Global Investment Bank Fined Record 27 Billion Won for Illegal Short Selling in South Korea

SEOUL, July 3 (Korea Bizwire) – South Korean financial regulators have imposed a record fine of 27.1 billion won on two subsidiaries of a global investment bank for illegal short-selling practices involving transactions worth approximately 100 billion won. The Financial Services Commission’s Securities and Futures Commission announced on July 3 that it had voted to levy [...]The post Global Investment Bank Fined Record 27 Billion Won for Illegal Short Selling in South Korea appeared first on Be Korea-savvy.

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The Financial Services Commission’s Securities and Futures Commission announced on July 3 that it had voted to levy the fines against CSAG (now UBS AG) and CSSL, both former affiliates of Credit Suisse Group. (Image from Credit Suisse Group webpage) SEOUL, July 3 (Korea Bizwire) – South Korean financial regulators have imposed a record fine of 27.1 billion won on two subsidiaries of a global investment bank for illegal short-selling practices involving transactions worth approximately 100 billion won.

The Financial Services Commission’s Securities and Futures Commission announced on July 3 that it had voted to levy the fines against CSAG (now UBS AG) and CSSL, both former affiliates of Credit Suisse Group. This marks the largest penalty imposed since the introduction of fines for naked short selling in April 2021, surpassing the previous record of 16.9 billion won.



According to the commission, CSAG submitted sell orders for 162,365 shares of 20 companies valued at about 60.3 billion won between April 7, 2021, and June 9, 2022, without owning the stocks. Similarly, CSSL placed sell orders for 401,195 shares of five companies worth approximately 35.

3 billion won from November 29, 2021, to June 9, 2022. The firms violated short-selling regulations by selling stocks that were on loan to affiliates within the same financial group or other securities firms before the return of these shares was confirmed. They also sold borrowed shares to third parties and only requested early.