How to Report Swaps Manipulation or Swaps Reporting Violations and Qualify for a CFTC Whistleblower Award

How Whistleblower Disclosures of Swaps Manipulation or Swaps Reporting Violations Can Qualify for CFTC Whistleblower Awards

Under the CFTC Whistleblower Program, whistleblowers are eligible for monetary awards when they voluntarily provide the CFTC with original information about violations of the Commodity Exchange Act (“CEA”) that lead to a successful enforcement action resulting in monetary sanctions exceeding $1,000,000.

CFTC-regulated swaps, including Foreign Exchange (“FX”) Forwards and FX Swaps, pose significant systemic risks.  Indeed, “the continued pursuit of various opportunistic strategies in the credit derivatives markets, including but not limited to those that have been referred to as ‘manufactured credit events,’ may adversely affect the integrity, confidence and reputation of the credit derivatives markets, as well as markets more generally. These opportunistic strategies raise various issues under securities, derivatives, conduct and antifraud laws, as well as public policy concerns.” See Joint Statement on Opportunistic Strategies in the Credit Derivatives Market (June 24, 2019).

Examples of violations of swaps-related CFTC regulations that can qualify for a CFTC whistleblower award include:

CFTC Enforcement Actions for Swaps Manipulation and Reporting Failures

As Commissioner Goldsmith Romero pointed out in a statement concerning a significant enforcement action for violations of swaps reporting and supervision rules, “[s]wap data reporting is fundamental to post-crisis financial regulation as one of the key tools to help regulators identify risk that could become systemic, and to conduct market surveillance. Reporting rules bring transparency to a previously opaque market.  Without this transparency, regulators are blind to the same risks that contributed to the financial crisis.” In recent years, the CFTC has taken several significant enforcement actions against swaps manipulation and other swaps-related violations:

Proving Swaps Manipulation or Fraud

To establish fraud or manipulation in violation of Regulation 180.1(a)(1)–(3), the CFTC must prove that the party:

  1. attempted to engage or engaged in prohibited fraudulent or manipulative conduct (i.e., employed a manipulative device, scheme, or artifice to defraud; made a material misrepresentation, misleading statement or deceptive omission; or engaged in a business practice that would operate as a fraud);
  2. with scienter; and
  3. in connection with any swap, or contract of sale of any commodity in interstate commerce, or contract for future delivery on or subject to the rules of any registered entity.

CFTC v. McDonnell, 332 F. Supp. 3d 641, 717 (E.D.N.Y. 2018). Proving manipulative conduct does not require a showing of an intent to affect prices or an actual effect on prices. In re McVean Trading, CFTC No. 17–15, 2017 WL 2729956, at *10 (June 21, 2017); In re Grady, CFTC No. 18–41, 2018 WL 4697026, at *5 (Sept. 26, 2018). Nor does it require “a showing of reliance or harm to market participants in a government action brought under CEA section 6(c)(1) and final Rule 180.1.” McVean Trading, 2017 WL 2729956, at *10.

CFTC Whistleblower Rewards and Bounties

Swaps whistleblowers are eligible to receive between 10 percent and 30 percent of the monetary sanctions collected in successful enforcement actions. In October 2021, the CFTC awarded $200 million to a whistleblower for providing information that led the CFTC to evidence of wrongdoing concerning the manipulation of financial benchmarks used by global banks.

Whistleblowers that voluntarily provide the CFTC with original information about violations of the CEA that leads the CFTC to bring a successful enforcement action resulting in the imposition of monetary sanctions exceeding $1,000,000 can qualify for a CFTC whistleblower award from CFTC collected monetary sanctions and from related actions brought by other governmental entities.

CFTC Whistleblower Protection for Swaps Reporting or Swaps Manipulation Whistleblowers

The CFTC Whistleblower Program also protects the confidentiality of swaps whistleblowers and does not disclose information that might directly or indirectly reveal a whistleblower’s identity. Whistleblowers can submit tips anonymously to the CFTC if represented by counsel. Furthermore, the Dodd-Frank Act protects whistleblowers from retaliation by their employers for reporting violations of the CEA to the CFTC.

Experienced and Effective CFTC Whistleblower Lawyers

Since 2014, the CFTC has issued more than $325 million in awards to whistleblowers. The largest CFTC whistleblower awards to date are $200 million, $45 million, $30 million, and $10 million.

Whistleblower disclosures have enabled the CFTC to bring successful enforcement actions against wrongdoers with orders for more than $3 billion in monetary relief.

Call our CFTC whistleblower lawyers today at 202-930-5901 or contact us here to find out if you are eligible for a CFTC whistleblower award. A delay in reporting commodities fraud can potentially disqualify a whistleblower from recovering an award or can lower a whistleblower award, so call us today for a free consultation. We represent CFTC whistleblowers concerning a wide variety of market manipulation schemes.

 

Swaps Manipulation
Tags: CFTC market manipulationCFTC Part 43 fraudCFTC red flags ruleCFTC whistleblower programReporting Swaps Manipulationswaps complianceswaps fraudSwaps ManipulationSwaps Reporting