Home trading triggers bank 'black hole' surveillance
alerts
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[May 28, 2020] By
Huw Jones
LONDON (Reuters) - Potential breaches of
market rules have spiked since traders began working from home in March,
drawing scrutiny from regulators and piling pressure on banks to plug
"black holes" in surveillance systems, industry officials say.
With banks unable to check in person on the behavior of traders working
remotely, they have to rely on machines that flag any apparent bad
behavior or suspicious transactions made under the unusual coronavirus
crisis working conditions.
"In your kitchen or spare bedroom there is no colleague to monitor what
you are up to and what we are seeing across a number of clients is a
spike in escalations," said Erkin Adylov, CEO of Behavox, whose software
is by banks, hedge funds and asset managers in New York, London and Asia
to monitor staff.
Behavox has seen an 18% rise in conduct being "escalated" or singled out
for scrutiny among clients since March, ranging from swearing to more
serious incidents like disclosing client names.
They have also included prohibited activities such as taking
conversations private, using personal email and giving financial advice
to family and friends, Adylov said.
"These kinds of breaches typically don't happen, but right now there is
a noticeable increase," he said.
When the coronavirus crisis hit, regulators in Europe and the United
States initially gave some leeway to home traders, such as easing a rule
that all conversations be recorded.
But working from home must not mean a relaxation in surveillance and
firms could hold retrospective reviews to focus on high risk areas,
Britain's Financial Conduct Authority said this week, adding it was
aware of a surveillance alert surge.
Greenwich Associates said there has been a jump in "false positives" or
potentially suspicious trades that must be reviewed, driven by record
trading volumes during March.
The consultancy said one global banking client saw more than 35,000
false positives during just one trading day in March, up from 5,000 in a
normal session, leading to delays in reviews by compliance teams.
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General view of the Canary Wharf financial district, following the
outbreak of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), in London, Britain,
May 5, 2020. REUTERS/Marika Kochiashvili/File Photo
"They normally review an alert on the same day, but in some cases it was two to
three weeks later," Danielle Tierney, senior analyst at Greenwich said.
Hong Kong's Securities and Futures Commission said on Thursday that remote
working policies due to the pandemic have caused an increase in operational risk
and that a "regulatory conversation" was needed with financial firms.
Greenwich's Tierney said firms that struggled to stay on top of surveillance
will be under pressure from regulators to upgrade systems and will not be simply
"forgiven" again for lapses next time round.
ALERT SPIKE
Tim Estes, executive chairman of Digital Reasoning, whose programs monitor staff
at global banks, said banks were still digging through backlogs from an
"incredible spike" in alerts, hiring teams in cheaper locations to do initial
reviews.
"They know that within the enormous backlogs there are likely incidents of
insider trading or market abuse," he said.
Rachel Sexton, head of consultants EY's financial services forensic and
integrity practice in London, said some processes have been harder to implement
in lockdown, such as the control of inside information
Britain's FCA this week told bankers to have adequate systems at home to stop
inside information leaks.
"What we will see in the next couple of months is regulators pro-actively
issuing more work-from-home guidance," said Robert Santella chief executive of
IPC Systems, a supplier of kit for traders working from home in the U.S. and
Europe.
(Reporting by Huw Jones; Editing by Alexander Smith)
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