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British Regulator Looking Into Currency Rates Trades

LONDON - Britain’s financial regulator said Wednesday that it was examining claims that traders at large banks manipulated some foreign-exchange benchmark rates and that it might start an official investigation.

The Financial Conduct Authority is talking to individuals in the foreign exchange market and seeking more information about claims that traders rigged the so-called WM/Reuters rates before deciding whether to open an investigation.

Bloomberg News reported that employees have been manipulating the rate by pushing through client trades before and during 60-second windows when the benchmarks are set. The rates are used by fund managers to calculate the value of their holdings and by index providers such as FTSE Group, Bloomberg reported.

A spokesman for the F.C.A. said the watchdog was already looking at the foreign exchange market before the Bloomberg report but added that it was still too early to say whether its findings would lead to an official investigation.

Because the foreign exchange market is not regulated, any F.C.A. inquiry would focus on individuals authorized by the regulator to act in the market and whether companies do enough to prevent market abuse.

“The F.C.A. is aware of these allegations and has been speaking to the relevant parties,” Stewart Todd, a spokesman, said.

Bloomberg, citing two unnamed traders, reported that rate manipulation occurred daily and has been going on for at least a decade, affecting the value of funds and derivatives.