Home of the best experts

News, Regulation, enforcement & litigation
By Gontran de Quillacq
On December 21, 2021

NatWest Pleads Guilty to Manipulating Treasury Markets

NatWest has admitted to market manipulation to the SEC. The guilty admission will cost much more than the $35m fine. It may become the SEC's new policy.

NatWest-OfficeNatWest has admitted to market manipulation to the SEC.

  • The fine is not big ($35m), but the many private litigations that will ensue will cost the firm much more
  • What is more relevant is that the SEC extracted a corporate confession.
  • Only 2% of the SEC settlements between 2014 and 2017 included such an admission of guilt. (see Wall Street, Companies May Have to Give Up More to Settle With SEC)
  • This low number is due to the SEC’s low resources. The agency often have to go to court to extract such a result – an avenue it rarely can afford.

So this settlement may herald a policy reversal and a more aggressive deterrence against corporate malfeasance.

 

References

 

 

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.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


Regulation, enforcement & litigation
Investments & markets
"The algorithm decided" is not a legal defense. Neither is "we didn't know the system had drifted." Courts are settling these questions fast — and the...
Derivatives
Investments & markets
Prediction markets have outgrown their reputation as election novelties. They are now structured like financial derivatives, regulated by the CFTC, and generating the same market-abuse problems...
Investments & markets
Regulation, enforcement & litigation
A 10% stock drop on a single post. Here is how it became a $2.6 billion verdict....
News
Pyrite Risk Experts is look for a senior full-stack developer to deploy some of its technology....
Investments & markets
Regulation, enforcement & litigation
Litigation risk, disclosure, and instrument-level analysis during global shocks...
Derivatives
Investments & markets
Valuation Compression, AI-Capex Issuance, Basel III Incentives, and Private Credit Interconnectedness in 2026...
Skip to content