The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) recently announced a $250 million civil money penalty against JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A. (JPMC) (NYSE: JPM) related to deficiencies in its trade surveillance program.
The OCC found that JPMC allegedly operated “with gaps in trading venue coverage and without adequate data controls required to maintain an effective trade surveillance program.”
Generally, trading venues are systems or electronic platforms, “operated by investment firms or market operators, that bring together multiple third party buying or selling interests in financial instruments to perform a transaction.”
The OCC expects banks to “perform trade surveillance to monitor the market conduct of its traders and clients as part of its market conduct risk control framework.”
The OCC found that JPMC allegedly “failed to surveil billions of instances of trading activity on at least 30 global trading venues.”
These gaps and deficiencies in JPMC’s trade surveillance program reportedly “constitute unsafe or unsound banking practices.”
The OCC also issued a cease and desist order “requiring JPMC to take broad and comprehensive corrective actions to improve its trade surveillance program.”
The order requires the bank to “correct the deficiencies, to seek the OCC’s non-objection before onboarding new trading venues, and to obtain an independent third party to conduct a trade surveillance program assessment.”
The OCC’s enforcement actions are “separate from, but coordinated with, the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System which announced a related enforcement action today against JPMorgan Chase & Co.”
The OCC penalty has been “paid to the U.S. Department of the Treasury.”
The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) says it “charters, regulates, and supervises all national banks and federal savings associations as well as federal branches and agencies of foreign banks.”
The OCC is an independent bureau of the U.S. Department of the Treasury and is “led by the Comptroller of the Currency.”