Citi breached a rule meant to keep banks safe, made liquidity reporting
errors
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[July 31, 2024] By
Lananh Nguyen and Tatiana Bautzer
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Citigroup repeatedly breached a U.S. Federal
Reserve rule that limits intercompany transactions, leading to errors in
its internal liquidity reporting, according to a Citi document from
December seen by Reuters.
Reuters is reporting the infractions for the first time. Under so-called
Regulation W, banks are required to restrict transactions like loans to
the affiliates they control. The rule is meant to protect depositors
whose money is insured up to $250,000 by the government.
The Regulation W infractions come as Citi works to fix separate problems
in its risk management and internal controls. Authorities labeled its
risk practices "unsafe and unsound" in 2020, and rebuked Citi over how
it measured counterparty risks in 2023. This year, regulators criticized
the bank's resolution planning, and most recently punished it with $136
million in fines for making insufficient progress on compliance.
The firm's "subsequent reaction to the breaches resulted in liquidity
reporting inaccuracies," according to the document, which provides a
2023 year-end snapshot of some of Citi's work on regulatory issues.
"We are fully committed to complying with laws and regulations and have
a strong Regulation W framework in place to ensure prompt
identification, escalation and remediation of issues in a timely
manner," a bank spokesperson said.
Reuters could not determine whether the violations have been remedied.
Regulation W was put in place by the Federal Reserve more than two
decades ago. It aims to prevent depository institutions from incurring
losses from their related entities, known as affiliates, for example by
dumping bad assets onto the institution's balance sheet or striking
deals at preferential rates.
According to the document, the "longstanding breaches revealed
weaknesses" in Citi's "ability to identify, monitor, and prevent" future
Regulation W violations. Meanwhile, "proposed revisions to policies and
procedures do not appear to provide sufficiently clear guidance for
employees to assure compliance with the regulation."
Regulation W violations at Citi were also confirmed by a separate source
with direct knowledge of similar infractions who had not reviewed the
document. The source requested anonymity because they were not
authorized to speak on the record.
The Federal Reserve declined to comment. The Office of the Comptroller
of the Currency (OCC) said it does not comment on specific banks.
PROTECTING BANKS
Government examiners test banks on their compliance with Regulation W.
Lenders that break the rule can be subject to more scrutiny and fines,
compliance experts said. For Citi, which has been under the regulatory
spotlight for deficiencies in its risk management and controls since
late 2020, any further action could add to its woes.
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The Citigroup Inc (Citi) logo is seen at the SIBOS banking and
financial conference in Toronto, Ontario, Canada October 19, 2017.
Picture taken October 19, 2017. REUTERS/Chris Helgren/File Photo
Citi's Regulation W transgressions were categorized as a compliance
risk in the document, and more narrowly labeled as a prudential and
regulatory risk. The internal classifications are used by the
company to meet global banking standards, according to a source
familiar with the document's contents.
The breaches, which happened "over an extended period of time,"
related to an inter-affiliate clearing relationship, the document
said. Clearing refers to the process of reconciling or confirming
transactions before they settle through the exchange of money or
securities.
Reuters could not determine further details about the infractions,
including the identity of the affiliate or the nature of the
transactions.
Consequences for breaching Regulation W can vary depending on the
frequency and severity of the offenses, said Julie Hill, dean of the
University of Wyoming College of Law, speaking generally about
Regulation W and not specifically about Citi.
Regulators can start by issuing minor warnings and private notices
that escalate in their urgency and harshness. Major violations can
result in fines or public punishments known as consent orders, she
added.
"The idea behind all of the rules and restrictions is to make sure
that profits from the bank aren't siphoned off" in a way that
jeopardizes depositors or drains a government insurance fund, Hill
said.
Reuters could not determine whether regulators were aware of Citi's
Regulation W breaches or inaccuracies in liquidity reporting.
COMPLIANCE RISK
Earlier this month, the Fed and the OCC fined Citi for "insufficient
progress" in fixing data management problems and implementing
controls to manage ongoing risks.
The bank has intensified its focus and increased its investment on
the compliance efforts over the last several months, CEO Jane Fraser
said at the time.
The two regulators have had Citi on notice since October 2020, when
they issued regulatory punishments called consent orders over its
risk management practices.
Since then, Fraser has said it is her top priority to transform the
bank and address regulators' orders. Investors have rewarded her
efforts with a 28% jump in Citi's stock this year, outpacing some
rivals.
(Reporting by Lananh Nguyen and Tatiana Bautzer in New York,
additional reporting by Saeed Azhar, editing by Megan Davies,
Paritosh Bansal and Anna Driver)
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