Credit Suisse to pay $135mn to settle New York FX probe

The logo of Swiss bank Credit Suisse is seen at an office building in Zurich October 24, 2013. Credit Suisse will shrink interest rate trading after revenue and profit at its investment bank slid in the third quarter, it said on Thursday, further scaling back an area squeezed by strict new regulation and feeble activity. REUTERS/Arnd Wiegmann (SWITZERLAND - Tags: BUSINESS LOGO)

Bloomberg

Credit Suisse AG will pay $135 million to resolve currency-manipulation allegations by New York’s banking regulator, the latest echo from authorities’ long-running scrutiny of foreign-currency trading at big banks.
Traders at the Zurich-based bank, prodded by executives in some cases, shared information about clients’ currency orders, talked to traders from other banks and in some instances front-ran customer orders in an effort to boost the bank’s own profits, New York’s Department of Financial Services said as it announced a settlement.
The bank also used software on its electronic trading platform to cancel out customers’ trades that stood to be costly for the bank, according to a consent order describing conduct from 2008 to 2015. Credit Suisse traders at the time used electronic chat rooms to talk with a small knot of traders who’ve been accused of manipulating currency prices and referred to themselves as “The Cartel.”
Three of those traders, formerly of JPMorgan Chase & Co., Barclays Plc and Citigroup Inc., await trial in Manhattan over accusations that they shared information and attempted to fix currencies. Trading by Cartel members was also at the core of a 2015 settlement with the US Justice Department in which six banks pleaded guilty and agreed to pay $5.8 billion. The New York regulator’s settlement with Credit Suisse grew out of its look into electronic trading platforms at large banks chartered in New York, including Deutsche Bank AG, Societe Generale SA, Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and BNP Paribas SA. The DFS reached a $485 million settlement with Barclays in late 2015. Other investigations are still active.
Credit Suisse, as part of its New York settlement, agreed to hire an outside consultant to review its practices. It will take a pre-tax charge of about $135 million in its fourth quarter.
While the bank signed off on DFS’s consent order, it neither admitted nor denied wrongdoing. “Credit Suisse does not admit to any findings of fact and the resolution does not involve any fraud-based violations,” the bank said in a written statement, saying it was pleased to put the matter behind it.
According to the DFS, Credit Suisse’s traders frequently tried to trade ahead of big foreign-exchange transactions by their clients, a practice known as front-running. When SABMiller Holdings Ltd. announced a bid to acquire the Foster’s Group in 2011, two Credit Suisse traders communicated with other traders, including a member of the Cartel, discussing ways to trade ahead of the deal, which would likely require conversions of British pounds and Australian dollars, the regulator said.
Credit Suisse’s traders also shared confidential information about foreign exchange orders placed by a customer of another bank they referred to as “Satan.” By sharing this customer’s orders or positions, they helped the bank’s traders maximize their profits, the DFS said.
Another scheme was described as “building ammo,” which meant that traders at Credit Suisse and other banks agreed to designate one of
their own to handle all of the banks’ forex trades around a fixing window. This way, the designated trader could exercise outsize market power and swing certain currency prices in a
particular direction.

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