Compliance
Compliance Corner: FCA, Citigroup Global Markets

The latest compliance news: regulatory developments, punishments, guidance, permissions and new product and service offerings.
Financial Conduct Authority
The Financial
Conduct Authority has fined Citigroup Global Markets
£12,553,800 for failing to properly implement the Market Abuse
Regulation trade surveillance requirements relating to the
detection of market abuse.
London-based Citigroup Global Markets failed to effectively
monitor its trading activities for certain types of insider
dealing and market manipulation, the UK regulator said in a
statement late last week.
By agreeing to resolve this case, Citigroup Global Markets
qualified for a 30 per cent discount. Without this discount, the
fine would have been £17,934,030 ($21,214,000).
The regulations, which came into force in 2016,
require firms to take more action in detecting and reporting
potential market abuse. It introduced a requirement to monitor
both orders and trades to detect potential and attempted market
abuse across a broad range of markets and financial
instruments.
The FCA found that Citigroup Global Markets failed to properly
implement the new requirement when it took effect. The firm took
18 months to identify and assess the specific market abuse risks
that its business may have been exposed to and which it needed to
detect.
“Citigroup Global Markets’ flawed implementation resulted in
significant gaps in its arrangements, systems, and procedures for
additional trade surveillance,” the FCA said.