Friday, April 20, 2012

Reuters: Regulatory News: UPDATE 1-'Milestone' US oil manipulation case unsettles traders

Reuters: Regulatory News
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UPDATE 1-'Milestone' US oil manipulation case unsettles traders
Apr 20th 2012, 20:14

Fri Apr 20, 2012 4:14pm EDT

  * Dutch firm Optiver accused of manipulating oil prices      * CFTC case one of largest involving oil price manipulation      * No admission of wrongdoing in settlement approved Thursday          By David Sheppard         NEW YORK, April 20 (Reuters) - U.S. regulators' $14 million  settlement with high-frequency trading firm Optiver over oil  price manipulation in 2007 is a "milestone" victory in their  toughening stance on market malfeasance which is being closely  watched by traders.           In its first major case against an algorithmic trader, the  Commodity Futures Trading Commission said late o n Thursday that  a court settlement required the Amsterdam-based firm to disgorge  $1 million in profits and pay $13 million over allegations it  used a rapid-fire tool nicknamed "The Hammer" to influence U.S.  oil prices in 2007.           The settlement came two days after U.S. President Barack  Obama proposed a renewed campaign against illegal oil trading  schemes. But the case dates back to the Bush administration's  effort to crack down on surging oil prices in late 2007 and 2008  as crude soared toward a record of nearly $150 a barrel.              The CFTC alleged that traders in Optiver's Chicago office  engaged in a practice called "banging the close", in which the  firm attempted to move U.S. crude, gasoline and heating oil  prices by executing a large volume of deals during the final  moments of trading, when exchanges set "settlement" prices.           The regulatory agency also alleged that an Optiver official  lied to cover up the purported scheme.        The case was viewed as a litmus test of the CFTC's efforts  to get more aggressive over market manipulation, a charge that  has historically been difficult to prove despite mounting  political pressure to take rogue traders to task. Financial  reforms have given it even more leeway to pursue malfeasance.         "It's definitely meant as a warning shot from the CFTC to  the industry," said Howard Tai, senior analyst at market  research firm Aite Group.             "Will others step out of bounds in the future? Almost  certainly. (But) they need to show that they are trying to get  on top of things to make traders think twice about stepping out  of line."             The CFTC launched a major investigation into oil prices in  2008. The Optiver case, announced in July of that year, was the  first to emerge from that effort.             "The CFTC will not tolerate traders who try to gain an  unlawful advantage by using sophisticated means to drive oil and  gas futures prices in their favor," David Meister, the CFTC's  enforcement chief, said in a statement.       "Manipulative schemes like 'banging the close' harm market  integrity, and false and misleading statements to exchange  officials to cover tracks obstruct the investigative process,"  he said.                        Optiver, which neither admitted nor denied the CFTC's  allegations as is common in such settlement cases, said it was  "pleased to put this matter behind it".               The settlement barred Christopher Dowson from trading  commodities for eight years, Randal Meijer for four years and  Bastiaan van Kempen for two years.            The company itself was barred for two years from trading  U.S. oil futures in the three minutes before the market closes.               The fine was less than the $19.3 million that Optiver had  set aside for the case in its 2010 annual report.                High-frequency and algorithmic traders have been watching  the Optiver case closely amid worries that other automated  trading programs could be deemed manipulative, though most firms  define themselves as market makers and liquidity providers  rather than proprietary trading shops.        Yusuke Seta, a commodity sales manager at brokerage Newedge  in Japan, said he backed a crackdown, though tougher regulation  was a concern for all traders.        "CFTC has reached a milestone, that is what matters," Seta  said.         "(But) sometimes it is hard to distinguish the line that  separates manipulation and usual trading."                              "YOU NEVER KNOW HOW LONG IT'S GOING TO LAST"              Optiver, founded as a one-man operation by options trader  Johann Kaemingk in Amsterdam in 1986, was considered a pioneer  in the closely knit high-frequency and algorithmic trading  communities of Amsterdam and Chicago.         It has more than 600 employees worldwide, including offices  in Sydney, and says on its website it has "never had a  loss-making year". The firm trades only with its own capital,  and has no clients.           The CFTC case revealed emails and phone recordings showing  efforts by traders at Optiver's Chicago branch to "move",  "whack" and "bully" oil prices.       According to a CFTC background sheet, van Kempen told an  Optiver trader on March 19, 2007: "You should milk it for right  now because you never know how long it's going to last."              The CFTC complaint said Optiver and van Kempen made false  statements to New York Mercantile Exchange compliance officials  in an effort to conceal the alleged scheme.           The defendants had attempted to manipulate NYMEX U.S. crude  oil, gasoline and heating oil contracts 19 separate times during  11 days in March 2007, according to the complaint.            "Those who seek to manipulate oil or other commodity markets  should know we aren't messing around," CFTC Commissioner Bart  Chilton said. "You manipulate, we are going after you."       In a copy of the private company's 2010 annual report  obtained by Reuters last year, the firm reported trading income  of 551.1 million euros (about $800 million) in 2007 and 710.6  million euros in 2008.        But trading income fell to 263.7 million euros in 2009 and  377.5 million euros in 2010.                    LONG TIME COMING          Obama on Tuesday called on lawmakers to raise civil and  criminal penalties on individuals and companies involved in  manipulative practices.               The CFTC was keen to trumpet the Optiver settlement on  Thursday, but the long wait between the alleged manipulation and  a settlement illustrates the difficulties faced by regulators.        The agency had been criticized after the number of  enforcement cases slumped between 2006 and 2008, just as  commodity markets were attracting more attention from investors  and the public as oil prices soared.          But since then the agency has made progress, successfully  lowering the legal bar for what constitutes commodity market  manipulation while winning some important backers.            Obama asked lawmakers for more money to fund the agency,  saying they needed to hire "more cops" for market oversight.          Last year enforcement cases filed by the CFTC surged 74  percent to its highest level in history. The number of cases has  climbed each year since 2008.         In 2010, the CFTC won a $25 million fine from hedge fund  Moore Capital Management for attempting to manipulate settlement  prices of platinum and palladium futures, and for "banging the  close".       A major suit against London-based oil trader Arcadia and its  U.S. unit is pending in court.        The regulator obtained orders imposing more than $290  million in civil monetary penalties in 2011, and directed the  payment of more than $160 million in restitution and  disgorgement, more than double the prior year.        The CFTC is expected to review HFT trading this year and is  seeking more money to update monitoring technology,  following fierce criticism in the wake of the equity market  "flash crash" in May 2010.            "As reflected by the court's order, we will seek significant  financial penalties from violators and limitations on their  privileges to trade on markets in the United States," Meister at  the CFTC said in the Optiver statement.  
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