Deutsche Bank to pay more
than $40 million to settle dark pool cases
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[December 17, 2016]
By Sarah N. Lynch
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A unit of Deutsche
Bank AG conceded that it misled investors and violated securities laws
and will pay more than $40 million to settle charges that it misinformed
clients about how it routed orders to anonymous trading platforms known
as dark pools, regulators said on Friday.
The bank agreed to pay $37 million to settle charges from federal and
New York state regulators, and an additional $3.25 million to the
Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA), Wall Street's
self-funded regulator.
In settling with both the New York Attorney General and the U.S.
Securities and Exchange Commission, Deutsche Bank also admitted that its
marketing materials about how it routed orders to various dark pools
were misleading. The problems were due to a computer coding error,
according to the documents related to that settlement.
FINRA's charges against the bank, meanwhile, revolved around "deficient
disclosures" by the bank's own dark pool trading platform itself. The
bank settled that matter without admitting or denying any wrongdoing.
“Deutsche Bank is pleased to have resolved these matters," Deutsche
spokeswoman Amanda Williams said in a statement.
"We believe that all concerns described in the settlements, which do not
allege intentional wrongdoing or misconduct, have been remediated.”
The SEC in recent years has been on the prowl for violations of complex
equity market structure rules that are designed to ensure fairness for
all investors.
Those cases have targeted exchanges, brokers and dark pools for a
variety of problems, from misleading investors about their services, to
giving some investors an edge by providing them with faster access to
trading data.
This marks the third joint case filed this year against a big bank by
the SEC and New York in connection with dark pools.
Barclays and Credit Suisse previously settled charges in connection with
misleading investors in dark pools, a type of alternative trading
platform that is similar to an exchange, but with less price
transparency.
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A statue is pictured next to the logo of Germany's Deutsche Bank in Frankfurt,
Germany September 30, 2016. REUTERS/Kai Pfaffenbach/File Photo
But the SEC and New York's case against Deutsche is distinct.
Unlike those two prior cases, which involved the banks misleading investors in
their own dark pools, Friday's main case against Deutsche Bank centers on
problems with its order router known as SuperX+.
Order routers are computers that decide where client orders should be sent in
order to obtain the best possible execution.
The SEC and New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman alleged that the bank
marketed this router as having a competitive edge because of its "dark pool
ranking model," which was able to review multiple dark pool trading venues and
determine which one would provide an investor with the best deal.
But a coding error that lasted from January 2012 through February 2014 led the
bank to use stale data to rank the various dark pools.
The stale data caused at least two dark pools not affiliated with Deutsche Bank
to receive inflated rankings, and the SEC said millions of orders would have
been sent elsewhere by the SuperX+ if the data had been properly updated.
"Broker-dealer customers expect to be told if a routing program like Deutsche
Bank's does not function properly, relies on stale data, and routes millions of
orders contrary to the described methodology," said Robert Cohen, the co-chief
of the SEC Enforcement Division's market abuse unit, in a statement.
(Reporting by Sarah N. Lynch; Editing by Lisa Von Ahn, David Gregorio and Bill
Rigby)
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