JPMorgan Admits Spoofing by 15 Traders, Two Desks in Record Deal

  • Bank pays $920 million to resolve Treasury, metals probes
  • Justice Department defers prosecution on two fraud charges
JPMorgan to Pay $920 Million in Record Spoofing Case
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JPMorgan Chase & Co. admitted wrongdoing and agreed to pay more than $920 million to resolve U.S. authorities’ claims of market manipulation involving two of the bank’s trading desks, the largest sanction ever tied to the illegal practice known as spoofing.

Over eight years, 15 traders at the biggest U.S. bank caused losses of more than $300 million to other participants in precious metals and Treasury markets, according to court filings on Tuesday. JPMorgan admitted responsibility for the traders’ actions. The Justice Department filed two counts of wire fraud against the bank’s parent company but agreed to defer prosecution related to the charges, under a three-year deal that requires the bank to report its remediation and compliance efforts to the government.