Friday, June 26, 2026
HomeBusiness and FinanceFour banks fined by UK regulator over gilt information sharing

Four banks fined by UK regulator over gilt information sharing

Unlock the Editorโ€™s Digest for free

Four banks have agreed to pay fines totalling more than ยฃ100mn after an investigation by the UKโ€™s competition watchdog found that employees used Bloomberg chat rooms to share sensitive information on gilt trading.

Citi, HSBC, Morgan Stanley and Royal Bank of Canada have agreed to settle separate cases with the Competition and Markets Authority on conduct that took place between 2009 and 2013.

A small number of traders from the banks were found to have participated in โ€œunlawfulโ€ exchanges by sharing sensitive information in one-on-one Bloomberg chats about the pricing of UK government bonds

Deutsche Bank was also subject to the probe opened by the CMA in 2018 but received immunity for reporting its conduct, a common practice under the regulatorโ€™s leniency policy where โ€œa business that has been involved in cartel activityโ€ helps with an investigation.

The fines are the latest in a series of penalties handed to global banks for sharing sensitive information in the currency and bond markets. In 2021, the European Commission fined a group of banks โ‚ฌ371mn for participating in a cartel in the primary and secondary market for European government bonds, sharing prices and other sensitive information in the run-up to debt auctions.

HSBC, Morgan Stanley and RBC were handed a 10 per cent reduction in penalties for settling after the CMA raised its objections while Citi received a 55 per cent discount, in part for settling before the regulator issued its objections.

โ€œThe fines imposed today reflect the CMAโ€™s commitment to dealing with competition law breaches and deterring anti-competitive conduct,โ€ Juliette Enser, executive director of competition enforcement at the CMA, said in a statement on Friday.

โ€œThe fines would have been substantially higher had the banks not already taken unusually extensive steps to make sure that this doesnโ€™t happen again,โ€ she added.

Citi, Deutsche, HSBC and Morgan Stanley each had one UK-based trader sharing information in bilateral Bloomberg chats, while RBC had two. None of the traders still work for the banks, the CMA has said.

Most of the information exchanged between the banks related to pricing in gilt auctions. Traders at Deutsche Bank and RBC also co-ordinated on trading strategies for gilts โ€œon a limited number of occasionsโ€, the CMA said.

Deutsche and RBC also had the highest volume of messages with traders at the banks exchanging information on 41 dates between November 2009 and April 2013.

Citi and Deutsche admitted their involvement before the CMA released its provisional findings in 2023 while HSBC, Morgan Stanley and RBC did not admit any wrongdoing. In statements sent to the Financial Times at the time, both RBC and Morgan Stanley said they disagreed with the regulatorโ€™s findings while HSBC has said it โ€œrefutesโ€ the allegations.

Morgan Stanley said on Friday it had โ€œtaken the commercial decision to draw a line under this long-running CMA investigationโ€. A spokesperson for HSBC said the bank was โ€œpleased to put this investigation behind usโ€. Citi and RBC both said they were pleased to have resolved the matter.

All of the banks said their compliance has significantly improved since the incidents took place.

The CMA did not say whether the exchanges restricted or distorted market competition.

Source link










RELATED ARTICLES

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Most Popular

Recent Comments

Translate ยป