UK Regulator Provisionally Finds 5 Banks Broke Competition Law on Government Bonds
24 Mai 2023 - 09:13AM
Dow Jones News
By Elena Vardon
The U.K.'s Competition and Markets Authority on Wednesday said
it has provisionally found that five banks broke competition law by
exchanging sensitive information on U.K. government bonds in
one-to-one online chats.
The regulator said the conversations in Bloomberg terminal chats
and alleged unlawful behavior by banks Citi, Deutsche Bank, HSBC,
Morgan Stanley and Royal Bank of Canada took place between 2009 and
2013.
It said a small number of traders who worked at the banks
exchanged information, including pricing and aspects of their
trading strategies, on the buying and selling of U.K. government
gilts and gilt asset swaps.
"This could have denied taxpayers, pension savers and financial
institutions the benefits of full competition for these products,
including the minimization of borrowing costs," Executive Director
of Enforcement Michael Grenfell said.
The CMA said Deutsche Bank had admitted its participation under
the regulator's leniency policy and will not be fined. It added
that Citi also admitted its involvement in anti-competitive
activity and that applied for leniency during the CMA's
investigation, so any fine it receives will be discounted.
"HSBC, Morgan Stanley and Royal Bank of Canada have not admitted
any wrongdoing. At this stage, no assumption should be made that
any of the banks have broken the law," the CMA said.
Write to Elena Vardon at elena.vardon@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
May 24, 2023 02:58 ET (06:58 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2023 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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