U.S. fines HSBC $175 million for lax forex trading 
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		 [September 30, 2017] 
		 WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The 
		U.S. Federal Reserve fined HSBC Holdings PLC <HSBA.L> $175 million on 
		Friday for "unsafe and unsound practices" in its foreign exchange 
		trading business, the latest in a series of fines for banks that fail to 
		prevent market manipulation. 
		 
		HSBC failed to monitor chat rooms where traders swapped information 
		about investment positions, the U.S. central bank said, echoing findings 
		by other regulators investigating the $5 trillion-a-day foreign exchange 
		or FX market. 
		 
		"The board levied the fine for deficiencies in HSBC's oversight of and 
		internal controls over FX traders," the Fed said in a statement. 
		 
		The fine follows others of more than $4.3 billion levied by the U.S. 
		Commodity Futures Trading Commission and Britain's Financial Conduct 
		Authority on six banks including HSBC in November 2014. 
						
		
		  
						
		"We are pleased to have resolved this matter related to practices in the 
		FX market from 2008-2013," said company spokesman Rob Sherman. 
		 
		
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			A branch of HSBC Bank is pictured in Cairo, Egypt July 30, 2017. 
			REUTERS/Mohamed Abd El Ghany 
            
			  
Authorities accused HSBC dealers of sharing confidential information about 
client orders and coordinating trades to boost their own profits. The foreign 
exchange benchmark they allegedly manipulated is used by asset managers and 
corporate treasurers to value their holdings. 
 
The Fed's enforcement action also requires HSBC to improve its controls and 
compliance risk management concerning the firm's FX trading, the Fed said. 
 
(Reporting by Patrick Rucker; additional reporting by Lawrence White in London; 
Editing by Elaine Hardcastle and Tom Brown) 
				 
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