Showing posts with label Regulator. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Regulator. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 19, 2014

NY regulator says financial firms could face bans over money laundering




WASHINGTON Wed Mar 19, 2014 3:39pm EDT



State financial regulator Benjamin Lawsky listens to testimony at a hearing in New York January 29, 2014. REUTERS/Eric Thayer

State financial regulator Benjamin Lawsky listens to testimony at a hearing in New York January 29, 2014.


Credit: Reuters/Eric Thayer




WASHINGTON (Reuters) – New York state’s top financial regulator on Wednesday said his office, as part of efforts to crack down further on Wall Street misdeeds, is considering banning certain banks from specific businesses.


The New York Department of Financial Services has taken an increasingly hard line on financial institutions that have violated U.S. sanctions laws through their U.S. dollar clearing operations, imposing steep fines on them.


But the head of that office, Benjamin Lawsky, said in a speech in Washington he could envision moving beyond fines to penalties that could hurt the institutions in more severe ways.


“You could say no dollar clearing for a month or for a year or for six months,” Lawsky said, adding that he is still thinking through the potential repercussions of such steps.


Last year Lawsky’s office blocked Deloitte LLP’s financial advisory unit from working with New York state-regulated banks for a year as part of a settlement related to its review of money laundering controls at Standard Chartered Bank.


“We’re considering some new, similar ideas when it comes to our investigations into banks that used their dollar-clearing operations to launder money, but we have not come to any firm conclusions on that issue yet,” Lawsky said.


Lawsky, who has worked to establish a reputation as a tough enforcer, did not name firms and told reporters after his speech that his office is still thinking through how they could keep banks out of certain businesses.


U.S. regulators, including Lawsky’s office, are looking at whether French banks Credit Agricole and Societe Generale violated anti-money laundering rules and economic embargoes on countries like Iran, Reuters has reported.


Lawsky’s office has reached settlements with Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi, which is owned by Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group Inc, and Standard Chartered over similar allegations.


Lawsky said regulators also need to go after more individuals as they figure out new ways to punish financial firms that break the rules.


“Ultimately, when Wall Street executives face real, serious consequences for breaking the rules – it helps deter future misconduct,” Lawsky said.


(Reporting by Emily Stephenson; Editing by Leslie Adler)





Reuters: Business News



NY regulator says financial firms could face bans over money laundering

Saturday, June 8, 2013

Court dismisses Bloomberg suit against swaps regulator




WASHINGTON | Sat Jun 8, 2013 11:19am EDT



WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The top U.S. derivatives regulator won a legal victory over Bloomberg LP late on Friday when a court dismissed a case the data vendor had filed that claimed a new rule on trading swaps would hurt its business.


Bloomberg is one of a dozen or so providers launching a platform on which to trade swaps, as regulators across the world crack down on the $ 630 trillion market to prevent a repeat of the 2008 financial crisis.


But that effort would be hurt by a new rule from the Commodity Futures Trading Commission which will force buyers and sellers of swaps to set aside enough money – or margin – to cope with the impact of a deal falling apart, Bloomberg had argued.


That is because the margin on a swap should be enough to cover five days of unwinding the position, but only one day for futures, a similar type of product traded on rival exchanges, making them cheaper to use.


The court said, however, that Bloomberg had provided no evidence that this requirement would hurt its business.


“Bloomberg … simply assume the worst-case scenario … without grounding their assumption in the actual behavior,” it said in its ruling.


On another point, it said that the “plaintiff’s contentions in this regard are remarkably perfunctory and devoid of factual support.”


Bloomberg could not be reached for comment.


Commissioner Bart Chilton said in a statement that the CFTC could focus on the task ahead of tightening regulations of swaps now that “another attempt to second-guess regulators on financial reform measures sought by Congress and President (Barack) Obama” was behind it.


Underlying the lawsuit is a looming battle between exchanges and investment banks over who rules the lucrative derivatives market, a vast playground for speculators, parts of which were long unregulated.


Exchanges, which dominate the futures markets, have been regulated for decades and now operate at a lower cost because of the CFTC’s rule.


The banks hold sway over the swaps market, and fear clients will defect to the exchanges, hurting their revenues as well as the trading platforms – called Swap Execution Facilities (SEF) – Bloomberg and others want to launch.


Bloomberg is a competitor of Thomson Reuters Corp (TRI.TO).


The case is Bloomberg LP v United States Commodity Futures Trading Commission, U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, No. 13-52


(Reporting by Douwe Miedema; Editing by Vicki Allen)





Reuters: Business News



Court dismisses Bloomberg suit against swaps regulator