Archegos Banks That Unwound Bets Face Criminal Antitrust Probe

Archegos Banks That Unwound Bets Face Criminal Antitrust Probe · Bloomberg

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(Bloomberg) -- The US Justice Department is ramping up scrutiny of banks that collectively lost billions of dollars in the collapse of Bill Hwang’s investment firm — mere months after scoring a conviction against him for deceiving those very firms.

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Prosecutors in the Justice Department’s criminal antitrust division have kicked back to life a dormant probe examining how Hwang’s lenders unwound more than $150 billion in bets placed by his family office, Archegos, according to people familiar with the matter.

Since Hwang’s trial, the department’s San Francisco office has made fresh inquiries, zeroing in on emergency talks the banks held in March 2021, where participants floated proposals to coordinate an orderly liquidation of their client’s portfolio to minimize their own losses, the people said.

The DOJ is probing if there was collusion or a conspiracy to collude to control prices in those chats. At least three banks — Credit Suisse, Nomura Holdings Inc. and UBS Group AG – reached a managed liquidation agreement to sell down parts of their Archegos exposure. Others like Goldman Sachs Group Inc., Morgan Stanley and Deutsche Bank AG explored such an agreement before deciding against it.

In the pantheon of Wall Street strategies, few have proved as costly as the short-lived attempt by Archegos’ trading partners to link arms in a managed unwind. The few that did reach an agreement ended up with the lion’s share of $10 billion in losses. One, Credit Suisse, later collapsed.

Now, the Justice Department might draw a second line under the lessons learned by declaring the strategy illegal.

It isn’t clear how long the inquiry may take or which banks, if any, might face charges. Spokespeople for the lenders and Justice Department declined to comment. The people with knowledge of the situation asked not to be named discussing a confidential inquiry.

The possibility that authorities could invoke the Sherman Act against Wall Street banks over solutions floated to deal with an emergency is certain to irk financial executives.

Though the 134-year-old law is commonly associated with crackdowns on monopolists, its first provision targets conspiracies to restrain trade. And for antitrust officials, the image of rival firms gathering to discuss keeping prices elevated may trigger concerns.