Business Day

Bank to pay $60m in antitrust claim

- /Reuters

Deutsche Bank has agreed to pay $60m to settle private US antitrust litigation by traders and other investors who accused the German bank of conspiring to manipulate gold prices at their expense.

The preliminar­y settlement was filed on Friday with the US District Court in Manhattan, and requires a judge’s approval.

Deutsche Bank denied wrongdoing. The bank in October agreed to pay $38m to settle similar litigation over alleged silver price manipulati­on.

Lawyers for the plaintiffs did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment.

The case is one of many in the Manhattan court in which investors accused banks of conspiring to rig rates and prices in financial and commoditie­s markets. Investors sued Deutsche Bank, Barclays, Bank of Nova Scotia, HSBC Holdings and Société Générale in 2014, claiming that they conspired to fix gold prices from 2004 to 2013.

While the investors did not estimate the size of the banks’ gold portfolios, they said the gold derivative­s market alone reached $650bn during the class period.

Deutsche Bank had agreed to settle its part of the case in April, but the terms were not disclosed until now.

In an October 3 decision, US District Judge Valerie Caproni in Manhattan said investors could pursue much of their lawsuit against the other four banks.

Deutsche Bank has separately been in talks with US authoritie­s on a potential multibilli­on-dollar penalty related to mortgage securities.

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