Simmtech Co. v. Barclays Bank PLC

74 F. Supp. 3d 581
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedJanuary 28, 2015
DocketNos. 13 Civ. 7789(LGS), 13 Civ. 7953(LGS), 14 Civ. 1364(LGS)
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 74 F. Supp. 3d 581 (Simmtech Co. v. Barclays Bank PLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Simmtech Co. v. Barclays Bank PLC, 74 F. Supp. 3d 581 (S.D.N.Y. 2015).

Opinion

OPINION AND ORDER

LORNA G. SCHOFIELD, District Judge:

The three cases before the Court allege a long-running conspiracy among the world’s largest banks to manipulate the benchmark rates in one of the world’s largest markets, the foreign exchange (“FX”) market. The primary action is on behalf of U.S.-based Plaintiffs, who, in a Consolidated Amended Class Action Complaint (the “U.S. Complaint”), allege that the twelve defendant banks1 violated Sections 1 and 8 of the Sherman Act (the “Consolidated Action”).

The two remaining actions involve Plaintiffs who are not in the United States (the “Foreign Plaintiffs” and the “Foreign Actions”). Plaintiff Simmtech Co., Ltd., filed a Complaint (the “Simmtech Complaint”) on behalf of those who traded foreign currency in South Korea with seven of the Defendants. Plaintiff Oddvar Larsen’s [586]*586Amended Complaint (the “Larsen Complaint”) alleges similar claims on behalf of those who traded foreign currency with the Defendants in Norway (collectively, the “Foreign Complaints”). Defendants move to dismiss all three actions. For the reasons stated below, the motions are denied as to the Consolidated Action and granted as to the Foreign Actions.

1. BACKGROUND

The following recitation is based on the allegations in the complaints in the three actions, documents incorporated by reference or integral to those complaints and judicially noticed facts. The allegations are assumed to be true solely for purposes of the present motions to test the sufficiency of the three complaints.

A. The Consolidated Action

Unless otherwise indicated, all quotations in this Section are taken from the U.S. Complaint.

1. The Parties

The U.S. Complaint alleges that the FX market is the largest and most actively traded financial market in the world, with global trades averaging $5.3 trillion per day. Defendants are the dominant dealers and horizontal competitors in the global FX market, with 84.25% of all trades in the market in 2018. Plaintiffs are twelve entities, including a municipal board, investment funds, pension plans and hedge funds2 that engaged in FX spot and outright forward transactions3 with one or more Defendants between January 1, 2003, and March 31, 2014.

The U.S. Complaint also asserts claims on behalf of a putative class of:

[a]ll persons who, between January 1, 2003 and the.present ..., entered into an FX instrument directly with a Defendant at or around the time of the fixing of the WM/Reuters Closing Spot Rates [i.e., the Fix, see infra ], or who entered into an FX Instrument directly with a Defendant settled in whole or in part on the basis of WM/Reuters Closing Spot Rates, where such persons were either domiciled in the United States or its territories or, if domiciled outside the United States or its territories, transacted in the United States or its territories.
2. The FX Market and Trading at “The Fix”

Currencies are traded in pairs where the seller sells one currency and buys another, and the price of one currency is expressed in relation to another currency as a ratio. To initiate an FX transaction, typically, a customer contacts a dealer bank for a quote for the relevant currency and quantity. The dealer provides a “bid,” which is the price at which the dealer is willing to buy the currency. The dealer also quotes an “ask,” the price at which the dealer is willing to sell the currency. The difference between the bid and ask is called the [587]*587“bid-ask spread,” which is the basis of the dealer’s compensation. While “dealers are incentivized to quote wider bid-ask spreads,” competition among them “narrows bid-ask spreads.” Currencies are commonly traded at published exchange rates called “fixing rates.” The WM/Reuters published rates “are the most important fixing rates in the FX markets” and “the primary benchmark for currency trading globally.” The U.S. Complaint alleges that Plaintiffs traded in the FX market with Defendants at, or at rates determined in large part by, “the most widely used WM/Reuters” fixing rates, the WM/Reuters Closing Spot Rates (the “Fix”).

For the most widely traded currencies, the Fix is determined by the median price of actual FX transactions in the 30 seconds before and after 4 p.m. London time (the “Fixing Window”). The WM Company extracts actual market prices from electronic communications networks that Defendants use to execute orders for FX instruments, such as Reuters, Currenex and EBS. The process is automated and anonymous. Trading at the Fix is popular for many reasons, including reduced tracking error and the perception of “universality and independence from any specific dealer.”

Plaintiffs bought FX instruments from Defendants priced at or by the Fix. The U.S. Complaint identifies the Defendants with whom each Plaintiff traded FX instruments, and alleges that each Plaintiff traded FX instruments with at least one Defendant and each Defendant traded with at least one Plaintiff.

3. Manipulation of the Fix

The core allegation in the U.S. Complaint is that “Defendants executed concerted trading strategies designed to manipulate, and which actually did manipulate” the Fix, allowing Defendants “to reap supra-competitive profits at the expense of Plaintiffs and the Class.” The U.S. Complaint alleges that “Defendants’ top-level traders used electronic communications to meet and conspire for over a decade” using a variety of electronic fora, including chat rooms, instant messages and email.

The chat rooms, with evocative names such as “The Cartel,” “The Bandits’ Club,” “The Mafia” and “One Team, One Dream,” were the primary sites of conspiracy. The Cartel, for example, counted traders from at least four Defendants among its members, including Citigroup, Barclays, UBS and JPMorgan, whose chief currency dealer in London ran the chat room. The Cartel’s members “exchanged information on customer orders and agreed to trading strategies to manipulate” the Fix. After manipulating the Fix, members allegedly “would send written slaps on the back for a job well done.”

In The Cartel and in other chat rooms, FX traders from the various Defendant banks shared inappropriate “market-sensitive information with rivals” including “information about pricing,” their customers’ orders and their net trading positions in advance of 4 p.m. London time. The traders discussed the “types and volume of trades they planned to place.” Using this nonpublic information, and “by agreeing in chat rooms and instant messages” to employ collusive trading strategies, Defendants moved the Fix in the direction they desired and thereby fixed the prices of the FX instruments.

The U.S. Complaint alleges that the risk of unilaterally manipulating the Fix was too high, and that “[n]o one defendant could accomplish systematic and continuing manipulation of’ the Fix without coordination with its rivals.

FX traders typically used one of three strategies to “fix the Fix”:

• “Front running” or “trading ahead”— Defendants traded their own proprie[588]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
74 F. Supp. 3d 581, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/simmtech-co-v-barclays-bank-plc-nysd-2015.