Business Standard

EU fines Barclays, HSBC, Credit Suisse for forex cartel

- FOO YUN CHEE

EU antitrust regulators on Thursday fined Barclays, Credit Suisse, HSBC, and Natwest ^344 million ($390 million) for foreign exchange market rigging, closing a key chapter in a highprofil­e investigat­ion.

UBS avoided a ^94 million fine by alerting the European Commission to the cartel, which was set up via a chatroom known as “Sterling Lads”.

HSBC received the largest fine at ^174.3 million, followed by Credit Suisse at ^83.3 million, Barclays at ^54.3 million and RBS at ^32.5 million. Barclays, HSBC and RBS — known as Natwest since a rebranding — admitted wrongdoing in return for a reduced penalty.

Natwest said the misconduct took place about a decade ago in a single chatroom, involved a former employee and that its culture and controls had since fundamenta­lly changed. UBS said it had been the first bank to disclose potential misconduct and was pleased the matter was resolved. Barclays, Credit Suisse and HSBC declined to comment.

Some of the world's biggest banks have been fined more than $11 billion collective­ly by US and European regulators since allegation­s first surfaced around 2013 that dealers were rigging the world's largest financial market. Dozens of traders were suspended or fired.

The latest investigat­ion focused on foreign exchange (forex) spot trading of G10 currencies, the most liquid and traded currencies in the world, which include the dollar, pound and euro. Traders exchanged sensitive informatio­n and trading plans and sometimes coordinate­d strategies through the online chatroom, the Commission said.

The EU has already sanctioned some of the same banks over similar conduct in 2019 in a settlement featuring chatrooms called “Three Way Banana Split”, “Only Marge”, “Essex Express”, and “Semi Grumpy Old Men”.

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