Chinese Bank's Brokerage Unit Pleads Guilty in ADR Bid-Rigging Case
15 Juni 2019 - 12:42AM
Dow Jones News
By Maria Armental
A New York-based broker-dealer owned by China's biggest lender
pleaded guilty to an antitrust charge related to bid-rigging on
American depositary receipts and reached a related civil
settlement.
Industrial and Commercial Bank of China Financial Services LLC,
known as ICBCFS, will pay about $46 million in total fines and
penalties, U.S. authorities said Friday.
The case against ICBCFS, the brokerage unit of Industrial and
Commercial Bank of China Ltd., represents the second criminal
conviction by the Justice Department and the largest recovery by
the Securities and Exchange Commission against a broker as part of
an investigation around ADRs. The SEC said it has reached
settlements totaling at least $414 million with 10 financial
institutions as part of the probe.
In the criminal case, ICBCFS admitted it conspired to rig bids
for rates to borrow ADRs, coordinating its bids with others to
artificially increase profits under an auction-style process,
according to court documents filed Friday in Manhattan federal
court. It was fined $3.3 million.
In the related civil settlement with the SEC, ICBCFS agreed to
be censured for violating antifraud provisions and failing to
reasonably supervise workers in its securities and lending desk,
without admitting or denying the SEC's findings. ICBCFS agreed to
return nearly $24 million in gains and pay about $19 million in
penalties and interest.
A representative for ICBCFS didn't immediately provide a
comment.
ADRs were designed to help investors to avoid many of the
complexities and costs of directly owning shares overseas while
helping foreign companies widen their investor base in the U.S.
ADRs are certificates that represent shares in a foreign company
held in custody at a depositary bank. Foreign companies transfer
the shares to depositary banks, which use them to back
corresponding securities issued to U.S. investors. The securities
track the price of the underlying shares.
ADRs can be issued without foreign shares being deposited as
long as brokers that receive them have an agreement with the
depositary bank and the broker or its customer owns the number of
foreign shares that corresponds to the number of shares the ADRs
represent, the SEC said.
However, the SEC found ICBCFS improperly obtained "pre-released"
ADRs from depositary banks because neither the firm nor its
customers owned the foreign shares that the ADRs represented.
That inflated the total number of a foreign issuer's tradable
securities and resulted in abusive practices such as inappropriate
short selling and dividend arbitrage, the SEC said.
"By falsely representing that the firm or its customers owned
the foreign shares to support pre-release transactions, ICBCFS
often played the role of middleman between depositary banks and
other market participants in the issuance of what amounted to
phantom securities," Sanjay Wadhwa, senior associate director of
the SEC's New York regional office, said in a statement.
ICBCFS has since appointed new senior management, voluntarily
discontinued ADR pre-release practices, and strengthen its
compliance department and compliance training program, the
regulator said.
Write to Maria Armental at maria.armental@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
June 14, 2019 18:27 ET (22:27 GMT)
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