Traders Beware: U.S. taps new tools to find fraud in
volatile commodities market
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[May 21, 2020] By
Chris Prentice
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - When the U.S.
Department of Justice charged a handful of JP Morgan Chase & Co <JPM.N>
traders in 2018 and 2019 with alleged commodities futures manipulation,
it wasn't the first time the government had probed the bank's metals
trading activities.
The Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) investigated the same
business as part of a similar probe of the silver market years earlier,
but it was not able to build a case with the data it had at the time,
according to U.S. court filings and a person with knowledge of the
aborted probe.
Since then, leaps in the agencies' data analysis capabilities have
enabled them to detect and prosecute increasingly sophisticated forms of
manipulation in the commodities futures markets which for decades have
gone under-surveilled, according to ten officials and industry experts.
The Justice Department fraud division is beefing up with the creation of
a sub-unit specializing in combating commodities fraud overseen by Avi
Perry, a trial attorney who has prosecuted high-profile cases involving
trading powerhouse Tower Research Capital, Merrill Lynch Commodities
Inc, and the ongoing JPMorgan probe, according to two sources.
The unit is also hiring a handful of additional trial attorneys,
according to the sources and online job postings. A Justice Department
spokesman said the agency intends to fill the positions "promptly".
The unit is part of a broader Justice Department initiative to
dramatically expand the scope of market manipulation the agency targets
for criminal prosecutions, beyond traditional insider trading and
futures manipulation into a range of asset classes, sources told
Reuters.
The effort, if successful, raises the stakes for traders with potential
jail-time, while banks, brokers and prop trading firms could face chunky
fines and business curbs as the agency gets better at detecting
potential misconduct across institutions.
The new-found expertise may also give the agencies an edge as they
scrutinize extreme market volatility sparked by the novel coronavirus
disruption, including last month's historic oil price crash. The CFTC is
reviewing how the U.S. crude oil benchmark fell below $0 a barrel for
the first time ever.
"There is just a wealth of information there, which is going to give us
years and years of cases to come, I would expect," Robert Zink, chief of
the Justice Department's fraud section, a unit of the agency's criminal
division, said of the data in an interview.
The Justice Department's commodities crackdown has recently targeted
"spoofing," whereby futures traders falsely create the impression of
strong demand or supply and then capitalize upon the market reaction.
Congress identified spoofing as market manipulation following the 2008
financial crisis. But it wasn't until years later, when Zink joined the
team investigating the 2010 "Flash Crash" which briefly wiped nearly $1
trillion off U.S. stock markets, that the fraud division learned how
widespread the practice was and decided to go after it.
As seasoned prosecutors of healthcare fraud, the team believed they
could apply the tools they had used to build those cases to the futures
markets. That project began as an experiment in combing government data
to sniff out suspicious patterns, such as doctors repeatedly overbilling
hours, and has led the agency to bring charges against over 4,200
defendants, Justice Department data show.
"The idea was: let's mine this data source to see who the worst actors
are. Let's not wait for walk-ins or whistleblowers and the like to make
our own cases," said Zink.
Around 2017, the fraud unit began developing those tools to spot known
suspicious trading patterns and learn new ones by scanning a range of
exchange data on bids and offers and trades, he said.
That led the agency to charge about more than a dozen current and former
traders at banks including Deutsche Bank <DBKGn.DE>, UBS <UBSAG.UL> and
Bank of Nova Scotia <BNS.TO> from 2017 to 2019.
To be sure, proving criminal charges is tough and the Justice Department
has had setbacks convincing juries with reams of data that traders
intended to manipulate the market when cancelling orders.
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The U.S. Department of Justice building is bathed in morning light
at sunrise in Washington, U.S., February 14, 2020. REUTERS/Mary F.
Calvert/File Photo
"Juries don’t understand the data and in a trial they hear competing narratives
from experts, and the burden of proof is high. The government has an uphill
battle when they only have pattern evidence," said Clifford Histed, an attorney
with K&L Gates.
Still, lawyers say the threat of criminal prosecution is a strong deterrence
which has surfaced witnesses who can help the agencies refine their data tools
and build other cases.
For example, Navinder Sarao, who pleaded guilty to spoofing trades that helped
cause the "Flash Crash," gave the agencies extensive information on such
tactics.
"We could identify a pattern that led us down a road to potential criminality,
and then we could close alternative avenues for explanation through
cooperation," Zink said of Sarao.
CFTC COLLABORATION
As part of its initiative, the Justice Department has increasingly worked in
parallel with the CFTC, a civil agency, which over the past three years has
gathered more detailed daily trading data from the exchanges it supervises,
officials said.
The CFTC brought a record 16 parallel enforcement actions with criminal
authorities in its fiscal 2019.
CFTC director of enforcement James McDonald declined to comment on potential
probes of recent market volatility, but said the data expertise put the agency
on a stronger footing than following the previous financial crisis.
"As we bring more cases in these areas and as our surveillance efforts (and
companies’) improve, we should expect spoofing strategies to continue to evolve
in an effort to evade detection," McDonald said. "Our job is to keep pace with
this evolution."
Traditionally, spoofing involved placing one large bid or offer and then swiftly
cancelling it, but CFTC's McDonald said regulators have seen new patterns
emerge.
These include traders coordinating strategies, with one placing the bogus spoof
order and one the genuine order, or placing spoof orders in one market to allow
them to execute genuine orders in correlated markets.
Most recently, the CFTC has detected traders placing bogus orders and genuine
orders on the same side of the market and then abruptly canceling the spoof
orders to create the impression of a major change in buying or selling interest.
The CFTC brought its first ever case alleging this "vacuuming" strategy against
Chicago trading firm Hard Eight Futures LLC and its founder Igor Chernomzav last
year. The parties agreed to pay $2.5 million to settle the civil charges.
A representative for Hard Eight did not respond to a request for comment.
The Justice Department's JPMorgan probe highlights the risks for companies as
the agency scans for a broader range of misconduct. It has charged six JPMorgan
traders for manipulating metals futures between 2008 and 2016. Authorities
recently began probing "similar" practices in its treasuries business, according
to company filings.
A spokesman for JP Morgan declined to comment.
Brian Benczkowski, assistant attorney general for the Justice Department's
criminal division, declined to comment on specific probes, but said that the
agency's software could lead it to widen investigations where it initially
appeared a handful of traders were breaking the rules.
"The more widespread the behavior the more likely [we are] to proceed against
the institution and seek a criminal resolution."
(Reporting by Chris Prentice; editing by Michelle Price and Edward Tobin)
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