Merrill Lynch International (MLI) has been fined GBP34,524,000 by the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) for failing to report 68.5 million exchange traded derivative transactions between 12 February 2014 and 6 February 2016.
This is the first enforcement action against a firm for failing to report details of trading in exchange traded derivatives, under the European Markets Infrastructure Regulation (EMIR), and reflects the importance the FCA puts on this type of reporting.
Reporting exchange traded derivative transactions helps authorities assess and address the risk inherent in financial systems caused by a lack of transparency. The reporting requirement was one of the key reforms introduced following the financial crisis in 2008 to improve transparency within financial markets.
While MLI were open and co-operative in assisting in the FCA’s investigation and quickly took steps to remediate the breach, MLI were the subject of two earlier and related transaction reporting cases.
Mark Steward (pictured), FCA Executive Director of Enforcement and Market Oversight, says: “Effective market oversight depends on accurate and timely reporting of transactions. The obligations under EMIR, as with MiFID, are key aspects of such oversight.
“It is vital that reporting firms ensure their transaction reporting systems are tested as fit for purpose, adequately resourced and perform properly. There needs to be a line in the sand. We will continue to take appropriate action against any firm that fails to meet requirements.”
MLI agreed to settle at an early stage of the investigation and received a 30 per cent reduction in their overall fine. Without this discount the fine would have been GBP49,320,000.