US govt chooses not to provide all trading details in FX manipulation case

Maria Nikolova

In a letter to Judge Berman, the US government argues that “the trading itself was not the crime nor is it an element of the charged crime. The trading is evidence that the crime occurred”.

The conflict over evidentiary details in the case brought by the United States Government against three members of the so-called “FX Cartel” or “FX Mafia” continues. It has been apparent that neither of the parties in the case, captioned USA v. Usher et al (1:17-cr-00019), is eager to go through the huge amount of data associated with the allegedly collusive trading that went on for nearly five years.

The Defendants in this case: Richard Usher, Rohan Ramchandani, and Christopher Ashton, are accused of having conspired to manipulate the FX market by “coordinating their bidding, offering, and trading” at “certain times.”

In a letter to Judge Berman at the New York Southern District Court, dated September 12, 2017, the US Government stated its arguments not to provide trading data detail on any particular episode of collusive trading alleged to have occurred during the five-year period of the conspiracy. The letter is in response to Defendants’ request from last week about such details being included in a bill of particulars.

The US Government requests the Court to reject the Defendants’ requests for a bill of particulars and for the Government to provide specificity for all of the many thousands of episodes of collusive trading that took place during the entire five-year run of the conspiracy, whether or not those episodes will be discussed at trial, as well as for the Government to provide the specifics on a much earlier timetable.

A bill of particulars is seen as unwarranted by the Government because the Indictment provides factual background and a clear statement of the alleged collusive agreement.

The Government alleges that the conspirators carried out that agreement, in part, by coordinating their currency trading. However, it adds that: “the trading itself was not the crime nor is it an element of the charged crime”.

“The trading is evidence that the crime occurred, just as chat transcripts, emails, and recorded phone calls are”.

Even with no trading data, the combination of witness testimony, chat transcripts, emails, internal bank documents, and recorded phone calls should be sufficient, according to the Government, as evidence that the collusive agreement existed and trading in conformance therewith occurred.

“The Government chooses not to provide trading data detail on any particular episode of collusive trading”, the letter says.

The Government also notes the hefty volume of data in question. The alleged conspiracy in this case lasted approximately five years, during which the conspirators communicated together in an online chat room nearly all day, every day. The Government says it has not catalogued, and does not intend to catalogue, each of those thousands of collusive trading episodes. The Government adds that it will need to identify a small subset of representative episodes to be tried.

“Requiring the Government to specify “the episodes” (which is the same as “all episodes”) of collusive trading would likely take many months if not years to accomplish, to no one’s benefit”.

The Government argues that the timetable suggested by the Defendants is unachievable. In exchange, it proposes that:

  • Within two weeks of the Court’s Order, the Government will identify no more than 200 episodes involving alleged coordination of trading between the co-conspirators for potential use in the case-in-chief at trial. For each episode, the list will provide the date, Bates number of the associated chat or phone call that describes the episode, and the approximate time of each episode.
  • The Government will provide two updates to this list, on November 3, 2017, and December 15, 2017.
  • The Parties will exchange initial trial exhibit lists for case-in-chief evidence, either two weeks after the Court provides its opinion and order on dispositive motions or March 1, 2018, whichever is earlier, and final trial exhibit lists for case-in-chief evidence on May 3, 2018.

The trial is scheduled for June 4, 2018.

Usher, former Head of G11 FX Trading-UK at an affiliate of Royal Bank of Scotland plc, as well as former Managing Director at an affiliate of JPMorgan Chase & Co., Ramchandani, former Managing Director and head of G10 FX spot trading at an affiliate of Citicorp, and Ashton, former Head of Spot FX at an affiliate of Barclays PLC, have pleaded not guilty.

Read this next

Digital Assets

Tether expands USDT and XAUT offerings on Telegram

Tether’s stablecoin USDT, which boasts a market cap of $108 billion, has expanded its presence onto The Open Network (TON), a blockchain closely linked to the Telegram messaging app.

Digital Assets

Embrace the New Era: USDt on TON Revolutionizes Peer-to-Peer Payments

The integration of USDt, the world’s largest stablecoin by market capitalization, onto The Open Network (TON) marks an advancement in the realm of digital finance.

Education, Inside View

Charting the Course: Expert Analysis on GBP/USD Signal

The GBP/USD is one of the highly regarded currency pairs in the world of Forex trading, known for being liquid, volatile, and having narrow spreads. Traders Union’s analysis combines the latest economic data, market news, and technical indicators, giving all the insights needed to make informed decisions about trading pounds and dollars.

Institutional FX

Iress’ QuantHouse adds BMLL’s historical order book data

“Across the industry, as sophistication levels increase, the demand for superior quality historical market data is intensifying. Market participants need easy access to global, ready-to-use data to improve their own products and strategies, gain a deeper understanding of liquidity dynamics, and generate alpha more predictably, without the burden of data engineering and infrastructure on their P&L.”

SEO

Binance Australia: Revolutionizing Cryptocurrency Trading Down Under

In 2024, Binance Australia continues to shape the cryptocurrency landscape, offering innovative trading solutions and comprehensive support for Australian traders. This article explores its services, regulatory compliance, and what makes it a top choice for crypto enthusiasts in Australia.

Inside View

European share trading is much higher than believed, says report

“Regulators in the EU and UK need to take the opportunity presented by the imminent establishment of a Consolidated Tape for shares and ETFs to update relevant post-trade transparency rules, so that they capture the full scope of share trading activity in Europe. Without this, Europe risks being left behind.”

Digital Assets

Abra launches prime solutions for digital assets

As an SEC-registered RIA, ACM will now operate as a fiduciary and allow clients to get exposure to the digital asset ecosystem under a separate account structure built on-chain, where clients retain title and ownership over their assets and their assets will be independently verifiable on-chain.

Retail FX

Unusual Whales taps Tastytrade as exclusive options broker

“We’re huge fans of Unusual Whales and the transparency they bring to the markets, enabling traders to make informed decisions.”

Industry News

GenAI can help transform OTC derivatives markets, said ISDA whitepaper

The risks of GenAI, however, include data breaches, regulatory issues, bias, as well as sub-standard or simply false results.

<