Ottawa Citizen

RBC Capital Markets fined US$5 million for unlawful futures trades in the U.S.

Canadian lender’s unit engaged in at least 385 misleading transactio­ns

- NICHOLA SAMINATHER

TORONTO RBC Capital Markets has been fined US$5 million by the U.S. Commoditie­s and Futures Trading Commission for failures that resulted in unlawful trades and other violations between at least late 2011 and May 2017.

Between December 2011 and October 2015, RBC Capital Markets (RBCCM), a unit of Canada’s biggest lender, Royal Bank of Canada, engaged in at least 385 non-competitiv­e, fictitious or unlawful trades, the CFTC said in a statement on its website.

The CFTC said 217 of the trades took place after the entry of a consent order in December 2014 of a CFTC enforcemen­t action against RBC for fictitious transactio­ns.

“The order finds that RBCCM had actual notice of the December 2014 injunction against RBC prohibitin­g wash trading, yet the Wash EFPs (exchange for physical) continued at RBCCM,” according to the statement.

In a wash trade, an investor simultaneo­usly buys and sells the same financial instrument­s, creating misleading activity. An exchange for physical is an agreement to trade a futures contract for the underlying asset.

“This matter has been resolved and we continue to remain committed to complying with regulatory requiremen­ts,” a spokeswoma­n for RBC said by email on Thursday.

“We have enacted a number of measures to prevent this issue from recurring, including improved surveillan­ce and additional training.”

Those involved believed such moves were allowed, and a compliance officer did not respond to inquiries on whether the trades were appropriat­e until at least May 2015, according to CFTC.

And while RBCCM reported the trades to the CFTC shortly before disclosing them in its 2015 compliance report, it failed to respond fully and on time to document requests and subpoenas from CFTC staff, the regulator said.

RBCCM also tried to dissuade the regulator’s staff from examining RBC’s role in the trades.

The CFTC also found RBCCM, which was responsibl­e for handling RBC’s futures transactio­ns in the United States, failed to “adequately implement a reasonable supervisor­y system overseeing its futures transactio­ns.”

 ?? COLE BURSTON/BLOOMBERG ?? The U.S. Commoditie­s and Futures Trading Commission has found RBC Capital Markets failed to “adequately implement a reasonable supervisor­y system overseeing its futures transactio­ns.”
COLE BURSTON/BLOOMBERG The U.S. Commoditie­s and Futures Trading Commission has found RBC Capital Markets failed to “adequately implement a reasonable supervisor­y system overseeing its futures transactio­ns.”

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