Ex-Barclays trader admits rigging currencies

Picture: Olivia Harris

Picture: Olivia Harris

Published Jan 5, 2017

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Manhattan - Jason Katz, a former Barclays currency

trader, admitted conspiring to fix prices in the foreign-exchange market, the

third individual to be charged and the first to plead guilty in a long-running

US criminal investigation into the rigging of currency rates.

Katz appeared in Manhattan federal court Wednesday, where

he admitted to participating in a conspiracy with other bankers to manipulate

emerging-market currency trades while working at three different financial

institutions from 2007 to 2013.

Katz’s conviction comes one day before five banks are

scheduled to be sentenced in connection with the Justice Department’s

three-year investigation. The banks - Citigroup, JPMorgan Chase & Company,

Barclays and Royal Bank of Scotland Group - pleaded guilty in May 2015 to

charges that their traders conspired to manipulate trading in U.S. dollars and

euros. UBS Group also pleaded guilty to a related charge.

Bloomberg previously reported that the currency-rigging

investigation had expanded to additional chatrooms involving trading in

emerging market currencies, including the Brazilian real, the Russian ruble

and the South African rand.

Trading history

Katz spent a year as director of emerging markets-foreign

exchange trading at Barclays beginning in 2010, according to regulatory filings

and his LinkedIn profile. He joined BNP Paribas in September 2011 as its

director of emerging markets-foreign exchange trading, before leaving for

Australia & New Zealand Banking Group two years later, the documents show.

Before joining Barclays, Katz spent more than nine years at Standard Bank,

where he was head of foreign exchange, according to his LinkedIn profile.

Prosecutors say Katz was a dealer of central and eastern

European, Middle Eastern and African currencies and conspired to manipulate

prices through "non-bona fide trades," coordinating the placement of

bids and offers, and agreeing on currency prices they would quote specific

customers.

Katz has agreed to cooperate with the government’s

investigation. The conspiracy charge Katz admitted to has a maximum penalty of

10 years in prison and a $1 million fine, which may be increased based on the

proceeds gained or the loss to investors.

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“These conspirators engaged in blatant collusion and

succeeded in manipulating exchange rates for multiple currencies to their

advantage,” said Brent Snyder, a deputy assistant attorney general with the

department’s antitrust division. “Conspiracies such as this undermine the

integrity of our financial markets, and the Antitrust Division is committed to

ensuring that they are pursued and punished.”

Currency chats

Katz’s time at Barclays coincides with that of Chris

Ashton, the former global head of spot trading at the London-based

bank. Prosecutors have been investigating allegations that Ashton and a

group of other traders participated in an electronic chatroom called The Cartel

where they conspired to rig currency prices. 

Ashton was permanently banned from US banking by the US

Federal Reserve in August. It isn’t clear whether Katz had any interaction with

Ashton or other members of The Cartel.

Read also:  Currency rigging overshadows Barclays profit

Those chatroom discussions formed the basis of guilty

pleas by four of the banks, which are scheduled to be sentenced Thursday in

Connecticut. Barclays, JPMorgan and Citigroup provided evidence of a potential

new antitrust conspiracy in the currency spot market that prosecutors say

involves different currencies than the ones at the centre of their 2015 guilty

pleas.

BLOOMBERG

 

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