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Banks to pay more than $5 billion for currency market rigging (w/video)

 
Attorney General Loretta Lynch gestures during a news conference at the Justice Department in Washington on Wednesday to announce that four big banks will pay $2.5 billion in fines and plead guilty to criminally manipulating global currency market going back to 2007. [Associated Press]
Attorney General Loretta Lynch gestures during a news conference at the Justice Department in Washington on Wednesday to announce that four big banks will pay $2.5 billion in fines and plead guilty to criminally manipulating global currency market going back to 2007. [Associated Press]
Published May 21, 2015

WASHINGTON — Five of the world's largest banks have agreed to pay more than $5 billion in fines to settle charges made by regulatory agencies and the Justice Department that the banks had acted in concert to manipulate international interest and foreign currency exchange rates.

U.S. Attorney General Loretta Lynch said the banks had engaged in "brazenly illegal behavior . . . on a near-daily basis." She added that the deal showed that the government "intends to vigorously prosecute all those who tilt the economic system in their favor (and) who subvert our marketplaces."

The scale of the price-fixing scandal is hard to grasp, yet it touched, imperceptibly, almost every company and individual in financial markets. By tweaking global benchmarks used to set foreign exchange and interest rates for a staggering number of transactions a day, the banks over several years bilked billions of dollars of extra profits by altering rates in their favor.

Critics complained that the Justice Department had failed to prosecute any additional individuals. A Wall Street watchdog group called Better Markets called it a "slap on the wrist," and Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., said in an email: "That's not accountability for Wall Street. It's business as usual, and it stinks."

The fines, however, are among the largest ever. Barclays alone will pay a total of $2.4 billion and fire eight employees who violated New York Banking Law for attempting to manipulate spot foreign exchange markets where $500 billion worth of dollars and euros are traded every day, five times as much as on all U.S. stock markets combined.

Barclays along with J.P. Morgan Chase, Royal Bank of Scotland Group and Citigroup will plead guilty to conspiring to manipulate the price of U.S. currency and euros, authorities said.

UBS will plead guilty to manipulating the Libor rate banks used as a benchmark for interest rates after prosecutors said the bank violated an earlier deal.

This is the third criminal settlement with UBS in six years. UBS will pay an additional Libor-related fine and report regularly to the Justice Department, which will ask the court to impose a three-year probation.

Lynch defended the settlements, saying, "This is not something that they enter into lightly nor something they enter into with any great joy in their heart." She said that the Justice Department was requiring cooperation from the banks in identifying individuals who might have been involved in the manipulation schemes.

Citicorp, a subsidiary of Citigroup, acknowledged a violation of the Sherman Antitrust Act and agreed in a settlement to a fine of $925 million — the largest fine ever imposed for violation of the act. Its settlement with the Federal Reserve includes a cease and desist order and a civil penalty of $342 million.

Citigroup also announced that it had reached a separate agreement to settle related private U.S. class action claims for a payment of $394 million, subject to court approval.

JPMorgan Chase said it had agreed to plead guilty to a single antitrust violation and pay a fine of $550 million. Under the resolution with the Fed, the firm will pay a fine of $342 million. The bank said it had previously set aside reserves for these settlements.

Many critics of the settlements said they would not change systemic or cultural factors that allow or even encourage criminal behavior. Yet the banks blamed a small number of traders. JPMorgan Chase chief executive Jamie Dimon said in a statement that "the lesson here is that the conduct of a small group of employees, or of even a single employee, can reflect badly on all of us."

Instead of competing with each other, traders conspired in a chat room called "Cartel" to fix the exchange rates that would be used to set prices for billions of dollars in currency trades, hurting other investors and manipulating consumer prices, according to officials.

Using coded language, members chatted in the minutes before 1:15 and 4 p.m., when snapshots of the euro-dollar exchange rates would be used to set prices for trades, to move the market to a price that would be profitable to them, the Justice Department said Wednesday. At other times of the day, they held off on trades to keep prices stable for others in the group to be able to close out of positions profitably.

The manipulations may have led to losses for large investors, such as pension funds, or corporations that were relying on a competitive market, Lynch said. Changes to the Libor rate, which is used to set rates on consumer loans, may have affected the rates people received on credit cards and mortgages.

But the currency trades, while substantial for large investors when pooled together, were likely too small individually to be noticed by retail investors, said Erin Davis, an equity analyst for Morningstar, a fund research firm. "These tiny amounts of money only add up to something for these large transactions," she said.