Traders from Barclays, RBS, Citigroup, JPMorgan and MUFG who used chat rooms to fix the spot forex market have cost their employers EUR1.07 billion in fines following an investigation by EU antitrust authorities,.
The traders, who were direct competitors, typically logged in to
multilateral chatrooms on Bloomberg terminals for the whole working day, and
had extensive conversations about a variety of subjects, including recurring
updates on their trading activities.
The chat rooms – operating under the colourful names of the ‘Essex Express’ and
‘Banana Split’ – were used to swap information on a variety of sensitive data,
including bid/ask spreads, outstanding customer orders and open risk positions.
In some case, traders would agree to stand down, temporarily refraining from
trading activity to avoid interfering with another trader within the chatroom.
The extent of the collusion – which took place over a five-year period between
2007 and 2012 – was revealed to the Commission by UBS, which received full
immunity and avoided an aggregate fine of €285 million.
The Banana Split cartel, which involved traders from Barclays, RBS, JPMorgan
and Citigroup – faced the heaviest sanctions, with the imposition of fines
totalling over EUR811 million. The Essex Express group, comprising dealers at
Barclays, RBS and MUFG Bank, faced charges of EUR258 million.
Commissioner Margrethe Vestager, in charge of competition policy says: “These
cartel decisions send a clear message that the Commission will not tolerate
collusive behaviour in any sector of the financial markets. The behaviour of
these banks undermined the integrity of the sector at the expense of the
European economy and consumers”.
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