A sign is seen outside a Royal Bank of Scotland building in central London January 28, 2014.
Credit: Reuters/Paul Hackett
(Reuters) - Royal Bank of Scotland (
RBS.L)
has suspended a senior currency trader in London, bringing to three the
number of traders suspended by the bank since a global investigation
into allegations of rigging reference exchange rates was launched last
year.
Ian Drysdale was put on leave earlier this week and has now been suspended, a source familiar with the matter said.
This follows the suspension of Julian Munson and Paul Nash in October last year.
RBS declined to comment, and Drysdale could not be reached for comment.
On Tuesday RBS said it was reviewing rules on currency dealers trading with their own money.
The
global probe into online communications between traders and allegations
of manipulating benchmark currency rates known as "fixings" has seen
more than 20 traders at many of the world's biggest
banks put on leave, suspended or fired.
The
Bank of England, Britain's Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) and the
U.S. Federal Reserve and Department of Justice are among those looking
into the allegations of wrongdoing in the $5.3 trillion-a-day global FX
market, the world's biggest market.
The
FCA's chief executive Martin Wheatley has said the allegations are
"every bit as bad" as those made in the interest rate-rigging scandal
centring on the London Interbank Offered Rate, or Libor, which has
already resulted in
banks paying $6 billion (3 billion pounds) in fines and settlements.
Benchmark
currency fixings are a cornerstone of global financial markets, used to
price trillions of dollars worth of investments and deals and relied
upon by companies, investors and central banks.
(Reporting by
Jamie McGeever; Editing by Greg Mahlich)
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