South Korea said to indict BNP Paribas for illegal short-selling

Banks including Credit Suisse Singapore, as well as hedge funds such as Segantii Capital Management and Jane Street, have also faced probes and fines as part of South Korea’s crackdown

    • The French bank was charged last week with violating local capital markets law, said sources, who requested anonymity discussing a private matter.
    • The French bank was charged last week with violating local capital markets law, said sources, who requested anonymity discussing a private matter. PHOTO: REUTERS
    Published Fri, Oct 25, 2024 · 08:56 PM

    SOUTH Korean prosecutors have indicted BNP Paribas for allegedly violating short-selling rules, said people with direct knowledge of the matter, the latest development in the country’s crackdown on such trades.

    The French bank was charged last week with violating local capital markets law, added the sources, who requested anonymity discussing a private matter.

    The Seoul Southern District Prosecutors’ Office earlier this month indicted a global investment bank and a global hedge fund for conducting illegal short selling, without naming them, noted a spokesperson at the office.

    Regal Funds Management – one of Australia’s largest hedge funds – said last week it was indicted, along with a former employee, for an alleged violation of securities trading regulation in 2019.

    Regal Funds denied the allegations and added that it is “considering its rights under South Korean law”.

    BNP Paribas, the prosecutors’ office, and South Korea’s Securities and Futures Commission all declined to comment.

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    The indictment came after Bloomberg News reported in December that South Korean financial regulators had imposed a total fine of 26.5 billion won (S$25.2 million) on BNP Paribas, its domestic brokerage unit and HSBC for naked short selling.

    HSBC’s Hong Kong unit and three of its traders were indicted by South Korean prosecutors on allegations of illegal short selling in March, with the bank vowing at that time to defend its position “vigorously”.

    The financial industry has been under increased scrutiny in South Korea, which outlawed short selling in its stock market a year ago.

    Banks including Credit Suisse Singapore, as well as hedge funds such as Segantii Capital Management and Jane Street have also faced probes and fines as part of the crackdown. 

    South Korea’s top financial regulator said last month that it plans to lift the ban on short selling at the end of March, and will ensure that necessary rule revisions are in place by then.

    The objective is to allow the strategy across all equities, not just in a limited number of stocks, Financial Services Commission chairman Kim Byoung-hwan said at that time. BLOOMBERG

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