Europe News

EU Commission charges HSBC, JPMorgan, Credit Agricole with rigging

The European Commission in Brussels, Belgium
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European Union antitrust regulators charged HSBC, JPMorgan and Credit Agricole on Tuesday with rigging financial benchmarks linked to the euro, exposing them to potential fines.

"The (European) Commission has concerns that the three banks may have taken part in a collusive scheme which aimed at distorting the normal course of pricing components for euro interest rate derivatives," the EU competition authority said.

The three banks could face penalties of up to 10 percent of their global turnover if found guilty of breaching EU antitrust rules.

Read MoreEU to fine banks billions of euros over rate rigging

In December a record 1.7-billion-euro ($2.3 billion) fine was levied on six banks including Deutsche Bank, Royal Bank of Scotland and Citigroup for similar offences. The lenders settled their charges and received a 10-percent cut in their fines.

The Commission did not provide details about broker ICAP which is under investigation for suspected rigging of the yen Libor financial benchmark.

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