Houston Chronicle

Wall Street cop amps up cheat detection

- By Matt Robinson

Wall Street should be put on notice: the government has new tools to look over traders’ shoulders in close to real time to spot misconduct.

The main U.S. derivative­s regulator, after years of relying on exchanges and whistle-blowers for tips on financial fraud, is beginning to reap benefits from an effort to bolster surveillan­ce to help root out rogue trading.

The U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission is touting the first fruits of a three-year project to enhance its ability to more closely watch how traders are buying and selling in the $558.5 trillion global derivative­s market, making it easier to move quickly against illegal tactics. New tools that help the regulator rapidly analyze trades and detect suspicious transactio­ns were credited with helping bring an enforcemen­t case against Bank of Nova Scotia this week.

“Now we can develop a case without traders knowing we’re looking at them,” CFTC Enforcemen­t Director James McDonald said in an interview. “In our markets, the evidence is in the data.”

The enhanced surveillan­ce capability is a dramatic developmen­t for the CFTC, which was viewed in

Washington before the 2008 financial crisis as a regulatory backwater mainly responsibl­e for overseeing agricultur­e futures. In response to the meltdown, Congress expanded the agency’s duties as a Wall Street watchdog to address gaps in the policing of derivative­s trading that was blamed for exacerbati­ng the collapse.

Because tight federal budgets have kept the CFTC’s funding from growing in line with its broadened responsibi­lities, the agency has continued to rely on day-to-day monitoring of markets done by exchange operators like CME Group Inc. But CFTC leaders have made a priority of improving the agency’s analytics capability and used a small bump in this year’s budget to expand the effort.

CFTC Chairman Heath Tarbert, who embraced the project that was already underway when he joined last year, said the Scotiabank case shows “the tremendous strides the agency has made” with its new capabiliti­es.

The Toronto-based lender agreed to pay $127.4 million in penalties after the CFTC’s analytics team was able to uncover evidence showing that the lender made false statements to conceal the scope of its wrongdoing during an agency investigat­ion of a spoofing case that was settled in 2018 for $800,000.

“Our ability to go through the electronic order book and look across markets has enabled the CFTC to not only spot misconduct, but also to uncover false and misleading statements,” Tarbert said. “Wrongdoers now have increasing­ly fewer ways to conceal their misconduct.”

Spoofing, which can be done manually or by using computer algorithms, involves flooding the market with orders that are later canceled when prices move in the desired direction. While there’s nothing inherently wrong with canceling orders, the Dodd-Frank Act made it illegal to place orders with no intention of executing them.

Gaining the ability to quickly examine trading data would represent a great leap from agency’s handling of its most famous spoofing case, which stemmed from the May 2010 stock crash when markets lost $1 trillion in five minutes before rebounding. Navinder Sarao, a British day trader, was sued by CFTC over spoof trades believed to have helped fuel that collapse, but the agency needed five years and help from a whistleblo­wer to bring its case.

“The ability to crunch huge amounts of data makes it a lot easier for the CFTC and DOJ to detect” spoofing, said Aitan Goelman, who led the agency’s enforcemen­t division until 2017.

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