European Commission re-adopts decisions on Euro Interest Rate Derivatives cartel
The European Commission today adopted two decisions concerning the Euro Interest Rate Derivatives (EIRD) cartel.
Following the 2019 partial annulment by the General Court of its 2016 decision, the European Commission has today re-adopted its prohibition decision against HSBC. The European Commission has now imposed total fines of €31.739 million on HSBC Holdings plc, HSBC Bank plc and HSBC France (now called HSBC Continental Europe).
Interest rate derivatives are financial products used by banks or companies to manage the risk of interest rate fluctuations or for speculation. They derive their value from the level of a benchmark interest rate, such as the Euro Interbank Offered Rate (EURIBOR) and/or the Euro Over-Night Index Average (EONIA) for EIRD.
In December 2016, the Commission adopted a decision imposing fines on HSBC, and two other undertakings, Crédit Agricole and JPMorgan Chase, for their participation in the cartel.
In September 2019, the General Court confirmed HSBC’s participation in the cartel but annulled the fine for insufficient reasoning.
Today’s decision explains in further detail how this fine was calculated.
For the same reason, the Commission today adopted another decision amending the 2016 decision against Crédit Agricole (Crédit Agricole SA and Crédit Agricole Corporate and Investment Bank) and JPMorgan Chase (JPMorgan Chase & Co., JPMorgan Chase Bank, National Association and J.P.Morgan Service LLP). This decision aims at correcting the same irregularity (lack of sufficient reasoning of the fines imposed) identified by the General Court in the HSBC decision, pending the General Court’s judgement in these two appeals.
The decisions are in line with the Commission’s policy of pursuing an effective and deterrent enforcement against cartels.