In this video we go over a recent foreign exchange trading scandal involving 5 European investment banks who illegally colluded with each other to make unfair profits in the foreign exchange markets.
Email us: Wallstreetmillennial @gmail.com
Check out our new website: Wallstreetmillennial.com
Support us on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/WallStreetMillennial?fan_landing=true
#Wallstreetmillennial

What's up guys and welcome back to wall street millennial on this channel, we cover everything related to stocks and investing today we're talking about a recent development in the european investment banking industry that shook the financial press. The european commission, which is the executive branch of the european union, recently announced massive fines for five of the biggest investment banks in europe. The european commission is in charge of enforcing all european union laws, including many financial and securities regulations, the feinstein levy, totaled, 261 million euros, that's a significant fine. Even for investment banks.

The five banks that were fined were ubs, barclays, rbs, hsbc and credit suisse. These are five of the biggest investment banks in europe and they dominate the london and european finance sectors. The crime they committed was possibly even more surprising than the pervasiveness of the criminal activity they have been running in the european commission's words. A foreign exchange trading cartel by colluding with each other to plan their forex trades.

They exploited their unfair advantage to extract money from other participants, including hedge funds, asset managers and other multinational companies. In this video we'll dive deep into what this cartel did, who ratted them out and what it all means for foreign exchange markets, foreign exchange or forex trading - involves the trading of different currencies and is done on a massive scale. Every single day companies that do business across national boundaries, trade forex to exchange international revenue to their home currency, for example, forex trading - is also done by traders, arbitragers and banks to manage differences in interest rates in different countries. If interest rates rise in one country more than another, then the exchange rate between the currencies of the two countries will adjust the currency of the country, with the higher interest rate will appreciate to reflect the fact that lenders can make more money in that country off The higher interest rate with so much money changing hands across different currencies for business purposes and not just trading purposes.

The forex markets are incredibly large. The forex cartel involved the trading of the so-called g10 currencies, which are the most significant and frequently traded currencies in the world. They include the us dollar, the british pound, the euro and several other currencies. When multinational companies exchange large sums of foreign currencies, they almost always do so through professional forex brokers.

That mainly means investment banks such as the five that were fined by the european commission. These five banks coordinated their forex trading strategies to maximize their own profits, rather than act in the best interest of their clients. They even maintained a professional online messaging system called the sterling lads to exchange their training information with one another that allowed them to make informed decisions based on their pooled information about what is happening in the markets. One particular strategy that i use is something called standing down.
This strategy involves coordinating trading activity so that one bank's trades don't adversely affect on others. For example, if two banks both want to buy large amounts of the same currency, they might coordinate, so they aren't both buying it. At the same time, this would give the illusion to the rest of the market that there isn't as much buying demand from large institutions as there actually is. The european commission was tipped off to this forex trading cartel by ubs, who itself was a participant in the cartel ubs submitted an application under the eu's leniency notice, which offers reduced penalties in exchange for reporting infringements in the law.

Because of this ubs had a 100 reduction in its fine. In other words, they were the so-called rat of the forex trading cartel. Most of the other banks also received leniency reductions for cooperating with the ensuing investigation. Barclays received 30 rbs received 50 and hsbc received 15.

Each of those three banks also received 10 of additional reductions for settling with the commission. Credit suisse was the loan bank that did not receive any reduction in fines because they did not cooperate with their investigation. The cartel activities of these five banks is harmful for the foreign exchange markets and therefore cost the general public. It may not seem like these activities harm anyone, because it's hard to pinpoint any one victim, but that's because the unfair profits that they extract are obscured by market mechanics or spread out across many people.

These banks do business with big money managers such as pension funds. It's entirely plausible that the cartel was illegally extracting money from a teacher's pension or a firefighter's pension via foreign exchange trading in markets like foreign exchange trading, is almost always a zero-sum or even negative sum game, meaning that if one trader makes money off a trade, there Must be someone on the other side of the trade who loses the same amount? The trading profits can't come from nowhere add on transaction expenses, from the exchanges, clearing houses and brokers, and it's frequently a negative sum game. Unfortunately, but possibly not surprisingly, this is not the first time that the european commission has busted trading cartels. In fact, this is their 37th settlement decision involving cartel.

Since 2008., ubs, barclays, rbs city and jp morgan settled with the commission for colluding using private chat rooms during the period from 2007 to 2013.. They called these collusion chat rooms names, like quote the three-way banana split. Unquote that settlement happened back in 2019 and, like the most recent case, ups avoided all fines by reporting the cartel the fines for the rest of the banks involved totaled more than a billion dollars. In those cases, the banks shared sensitive client information like what their clients outstanding orders were, what their open positions were and other detailed and planned trading activities.
Also, in 2019, the european commission busted barclays city, jpmorgan, mufg bank and rbs for colluding in the forex markets. For the same thing, the banks operated chat rooms that they named quote the essex express and the jimmy unquote as well. As quote the semi-grumpy old man. Unquote.

The first chat room was named, the sx express and the jimmy, because all the traders involved lived in sx, except for one named jimmy, and the members would meet on a train to london, big banks. Reading the markets to extract unfair profits is a chronic occurrence with both the european and u.s investment banks. According to reuters, they have been fined a total of more than 11 billion dollars since 2013, when the sec and other regulators first started alleging the rigging. Whenever these allegations come up, they frequently try to isolate the wrongdoing to individuals within by blaming just a few bad apples.

They deflect some of the blame in negative publicity. In the most recent case, rbs tried to deflect blame by saying that the misconduct with the cartel was from more than a decade ago, involving a former employee and that their company culture has since changed. Another example of big banks rigging the markets includes the u.s energy markets in the early 2010s jp morgan established a subsidiary called jp morgan ventures, energy corporation. That company acted as a middleman purchasing electricity from power plants and selling it to utility companies.

Utilities purchase the energy at competitive auctions from whoever offers the cheapest price. They then charge end utility customers, a retail rate, which is usually some markup over. The wholesale rate of the utility company paid jp morgan found a way to manipulate the competitive bidding process and back huge profits for themselves. They were able to pull it off by taking advantage of some technicalities in california electricity laws.

It has been estimated that their gimmicks cost americans more than 100 million dollars in higher electricity bills. Jp morgan eventually settled with the federal energy regulatory commission for nearly half a billion dollars check out our video on that scandal. If you haven't already alright guys that wraps it up for this video, what are your thoughts on this massive forex trading cartel involving the most influential banks in europe? Let us know in the comments section below, if you enjoyed this content, make sure to smash the like button and subscribe for more videos like this one. In the meantime, thank you so much for watching and we'll see in the next one wall, street millennial signing out.
.

By Stock Chat

where the coffee is hot and so is the chat

36 thoughts on “European banks busted for operating forex cartel”
  1. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Bank & Finanzas says:

    Greetings from PERU , European Banks in dropp now

  2. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars bcbr says:

    As a wise man once said: My friends, it just keeps happening

  3. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Jacques Martins says:

    It seems like UBS is a very very strategic snitch and for twice in a row Deatsche Bank doesn't seem to be involved.

  4. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars V D says:

    Q: How to find scandal?
    A: Look where HSBC is.

  5. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Affluent Nerd says:

    What is that weird intro sound. Did playstation threaten to sue or something?

  6. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars GamerzBlog says:

    fines lol , paying fines is a part of every comparation criminal activity. thieves earn profit 5 Billions from illegal activities and pay 200 million fine lol. settlements are the thing that use to fool normal voting people so they thing law makers voted by people making laws lol

  7. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Thaddeus J. Pumpernickel says:

    Somehow, I sincerely doubt the "punishment" is really going to deter this kind of thing from happening again and again.

  8. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars andi 255555 says:

    What do we learn from this: Never be in the same Cartel as UBS.

  9. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Peter Yianilos says:

    When a bank meticulously manipulates the system of oversight and regulation to steal x dollars in unearned profit, the penalty should be 5x MINIMUM. I have seen a repeating history of fines that make their nefarious activities “worth it”. Does anyone really not see that incentive plan?

  10. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars m says:

    Do any of us know if these fines are tax deductible ?? m say a cost of doing business etc etc It would seem to me that a fine for making an error of some sort should be viewed differently than one for a criminal activity. Just a thought. thankyou in advance. m

  11. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Thomas Smith says:

    You should talk about the hedge fund probe by DOJ on short selling scheme! Markets are run by crooks.

  12. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Stuart Egrin says:

    Fines are just a cost of doing business? But how much did these banks actually make from there illegal activities? And who made substantial bonuses off of all the earnings from their activities?

  13. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Stuart Egrin says:

    So unless or until the board of directors and executives are held accountable nothing will change

  14. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Brandon T. Luong says:

    Whenever banks say there are too many regulations or they can regulate themselves, I keep pointing to their cartoonish fuckery of why these had to be established.

  15. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars chile9615 says:

    More money more problems….that you can get away with.

  16. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars economic mercenary says:

    meanwhile in the US brokers are getting away with 'disabling' the sell bottom

  17. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Hany Taifoor says:

    This documentary is piece of art, i was going to watch it even if it was 2 hours long, pls try to stretch this subject in more detailed analysis it would be great financial documentary.
    I didn't hear about any of what you have mentioned here even though I'm so interested in financial sector and i watch and follow a lot of financial YouTube channels and other sources.
    Thanks a lot for thus video

  18. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Pete Mitt says:

    HSBC should change their slogan to "Down For Whatever"

  19. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars DJ Smithe says:

    If people went to jail or a bank was fined a year's profit, this would stop.

  20. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Michael Smith says:

    You would think banks would stop including UBS from their cartel chats after a while…

  21. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars FredSpeed3 says:

    If you could see every retail trader orders and spot clusters of stoploss orders and have billions in capital to send the price your way to trigger those stoplosses, why wouldn't you do this. Have a look at the EURCHF crash. the pair was pegged at 1.2 Franc and the long positions where 70:1. By the way, those fines are laughable to say the least.

  22. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Alexander Smith says:

    Wow, we have to reward banks for being “only a little shady”

  23. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars shawn stangeland says:

    For bitcoin to continue to rise there is whale collusion

  24. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars A Puzekat says:

    JP Morgan milks 180 million dollars from electric paying customers, so a fine of 410 million is issued by federal commission and how did the customers who paid 180M too much get their money back?

  25. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars He maccabe says:

    Again? Haven't they been caught doing this before?

  26. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Jonathan Berrios says:

    I’m sure this happens more often than not. Greed wins!

  27. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars David - says:

    Recorded directly from the laptop over the bathroom WC seat

  28. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Thruway Circus 25 says:

    If the common person is getting hurt by all this, why doesn't the common man get compensation for it? What is the point of these "massive" fines if they make it back in a quarter

  29. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Buck Porter says:

    Ah HSBC…the Germany of financial war crimes lol

  30. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars lostlogic69 says:

    and the Banks has the gall to demand to be bailed out whenever they go bankrupt?

  31. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars MSZ says:

    Until the fines are super high, these banks will keep playing these dirty tricks. They earn huge profits from their malpractices and then end up paying meager fines to settle and get away.

  32. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars jockmclaren47 says:

    $11billion in fines since 2013. And what were their profits in that time? The fines don't stop therm, greed always wins. Time to start suspending their trading licences.

  33. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars lefix says:

    Please figure out how to get rid of the annoying thuds in the sound.

  34. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Garbage Channel says:

    You should get a better mic. Audio quality does a lot on youtube

  35. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Peter Nyström says:

    Ohh but Crypto is the most dangerous invention to our Economy.

    Banks + Fiat, hold my bear.

  36. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Samuel Andermatt says:

    Credit Suisse trads at 48% of book value that says something about their skill.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.