Compliance
Singapore Proposes Criminal Sanctions Against Market Benchmark Fiddlers

The MAS has proposed to make it a criminal offence to manipulate market benchmarks - an issue that continues to see regulators hunt down alleged wrong-doers in a variety of markets around the world.
Singapore’s financial regulator and de facto central
bank proposes to make it a crime to fiddle benchmark rates, as
global regulators wrestle with recent scandals and ongoing
allegations of market rigging.
Earlier this week, the Monetary
Authority of Singapore set out proposals under which the
manipulation of any financial benchmark in the city-state will be
treated as a criminal offence, with miscreants subject to civil
sanctions, it said in a statement. The powers will apply to acts
happening in Singapore and involving benchmarks administered in
the jurisdiction, it said.
The move follows a consultation in 2013 on the matter.
“The proposed regulatory framework will deter manipulation of
financial benchmarks and enhance the integrity of benchmarks set
in Singapore,” Lee Boon Ngiap, assistant managing director, MAS,
said.
Last June, the regulator censured 20 banks for trying to rig
benchmark interest rates and ordered them to set aside as much as
S$12 billion ($9.6 billion) at zero interest ahead of steps to
improve controls. The banks included ING, Royal Bank of Scotland,
UBS, Bank of America, BNP Paribas, Oversea-Chinese Bank Corp.
Barclays, Credit Agriciole, DBS, Deutsche Bankk Standard
Chartered, United Overseas Bank, ANZ, Citigroup, JP Morgan,
Macquarie, HSBC, Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group.
Elsewhere in the world, there remain allegations that precious
metals markets have been manipulated. Deutsche Bank, Bank of Nova
Scotia and HSBC have been accused of manipulating prices in the
multi-billion dollar market in a lawsuit filed late last week
(Reuters). The suit was filed in a New York district
court by J Scott Nicholson, a resident of Washington DC and
alleges that the banks, which oversee the century-old silver fix,
manipulated the physical and COMEX futures market since January
2007. The London gold fix market has drawn regulatory
scrutiny.
In the summer of 2012, criminal settlements involving Barclays
revealed a number of banks had manipulated interbank interest
rates, such as the LIBOR benchmark. The saga led to the
resignation of Barclays’ then-chief executive Robert Diamond and
saw a number of firms bolster – they said – their compliance
procedures. Royal Bank of Scotland was also one of the banks to
be punished for LIBOR manipulation, along with UBS.