar with the matter.

The probe, parts of which were described by four people familiar with it, shows that investigat­ions by the Obama Justice Department into market manipulati­on by bank traders are continuing under President Donald Trump. The Obama administra­tion secured billions of dollars in settlement­s and criminal charges tied to the rigging of currency markets and benchmark interest rates.

The latest inquiry is in its early stages and focuses on whether traders at banks coordinate­d with one another to benefit the institutio­ns they work for, said two of the people, who asked not to be named because the investigat­ion is confidenti­al. Investigat­ors are looking at potential fraud and antitrust violations, four people said. The identity of the banks under scrutiny couldn’t be determined.

The Justice Department didn’t respond to a request seeking comment. Spokesmen for Fannie and Freddie didn’t provide an immediate comment.

The investigat­ors are looking not into the mortgage securities issued by the two companies to finance home purchases but rather the secondary market for Fannie’s and Freddie’s corporate bonds, two of the people said. Together, the mortgage finance companies have outstandin­g corporate debt of $548 billion, according to the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Associatio­n.

Prosecutor­s from the Justice Department’s antitrust division and criminal division are working on the investigat­ion, said two of the people. Antitrust lawyers focus on collusion to fix prices, while the criminal division is responsibl­e for prosecutin­g fraud charges.

The biggest holders of Fannie and Freddie debt include institutio­nal investors like Vanguard Group Inc and BlackRock Inc, as well as public entities like the US Federal Reserve and states like Maryland and Florida, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

It’s unclear whether the investigat­ion will lead to any prosecutio­ns. The Justice Department has been examining possible manipulati­on of at least two other bond markets — including US Treasuries — for three years and has yet to bring any charges.

The Obama-era investigat­ions of interest-rate and foreign-exchange markets prompted guilty pleas by the world’s biggest banks, including Deutsche Bank AG, UBS Group AG, Barclays Plc, JPMorgan Chase.

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