Compliance
Compliance Corner: SteelEye, Cross-Border Product Manipulation

The latest compliance news: regulatory developments, punishments, guidance, permissions and new product and service offerings.
SteelEye
SteelEye, a
London-headquartered surveillance provider used by financial
firms worldwide, has launched Cross-Product Detection for trade
surveillance. This feature protects institutions against what the
business says is a growing threat of cross-product market
manipulation.
This manipulation occurs when bad actors place orders or trades
in one financial instrument to affect the price of another
illicitly, either on the same trading platform or a separate one.
For example, a trader could place a large trade order for an
equity to positively impact the price of a related derivative
contract.
The practice often leaves subtle footprints that are difficult
for firms to detect, creating difficulties for compliance
departments tasked with identifying wrongdoers, SteelEye said in
a statement.
In December 2021, a unit of UK-based NatWest Group, agreed to pay
about $35 million and pleaded guilty to wire and securities fraud
in relation to a long-running scheme by some of its traders to
manipulate US Treasury debt markets.
“Regulatory authorities are growing increasingly wary of
cross-product market manipulation. Over the last decade, several
enforcement cases related to cross-product manipulation have been
filed in the US and UK,” SteelEye said.
SteelEye said its solution uses algorithms to analyze trading
activity and spot cross-product manipulation patterns. By
recognizing suspicious correlations between trades in different
instruments, the tool helps uncover hidden relationships that
might otherwise go unnoticed.
Once flagged, the system generates a potential market abuse
alert. Compliance teams can determine whether an alert is a
true concern or a legitimate market activity influenced by
cross-product dynamics.
“Cross-product surveillance is no longer a ‘nice-to-have’ – it’s
an essential tool for protecting market integrity. Watchdogs will
remain laser-focused on this issue, and firms that fail to adapt
run the risk of intense regulatory scrutiny and hefty penalties,”
Matt Storey, chief product officer at SteelEye, said.
As
reported earlier this week, global regulators imposed more
fines on financial institutions in the first half of 2024 for
various compliance lapses than was the case a year earlier.
Besides its UK headquarters, SteelEye – founded in 2017 – has offices in North America, Portugal, and India.