Wednesday, July 17, 2013

Barclays, traders fined $488 million amid U.S. energy probe

This copy is for your personal, non-commercial use only. To order presentation-ready copies for distribution to your colleagues, clients or customers, click the "Reprints" link at the top of any article.

Barclays Plc and four former traders were ordered to pay a combined $487.9 million in fines and penalties by the U.S. Federal Energy Regulatory Commission for engaging in what the agency said was a scheme to manipulate energy markets in the Western U.S. from 2006 to 2008.

The agency directed the company and traders to pay $453 million in civil penalties to the U.S. Treasury within 30 days, according to the order issued yesterday. The London-based bank also must surrender $34.9 million in profits, to be distributed to programs that help low-income homeowners pay energy bills in California, Arizona, Oregon and Washington, the FERC said.

?Manipulating energy markets comes at a steep cost,? said U.S. Senator Ron Wyden, an Oregon Democrat and chairman of the Energy Committee. ?Consumers have the right to heat and power their homes without fear that traders are stacking the deck against them to rack up unjust profits.?

The electric-energy fine surpasses the 290 million pounds ($438 million) Barclays paid for manipulating the London interbank offered rate and is a setback to Chief Executive Officer Antony Jenkins?s attempts to rebuild regulators? confidence in the bank. FERC?s move is part of a crackdown by global regulators on alleged rigging of benchmarks used in markets from crude oil to currencies.

FERC Crackdown

The penalties, which the agency first proposed Oct. 31, stem from an investigation in the FERC?s crackdown on market manipulation. Since 2011, the agency publicized at least 13 probes of energy-market gaming, including investigations of trading units at Deutsche Bank AG and JPMorgan Chase & Co.

?This does show a new regulatory toughness,? John Coffee, a law professor who specializes in corporate governance at Columbia Law School in New York, said in an e-mail. The penalties imposed on individual traders exceed what the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission does in similar regulatory cases, he said.

Barclays gained 0.4% to 309.5 pence at 2:51 p.m. in London, giving the company a market value of about 40 billion pounds. The shares have climbed 18% this year.

Legitimate Trades

?We believe that our trading was legitimate and in compliance with applicable law,? Marc Hazelton, a Barclays spokesman, said yesterday in a statement. ?We intend to vigorously defend this matter.?

He said the bank believes the penalty is without basis and that the FERC order is a ?one-sided document, and does not reflect a balanced and full description of the facts or the applicable legal standard.?

The FERC determined that the Barclays traders manipulated markets in the Western U.S. from November 2006 to December 2008. The employees made transactions in fixed-price products -- often at a loss -- with the intent of moving an index to benefit the bank?s other bets on swaps, according to the FERC.

The evidence ?demonstrates that the intentional amassing of the positions and trading to influence price were not based on normal supply and demand fundamentals, but rather on the intent to effect a scheme to manipulate the physical markets in order to benefit the financial swaps,? the agency wrote in its order. Swaps are derivative instruments used to hedge risks or for speculation.

Market Harmed

The watchdog?s staff estimated that the misconduct caused $139 million ?in harm to the market.? Their actions ?demonstrate an affirmative, coordinated and intentional effort to carry out a manipulative scheme,? violating U.S. law and FERC rules, the agency said in the statement.

The FERC directed Barclays to pay $435 million in penalties and Scott Connelly, former head of its North American power- trading desk, to pay $15 million, for allegedly directing the manipulation of electric energy prices.

?We recognize that Connelly contends that his personal financial circumstances may make payment of these penalties difficult, but Connelly?s participation in a serious scheme to manipulate the nation?s wholesale power markets warrants the imposition of significant penalties,? the FERC said in its order. The penalty, ?while severe, is well short of what the statute allows,? it said.

Instant Messages

Todd Mullins, an attorney for Connelly with McGuireWoods LLP in Washington, declined to comment on the order. In a Dec. 14 filing with the agency, Connelly?s attorneys said there was no proof that he had violated the law and that the conclusions of FERC staff were inconsistent with the facts.

The FERC also levied fines of $1 million each on former Barclays traders Daniel Brin, Karen Levine and Ryan Smith. Brin declined to comment yesterday. The agency used instant messages and e-mails sent by the former traders to bolster its case against them.

?This is an aggressive action by FERC,? said Thomas Sporkin, a former Securities and Exchange Commission enforcement lawyer and now a partner at BuckleySandler LLP. Regulators typically name specific victims when levying fines of that magnitude, he said. ?It may be hard for the public to grasp why there?s such a huge penalty here and why they?re naming individuals given that there?s no identified victim.?

Other Probes

Congress in 2005 granted the agency additional enforcement powers, including the ability to fine violators as much as $1 million a day, after market manipulation by traders for Enron Corp. triggered rolling blackouts in California. In some cases, including its probe of Frankfurt-based Deutsche Bank, FERC has reached a settlement with the companies it is investigating.

By fining individual traders as well as Barclays, ?FERC is trying to send a strong signal to the traders that ?manipulative conduct? will not be tolerated,? Carrie Allen, an energy attorney with Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld LLP, who has represented companies dealing with FERC, said in an e-mail.

European antitrust regulators are investigating allegations of price manipulation and collusion by traders in crude, refined-product and biofuels markets. Britain?s Financial Conduct Authority is considering opening a probe into potential manipulation of the WM/Reuters currency rates, which are used to set the value of trillions of dollars of investments.

www.bloomberg.com

Copyright 2013 Bloomberg. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/FuturesMarketWatch/~3/l4BBuUzCRy0/barclays-traders-fined-488-million-amid-us-energy

louisiana primary syracuse basketball chipper jones chipper jones mickael pietrus heart transplant the international

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.