FCA fines MBL £13M for control deficiencies allowing trader to conceal over 400 fictitious trades
The UK Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) has fined Macquarie Bank Limited – London Branch (MBL) £13 million for serious failings that allowed one of its employees to record over 400 fictitious trades.
From June 2020 to February 2022, Travis Klein, a trader based on MBL’s London Metals and Bulks Trading Desk was able to record and take steps to conceal over 400 fictitious trades in MBL’s internal systems in a bid to hide his trading losses.
The fictitious trades were not detected earlier because of significant weaknesses in MBL’s systems and controls, some of which the firm had been previously made aware of. Despite knowing of the weaknesses, MBL failed to put effective and timely plans in place to fix them.
As a result, Mr Klein, a relatively junior trader, was able to bypass three key internal controls without detection for over 20 months. The FCA has banned Mr Klein from the financial services industry for acting dishonestly and without integrity and would have fined him £72,000 if his application for serious financial hardship had not been successful.
The fictitious trades cost MBL an estimated USD $57.8 million to unwind but did not affect customers or the market overall. If MBL had taken timely action to plug these gaps in their systems and controls, this cost could have been substantially reduced or avoided altogether.