بسم الله الرحمن الرحيم! خوش آمدید ہم تمام وزیٹرز کہ خوش آمدید کہتے ہیں آپ ہماری وہب سائٹ کی مدد سے ٹیکنالوجی کی تمام خبروں سے باخبر رہ سکتے ہیں اس کے علاوہ آپ ہر کمپیوٹر کی تعلیم بھی بالکل مفت حاصل کر سکتے ہیں ہماری گزارش ہے کہ آپ خود بھی ہماری ویب سائٹ سے فائدہ اٹھائیں اور اپنے دوستوں کو بھی ہماری ویب سائٹ کا بتائیں شکریہ







NEW YORK: Nine major banks accused of foreign-exchange rigging have agreed to pay more than $2 billion to investors in settlements, a law firm involved in the process said on Thursday.
Plaintiffs have “reached settlements totalling more than $2bn with Bank of America, Barclays, BNP Paribas, Citi, Goldman Sachs, HSBC, JPMorgan, RBS and UBS,” legal firm Hausfeld said in a statement published after a hearing in New York.
Hausfeld, which represented investors, gave no indication how the sum would be divided between the banks and said that the agreements were preliminary and must still be approved by US District Judge Lorna Schofield.
In June, sources close to the situation reported that Barclays would pay $375 million, HSBC $285m, BNP Paribas nearly $100m and Goldman Sachs about $130m. But they also specified that the amounts were subject to change.
None of the banks responded immediately when contacted by AFP.
Some of the banks in Thursday’s announcement had already agreed to specific sums.
US banking giant JPMorgan Chase agreed to pay $99.5m in January, followed by Bank of America at $180m, Citigroup at $394m and Swiss UBS at $135m.
“In addition to the billions of dollars in compensation, these settling banks have agreed to cooperate with investors in their continuing litigation” against other institutions, Hausfeld said.
Thursday’s agreements are distinct from proceedings led by US and British regulators, which in May ordered $6bn in fines on six major banks — Barclays, JPMorgan Chase, Citigroup, Royal Bank of Scotland, UBS and Bank of America — for rigging foreign exchange market and Libor interest rates.
Barclays, JPMorgan Chase, Citigroup and the Royal Bank of Scotland all pleaded guilty to US Justice Department charges of conspiring to manipulate the massive currency market.
“While the recoveries here are tremendous, they are just the beginning,” said Hausfeld chairman Michael Hausfeld. “Investors around the world should take note of the significant recoveries secured in the United States and recognise that these settlements cover a fraction of the world’s largest financial market,” he said.
The firm also noted that it was considering “concerted action” in London.












 
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