Japanese regulators are probing JPMorgan for its alleged role in a high-profile insider trading case, Dow Jones Newswires reported yesterday, the latest bad news for the embattled US investment bank.
The Securities and Exchange Surveillance Commission (SESC) recommended on Tuesday that an asset manager be fined for short-selling Nippon Sheet Glass shares after illegally obtaining information ahead of a stock sale JPMorgan was underwriting.
A sales executive for the US bank — which is already reeling from a shock US$2 billion loss on derivatives trading — was the source of the leak, Dow Jones said, citing an unnamed source.
The 2010 case is among several at the center of a wide-ranging investigation by Japan’s securities watchdog into insider trading.
The SESC did not name the alleged source, but JPMorgan was the lead underwriter and one of just two taking part, according to Dow Jones, with the other, Daiwa Securities, already saying it was not involved in the inquiry.
In a carefully worded statement, JPMorgan Securities Japan yesterday confirmed it was in talks with regulators, but added the firm “has not received any indication from authorities that suggests JPMorgan’s involvement either by the company as a whole, or by any department as a whole.”
The statement, which made no reference to the possible involvement of an individual, added: “We take this matter extremely seriously and will continue to take measures to enhance our internal control … We are cooperating fully with the authorities on this matter.”
The SESC declined to comment when asked if it was investigating the US bank over the insider trading allegations.
It recommended a fine of just ¥130,000 (US$1,600) against the fund manager involved, Asuka Asset Management, even though the firm was alleged to have made more than ¥60 million.
Token punishment levels are common in insider trading cases. On Tuesday, the SESC asked financial regulators to fine Sumitomo Mitsui Trust Bank about ¥80,000 over a separate alleged insider trading case connected to a share offering by Mizuho Financial Group. In March, it said Chuo Mitsui, now part of Sumitomo Mitsui Trust Bank, be fined ¥50,000 for insider trading of shares in Inpex Corp.
The US dollar was trading at NT$29.7 at 10am today on the Taipei Foreign Exchange, as the New Taiwan dollar gained NT$1.364 from the previous close last week. The NT dollar continued to rise today, after surging 3.07 percent on Friday. After opening at NT$30.91, the NT dollar gained more than NT$1 in just 15 minutes, briefly passing the NT$30 mark. Before the US Department of the Treasury's semi-annual currency report came out, expectations that the NT dollar would keep rising were already building. The NT dollar on Friday closed at NT$31.064, up by NT$0.953 — a 3.07 percent single-day gain. Today,
‘SHORT TERM’: The local currency would likely remain strong in the near term, driven by anticipated US trade pressure, capital inflows and expectations of a US Fed rate cut The US dollar is expected to fall below NT$30 in the near term, as traders anticipate increased pressure from Washington for Taiwan to allow the New Taiwan dollar to appreciate, Cathay United Bank (國泰世華銀行) chief economist Lin Chi-chao (林啟超) said. Following a sharp drop in the greenback against the NT dollar on Friday, Lin told the Central News Agency that the local currency is likely to remain strong in the short term, driven in part by market psychology surrounding anticipated US policy pressure. On Friday, the US dollar fell NT$0.953, or 3.07 percent, closing at NT$31.064 — its lowest level since Jan.
The New Taiwan dollar and Taiwanese stocks surged on signs that trade tensions between the world’s top two economies might start easing and as US tech earnings boosted the outlook of the nation’s semiconductor exports. The NT dollar strengthened as much as 3.8 percent versus the US dollar to 30.815, the biggest intraday gain since January 2011, closing at NT$31.064. The benchmark TAIEX jumped 2.73 percent to outperform the region’s equity gauges. Outlook for global trade improved after China said it is assessing possible trade talks with the US, providing a boost for the nation’s currency and shares. As the NT dollar
The Financial Supervisory Commission (FSC) yesterday met with some of the nation’s largest insurance companies as a skyrocketing New Taiwan dollar piles pressure on their hundreds of billions of dollars in US bond investments. The commission has asked some life insurance firms, among the biggest Asian holders of US debt, to discuss how the rapidly strengthening NT dollar has impacted their operations, people familiar with the matter said. The meeting took place as the NT dollar jumped as much as 5 percent yesterday, its biggest intraday gain in more than three decades. The local currency surged as exporters rushed to