NEW YORK, July 31 (Reuters) - Citigroup repeatedly breached a U.S. Federal Reserve rule that limits intercompany transactions, leading to errors in its internal liquidity reporting, according to a Citi document from December seen by Reuters.

Reuters is reporting the infractions for the first time. Under so-called Regulation W, banks are required to restrict transactions like loans to the affiliates they control. The rule is meant to protect depositors whose money is insured up to $250,000 by the government.

The Regulation W infractions come as Citi works to fix separate problems in its risk management and internal controls. Authorities labeled its risk practices “unsafe and unsound” in 2020, and rebuked Citi over how it measured counterparty risks in 2023. This year, regulators criticized the bank’s resolution planning, and most recently punished it with $136 million in fines for making insufficient progress on compliance.

The firm’s “subsequent reaction to the breaches resulted in liquidity reporting inaccuracies,” according to the document, which provides a 2023 year-end snapshot of some of Citi’s work on regulatory issues.

  • sunzu@kbin.run
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    3 months ago

    There are many legitimate uses for intercompany transactions but that’s also where a lot of crime happens too long

    Limp dick compliance departments are under staffed and under paid and when big daddy SVP comes in, they get pushed through or you lose your job.

    Then we all wonder how the “internal controls” are just never good enough to protect against malicious executives.

    Then limp dick regulator does nothing…

    Makes you wonder if the system is broke or is it working as intended. Real people are getting laid well!