UK
prepares forex fines for six banks on Wednesday: sources
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[November 07, 2014]
By Steve Slater and Jamie McGeever
LONDON (Reuters) - British regulators
investigating allegations of collusion and manipulation in the foreign
exchange market could fine a group of six banks as early as next
Wednesday, people familiar with the matter said.
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The six banks are Switzerland's UBS, U.S. banks JP Morgan and
Citigroup and Britain's HSBC, Barclays and Royal Bank of Scotland,
sources said. They are expected to be fined a total of about 1.5
billion pounds ($2.37 billion).
It would be the first settlement in the year-long global probe into
the $5.3 trillion-a-day foreign exchange market. Around 35 traders
have been suspended or fired by their banks. No individual or
institution has so far been accused of any wrongdoing.
A group settlement could be appealing to the banks, after Barclays
in 2012 was singled out as the first bank to settle with regulators
over a global investigation into the rigging of benchmark interest
rates.
Three sources said the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) was working
to release the coordinated settlement with the banks on Wednesday,
although they said that timetable could slip if problems emerge with
details.
The regulator said there was no date confirmed for any settlement.
JP Morgan could not be immediately reached for comment, and the
other five banks all declined to comment.
U.S. regulators are also working towards a settlement. The U.S.
Commodity Futures Trading Commission could announce a settlement
with a group of banks around the same time, one U.S. based source
said.
The group of banks in the U.S. settlement was not necessarily the
same as the group in the UK deal, although there would be overlap.
The UK fines are expected to be for lax internal compliance at the
banks, oversight failures and possible market conduct breaches by
individual employees, but not deliberate market manipulation,
sources have said.
The British regulator could fine one bank between 300 million and
400 million pounds, and the other five are expected to be fined
200-300 million, one of the sources said. |
The six banks all set aside money for potential settlements of forex
investigations in their third quarter results, signaling part of the
process was near to a conclusion. The six banks and Bank of America,
Deutsche Bank and Credit Suisse have set aside about $7 billion for
legal provisions.
HSBC this week specifically set aside $378 million for a potential
settlement with the UK watchdog.
The regulator notified the six banks of its planned settlement eight
weeks ago, the sources said. One said they had to submit responses
by Friday.
Estimates on how much banks will be fined in total vary wildly.
Settlements with U.S. authorities are expected to be much more
costly, particularly with the Department of Justice (DOJ).
Earlier this year, banking research firm Autonomous put the
worldwide potential settlement costs at around $35 billion.
(Additional reporting by Kirstin Ridley Editing by Jane Merriman)
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