Banking

Rabobank hit with $29 mln EU fine over 2006-16 bond cartel


Rabobank headquarters is seen in Utrecht

Rabobank headquarters is seen in Utrecht, Netherlands August 21, 2018. Picture taken August 21, 2018. REUTERS/Eva Plevier/ File photo Acquire Licensing Rights

BRUSSELS, Nov 22 (Reuters) – Dutch bank Rabobank was hit with a 26.6-million-euro ($29 million) fine by EU antitrust regulators on Wednesday for taking part in a euro-denominated bonds trading cartel for a decade.

Banks around the world have been fined billions of euros by antitrust enforcers in recent years for rigging key financial benchmarks and currencies.

The European Commission said the cartel, which operated between 2006 and 2016, focused on euro-denominated SSA bonds (Supra-Sovereign, Foreign Sovereign, Sub-Sovereign/Agency bonds) and government guaranteed bonds traded in Europe.

Government guaranteed bonds were issued for a limited period due to the 2008 global financial crisis.

Deutsche Bank (DBKGn.DE) staved off a fine of almost 156 million euros after it alerted the European Union’s competition watchdog to the cartel, triggering an investigation in 2017.

“Deutsche Bank has proactively cooperated with the European Commission in this matter and, as a result, has been granted full immunity,” the German bank said.

The traders operated at Deutsche Bank’s EUR SSA desk in Frankfurt and at Rabobank’s Investment Grade Bonds desk in London to exchange information on prices, volumes as well as current and future trading strategies and positions, the Commission said.

It said the traders used Bloomberg emails, instant messages and online chatrooms to communicate.

“Trustworthy and well-functioning bonds trading markets are crucial not only for the national authorities issuing bonds but also for the investors buying and trading,” EU antitrust chief Didier Reynders said in a statement.

($1 = 0.9168 euros)

Reporting by Foo Yun Chee and Sudip Kar-Gupta
Editing by Mark Potter

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

Acquire Licensing Rights, opens new tab

An agenda-setting and market-moving journalist, Foo Yun Chee is a 20-year veteran at Reuters. Her stories on high profile mergers have pushed up the European telecoms index, lifted companies’ shares and helped investors decide on their move. Her knowledge and experience of European antitrust laws and developments helped her broke stories on Microsoft, Google, Amazon, numerous market-moving mergers and antitrust investigations. She has previously reported on Greek politics and companies, when Greece’s entry into the eurozone meant it punched above its weight on the international stage, as well as Dutch corporate giants and the quirks of Dutch society and culture that never fail to charm readers.



Source link

Leave a Response