A former HSBC FX trader was sentenced to two years in prison by a New York judge this Thursday. Mark Johnson, a British citizen, was handed the sentence by US District Judge Nicholas Garaufis in Brooklyn, New York.
Johnson, who left his position as HSBC’s Global Head of Foreign Exchange in 2017, was taken directly to prison from court. US prosecutors term for Johnson but Judge Garaufis reduced the sentence to two, citing Johnson’s prior community work and noting that he would be separated from his family in the UK.
The sentence stems from a December 2011 . Cairn, a UK-based oil and gas exploration, and development company, which hired HSBC to convert $3.5 billion from dollars to pounds.
Leading the FX team at HSBC, Johnson promised to perform the transaction in small, regular amounts. The purpose of this was to prevent a spike in the exchange rate.
Instead, HSBC traders deliberately increased the value of the pound just prior to the transaction. This meant that Cairn paid an artificially high price for the transaction.
Prosecutors claimed that Johnson and another former HSBC executive, Stuart Scott, were responsible for the fraudulent behavior, known in industry terms as ‘front-running’. The two traders falsely told Cairn that the spike in the pound’s value was due to an order from the Russian Central Bank.
During the month-long trial, Johnson attempted to separate himself from the transaction, noting that he was in New York on the day of the transaction and that he had left Scott to manage it. Scott, formerly HSBC’s Head of Cash Trading for Europe, the Middle East, and Africa, is currently fighting extradition from the UK to stand trial in the United States.
Johnson’s sentence comes after HSBC was forced to pay the US Justice Department a $100 million fine in January 2018 as a result of probes into the Cairn transaction. On top of his two-year sentence, Johnson will also have to pay a $300 000 fine.
Commenting on the case, Judge Garaufis said that: “A brief prison sentence is necessary, but anything greater is punitive. I’m assured no financial institution will ever again trust him (Johnson) in handling multibillion-dollar transactions.”
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