Australia Banks Say Employees Tried to Rig Ringgit Rate in Singapore
November 24 2016 - 11:00PM
Dow Jones News
MELBOURNE, Australia—Two of Australia's largest banks admitted
that several employees in Singapore tried to manipulate the
benchmark rate for the Malaysian ringgit, although there is no
evidence they were successful.
On Friday, Australia's antitrust regulator began proceedings in
federal court against Australia & New Zealand Banking Group
Ltd. and Macquarie Group Ltd. The regulator claims the banks
attempted to engage in cartel conduct.
The banks each confirmed they had agreed to settle with the
regulator in relation to the conduct of employees in 2011. The
identities of the individuals weren't disclosed in statements from
the banks and regulator.
The Australian Competition and Consumer Commission said it
agreed with ANZ and Macquarie on facts that would be presented to
the court for consideration, including that a Macquarie trader and
traders employed by ANZ—along with a number of other unspecified
banks in Singapore—had communicated in private online chat rooms
about daily submissions to be made to the Association of Banks in
Singapore regarding the ringgit fixing rate.
The banks and the regulator also agreed that on various dates in
2011, the traders tried to make arrangements with other banks that
submitting banks would make high or low bids to the Association of
Banks in Singapore. The ACCC alleges ANZ and Macquarie sought to
influence the fixing rate.
ANZ said it agreed that three employees unsuccessfully attempted
to influence the setting of benchmark rates used to settle
contracts for the ringgit on 10 occasions. It agreed to a 9 million
Australian dollar (US$6.7 million) penalty.
Macquarie, which agreed to pay a A$6 million penalty, said the
regulator acknowledged that no senior manager or other employees
were involved in or aware of the conduct of its junior employee in
Singapore.
Macquarie said the employee was fired in 2012, while ANZ said
the three employees that faced allegations are no longer employed
by the bank.
The Association of Banks in Singapore's benchmark rates are used
as reference rates for settling non-deliverable forward contracts
for currencies that aren't freely tradable outside the domestic
economy. Banks mainly use non-deliverable forward contracts for
hedging and risk management.
The Australian regulator said ANZ was a submitting bank for the
ringgit fixing rate, and Macquarie often initiated discussions
between traders but wasn't a submitting bank. It estimated that
annual turnover for non-deliverable forward contracts in Australia
was about A$9 million to A$10 million.
"These proceedings are a reminder that Australian cartel laws
apply to financial markets and capture cartel conduct by firms that
carry on business in Australia, regardless of where that conduct
occurred," ACCC Chairman Rod Sims said.
The federal court will determine if the penalties agreed upon
with the regulator were appropriate. The ACCC said it wouldn't
comment further regarding penalties until the court made its final
orders.
ANZ Chief Risk Officer Nigel Williams said the bank accepted
responsibility and apologized for the actions of its former
employees. He added that the matter was previously investigated by
the Monetary Authority of Singapore, which completed a review and
supervisory action in 2013 involving 20 banks operating in
Singapore, but found no conclusive evidence that foreign exchange
benchmarks had been successfully influenced.
Since that investigation, ANZ said it had strengthened its
compliance systems. Similarly, Macquarie said it had tightened
surveillance of electronic communications world-wide, improved
trade monitoring and intensified training for its front office
staff.
Write to Robb M. Stewart at robb.stewart@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
November 24, 2016 22:45 ET (03:45 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2016 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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