Barclays to fight US$453m power fine in US court
Barclays is trying to rebuild its battered reputation, repair relationships with regulators
Barclays will contest a record US$453 million (HK$3.5 billion) fine imposed by a US energy regulator against the British bank and four of its power traders, setting up a likely federal court battle.
The fines, which were upheld by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) on Tuesday, confirm the top US energy cop will pursue its most ambitious market manipulation case to date.
For Barclays, the sanction is the latest of a series of scandals that include a US$450 million fine by US and UK regulators for rigging global benchmark interest rates last year.
But unlike its settlement over Libor (London Interbank Offered Rate), where the bank accepted wrongdoing, it has fought the FERC allegations from the start.
FERC first proposed the fines in October last year over alleged manipulation of Californian and other western power markets by the British bank in the last decade.
Tuesday’s ruling said FERC commissioners agreed with earlier findings by regulatory staff, which said the bank deliberately lost money in physical power markets to benefit its financial positions between 2006 and 2008, and that the Barclays traders knew their activity was unlawful.