Saturday, November 1, 2014

HSBC to set aside £400m for forex probe

Sent: Saturday, November 1, 2014 8:55:09 AM
Subject: Fwd: HSBC BANK TO SET ASIDE 640 MILLION FOR FINES IN FOREX PROBE (ILLEGAL CURRENCY MANIPULATION)

fyi






HSBC to set aside £400m for forex probe

Martin Arnold in London
HSBC is expected to set aside about £400m ($640m) to cover the cost of an investigation into suspected manipulation of foreign exchange markets when it reports third-quarter results on Monday.
The move would take to $5.6bn the total value of litigation and conduct charges taken by the six banks engaged in talks with the UK Financial Conduct Authority and other regulators about their forex inquiries.
UBS, JPMorgan Chase, Citigroup, Royal Bank of Scotland and Barclays – the five other banks that are in talks about a simultaneous settlement with the FCA in November – have already taken provisions for this issue.

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HSBC declined to comment. Its charge is expected to be similar in size to the £400m provision announced by RBS on Friday, according to people familiar with the matter. Citi and Barclays this week recorded provisions of $600m and £500m respectively for their impending forex settlements.
Earlier in October, JPMorgan and UBS set aside $1bn and $2bn respectively, much of which was estimated by analysts to be related to the claims that their investment bankers might have manipulated the $5.3tn-a-day forex market.
HSBC will add its charge for a potential settlement of the forex investigation to a list of litigation and conduct provisions that is likely to exceed $1bn. These will include the $550m it agreed to pay in September to settle allegations from a US government agency that it mis-sold mortgage-backed securities in the run-up to the financial crisis.

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Forex trading probes
Foreign exchange trading probes
After the manipulation of Libor is rigging foreign currency markets the next big scandal to hit some of the world’s biggest banks?

Further reading
It is also expected to put aside another provision to cover compensation it is paying to its UK customers for mis-selling payment protection insurance, adding to existing provisions on this issue of $3.35bn.
The FCA has written to the six banks in the past few weeks, accusing them of system and control failures in their foreign exchange businesses and setting a November deadline for final negotiations, according to people familiar with the matter. The simultaneous settlement with the FCA could lead to fines totalling £1.5bn.
There are separate investigations, and the prospect of additional financial penalties, in other countries, including by the US Department of Justice. Citi noted that it was being investigated by the criminal and antitrust divisions of the Department of Justice and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, as well as the Swiss Competition Commission.
HSBC signed a five-year deferred prosecution agreement (DPA) with US authorities in 2012 after admitting that it processed drug trafficking proceeds through Mexico and transmitted funds from sanctioned countries including Iran. The DPA puts it at risk of a criminal conviction and potential loss of its crucial US banking licence if it commits another crime in that period.
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2 comments:

Anonymous said...

If the banks are fined who gets the money and who ultimately benefits? Doesn't it just return into their own system and nobody is any wiser?What happened to the money that the banks manipulated out of the market? Will the banks apologize (and change their ways) to all that were defrauded or turn it into an opportunity for renewed public support, another public relations exercise? Considering that banks can only succeed as a result of fraudulent practices such as financing wars and creating money out of thin air with a mandate from the IMF and BIS as well as other regulatory authorities and governments then not only are they too big too fail but the elite cabal cannot hope to survive and rule by their system of debt slavery and inflation-depression / accumulation-distribution if they are closed down like they should have been a long time ago. Banks rule the planet but not by example ...

Forex Fund Management said...

Nice information. I want to know if a bank faces crisis and all the money is wasted up, how will the depositors get their money back in such cases? I have heard a news that once there was bank and it couldn't return the money because the bank was found bankrupt.

Regards,
Ramiz Jilani