Friday, August 31, 2012

Reuters: Regulatory News: UPDATE 1-SEC charges former Stanford Group executives

Reuters: Regulatory News
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UPDATE 1-SEC charges former Stanford Group executives
Sep 1st 2012, 03:34

Fri Aug 31, 2012 11:34pm EDT

WASHINGTON Aug 31 (Reuters) - U.S. securities regulators charged former officials of Stanford Group Co for their role in the demise of the brokerage and bank controlled by Ponzi-schemer Allen Stanford.

Former Stanford Group Co president Daniel Bogar, former compliance officer Bernerd Young, and Jason Green, who oversaw parts of the private client group at Stanford were charged with aiding in the fraud, according to an order made public Friday instituting administrative proceedings against them.

In the order, the SEC alleged that the three executives knew or should have known that offering documents in connection to certificates of deposits sold by Stanford International Bank were false or misleading. Instead, the SEC alleged, they encouraged their colleagues to use the incomplete offering documents to help sell the CDs.

In a statement, Green's lawyers, John Kincade and George Freeman, said that Green had no knowledge of the fraud.

"We look forward to the opportunity to clear Mr. Green's name, and we are confident we will succeed," they said.

Lawyers for Bogar and Young did not immediately respond to messages seeking comment.

Allen Stanford was sentenced in June to 110 years in prison for bilking investors with fraudulent CDs by Stanford International Bank, his bank in Antigua.

Separately, on Friday the SEC settled allegations of securities fraud against Jay Comeaux, who managed the brokerage's Houston branch office, according to a filing that instituted administrative proceedings against him.

Comeaux, who settled the case without admitting or denying the SEC's findings, faces a bar from the industry, and may face penalties that have not yet been determined, the SEC said

Comeaux was responsible for supervising the brokerage's financial consultants, and received commissions of at least $1.3 million on the sales of fraudulent CDs, the SEC said.

According to the SEC, Comeaux knew that the bank wouldn't disclose details of its investment holdings, but still used marketing material that told investors that the bank maintained a "well-diversified portfolio of highly marketable securities."

A lawyer for Comeaux did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

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Reuters: Regulatory News: UPDATE 3-China won't challenge WTO ruling in U.S. bank card row

Reuters: Regulatory News
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UPDATE 3-China won't challenge WTO ruling in U.S. bank card row
Aug 31st 2012, 22:17

Fri Aug 31, 2012 9:39am EDT

GENEVA Aug 31 (Reuters) - China has decided not to appeal against a World Trade Organisation ruling that found it had discriminated against U.S. bank card suppliers such as Mastercard Inc and Visa Inc in favour of a state-owned enterprise, China UnionPay.

China needed to declare its intention to appeal before a meeting of the WTO's Dispute Settlement Body on Friday formally adopted a ruling published last month, which handed the United States an election-year trade policy victory against China.

A U.S. official at the meeting said the United States was "extremely pleased" that the ruling would not be appealed, according to a transcript of the diplomat's remarks.

"The policies of China, as reflected in the measures at issue in this dispute, have caused pervasive discrimination at every stage of a card-based payment transaction and severely distorted competition in China's market," the unnamed official said.

The Chinese market for electronic payment services was worth well over $1 trillion per year, the official said.

However, although the ruling found that China UnionPay (CUP) had a monopoly on yuan payment cards issued and used in China, it rejected the U.S. claim that CUP was an "across-the-board monopoly supplier" for all transactions denominated in yuan.

The U.S. diplomat said the United States was disappointed that the ruling had stopped short of branding CUP as a "monopoly or exclusive supplier".

China's representative at the meeting said that claim had been the centrepiece of the U.S. case, and China commended the dispute panel for rejecting it.

However, despite China's decision not to appeal, the Chinese official said that the ruling was not entirely free from error, and China was "troubled" by parts of the ruling.

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Reuters: Regulatory News: Bernanke raps BIS call for global cooperation by central banks

Reuters: Regulatory News
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Bernanke raps BIS call for global cooperation by central banks
Aug 31st 2012, 22:31

By Alister Bull

JACKSON HOLE, Wyo. | Fri Aug 31, 2012 6:31pm EDT

JACKSON HOLE, Wyo. Aug 31 (Reuters) - The world's big central banks ought to cooperate more by taking into account the global impact of their individual policy decisions, a top policymaker said on Friday, but he was immediately challenged by Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke.

Jaime Caruana, general manager of the Bank for International Settlements, a global forum for central banks, told some of the world's most powerful policymakers that they must recapture the common sense of purpose they showed when fighting the global financial crisis of 2007-09.

"Central banks need to take a more international perspective, recognize their collective influence and take into account monetary policy spillovers," he told policymakers at the annual retreat here, hosted by the Kansas City Fed.

U.S. and European central bankers are working to restore growth on both sides of the Atlantic, while weighing up the costs and benefits of further action that critics say could contribute to an even more serious financial crisis in the future.

Bernanke, in the audience at the luncheon address, did not flatly reject the suggestion, but he noted that a discussion about international monetary policy cooperation also implied cooperation on foreign exchange rates.

"A problem is, of course, that a lot of exchange rate policy is not made by central banks, it is made by finance ministries ... so I think you have opened up a much more complicated coordination problem than central banks sitting together and reasoning together."

Caruana cheerfully agreed that he was absolutely correct -- drawing general laughter from policymakers that included the governor of the Bank of Japan and president of the Bundesbank as well as the chief of the U.S. central bank -- but stuck to his guns and insisted the question was still legitimate to pose.

Arguing globalization intensified spillovers from financial market disruptions in one country into another, he added that this indicated the need to take the global impact of domestic policy decisions into account.

"This does not necessarily mean monetary policy coordination at the global level, but it does require central banks to better appreciate, internalize and share the side effects that arise from individual monetary policies," he said.

Caruana also said he was "sympathetic" for calls for central bankers to grant "global considerations" an explicit role in their decision-taking, but doubted this could be formalized.

"The major central banks would not be able to publicly outline the mutual consistency of their policies. Drawing attention to areas of inconsistency and dissent would probably undermine effective cooperation," he said.

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Reuters: Regulatory News: Former Stanford Group president settles SEC fraud charges

Reuters: Regulatory News
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Former Stanford Group president settles SEC fraud charges
Aug 31st 2012, 22:02

WASHINGTON | Fri Aug 31, 2012 6:02pm EDT

WASHINGTON Aug 31 (Reuters) - A former president of Stanford Group Co, the defunct brokerage that used to be controlled by convicted Ponzi-schemer Allen Stanford, has settled securities fraud charges with U.S. securities regulators.

Jay Comeaux, who managed the brokerage's Houston branch office, settled the case without admitting or denying the Securities and Exchange Commission's findings, according to a filing that instituted administrative proceedings.

Comeaux faces a bar from the industry, and may face penalties that have not yet been determined, the SEC said.

Allen Stanford was sentenced in June to 110 years in prison for bilking investors with fraudulent certificates of deposit issued by Stanford International Bank, his bank in Antigua.

Comeaux was responsible for supervising the brokerage's financial consultants, and received commissions of at least $1.3 million on the sales of fraudulent CDs, the SEC said.

According to the SEC, Comeaux knew that the bank wouldn't disclose details of its investment holdings, but still used marketing material that told investors that the bank maintained a "well-diversified portfolio of highly marketable securities."

A lawyer for Comeaux did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The agency is expected to bring cases against several other former Stanford executives.

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Reuters: Regulatory News: Momentive Performance Materials withdraws IPO

Reuters: Regulatory News
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Momentive Performance Materials withdraws IPO
Aug 31st 2012, 21:04

Fri Aug 31, 2012 5:04pm EDT

Aug 31 (Reuters) - Specialty chemicals manufacturer Momentive Performance Materials Holdings LLC filed with regulators to withdraw its proposed initial public offering of common stock.

The company, which focuses on production of thermosetting resins, silicones and silicone derivatives, had in April last year filed to raise up to $862.5 million in its offering.

Momentive did not mention a specific reason behind its decision to pull the IPO in the registration statement filed on Friday with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.

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Reuters: Regulatory News: UPDATE 2-US SEC appeals in bid to help Stanford victims file claims

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UPDATE 2-US SEC appeals in bid to help Stanford victims file claims
Aug 31st 2012, 20:51

Fri Aug 31, 2012 4:51pm EDT

By Sarah N. Lynch

WASHINGTON Aug 31 (Reuters) - U.S. securities regulators said on Friday they would appeal a federal judge's ruling rejecting their request for an industry-backed fund to start a court proceeding that could help compensate the victims of Allen Stanford's $7 billion Ponzi scheme.

The Securities and Exchange Commission announced its decision in a filing in federal district court in Washington, D.C., on Friday.

"We believe investors who bought Stanford CDs through the Stanford broker-dealer are protected under the law and therefore should at least be able to present their claims for relief in a court of law," SEC spokesman John Nester said.

"That is why we are appealing the lower court ruling and seeking an order compelling SIPC to begin a proceeding."

The SEC is trying to force the Securities Investor Protection Corp to start liquidation proceedings for the victims, some of whom lost millions of dollars in the fraud.

In July, a federal judge rejected the plea, saying the agency had not met its legal burden to show why SIPC should be compelled to act.

SIPC, which has handled high-profile liquidations such as Bernard Madoff's Ponzi scheme, contended that Stanford's offshore bank fell outside the scope of its authority.

It argued that the law limits it to protecting customers against the loss of missing cash or securities in the custody of failing or insolvent SIPC-member brokerages.

Allen Stanford was sentenced in June to 110 years in prison for bilking investors with fraudulent certificates of deposit issued by Stanford International Bank, his bank in Antigua.

"We will defend our position and the court's opinion," said Stephen Harbeck, the president and CEO of SIPC. "We just think that the SEC is attempting to require us to provide a guarantee of the value of a certificate of deposit issued by an off-shore bank, and that is not what our statutory mission is."

"Our mission is to protect the custody function that brokerage firms perform," he added.

The decision to appeal the judge's ruling will tee up a precedent-setting case for the SEC, which until now has never taken legal action against the industry-backed fund in its 42-year history.

Since 2009, when Stanford was first arrested and charged, victims of the fraud have been fighting for SIPC to start a liquidation proceeding in the hope of getting back at least some of the funds they lost.

In a brokerage liquidation, a trustee winds down the business, returns securities and other assets to customers and creditors, and often tries to recover additional assets. The goal is to maximize what customers and creditors recover, and distribute assets fairly.

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Reuters: Regulatory News: UPDATE 1-US DOJ targets banks, others in new money laundering offensive

Reuters: Regulatory News
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UPDATE 1-US DOJ targets banks, others in new money laundering offensive
Aug 31st 2012, 20:57

Fri Aug 31, 2012 4:57pm EDT

* Prosecutors examining money-laundering compliance

* DOJ can bring criminal charges, with big penalties

* Law applies to wide range of financial institutions

* Shift in focus comes as DOJ unit wraps up sanctions cases

By Aruna Viswanatha and Brett Wolf

Aug 31 (Reuters) - The U.S. Department of Justice is shifting its sights to a new offensive in combating money laundering: bringing criminal charges against banks and other financial institutions for weak compliance systems that fail to catch illicit money flows.

Even while the department's money-laundering unit is wrapping up a series of blockbuster cases involving sanctions-busting transactions routed through some of Europe's biggest banks, it has set its sights on the next front.

While the sanctions cases involving Iran and other countries have largely dealt with historical conduct, part of the shift is to pursue ongoing misconduct.

The focus on compliance systems has traditionally been left to financial firms' direct regulators, including the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, whose punishments usually amount to a strong slap on the wrist.

The DOJ has brought a handful of its own such cases, including one against Wachovia in 2010 in which authorities said the bank failed to maintain effective anti-money laundering controls and did not stop more than $100 million of Colombian and Mexican drug traffickers' money from being laundered through accounts at the bank.

The DOJ unit is now interested in ramping up the number of criminal cases it brings under the Bank Secrecy Act, or BSA, a law that requires financial institutions and their employees to take steps to combat money laundering.

"I think you are going to see more complex BSA cases against banks, I think you are going to see enforcement across the broader spectrum of financial institutions," said Jennifer Shasky Calvery, who heads the Department of Justice's Asset Forfeiture and Money Laundering Section.

The cases come with potentially hefty punishments, with financial penalties equal to the illicit funds moved and prison sentences between five and ten years for individuals.

Also part of the appeal is that BSA cases, including compliance-related charges, can capture a range of financial institutions, from commercial banks and credit unions, to broker-dealers and insurers, to casinos and pawnbrokers.

In June, the Department of Justice charged check-cashing businesses in Brooklyn and Los Angeles with failing to file certain transaction reports and failing to have an effective anti-money laundering program. The businesses were being used to move more than $50 million in money, some of which was potentially linked to healthcare fraud, the government said.

Besides being one of the first such cases against a financial institution that isn't a bank, it was also the first to indict individuals - the owners of the businesses - with failing to have an effective anti-money laundering program.

It is unclear whether the effort will produce marquee cases or those targeted at smaller entities, and individual charges are unlikely at larger institutions since responsibilities are often shared by multiple employees and departments.

BIG CASES

At least one big upcoming case, against HSBC, is expected to be based in part on the bank's weak compliance systems.

The U.K.-based bank set aside $700 million last month for anticipated U.S. fines that are expected to come from a years-long probe by the Department of Justice and other authorities.

A U.S. Senate report in July highlighted the allegations, finding that HSBC had let clients shift potentially illicit funds from countries such as Mexico, Iran, the Cayman Islands, Saudi Arabia and Syria.

HSBC representatives have said the case is not about the bank's complicity in money laundering, but about "lax compliance standards".

One of the largest casino companies, Las Vegas Sands , run by magnate Sheldon Adelson, is also under investigation by the Department of Justice for potential violations of anti-money laundering laws, according to a source familiar with the matter.

Banks have in the past generally tailored their anti-money laundering efforts to meet the requirements of banking regulators. With the DOJ's shift in focus, banks may need to ensure they are not liable to criminal charges of money laundering that the department would try to establish in any case it pursued.

"Any responsible financial institution is going to have to assess its anti-money laundering program and make sure that it has not just enough resources and personnel to satisfy regulators but also to ward off any criminal investigative activity," Peter Djinis, a former regulatory policy official with the U.S. Treasury Department's Financial Crimes Enforcement Network, also known as FinCEN.

Djinis, who is now in private practice in Florida, said he hopes the department's intensified interest doesn't cause friction with regulators.

Notably, New York state bank regulator Benjamin Lawsky earlier this month aggravated federal authorities by breaking from negotiations to bring his own sensational sanctions case against British bank Standard Chartered, extracting a large settlement in the process.

"What we don't want to do is have a bidding contest between the criminal prosecutorial powers of law enforcement and the oversight and supervisory powers of the regulators," Djinis said.

NEW UNIT

In 2010 the Department of Justice created within the asset forfeiture section a specialized unit, money laundering and bank integrity, which it staffed with about 14 prosecutors who focus exclusively on financial institution cases.

The unit, which is also handling the sanctions and stripping-related cases including the one against Standard Chartered, is focused on fortifying the U.S. financial system against money laundering and illicit finance, Shasky Calvery said.

"The way we do that is by aggressively enforcing the Bank Secrecy Act," she said.

The term "stripping" refers to the practice of banks removing or masking information regarding transactions.

Shasky Calvery is leaving the Justice Department next month to head FinCEN, the U.S. Department of the Treasury's anti-money laundering unit.

Her deputy, Jai Ramaswamy, will serve as acting chief of the unit and said he planned to keep it on the same track.

Part of the shift in focus appears to be a greater interest in cases which show ongoing illegal conduct rather than going after banks and institutions that broke the law in the past but have not continued to do so.

The headline-grabbing cases involving allegations that some of the world's largest banks concealed Iran-linked transactions are related to historical conduct. The Standard Chartered case, for example, deals primarily with conduct that occurred before 2008.

The newer focus cases in contrast involve some more recent activity. The check cashing case, for example, involved conduct that lasted through June 2011, prosecutors said.

Earlier this month the Department of Justice charged what it described as a multi-million dollar money laundering conspiracy to help move drug money in Texas, and said the conduct had occurred through 2011.

Such cases also represent something of shift to charging so-called professional money-launderers, as opposed to adding money-laundering charges to an underlying drug or corruption case.

Another priority of the unit is examining potential misconduct in new types of technology such as mobile payments, Shasky Calvery said.

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Reuters: Regulatory News: SEC seeks better compliance on muni 'pay-to-play' ban

Reuters: Regulatory News
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SEC seeks better compliance on muni 'pay-to-play' ban
Aug 31st 2012, 19:41

Fri Aug 31, 2012 3:41pm EDT

Aug 31 (Reuters) - The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission said Friday it is looking for stronger compliance with a rule that clamped down on so-called pay-to-play practices among underwriters and other professionals in the municipal bond market.

The SEC, which approves and enforces rules for the $3.7 trillion market, issued a risk alert that it said had been triggered by practices spotted by SEC examiners "that raise concerns about firms' compliance with their obligations under MSRB Rule G-37."

That Municipal Securities Rulemaking Board rule is aimed at prohibiting muni firms from doing business with muni bond issuers like states and cities in the wake of certain political contributions to officials of the issuing entity. It also requires firms to disclose contributions and other information.

The SEC's alert cited four areas of concern -- compliance with a ban on doing business with an issuer within two years of a political contribution, possible record-keeping violations, failure to file accurate and complete political contribution information with regulators, and inadequate supervision.

"We hope that by describing practices that our examiners have observed, we will promote compliance by helping firms to consider how each of them can most effectively meet their obligations under MSRB rules," Carlo di Florio, director of the SEC's Office of Compliance Inspections and Examinations, said in a statement.

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Reuters: Regulatory News: US SEC seeks appeal in bid to help Stanford victims file claims

Reuters: Regulatory News
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US SEC seeks appeal in bid to help Stanford victims file claims
Aug 31st 2012, 19:59

WASHINGTON | Fri Aug 31, 2012 3:59pm EDT

WASHINGTON Aug 31 (Reuters) - U.S. securities regulators said on Friday they would appeal a federal judge's ruling rejecting their request for an industry-backed fund to start a court proceeding that could help compensate the victims of Allen Stanford's $7 billion Ponzi scheme.

The Securities and Exchange Commission announced its decision in a filing in Washington D.C.'s federal district court late Friday afternoon.

The SEC is trying to force the Securities Investor Protection Corp to start liquidation proceedings for the victims, some of whom lost millions of dollars in the fraud. In July, a federal judge rejected the plea, saying the agency had not meet its legal burden to show why SIPC should be compelled to act.

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Reuters: Regulatory News: US Dept. of Justice looks to next era of money-laundering cases

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US Dept. of Justice looks to next era of money-laundering cases
Aug 31st 2012, 18:19

Fri Aug 31, 2012 2:19pm EDT

* Prosecutors examining money-laundering compliance

* DOJ can bring criminal charges, with big penalties

* Law applies to wide range of financial institutions

* Shift in focus comes as DOJ unit wraps up sanctions cases

By Aruna Viswanatha and Brett Wolf

Aug 31 (Reuters) - The U.S. Department of Justice is shifting its sights to a new offensive in combating money laundering: bringing criminal charges against banks and other financial institutions for weak compliance systems that fail to catch illicit money flows.

Even while the d epartment's money-laundering unit is wrapping up a series of blockbuster cases involving sanctions-busting transactions routed through some of Europe's biggest banks, it has set its sights on the next front.

While the sanctions cases involving Iran and other countries have largely dealt with historical conduct, part of the shift is to pursue ongoing misconduct.

The focus on compliance systems has traditionally been left to financial firms' direct regulators, including the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, whose punishments usually amount to a strong slap on the wrist.

The D OJ has brought a handful of its own such cases, including one against Wachovia in 2010 in which authorities said the bank failed to maintain effective anti-money laundering controls and did not stop more than $100 million of Colombian and Mexican drug traffickers' money from being laundered through accounts at the bank.

The DOJ unit is now interested in ramping up the number of criminal cases it brings under the Bank Secrecy Act, or BSA, a law that requires financial institutions and their employees to take steps to combat money laundering.

"I think you are going to see more complex BSA cases against banks, I think you are going to see enforcement across the broader spectrum of financial institutions," said Jennifer Shasky Calvery, who heads the Dep artment of Justice's Ass et Forfeiture and Money Laundering Section.

The cases come with potentially hefty punishments, with financial penalties equal to the illicit funds moved and prison sentences between five and ten years for individuals.

Also part of the appeal is that BSA cases, including compliance-related charges, can capture a range of financial institutions, from commercial banks and credit unions, to broker-dealers and insurers, to casinos and pawnbrokers.

In June, the Department of Justice charged check-cashing businesses in Brooklyn and Los Angeles with failing to file certain transaction reports and failing to have an effective anti-money laundering program. The businesses were being used to move more than $50 million in money, some of which was potentially linked to healthcare fraud, the government said.

Besides being one of the first such cases against a financial institution that isn't a bank, it was also the first to indict individuals - the owners of the businesses - with failing to have an effective anti-money laundering program.

It is unclear whether the effort will produce marquee cases or those targeted at smaller entities, and individual charges are unlikely at larger institutions since responsibilities are often shared by multiple employees and departments.

But at least one big upcoming case, against HSBC, is expected to be based in part on the bank's weak compliance systems.

The U.K.-based bank set aside $700 million last month for anticipated U.S. fines that are expected to come from a years-long probe by the De partment o f Justice a n d other authorities.

A U.S. Senate report in July highlighted the allegations, finding that HSBC had let clients shift potentially illicit funds from countries such as Mexico, Iran, the Cayman Islands, Saudi Arabia and Syria.

One of the largest casino companies, Las Vegas Sands , run by magnate Sheldon Adelson, is also under investigation by the De partment o f Justice f o r potential violations of anti-money laundering laws, according to a source familiar with the matter.

Banks have in the past generally tailored their anti-money laundering efforts to meet the requirements of banking regulators. With the DOJ's shift in focus, banks may need to en sure they are not liable to criminal charges of money laundering that the department would try to establish in any case it pursued.

"Any responsible financial institution is going to have to assess its anti-money laundering program and make sure that it has not just enough resources and personnel to satisfy regulators but also to ward off any criminal investigative activity," Peter Djinis, a former regulatory policy official with the U.S. Treasury Department's Financial Crimes Enforcement Network, also known as FinCEN.

Djinis, who is now in private practice in Florida, said he hopes the d e partment's intensified interest doesn't cause friction with regulators.

Notably, New York state bank regulator Benjamin Lawsky earlier this month aggravated federal authorities by breaking from negotiations to bring his own sensational sanctions case against British bank Standard Chartered, extracting a large settlement in the process.

"What we don't want to do is have a bidding contest between the criminal prosecutorial powers of law enforcement and the oversight and supervisory powers of the regulators," Djinis said.

NEW UNIT

In 2010 the Department of Justice created within the asset forfeiture section a specialized unit, money laundering and bank integrity, which it staffed with about 14 prosecutors who focus exclusively on financial institution cases.

The unit, which is also handling the sanctions and stripping-related cases including the one against Standard Chartered, is focused on fortifying the U.S. financial system against money laundering and illicit finance, Shasky Calvery said.

"The way we do that is by aggressively enforcing the Bank Secrecy Act," she said.

The term "stripping" refers to the practice of banks r emovi ng or maski ng i nformation regarding transactions.

Shasky Calvery is leaving the Justice Department next month to head FinCEN, the U .S. Department of the T reasury's a nti-money laundering unit.

Her deputy, Jai Ramaswamy, will serve as acting chief of the unit and said he planned to keep it on the same track.

Part of the shift in focus appears to be a greater interest in cases which show ongoing illegal conduct rather than going after banks and institutions that broke the law in the past but have not continued to do so.

The headline-grabbing cases involving allegations that some of the world's largest banks concealed Iran-linked transactions are related to historical conduct. The Standard Chartered case, for example, deals primarily with conduct that occurred before 2008.

The newer focus cases in contrast involve some more recent activity. The check cashing case, for example, involved conduct that lasted through June 2011, prosecutors said.

Earlier this month the Department of Justice charged what it described as a multi-million dollar money laundering conspiracy to help move drug money in Texas, and said the conduct had occurred through 2011.

Such cases also represent something of shift to charging so-called professional money-launderers, as opposed to adding money-laundering charges to an underlying drug or corruption case.

Another priority of the unit is examining potential misconduct in new types of technology such as mobile payments, Shasky Calvery said.

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Reuters: Regulatory News: National Bank "systemically important" to Canada, CEO says

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National Bank "systemically important" to Canada, CEO says
Aug 31st 2012, 17:48

Fri Aug 31, 2012 1:48pm EDT

* Regulators to set list of vital Canadian banks next year

* Canada's No. 6 bank far smaller than competitors

* Could face higher capital standards

By Cameron French

TORONTO, Aug 31 (Reuters) - National Bank Financial Chief Executive Louis Vachon said on Friday he believes the bank will be designated "systemically important" to Canada's banking industry, and thus may face stricter capital retention rules.

Global regulators are imposing stricter rules on the banking industry to avoid a repeat of the 2008 financial crisis. These include a tougher set of standards for banks designated systemically important, or "too big to fail", meaning their collapse would imperil the broader industry.

While regulators have so far focused on banks considered systemically important for the global industry, they are now turning their sights to lenders considered key to national industries.

Canada's banking sector is dominated by five big banks, all of which are expected to be designated systemically important domestically.

But Vachon said he expects National, Canada's No. 6 bank and less than half the size of any of its larger rivals, also will be included on the list.

"Our view, and again that is our view... is that we are likely to be included as a domestic SIFI (systemically important financial institution)," he said on a conference call to discuss the bank's third-quarter results.

Although the criteria for deciding which banks will be targeted and what standards they will face will not be released until next year, it is expected banks labeled as SIFIs will be forced to carry a level of capital above and beyond the stricter standards currently being phased in for other banks.

Retaining more capital leaves less for banks to use to expand their businesses or pay back to shareholders as dividends or buybacks.

Vachon said National would not be doing large share buybacks until it has a clearer view of what standards will be put in place.

National has about C$176 billion ($178.5 billion) in assets, according to Reuters data, far less than Canada's largest lender, Royal Bank of Canada, which has C$824 billion in assets, and less than half of No. 5 bank Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce's C$387 billion.

Robert Sedran, an analyst at CIBC World Markets, said naming National Bank a SIFI makes sense from the standpoint of maintaining a level playing field among the Canadian banks.

"The question almost becomes more of a competitive environment one... (and) I think OSFI would be disinclined to treat anyone differently," he said.

Canada's Office of the Superintendent of Financial Institutions is the country's bank regulator, and will be responsible for implementing the new regulations.

Canada's other big banks are Toronto-Dominion Bank, Bank of Nova Scotia and Bank of Montreal

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Reuters: Regulatory News: UPDATE 1-Three ex-UBS bankers guilty in muni bond rigging case

Reuters: Regulatory News
Reuters.com is your source for breaking news, business, financial and investing news, including personal finance and stocks. Reuters is the leading global provider of news, financial information and technology solutions to the world's media, financial institutions, businesses and individuals. // via fulltextrssfeed.com
UPDATE 1-Three ex-UBS bankers guilty in muni bond rigging case
Aug 31st 2012, 18:22

Fri Aug 31, 2012 2:22pm EDT

* Part of U.S. probe of $3.7 trillion muni bond market

* Three ex-UBS employees among 19 charged in probe

* Defense lawyer indicates appeal likely

By Basil Katz and Grant McCool

NEW YORK, Aug 31 (Reuters) - Three former UBS AG executives were convicted on Friday of conspiring to deceive U.S. cities and towns by operating a scheme to rig bids to invest municipal bond proceeds.

The verdict by a federal court jury in Manhattan is the latest victory for the U.S. Department of Justice in its broad investigation of the $3.7 trillion U.S. municipal bond market. The widespread probe has touched some of the world's largest banks.

The three defendants, Peter Ghavami, Gary Heinz and Michael Welty, were charged in 2010 as part of a probe focused on rooting out schemes to fix prices and rig bids on bond transactions. The former bankers denied wrongdoing and said government witnesses had lied to ensnare them.

Each defendant was found guilty on two counts of conspiracy. The jury also convicted Heinz and Welty on other charges, but found Welty not guilty on one wire-fraud count, and Heinz not guilty of witness tampering. Heinz was the only one of the three to face that charge.

Ghavami, a Belgian national, left UBS in 2007 as global head of commodities. Both Heinz, of Jersey City, New Jersey, and Welty, of New York, worked on UBS' municipal bond reinvestment and derivatives desk at the time of the suspected offenses.

The two conspiracy charges involved rigging bids in 2001 and 2002 for guaranteed investment contracts, which cities and counties use to park proceeds from municipal bond sales.

The conspiracy charges carry a maximum of five years in prison each. No sentencing date has been set.

Charles Stillman, a lawyer for Ghavami, told reporters: "We are obviously disappointed with the verdict. We are looking forward to an appeal ... "

Lawyers for the other two defendants declined to comment.

Stillman told the jury in his closing arguments this week that his client "did nothing more than his job entirely in good faith and that he never intended to and never did cheat a municipality, the Internal Revenue Service, anyone."

During the trial, the jury heard from government witnesses who pleaded guilty to similar crimes and agreed to testify against the defendants, and also heard audio recordings of conversations between the bankers.

"It was fraud, plain and simple. It involved greed, deception and betrayal," prosecutor John Van Lonkhuyzen said in his closing statement to the jury on Aug. 27.

The jury began deciding the case on Wednesday afternoon. The trial began on July 30.

"It was horrendously difficult. It was a big deal, what we had to weigh," said one juror, who asked not to be identified, after the verdict.

Thirteen people and one company have pleaded guilty to charges stemming from the bid-rigging investigation. A total of 19 people have been charged.

The U.S. government has a 10-year window to bring criminal charges over suspected crimes that affect financial institutions.

In this case, since the three bankers were charged in December 2010, the case falls within the statute of limitations, U.S. District Judge Kimba Wood has ruled.

In May, three former financial executives were convicted of similar charges by another federal jury in Manhattan.

In July, former JPMorgan Chase & Co banker Alexander Wright pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to commit wire fraud for manipulating the bidding process for a June 2002 contract.

Wright and former UBS employee Mark Zaino testified for the government at the trial of the former UBS executives. Zaino pleaded guilty in 2010 to bid-rigging charges.

The case is USA v. Peter Ghavami et al, U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York, No. 10-cr-1217.

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Reuters: Regulatory News: Three ex-UBS bankers convicted in muni bond rigging case

Reuters: Regulatory News
Reuters.com is your source for breaking news, business, financial and investing news, including personal finance and stocks. Reuters is the leading global provider of news, financial information and technology solutions to the world's media, financial institutions, businesses and individuals. // via fulltextrssfeed.com
Three ex-UBS bankers convicted in muni bond rigging case
Aug 31st 2012, 17:18

NEW YORK | Fri Aug 31, 2012 1:18pm EDT

NEW YORK Aug 31 (Reuters) - Three former UBS executives were found guilty on Friday of conspiring to deceive U.S. cities and towns by operating a scheme to rig bids to invest municipal bond proceeds.

The Manhattan federal court jury verdict is the latest victory for the U.S. Department of Justice in its broad investigation of the $3.7 trillion U.S. municipal bond market.

Each defendant was found guilty on two counts of conspiracy, and the jury also convicted some of the men on other charges. The jury found one of the men not guilty on one wire fraud count. The jury also found another of the defendants innocent of witness tampering - the only one to face that charge.

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Reuters: Regulatory News: Rules to tackle "algo" traders could backfire-study

Reuters: Regulatory News
Reuters.com is your source for breaking news, business, financial and investing news, including personal finance and stocks. Reuters is the leading global provider of news, financial information and technology solutions to the world's media, financial institutions, businesses and individuals. // via fulltextrssfeed.com
Rules to tackle "algo" traders could backfire-study
Aug 31st 2012, 17:21

By Tommy Wilkes

LONDON | Fri Aug 31, 2012 1:21pm EDT

LONDON Aug 31 (Reuters) - European regulations designed to crack down on so-called high- frequency trading (HFT) could end up reducing the number of buyers and sellers in financial markets rather than boosting it, a UK-government commissioned paper said.

The European Union's draft law MiFID II, a reform of Brussels' earlier Markets in Financial Instruments Directive (MiFID), will introduce tougher regulation of financial markets including for HFT.

Speed traders use powerful computers to churn out thousands of trades in fractions of a second to profit from tiny price discrepancies, sparking criticism that they increase market volatility and instability.

The HFT industry hit the headlines in May 2010, when it was blamed for the "flash crash" in the United States, when the stock market plummeted more than 1,000 points, or nearly 10 percent, in a matter of minutes.

The fall was initially caused by one large erroneous trade from a funds firm, but the losses were rapidly magnified when computer-driven high-frequency traders followed the move down.

Among MiFID's more controversial proposals, speed traders who increasingly function as market makers will be forced to post prices to buy and sell at all times, to stop them from pulling out when markets get choppy.

The hope is that this will boost liquidity and support orderly markets, but speed traders say this would put them at an unfair disadvantage.

The Foresight working paper, which brings together some 35 academics from nine countries to examine the MiFID proposals, said the requirement could end up having the reverse effect and reduce liquidity.

NOT CONSISTENT

"Many high-frequency strategies post bids and offers across correlated contracts. A requirement to post a continuous bid- offer spread is not consistent with this strategy and, if binding, could force high-frequency traders out of the business of liquidity provision," it said.

"With upwards of 50 percent of liquidity coming from high- frequency traders, this could be disastrous."

The paper also questioned "notification" policies, which would require all firms engaged in algorithmic trading to provide the regulator with a description of their strategies, trading parameters and key risk controls annually, to stop unsound algorithms from damaging orderly markets.

The Foresight working paper said the proposed policy was too vague, while its implementation would require excessive costs for both firms and regulators.

"It is also doubtful that it would substantially reduce the risk of market instability due to errant algorithmic behaviour, although it may help regulators understand the way the trading strategy should work."

The HFT's trade body reacted positively to the working paper's findings.

"We are encouraged to see such a rational and evidence-based assessment of the benefits of automated trading and we hope that these findings will have a positive impact on the European regulatory debate," FIA EPTA Chairman Remco Lenterman said.

Foresight's final report is due out later this year.

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Reuters: Regulatory News: UPDATE 1-BoE's Haldane says Basel bank rules may need rethink

Reuters: Regulatory News
Reuters.com is your source for breaking news, business, financial and investing news, including personal finance and stocks. Reuters is the leading global provider of news, financial information and technology solutions to the world's media, financial institutions, businesses and individuals. // via fulltextrssfeed.com
UPDATE 1-BoE's Haldane says Basel bank rules may need rethink
Aug 31st 2012, 16:12

Fri Aug 31, 2012 12:12pm EDT

* BoE's Haldane calls for "de layering" of Basel rules

* Haldane wants simpler approach to regulating banks

* Says complexity in banks could be taxed

By Huw Jones

LONDON, Aug 31 (Reuters) - The world's core regulatory response to the 2007-09 financial crisis may need a rethink, a top Bank of England official said on Friday, as the rules due to start coming into force next January may be too complicated to work well.

Andrew Haldane, the BoE's executive director for financial stability said "less may be more" when it comes to financial regulation, calling for a "de-layering" of the Basel III accord to focus on a simpler gauge of bank stability.

The accord is a hard-won deal by world leaders to force banks to hold more capital that taxpayers are less likely to have to bail them out in the next crisis.

Haldane said it may not be up to the task.

"The Tower of Basel is at risk of over-fitting -- and over-balancing. It may be time to rethink its architecture," Haldane said in a speech to central bankers meeting in the United States at Jackson Hole, Wyoming.

Haldane said Basel's complexity means it will be "close to impossible" to measure default probabilities for a large international lender's banking book and work out how much capital should be set aside.

This raises "serious questions" about the robustness of the regulatory framework.

European banks could end up being forced to provide 30,000-50,000 different bits of data to regulators in future across 60 different regulatory forms, Haldane said.

The banks may need to employ 70,000 more people just to comply with Basel in Europe.

"Taken together, the emerging picture is of a steadily rising regulatory tower," Haldane said.

DE-LAYERING BASEL

He suggested steps to simplify Basel, such as placing its 3 percent leverage ratio on a equal footing with capital ratios. That would mean regulators relying more on their own judgements and less on banks calculating the size of their capital buffers based on complicated internal risk models, he said.

The leverage ratio is a simple measure of a bank's assets to capital and at 3 percent it means a bank's equity can be leveraged up to 33 times.

Basel's emphasis is on forcing banks to hold higher and better-quality capital buffers while its leverage ratio is only a blunt backstop in case of errors in capital calculations.

The Bank of England's Financial Policy Committee has already put leverage and capital ratios on an equal footing when it comes to supervising banks.

Banks that failed during the financial crisis tended to have lower leverage ratios of around 1 percent, Haldane said.

However, U.S. banks published leverage ratios before the crisis but regulators still failed to spot problems and some had to be shored up.

The complexity of banks could also be tackled by levying a specific capital charge to encourage simpler balance sheets, Haldane said.

Solutions such as the Vickers reform to force retail arms of UK banks to hold more capital can be complex to implement and that markets could encourage banks to sell off assets to simplify themselves, he added.

The Bank of England becomes the main regulator for banks and insurers in Britain from 2013.

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