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12 major banks close to $1.9B settlement in price-fixing case

The Associated Press

NEW YORK — Twelve major banks have tentatively agreed to pay $1.87 billion to settle allegations that they colluded to fix prices and lock out competitors in the market for insurance-like products widely traded before the financial crisis, according to a lawyer for investors.

The deal, if finalized, would be one of the largest U.S. anti-trust settlements, said Daniel Brockett, a lawyer representing a Los Angeles pension fund among other plaintiffs. He said the final terms need to be hammered out, and a judge would have to approve the deal.

Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase, Citigroup and other banks met secretly to kill proposals that would put the trading of these insurance-like products onto an exchange through which they could be bought and sold like stocks and their prices made more transparent, according to a complaint filed in U.S District Court in New York. In keeping trading private in a “rigged” market, the banks cheated investors out of billions of dollars, the complaint alleges.

“There was no central place to go for a stream of prices. You had to go to the banks, and they controlled the business and they charged high prices,” said Brockett, a partner at Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan. An investor “basically had to pay what they wanted.”

The banks have denied allegations of wrongdoing. They are not charged criminally.

Emails and phone calls to lawyers representing several of the banks were not returned. A spokesman for Bank of America declined to comment.

Another defendant in the suit, the International Swaps and Derivatives Association, said in a statement that it is “pleased” that the case is close to resolution and that it is “committed to further developing CDS market structure to ensure the market functions safely and efficiently.”

CDS stands for credit-default swap, a product bought by investors to protect themselves in case governments or companies default on their debts.