ICBC puts capital into US unit, seeks cyber review after hack
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[November 11, 2023] By
Paritosh Bansal, Lananh Nguyen and Davide Barbuscia
NEW YORK/LONDON (Reuters) -Industrial and Commercial Bank of China
injected capital into its U.S. unit to help pay BNY Mellon $9 billion
for unsettled trades and hired a cybersecurity firm to enable it to
resume normal business after a ransomware attack, sources familiar with
the matter said.
ICBC's U.S. unit told market participants on Friday it was hoping to
finish the cyber review over the weekend, but the sources said they
expected it would spill into next week. Meanwhile, the bank is using
manual processes to trade, they said.
The details, including the cash injection for unsettled trades, have not
been previously reported.
The ransomware attack was claimed by cybercrime gang Lockbit, a widely
deployed ransomware first seen on Russian-language-based cybercrime
forums in January 2020. It is the latest in a string of ransom demands
by hackers this year.
The cyberattack sent ripples through the U.S. Treasuries market, where
ICBC acts as a broker for hedge funds and other market participants,
helping them trade in the securities. While the extent of disruption to
market was limited, it brought into focus the resilience of a market
that underpins global finance.
When the hack happened earlier this week, ICBC was unable to access its
systems, leaving it temporarily owing BNY $9 billion for unsettled
trades, two of the sources said. The custody bank is the sole settlement
agent for Treasuries.
The Chinese parent then injected capital into the U.S. unit, allowing it
to settle the trades and pay back BNY Mellon, the sources said. That has
now happened, they said.
ICBC did not respond to a request for comment. ICBC Financial Services,
the bank's U.S. unit, has said it was investigating the attack that
disrupted some of its systems, and making progress toward recovering
from it.
ICBC's representatives told market participants on a call organized by
the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association (SIFMA), a
trade group, on Friday afternoon that they had hired a cybersecurity
firm to do an assessment to ensure that its systems are safe, three
sources familiar with the matter said.
ICBC said it hopes to be done as soon as this weekend, the sources said,
noting that it could take longer, given the complexity of the task. They
also told market participants about the capital injection but did not
disclose the amount or the reason for it, the sources said.
Meanwhile, ICBC's computer systems have been isolated from the rest of
Wall Street, the sources said. But alternative systems have been put in
place to enable trading by ICBC, which involve moving information
manually, including by carrying USB sticks with information, two of the
sources said.
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People walk past a booth of ICBC Credit Suisse Asset Management Co
at the 2020 China International Fair for Trade in Services (CIFTIS),
in Beijing, China September 5, 2020. REUTERS/Tingshu Wang/File photo
SIFMA declined to comment.
Global regulators on Friday were monitoring the impact. U.S.
Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said on Friday that she and China
Vice Premier He Lifeng spoke about the issue during talks in San
Francisco this week. She said the hack had not interfered with the
market for U.S. government debt.
THE HACK
Rumors about the hack started to circulate in the market on
Wednesday afternoon, but one of the sources close to a major
market-maker said it was not clear to most people on Wall Street
what was going on until Thursday morning.
As news of the hack spread, other firms started removing any
connectivity between ICBC's computer systems and their own, the
source said. SIFMA, the trade group, organized calls for market
participants with updates, the sources said.
ICBC is not among the top-tier firms that deal in Treasuries,
including the primary dealers that trade directly with the New York
Federal Reserve, which limited the impact it had on the market, the
sources said.
Still, Scott Skyrm, who works at money market trading firm Curvature
Securities, said overnight rates in the repo market were volatile
and closed Thursday at levels lower than would have otherwise been
the case. There was a rise in the number of firms that failed to
return bonds they had borrowed.
US Treasury fails, the value of Treasury securities that were not
delivered to fulfil a trade contract, rose to $62.2 billion on
Thursday, the highest since March, up from $25.5 bln a day earlier,
according to Depository Trust & Clearing Corp.
To give the market more time to settle trades, the Federal Reserve's
system for moving cash through the financial system said it had
extended the closing time for certain customers on Friday.
"These cyberattacks are scary," said Jack McIntyre, a fixed income
portfolio manager at Brandywine. "The good news would be that I
guarantee you primary dealers are having (a) discussion to make sure
this cannot happen to them. I'm sure everybody's doing a deep dive
on their security systems."
ICBC's Hong Kong-listed shares ended Friday down 0.8%, compared to a
1.13% drop in a Hong Kong index of mainland Chinese banks. Its
Shanghai-listed shares closed flat.
(Reporting by Harry Robertson, James Pearson, Naomi Rovinick in
London, Yoruk Bahceli in Amsterdam, Davide Barbuscia, Chris
Prentice, Mike Derby, Carolina Mandl, Laura Matthews and Paritosh
Bansal in New York; Zeba Siddiquai in San Francisco; Editing by
Megan Davies, Dhara Ranasinghe, Alexander Smith, Richard Chang and
Anna Driver)
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