Kraft Heinz, which was Kraft Foods until 2015, and Mondelez
bought $90 million of December 2011 wheat futures, which gave
the companies a dominant position in the market, even though
they never intended to take possession of the grain, the CFTC
said.
The move sent a false signal that the companies had demand for
wheat and caused an artificial price fluctuation that earned
them more than $5 million in profits, the CFTC said.
Both companies said they strongly disagree with CFTC's
statement, which "blatantly violate and misrepresent the terms
and spirit of the consent order", and will be seeking immediate
relief from the court.
The commission said the companies' goal was to narrow the price
spread between the December 2011 and deferred-month wheat
futures contracts, causing the market to sell cash wheat to the
companies at lower prices, while earning them a profit on their
speculative futures positions.
Wheat futures and options traders had also accused the companies
of illegally manipulating the grain's price at their expense.
The penalty is about three times the companies' alleged gain,
the CFTC said in a statement. (http://bit.ly/2OX1iyo)
(Reporting by Nivedita Balu in Bengaluru; Editing by Arun Koyyur
and Shinjini Ganguli)
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