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Forex rigging: MAS is toothless, such puny penalties

LITTLEREDDOT

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
KNN, big banks set aside billions of dollars to pay fines/settlements to regulators in New York, London and here MAS actually return the "security deposit" to the banks.

Singapore Returns Up to $9 Billion to Banks in Rate Probe

<cite class="byline" style="margin: 0px; padding: 0px; border: 0px; outline: 0px; font-size: 11px; vertical-align: baseline; color: rgb(111, 111, 111); display: block; font-style: normal; line-height: 1.3em; width: 350px; background: transparent;">By Tanya Angerer - Nov 6, 2014</cite>
Singapore’s central bank returned as much as S$12 billion ($9.3 billion) that it took from 19 lenders last year as a penalty for trying to rig benchmark interest rates.

UBS AG (UBSN), Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc and ING Group NV were among the banks asked to post reserves ranging from S$100 million to S$1.2 billion for a year at zero interest in June 2013. The Monetary Authority of Singapore had censured 20 banks whose traders tried to manipulate the Singapore interbank offered rate, swap offered rates and currency benchmarks in the city-state. Commerzbank AG (CBK) was exempted from setting aside cash.

“These banks have completed the remedial actions to strengthen the governance, internal controls and surveillance systems for their benchmark submissions and trading operations,” the authority said in an e-mailed statement.

Returning the money puts to rest investigations in Singapore that started last year amid a widening global review of benchmark rates following reports of potential manipulation. Barclays Plc, UBS and RBS have paid billions of dollars to settle claims with U.S. and U.K. financial regulators on rigging Libor. MAS has said it will make rigging key rates a criminal offense and bring supervision under its direct oversight.

The banks took disciplinary action against 133 traders found to have tried to rig the rates, with about three-quarters of them having resigned or been asked to leave their firms, MAS said last year. The traders who are still employed will be subject to disciplinary action, it said.

During the review of benchmarks set from 2007 to 2011, the central bank’s officials went through more than 100 million documents, according to MAS.

 

mojito

Alfrescian
Loyal
If the banks leave along with their currency traders, who is going to rent those expensive condos from sinkie landlords? These are orders from the top to cease investigations. The executive who launced the investigation has been properly dealt with.
 
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