Daily Express

Merrill Lynch’s £34.5m fine for non-reporting

- By Kalyeena Makortoff City Reporter

BRITAIN’S financial watchdog has fined Merrill Lynch Internatio­nal £34.5million for failing to report 68.5 million exchange traded derivative transactio­ns, in what the watchdog said was the first fine of its kind.

The Financial Conduct Authority said the fine was related to unreported transactio­ns that took place between February 12, 2014 and February 6, 2016 and was the first enforcemen­t against a firm for this kind of activity under the European Markets Infrastruc­ture Regulation (EMIR).

The fine for Merrill Lynch Internatio­nal had been cut down by 30 per cent after the firm agreed to settle during an early stage of the investigat­ion. Without that discount, the firm would have faced a fine worth £49.3million, the FCA said.

Mark Steward, the FCA’s executive director of enforcemen­t and market oversight, said: “It is vital that reporting firms ensure their transactio­n reporting systems are tested as fit for purpose, adequately resourced and perform properly. “There needs to be a line in the sand. “We will continue to take appropriat­e action against any firm that fails to meet requiremen­ts.”

Bank of America Merrill Lynch said in a statement that it had self-reported the issue to the UK watchdog, and given assurances that none of its clients had taken a financial hit.

“We are wholly committed to complying with all applicable regulatory requiremen­ts,” it said.

“When we discovered that certain trades had not been fully reported to a trade repository, as required following the introducti­on of EMIR, we immediatel­y reported the matter to the FCA.

“We have re-evaluated and improved our related processes and can confirm that no clients were financiall­y impacted as a result.”

‘There needs to be a line in the sand’

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