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Barclays, Credit Suisse charged with dark pool violations

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Barclays Capital and Credit Suisse Securities (USA) have agreed to settle separate SEC cases finding that they violated federal securities laws while operating alternative trading systems known as dark pools and Credit Suisse’s Light Pool.

The New York Attorney General’s office is announcing parallel actions against the two firms.
 
Barclays agreed to settle the charges by admitting wrongdoing and paying USD35 million penalties to the SEC and the NYAG for a total of USD70 million. 
 
Credit Suisse agreed to settle the charges by paying a USD30 million penalty to the SEC, a USD30 million penalty to the NYAG, and USD24.3 million in disgorgement and prejudgment interest to the SEC for a total of USD84.3 million. 
 
“These cases are the most recent in a series of strong SEC enforcement actions involving dark pools and other alternative trading systems,” says SEC Chair Mary Jo White. “The SEC will continue to shed light on dark pools to better protect investors.”
 
“Dark pools have a significant role in today’s equity marketplace, and the firms that run these venues must ensure that they do not make misstatements to subscribers about their material operations,” says Andrew Ceresney, Director of the SEC’s Enforcement Division.  “These largest-ever penalties imposed in SEC cases involving two of the largest ATSs show that firms pay a steep price when they mislead subscribers.” 
 
According to the SEC’s order instituting a settled administrative proceeding against Barclays:
 
Barclays said that a feature called Liquidity Profiling would “continuously police” order flow in its LX dark pool and that the firm would run “surveillance reports every week” for toxic order flow. 
 
In fact, Barclays did not continuously police LX for predatory trading using the tools it said it would, and it also did not run weekly surveillance reports.
 
Barclays did not adequately disclose that it sometimes overrode Liquidity Profiling by moving some subscribers from the most aggressive categories to the least aggressive.  The result was that subscribers that elected to block trading against aggressive subscribers nonetheless continued to interact with them. 
 
Barclays at times misrepresented the type and number of market data feeds that it used to calculate the National Best Bid and Offer in LX.  For example, Barclays represented that it “utilize[d] direct feeds from exchanges to deter latency arbitrage” when in fact Barclays used a combination of direct data feeds and other, slower feeds in the dark pool.
 
“Barclays misrepresented its efforts to police its dark pool, overrode its surveillance tool, and misled its subscribers about data feeds at the very time that data feeds were an intense topic of interest,” said Robert Cohen, co-chief of the Market Abuse Unit.  “Investors deserve fair and equitable markets without this misbehaviour.”
 
According to the SEC’s orders instituting settled administrative proceedings against Credit Suisse:
 
Credit Suisse misrepresented that its Crossfinder dark pool used a feature called Alpha Scoring to characterize subscriber order flow monthly in an objective and transparent manner.  In fact, Alpha Scoring included significant subjective elements, was not transparent, and did not categorize all subscribers on a monthly basis. 
 
Credit Suisse misrepresented that it would use Alpha Scoring to identify “opportunistic” traders and kick them out of its electronic communications network, Light Pool. In fact, Alpha scoring was not used for the first year that Light Pool was operational. Also, a subscriber who scored “opportunistic” could continue to trade using other system IDs, and direct subscribers were given the opportunity to resume trading.
 
Credit Suisse accepted, ranked, and executed over 117 million illegal sub-penny orders in Crossfinder.
 
Credit Suisse failed to treat subscriber order information confidentially and failed to disclose to all Crossfinder subscribers that their confidential order information was being transmitted out of the dark pool to other Credit Suisse systems.
 
Credit Suisse failed to inform subscribers that the Credit Suisse order router systematically prioritized Crossfinder over other venues in certain stages of its dark-only routing process.
 
Finally, CSSU also failed to disclose that it operated a technology called Crosslink that alerted two high frequency trading firms to the existence of orders that CSSU customers had submitted for execution.
 
“Two Credit Suisse ATSs failed to operate as advertised, and failed to comply with numerous regulatory requirements over a multi-year period,” said Joseph Sansone, Co-Chief of the Market Abuse Unit. “The Commission’s action today sends a strong message that the agency will continue to scrutinise ATSs for compliance with the securities laws.” 
 
The SEC’s order finds that Barclays violated Section 17(a)(2) of the Securities Act, Securities Exchange Act Section 15(c)(3), Rules 15c3-5(c)(1)(i) and 15c3-5(b) of the SEC’s Market Access Rule, and Rules 301(b)(2) and (10).  The order requires Barclays to pay a USD35 million penalty, to cease and desist from these violations, censures Barclays, and requires Barclays to engage a third-party consultant to review its marketing of LX, its Market Access Rule compliance, and its compliance with certain requirements of Regulation ATS.
 
The SEC’s orders find that Credit Suisse violated Section 17(a)(2) of the Securities Act, Rules 301(b)(2), (5) and (10) of Regulation ATS, and Rules 602(b) and 612 of Regulation NMS.  The orders require Credit Suisse to cease and desist from these violations, censure Credit Suisse, and require Credit Suisse to pay USD30 million in total penalties, disgorgement of USD20,675,510.52, and prejudgment interest of USD3,639,643.39. Credit Suisse consented to the SEC’s orders without admitting or denying the findings.

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