JPMorgan Chase, Citigroup, Barclays and The Royal Bank of Scotland conspired with one another to fix rates on US dollars and euros traded in the huge global market for currencies, according to a settlement announced today between the banks and US Justice Department.
Currency traders allegedly shared customer orders through chat rooms and used that information to profit ahead of their clients.
The criminal behavior took place between December 2007 and January 2013, according to the agreement.
The broader settlement was long expected. The Commodity Futures Trading Commission had fined those banks a combined USD 1.4 billion for their involvement in the scheme last year.
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Big banks have been fined billions of dollars for their role in the housing bubble and subsequent financial crisis.
But even so, the latest penalties are big Including a separate agreement with the Federal Reserve announced today, the banks will have paid nearly USD 9 billion in fines and penalties for their manipulation of the USD 5.3 trillion foreign exchange market.
Global companies, who do business in multiple currencies, rely on their banks to give them the closest thing to an official exchange rate each day. Banks are supposed to be looking out for their clients instead of using their clients' needs to profit ahead of them.
It is rare to see a bank plead guilty to any wrongdoing. Even in the aftermath of the financial crisis, most reached what were known as "non-prosecution agreements" or "deferred prosecution agreements" with regulators, agreeing to pay billions in fines but not admit any guilt.
One of the most notable banks to plead guilty to any criminal wrongdoing was investment bank Drexel Burnham Lambert, which plead guilty to fraud in the 1980s following the implosion of the junk bond bubble.