London ‘Cartel’ Traders Petition US Court to Dismiss FX Rigging Charges

Tuesday, 27/03/2018 | 17:01 GMT by Aziz Abdel-Qader
  • The indictment accuses the trio with conspiring to restrain trade from ‎the end of 2007 through the beginning of 2013.‎
London ‘Cartel’ Traders Petition US Court to Dismiss FX Rigging Charges
Finance Magnates

Three ex-traders at the heart of criminal investigations over their participation in a Forex rigging chatroom on Monday asked a US judge to dismiss the case against them, saying they did nothing wrong as their banks “weren’t always in direct competition.”

Richard Usher, formerly of JPMorgan Chase & Co., Rohan Ramchandani, who worked at Citigroup Inc., and Chris Ashton, a former Barclays Plc trader, allegedly created a chat group that they named “the Cartel” to coordinate trading of US dollars and euros and manipulate the prices of the Exchange rates.

"This is just banks contacting each other," said Michael Kendall, the lawyer of JPMorgan trader Usher.

However, Assistant US. Attorney Carrie Ann Syme said the indictment actually accuses them of conspiring to restrain trade from the end of 2007 through the beginning of 2013. Syme said that while competitors deal with each other in every market, the goal of the three men was to suppress and eliminate competition in the trading of the euro and dollar in the US, UK, and Switzerland.

The indictments against the trio came after US authorities faced criticism for not prosecuting any traders involved in the FX rigging scandal since it broke out in 2013, although they did impose multi-billion dollar fines against major banks.

Back in March 2016, Britain’s Serious Fraud Office looked at the same evidence and decided not to bring charges, citing insufficient evidence for a realistic prospect of conviction.

Lawyers for the traders criticized the US for moving forward with the case, but the City traders agreed to voluntarily travel to New York to defend themselves and deny any wrongdoing.

Three ex-traders at the heart of criminal investigations over their participation in a Forex rigging chatroom on Monday asked a US judge to dismiss the case against them, saying they did nothing wrong as their banks “weren’t always in direct competition.”

Richard Usher, formerly of JPMorgan Chase & Co., Rohan Ramchandani, who worked at Citigroup Inc., and Chris Ashton, a former Barclays Plc trader, allegedly created a chat group that they named “the Cartel” to coordinate trading of US dollars and euros and manipulate the prices of the Exchange rates.

"This is just banks contacting each other," said Michael Kendall, the lawyer of JPMorgan trader Usher.

However, Assistant US. Attorney Carrie Ann Syme said the indictment actually accuses them of conspiring to restrain trade from the end of 2007 through the beginning of 2013. Syme said that while competitors deal with each other in every market, the goal of the three men was to suppress and eliminate competition in the trading of the euro and dollar in the US, UK, and Switzerland.

The indictments against the trio came after US authorities faced criticism for not prosecuting any traders involved in the FX rigging scandal since it broke out in 2013, although they did impose multi-billion dollar fines against major banks.

Back in March 2016, Britain’s Serious Fraud Office looked at the same evidence and decided not to bring charges, citing insufficient evidence for a realistic prospect of conviction.

Lawyers for the traders criticized the US for moving forward with the case, but the City traders agreed to voluntarily travel to New York to defend themselves and deny any wrongdoing.

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