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Summary Of Miscreants In Banking, Wealth Management
Tom Burroughes
20 December 2012
Editor's note: this
item has been updated to take account of latest developments involving UBS,
which agreed on 19 December to pay a total of $1.53 billion to settle interbank interest rate
manipulation charges with global regulators. The “naughty corner” for miscreant banks and other wealth
management institutions is getting crowded. Charges of interbank rate fixing,
lax anti-money laundering controls and questionable pricing policies have been
levelled - and in some cases punished heavily. Besides misbehaviour, there have
also been some losses – such as at JP Morgan – which embarrassed the firms
concerned. Some of the failings that have been punished, such as
UBS's and Barclays’ misbehaviour over the interbank interest rate rigging affair, go back
several years and as of the time of writing, firms have moved, or say they have
done so, to clean up their act. But what must clients, such as those of wealth
managers with ties to some of these banks, think? In almost every case, there
is a variation on the line of “never again” and “we have turned over a new
leaf”, until, almost inevitably, some other firm is punished for an offence.
Would-be private clients must wonder where they can find an unblemished bank.
(This is a fact likely to be seized upon by smaller firms.) Having said all of which, I don’t doubt that the firms
making the headlines recently, most obviously HSBC (anti-money laundering) and
Barclays and UBS (LIBOR rigging) are aware of the work they must embark upon to improve
their reputation. These firms must engage as openly as they can with clients
(and for that matter, constructive critics such as this publication). By way of a guide to some of the problems that have hit
these firms, here is a summary of the main institutions. Not all of the cases
mentioned are complete and could be subject to further action. In the case of
JP Morgan, the loss is not necessarily the result of any wrongdoing. The summary
here is in no way a comment by this publication as to the specific
responsibility of the firms concerned. UBS The Zurich-headquartered bank agreed to pay around SFr1.4
billion (around $1.53 billion) in fines and related payments to the US, Swiss and UK
authorities to settle investigations that Switzerland’s largest bank manipulated
interbank interest rates. The UK's
Financial Services Authority said that UBS' offences were widespread and
"do not make for pretty reading". The FSA said it had found at least
2,000 requests for inappropriate interest rate submissions, as well as a number
of emails and other communications about the issue. As part of the proposed
agreement with the US Department of Justice, UBS Securities Japan Co has
agreed to enter a plea to one count of wire fraud relating to the manipulation
of certain benchmark interest rates, including Yen LIBOR. Statements from other
regulators were due at the time of this update going to press. Societe Generale Japan’s
Financial Services Agency in October ordered the suspension of Societe
Generale's Japanese private banking business, after discovering “serious
violations of laws and regulations”, during an inspection. The FSA took administrative action against the French
lender, after “serious problems that may impede sound and appropriate business
operations were recognised, regarding the governance system, the compliance
system, and the customer protection management system”. SocGen had to suspend most of its private banking division,
which will mean not accepting new money and soliciting for new money, between
23 October 2012 to 22 November 2012. SocGen must also suspend most of its trust
business in the corporate division between 23 October 2012 to 22 January 2013,
which the bank says is a non-core asset. The French banking giant has also been reprimanded by Hong
Kong's Securities and Futures Commission for lack of internal controls of its
wealth management activities in its Hong Kong
branch, leading it to reimburse customers more than $11 million (amounts are in
US dollars unless otherwise stated). The SFC raised concerns that, in over
3,000 transactions undertaken between April 2003 and January 2006, customers of
the bank's Hong Kong-based wealth management activities paid or received a
different price for over-the-counter products, from the actual price transacted
for them by SocGen, with the difference, or margin, being retained by the bank
as a fee. Barclays UK-listed Barclays has incurred penalties from US and UK authorities
totalling £290 million (around $455 million) for misconduct relating to the
inter-bank interest rate market. Chief executive Bob Diamond, a high-profile
character renowned for his large bonuses and hard-charging style in running the
bank, has resigned. Lord (Adair) Turner, chairman of the Financial Services
Authority, the UK regulator,
branded the LIBOR-rigging as a huge blow to London’s reputation as a financial capital.
The FSA is probing other banks; a letter sent to the New York Federal Reserve,
and recently published, mentioned Lloyds Banking Group as a firm that is
possibly implicated. The US
Justice Department is carrying out a criminal investigation into the
rate-rigging affair. Lloyds has declined to comment on the claims that it was
involved. HSBC HSBC agreed to make a total payment of $1.92 billion to
settle a US
criminal investigation over breaches of anti-money laundering and sanctions
laws, said to be the biggest penalty ever paid by a bank for such
transgressions. The UK/Hong Kong-listed HSBC created dramatic headlines
earlier in the year when its global compliance boss, David Bagley, resigned in
front of a US Senate Committee that was grilling HSBC executives and other
persons about a report claiming widespread shortcomings in how HSBC operated
anti-money laundering controls. It was said that money laundering failings
facilitated monies for drug gangs, rogue states such as Iran, and terrorists. JP Morgan Earlier it was revealed that the US bank had suffered losses of $2
billion, which had prompted a blunt apology from chief executive Jamie Dimon.
Ina Drew stepped down as head of the chief investment office. The losses hit
the image of a blue-blooded Wall Street firm that, unlike many of its peers,
had seemed to emerge almost stronger from the 2008 financial turmoil. The issue
has also reignited debate on how large banking firms should be structured to
protect depositors. Commenting about its second-quarter results, the bank noted
there had been “significant risk reduction” allowing the firm to move
substantially all remaining synthetic credit positions to the investment bank.
The CIO synthetic credit group has been shut down. Coutts The UK-based private bank was fined £8.75 million (around
$13.8 million) by the FSA, the sixth-largest fine ever handed out by the
regulator, for failing to take reasonable care to establish and maintain
effective anti-money laundering systems and controls relating to high-risk
customers, including “politically exposed persons”. Merrill Lynch The Bank of America-owned firm was fined $2.8 million for
supervisory failures that led to it overcharging clients $32 million in
unwarranted fees. The US Financial Industry Regulatory Authority also imposed
the fine on the US
securities firm for failing to provide certain required trade notices. Merrill
Lynch repaid the nearly 100,000 affected clients with interest. UBS The Irish Central Bank fined UBS' international life
insurance division in relation to various breaches of a new act introduced to
protect the financial system from money laundering and terrorist financing. The
Central Bank of Ireland
and UBS agreed on 19 June that the latter will pay a financial penalty of
€65,000 (around $81,700) for failing to comply with specific requirements of
the Criminal Justice Act 2010. The life insurer, part of the Swiss wealth management and
banking group, was not accused of terrorist financing or money laundering as
such. Among the breaches were failing to instruct staff and directors about the
new directives promptly after the Act had come into force in July 2010. The
firm had also failed to adopt adequate written policies and procedures in
relation to the identification and reporting of suspicious transactions, the
central bank said in a statement. The central bank's anti-money laundering and
counter terrorist financing supervisory unit identified these breaches during
an inspection of the firm carried out in December 2010. Standard Chartered On 15 August, Standard Chartered agreed with authorities in New York to pay a civil penalty of $340 million to settle
charges over transactions linked to Iran. "The New York State
Department of Financial Services and Standard Chartered Bank have reached an
agreement to settle the matters raised in the DFS Order dated 6 August 2012.
The parties have agreed that the conduct at issue involved transactions of at
least $250 billion,” according to a statement issued by Benjamin Lawsky, New
York Superintendent of Financial Services. In December this year, the bank agreed a $327 million
settlement with US authorities for rules violations relating to a period
between 2001 and 2007. “The settlements are the product of an extensive internal
investigation that led the bank voluntarily to report its findings concerning
past sanctions compliance to these US authorities, and nearly three years of
intensive cooperation with regulators and prosecutors,” it said. “Under the
terms of the OFAC Settlement Agreement, the Deferred Prosecution Agreements
with the Department of Justice and the District Attorney’s Office, and the
Cease & Desist Order and Order of Assessment of a Civil Money Penalty with
the Federal Reserve, no further action will be taken against Standard Chartered
by these authorities if it meets the conditions set out in the agreements,” it
said. Wells Fargo The Securities and Exchange Commission has charged the
firm's brokerage firm and a former vice president for selling products tied to
mortgage-backed securities without fully understanding their complexity or
disclosing the risks to investors. Wells Fargo agreed to pay $6.5 million to
settle after the SEC found it relied excessively on rating agencies when
selling products. The money will be placed into a fund for the benefit of
harmed investors. The products were sold by Minneapolis-based Wells Fargo
Brokerage Services (now Wells Fargo Securities), between January 2007 and
August 2007. BlackRock The Financial Services Authority fined BlackRock Investment
Management (UK) £9.5 million ($15.3 million)
for failing to protect client money adequately. Nikolai Battoo The US Securities and Exchange Commission froze the US-based assets of an asset manager
and two of his companies for fraudulently proclaiming to investors a track
record of “exceptional risk-adjusted returns”, when in fact “particularly heavy
losses” were incurred in 2008. According to the SEC, Nikolai Battoo claimed to
manage $1.5 billion on behalf of investors globally, $100 million of which is
on behalf of US-based investors. The losses he suffered in 2008 were due to his
investments in the Bernard Madoff Ponzi scheme - in which several
Battoo-managed hedge funds were heavily invested - and a failed derivative
investment programme.