Thomas
C. Baxter, Jr., Executive Vice President and General Counsel
Testimony of Thomas C. Baxter, Jr., before the Subcommittee
on Oversight and Investigations, Committee on Financial Services,
U.S. House of Representatives (UBS portion)
Introduction
Chairwoman Kelly, Representative Gutierrez and members of
the Subcommittee, I am pleased to be here this morning to
discuss certain recent events relating to the Federal Reserve’s
Extended Custodial Inventory (“ECI”) program.
With me from the Federal Reserve Board are Katherine Wheatley,
Assistant General Counsel, and Michael Lambert, Financial
Services Cash Manager. Today, I will focus on the Federal
Reserve Bank of New York’s (“New York Fed”)
responses to the deceptive conduct of one of the former operators
of an ECI facility, namely UBS, a Swiss banking organization.
UBS operated an ECI site in Zurich, Switzerland, until late
October of 2003 when the New York Fed terminated its contract
with UBS for serious breaches. More recently, the Federal
Reserve assessed a $100 million civil money penalty against
UBS for its deceptive conduct both in connection with its
performance under the ECI contract, and with respect to the
investigation into that performance.
My remarks today will cover four topics. First, I will provide
some background regarding the ECI program. Second, I will
review the chronology surrounding our discovery that UBS had
violated its ECI Agreement with the Federal Reserve Bank of
New York by engaging in U.S. dollar (“USD”) banknote
transactions with countries subject to sanctions by the U.S.
Department of the Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets
Control (“OFAC”), and, moreover, that certain
former officers and employees of UBS had intentionally deceived
the New York Fed in order to conceal those transactions. Third,
I will explain the rationale behind our decision to assess
a civil money penalty in the amount of $100 million and will
distinguish this punitive action from the earlier action for
breach of contract and the remedial action of the Swiss supervisor,
the Swiss Federal Banking Commission (referred to as the “EBK”).
Fourth, I will discuss the steps the New York Fed has taken
with respect to its remaining ECI operators so as to improve
the controls relating to OFAC compliance.
Background on the ECI Program
Let me now describe the ECI program. The ECI program serves
as a means to facilitate the international distribution of
U.S. banknotes, permit the repatriation of old design banknotes,
promote the recirculation of fit new-design currency, and
strengthen U.S. information gathering capabilities on the
international use of U.S. currency and sources of U.S. banknote
counterfeiting abroad. ECI facilities function as overseas
cash depots operated by private-sector commercial banks. These
banks hold currency for the New York Fed on a custodial basis.
It is estimated that as much as two-thirds of the value of
all Federal Reserve Notes now in circulation, or more than
$400 billion of the $680 billion now in circulation, is held
abroad. While many financial institutions trade U.S. dollars
in the foreign exchange markets, no more than thirty institutions
worldwide participate in the wholesale buying and selling
of physical USD banknotes. Wholesale banknote dealers purchase
approximately 90 percent of the U.S. banknotes that are exported
to international markets from the New York Fed.
Working with the U.S. Department of the Treasury, the Federal
Reserve introduced the ECI program as a pilot in 1996 to aid
in the introduction of the $100 new currency design note,
and in recognition that an assured supply of U.S. currency
abroad would help to alleviate any uncertainty that might
have been associated with a new design. The pilot program
succeeded in ensuring the orderly introduction of the new
design banknotes by providing ready supplies of such notes,
particularly in the European and former Soviet Union markets.
After supporting the successful introduction of the new design
$100 banknote in 1996, the primary purpose of the ECI program
shifted to enhancing the international banknote distribution
system. Currently, there are a total of eight ECI facilities
in five cities that are operated by five banks: American Express
Bank (London), Bank of America (Hong Kong, Zurich), HSBC Bank
USA (London, Frankfurt, Hong Kong), Royal Bank of Scotland
(London), and United Overseas Bank (Singapore).
The New York Fed manages the ECI program and provides management
oversight and monitoring of it. We coordinate the shipment
and receipt of currency between our offices and the ECIs.
All banknotes contained within an ECI vault and while being
transported between the New York Fed and an ECI vault, remain
on the books of the New York Fed. When banknotes are withdrawn
from the ECI vault to fill a banknote order from a third party,
or for an ECI operator’s use, the ECI operator’s
account at the New York Fed is debited accordingly. When banknotes
are deposited into the ECI vault and augment the New York
Fed inventory, the operator’s account at the New York
Fed will be credited.
The relationship between ECI operators and the New York Fed
is governed by an ECI Agreement and a Manual of Procedures
for the ECI Program (“Manual of Procedures”).
From the start of the ECI program, the ECI Agreement has specifically
prohibited ECI operators from engaging in transactions with
OFAC sanctioned countries. In addition, since the beginning
of the program, the ECI Agreement and the Manual of Procedures
have required ECI operators to provide the New York Fed with
monthly reports showing all countries that engaged in U.S.
dollar transactions with the operator during the preceding
month and the volume of those transactions.
The ECI program facilitates the international distribution
of U.S. currency by maintaining sufficient inventory of Federal
Reserve notes in strategically located international distribution
centers. The ECIs also are a key part of the Federal Reserve’s
and Treasury’s efforts to distribute currency to the
major global financial markets during times of crises. In
the wake of the September 11th attacks, when air transportation
was seriously disrupted, having U.S. currency already positioned
at the ECI facilities enabled the Federal Reserve to satisfy
heightened international demand for U.S. currency in the major
financial markets without any interruption of service.
In addition to its role in international currency distribution,
the ECI program is critical to ensuring the quality of U.S.
currency abroad. ECIs are required to sort currency purchased
from market participants both by currency design (old and
new) and into fit and unfit notes. These requirements ensure
that old design and unfit notes are removed from circulation
in a timely fashion. ECIs are also responsible for authenticating
banknotes purchased in the market. The ECIs detect counterfeit
notes as they circulate in significant offshore money markets,
and quickly report information on the geographic sources of
these counterfeit notes to the Secret Service.
Finally, the information provided by the ECIs to the New York
Fed regarding country level flows of payments, and receipts
of U.S. dollars is important to the Federal Reserve, the Treasury,
and the United States Secret Service because it provides a
valuable tool for estimating stocks and flows of U.S. currency
abroad, particularly for countries about which little information
was available previously. Before the ECI program, the United
States had little or no access to this mission-critical information
about overseas counterfeiting and currency flows that is now
required by the ECI Agreements.
The Chronology
I will now turn to the chronology of events surrounding the
discovery that UBS had engaged in ECI transactions with OFAC-sanctioned
countries and had concealed those transactions from the New
York Fed.
On April 20, 2003, the Sunday New York Times reported that
U.S. armed forces had discovered, in Baghdad, approximately
$650 million in United States currency. According to the article,
the wrapping on the currency indicated that it originated,
in part, from the New York Fed. Upon reading this article,
I sent an e-mail directing staff at the New York Fed to attempt
to determine how currency bearing the mark of the Federal
Reserve Bank of New York might have traveled from our offices
to Baghdad. Around the same date, staff from the Board of
Governors of the Federal Reserve System (“Board of Governors”)
in Washington were contacted by the Treasury Department and
asked to assist in tracing the same currency. Also at this
time, staff at the New York Fed and other Reserve Banks received
telephone calls from agents of the U.S. Customs Service seeking
information regarding the discovered banknotes.
Within days, the New York Fed received serial numbers for
a small sample of the banknotes found in Iraq. By April 24,
2003, our cash staff in East Rutherford, N.J., had determined,
using serial number records, that the sampled notes were part
of twenty-four shipments that had been sent from our offices
to three of our ECI facilities: HSBC in London, Bank of America
in Zurich and UBS in Zurich. Over the next few weeks, we received
additional serial numbers from other samples of the discovered
currency as well as serial numbers from samples of an additional
$112 million that was discovered in Iraq shortly after the
initial hoard. We successfully traced those serial numbers
to the same three ECI facilities, as well as to HSBC’s
ECI facilities in Frankfurt and London; to the Royal Bank
of Scotland’s ECI facility in London; to a number of
commercial banks in the United States and abroad; and to several
foreign central banks.
In an effort to follow the currency trail further, in early
May of 2003, we contacted each of the ECI operators, and one
of the commercial banks that had done a large volume of relevant
currency purchases, and asked them to provide us with information
regarding the counterparties to whom they sold the identified
banknotes. By the end of May, we had received responses from
HSBC and Bank of America that included, for HSBC, specific
counterparty information, and for Bank of America, more general
country information, for the relevant shipments. No transactions
with Iraq or any other OFAC-sanctioned countries were contained
in these responses. Our investigative efforts to follow the
trail of the currency discovered in Iraq are continuing.
UBS responded to our inquiry by advising that it did not track
serial numbers for its banknote sales. In the alternative,
UBS agreed to provide information regarding shipments of currency
from the ECI that corresponded closely to the dates on which
the notes found in Iraq had been shipped from the New York
Fed’s New Jersey office to the UBS ECI. UBS also informed
the New York Fed that Swiss law considerations precluded the
sharing of specific counterparty names. Accordingly, only
country destinations could be provided. On June 25, 2003,
UBS provided a report to one of our cash officers, who was
in Zurich for a periodic site inspection. The report purported
to list the relevant shipments by date and included the countries
to which the banknotes were sold and the amounts in each shipment.
While no transactions with Iraq were identified, included
in this report were entries representing eight shipments of
banknotes to Iran. Of course, we had not expected such a disclosure
as currency transactions with Iran were expressly prohibited
by the ECI Agreement.
Upon learning that UBS had sold banknotes to Iran, we asked
UBS to explain how these Iranian transactions could have occurred
in view of the clear contractual prohibition in the ECI Agreement
against shipping currency to countries that are the subject
of regulations issued by OFAC. We also inquired as to why
these transactions had not appeared on the monthly dollar
transaction reports that UBS was required to provide to the
New York Fed pursuant to the ECI Agreement. UBS responded
that the transactions with Iran were done by mistake. Further,
with respect to our specific questions directed at the false
monthly reports, UBS banknote personnel provided a facially
plausible, but false, explanation. The explanation was that
the reports were the result of an innocent mistake and not
an intentional deception.
In early July of 2003, New York Fed management concluded that
the transactions by our ECI operator, UBS, with Iran constituted
a material event that needed to be reported. Consequently,
on July 11, 2003, I sent a memorandum reciting the facts known
then to the New York Fed’s board of directors, which,
under Section 4 of the Federal Reserve Act, exercises “supervision
and control” of the Bank management. In addition, the
New York Fed disclosed what we knew to senior staff at OFAC,
the Board of Governors, and the Department of the Treasury.
The UBS situation was discussed with the New York Fed’s
board of directors at its meeting on July 17, 2003. The directors
concurred in the management recommendation to more fully understand
the facts by involving UBS’s home country supervisor,
the EBK, and when the facts were fully understood, to make
a decision with respect to contract termination.
On July 22, 2003, I met with representatives of the EBK in
Switzerland to discuss how to move forward with an inquiry.
I explained to the representatives that, to avoid termination
of its ECI contract, UBS would have to provide the New York
Fed with reassurance as to its compliance. I emphasized that
the New York Fed could not tolerate a repeat violation. I
also told the EBK that I was not satisfied with the explanation
proffered by UBS concerning the monthly reports. It was agreed
that the New York Fed would draft questions regarding UBS’s
compliance with OFAC regulations in the operation of the ECI
and that Ernst and Young (“E&Y”), UBS’s
outside auditor, would review the operation and prepare responses
to our questions.
In late July of 2003, E&Y began its review of UBS’s
ECI operation. During the course of this review, which concluded
in October of 2003, E&Y learned that in addition to the
transactions with Iran, UBS had also engaged in banknote purchase
transactions with Cuba, another country on the OFAC list,
and that the banknotes had been deposited into the ECI. E&Y
also learned that, in preparing the monthly dollar transaction
reports, personnel in UBS’s banknotes operation had
concealed the Cuban transactions from the New York Fed. E&Y
informed senior UBS personnel of its findings and encouraged
UBS to disclose the information to the EBK and to the New
York Fed.
In mid-October, UBS disclosed to the EBK that, in addition
to the transactions with Iran, it had engaged in USD banknote
transactions with Cuba that involved the ECI. The EBK advised
UBS to disclose the transactions to the New York Fed. Late
on Friday, October 24, 2003, representatives of UBS met with
me at the New York Fed. They told me that UBS had engaged
in transactions not only with Iran, but also with Cuba, and
with Libya, yet another country on the OFAC list. On Tuesday,
October 28, 2003, the New York Fed terminated its ECI Agreement
with UBS for breach of Articles 8 and 9 of the Agreement which
dealt with, respectively, UBS’s monthly reporting obligations
and its OFAC compliance obligations. Within a week of the
termination, UBS disclosed that it had also engaged in transactions
with Yugoslavia (the Republics of Serbia and Montenegro) during
the time that Yugoslavia was subject to OFAC sanctions. New
York Fed management promptly informed the New York Fed board
of directors of the decision to terminate for breach, and
the reasons for the decision.
After terminating the contract for breach, the New York Fed
needed UBS’s continuing cooperation in the investigation
of the facts regarding the breach and the false reports. Senior
management of UBS did cooperate with us in these specific
matters. Further, we received extraordinary assistance from
our supervisory colleagues at the EBK.
Following the termination of the ECI Agreement, UBS appointed
an investigative steering committee and retained two respected
law firms to conduct a full investigation into the operation
of the Zurich ECI. The internal and external auditors of UBS
were asked to assist. The EBK agreed to allow UBS to share
the results of this investigation with the New York Fed on
a confidential basis.
Over the next six months, the investigative team interviewed
forty-eight UBS employees, many on multiple occasions, and
reviewed several thousand documents, including e-mails. On
December 3, 2003, the first report from the investigation
was provided to the New York Fed. Between delivery of the
first report and April of 2004, I, and other New York Fed
officers met with representatives of UBS on three occasions
and had many telephone conversations in which we reviewed
the status of the investigation and requested that more work
be done on specific issues. During this same time period,
the UBS investigative team also provided us with numerous
supplemental responses, documents, and updated chronologies.
True to its commitment during the summer of 2003, the EBK
enabled UBS to make full disclosure of the investigative results,
and also enabled the New York Fed to interview members of
the E&Y team that had reviewed UBS’s ECI operations.
On April 16, 2004, UBS provided the New York Fed with its
final supplement to the December report.
The investigation confirmed that UBS engaged in USD banknote
transactions, through the ECI, directly with four OFAC sanctioned
countries: Cuba, Libya, Iran, and the former Yugoslavia, but
not directly with Iraq. UBS consistently engaged in these
transactions from the inception of the ECI program, notwithstanding
the fact that the UBS personnel involved clearly understood
that the ECI Agreement prohibited such transactions. Moreover,
UBS personnel took affirmative steps to conceal these transactions
from the New York Fed, including, but not limited to, falsifying
the monthly U.S. dollar transaction reports that it was contractually
obligated to submit. UBS personnel continued their efforts
to conceal these transactions even after the investigation
was underway. The banknote personnel of UBS also affirmatively
misled the EBK.
In early May of 2004, the New York Fed engaged the EBK in
discussions regarding the appropriate supervisory response
to UBS’s conduct. Our goal was for the EBK to take remedial
action in its capacity as UBS’s home country supervisor,
and for the Federal Reserve to take punitive action against
UBS for its deceptive conduct with respect to an important
U.S. program--our sanction regime. On May 10, 2004, the EBK
publicly reprimanded UBS for the failures in internal control
that permitted both the breach of contract and the deception.
The EBK’s decision acknowledged that UBS planned to
discontinue its banknote trading business, and forbade UBS
from restarting this business without the EBK’s consent.
Simultaneous with the EBK’s announcement of its supervisory
decision, the Federal Reserve announced the assessment of
a $100 million civil money penalty against UBS.
The Civil Money Penalty Assessment
I now turn to my third topic and focus on the amount of the
civil money penalty assessed by the Federal Reserve against
UBS. At the outset, let me emphasize that the civil money
penalty is directed at deception and the violation of U.S.
laws relating to deception. The remedy for breach of contract
was contract termination, and that occurred more than six
months ago.
The Federal Reserve’s statutory authority to assess
a civil money penalty is expressly set out in Section 8(i)
of the Federal Deposit Insurance Act (“FDI Act”).
When the Federal Reserve determines that a financial institution
has violated the law, as UBS did here, and that such a violation
justifies the assessment of a civil money penalty, we look
first to Section 8(i) to determine the range of the penalty
that might be imposed. The statute carefully lays out a three-tiered
approach to assessment. The tiers focus on both the likelihood
that the violation will cause financial harm to the institution
and on the degree of willfulness demonstrated by the institution
in committing the violation. The greater the likelihood of
harm and the more deliberate the act, the higher the maximum
penalty.
UBS’s conduct here constituted a tier two violation.
Section 8(i)(2)(B) of the FDI Act provides that any depository
institution that violates any law, which violation is part
of a pattern of misconduct, shall pay a civil money penalty
of not more than $25,000 for each day during which such violation
continues. This formula, applied to UBS’s multiple violations
of law, permitted the Federal Reserve to assess a civil money
penalty of $100 million.
While UBS is a $1 trillion institution, and has abundant financial
resources, banknote trading was a very small piece of UBS’s
overall business. For the years 1999-2003, UBS’s banknote
trading business for all currencies with all countries had
aggregate net profit of approximately $87 million. From 1996
through 2003, UBS earned net profit of slightly less than
$5 million from its banknote transactions with countries subject
to OFAC sanctions. Thus, the $100 million civil money represents
a penalty that is approximately twenty times the amount of
the net profit that UBS derived from its wrongful conduct.
Clearly, however, we recognized the severity of UBS’s
actions. UBS had deceived us over an eight-year period in
several different ways. In assessing the civil money penalty,
however, we were mindful that the assessment should not be
made in a vacuum. In 1992, the Board of Governors assessed
a $200 million penalty against BCCI; and the $100 million
civil money penalty assessed against UBS is equal to the next-highest
penalty the Federal Reserve has ever assessed against an institutional
respondent. Last year, in conjunction with a criminal disposition
by the U.S. Department of Justice, the Federal Reserve assessed
Credit Lyonnais a $100 million civil money penalty. While
no two cases are alike, Credit Lyonnais engaged in a similar
pattern of deliberate and repeated false statements to the
Federal Reserve in connection with its secret acquisition
of the Executive Life Insurance Company.
In considering whether the amount of the civil money penalty
was sufficiently large, it is not enough to look only at the
size of UBS’s balance sheet and net profit. It is important
to keep in mind that UBS is a Swiss institution with its own
banking supervisor, the EBK, which has no authority to impose
money penalties. A Swiss governmental reprimand to the largest
bank in Switzerland is, to our knowledge, unprecedented in
Swiss history. The EBK took that action, in no small measure,
to demonstrate that it would not tolerate deception any more
than we would. We gave special consideration to the EBK’s
views also because, as senior Treasury officials have noted
in testimony before Congress, the EBK has demonstrated exceptional
cooperation in matters relating to the global fight against
terrorist financing. As a bank supervisor active in that fight,
the Federal Reserve appreciates the value of global cooperation.
In short, the $100 million civil money penalty that we assessed
against UBS was appropriate. It was in proportion to the revenues
UBS derived from its unlawful actions. It was in line with
the Federal Reserve’s history of civil money penalties.
And, it was appropriate because we were able to act together
with the EBK to craft supervisory action that is both punitive
and remedial.
2004 Enhancement of ECI OFAC Compliance Requirements
Turning to my final point, I will describe the actions taken
by the New York Fed in the wake of the discovery of UBS’s
deceit. These actions are aimed at ensuring that our ECI operators
will not conduct ECI transactions directly with OFAC sanctioned
countries. Thus, through our ECI contracts, we are able to
extend the reach of the OFAC sanctions to foreign jurisdictions.
It is important to keep in mind, however, that the U.S. sanctions
regime cannot be applied extraterritorially without limitation.
Immediately following the discovery that UBS had engaged in
transactions with Iran, in July 2003, we directed inquiries
toward each of the five banks with which we continue to maintain
an ECI relationship. The banks responded by detailing for
us the procedures each had in place to ensure their contractual
compliance with the OFAC regulations and various Anti-Money
Laundering (“AML”) statutes and regulations. These
responses gave us sufficient confidence to carry us through
for the period necessary until we could amend our contracts
to strengthen the OFAC and AML compliance provisions.
In the fall of 2003, the New York Fed began a process of amending
all of the ECI Agreements and the accompanying Manual of Procedures
to strengthen the compliance requirements supporting the OFAC
sanctions programs. Each revised Agreement establishes the
ECI operators’ general responsibilities for OFAC compliance,
while the new Manual of Procedures enumerates in detail minimum
specific responsibilities. The new contracts and Manual of
Procedures were all executed and became fully effective in
February 2004.
In revising the ECI Agreements, two major changes were made
to the OFAC Compliance Section. First, language was added
to expressly provide that the ECI bank “agrees that
ECI Banknote Activity is subject to the jurisdiction of the
U.S. Department of Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets
Control.” Second, the Agreement was amended to include
an acknowledgement from the operating bank that, with respect
to banknote transactions, it must comply with the provisions
of the U.S. Trading with the Enemy Act, the International
Emergency Economic Powers Act, the Antiterrorism and Effective
Death Penalty Act, and “any other similar asset control
laws, to the extent that they are implemented by OFAC regulations.”
Perhaps the most significant changes, however, relate to new
audit requirements for the ECIs. A new section was added to
the ECI Agreement requiring an annual audit of the operating
bank’s AML and OFAC compliance programs by a public
accounting firm, hired at the ECI operator’s expense.
The ECI Agreement also provides that a management representative
must attest that the ECI operator is complying with the contract.
Then, in a Sarbanes-Oxley inspired provision, the contract
requires that the public accounting firm must attest to the
management assertion, and specifically, whether the assertion
is fairly stated. The contract also provides that the public
accounting firm will render an opinion on whether the monthly
reports that the ECI bank has provided to the New York Fed
are accurate. The New York Fed is currently in the process
of working with the public accounting firms concerning implementation
of this requirement.
The Manual of Procedures was also expanded and now requires
ECI operators to:
1. Establish a system of internal controls to ensure compliance
with all OFAC regulations. Internal controls should be specific
to all aspects of ECI Banknote Activity from account opening
through the initiation and settlement of all transactions;
2. Perform and document a comprehensive OFAC risk assessment
of all aspects of ECI activities, including any transactions
that are processed through the ECI for another institution;
3. Designate a compliance officer responsible for monitoring
compliance with all OFAC laws and regulations, and an officer
responsible for overseeing any funds blocked as a result of
any OFAC law or regulation;
4. Implement an audit program that will provide for independent
testing of all aspects of the OFAC compliance program and
for an annual comprehensive audit of each line of business
relating to the ECI activities;
5. Provide appropriate OFAC compliance training for all employees
in each line of business relating to ECI activities;
6. Maintain the most current OFAC List of prohibited countries,
entities, and individuals;
7. Retain all OFAC-related records for a period of not less
than five years; and
8. Require the OFAC compliance officer to develop a program
to screen customers and transactions for OFAC compliance.
The screening program shall, at a minimum:
a) Ensure that all new customers are compared to the OFAC
list and formally approved for activity before any transaction
is initiated with the customer;
b) Specify what information in the account is being compared,
e.g., accountholder, signatories, powers of attorney, beneficiaries,
and/or beneficial owners;
c) Require that, whenever OFAC updates the OFAC List, a review
shall immediately be performed of existing customers and of
all electronic files used to maintain customer information;
d) Require periodic testing to ensure that existing customers
and any electronic customer information files are effectively
tested for OFAC compliance;
e) Require that all ECI activities be compared to the OFAC
list and monitored for prohibited activity;
f) Implement an escalation program to ensure that any potential
matches of customers or transactions be reported immediately
to the OFAC compliance officer for review and disposition;
g) Implement effective controls to identify transactions that
match an OFAC-sanctioned individual or entity;
h) Require that any identified transactions be reported to
OFAC in accordance with OFAC regulations and to the New York
Fed personnel identified in the ECI Agreement; and
i) Require that a history file of any customers or transactions
initially identified as potential matches but subsequently
approved by the OFAC compliance officer, be maintained under
record retention policies for review by internal audit.
The changes to the Agreement and the expanded seventeen-point
procedural program have strengthened ECI program internal
controls, established operational responsibility for compliance,
and specified internal and external audit requirements. Moreover,
each ECI operator’s policies and procedures directed
at OFAC compliance will be reviewed by a team from the New
York Fed and OFAC. The first of these reviews is currently
being planned.
I should note that, following the announcement of the assessment
of the $100 million civil money penalty against UBS, we again
directed inquiries to our ECI operators to learn their reactions
to the Federal Reserve’s action. All of the ECI operators
viewed the penalty as significant and understood that it reflected
the importance the New York Fed places on both strict compliance
with the OFAC requirements of the ECI Agreement and the Manual
of Procedures, and on the integrity of its ECI operators.
Conclusion
The ECI program serves an important U.S. function by ensuring
that we supply USD banknotes to the global market in an efficient
manner, and that the quality of, and confidence in, our currency
is maintained at a high level. UBS’ egregious conduct
should not overshadow the ECI program’s benefits. In
terminating the UBS ECI contract, in assessing a $100 million
civil money penalty against UBS for its deceptive conduct
as a former ECI operator, and in working with the EBK to craft
a coordinated regulatory response, the Federal Reserve acted
decisively and properly to send a message about the importance
it places on OFAC compliance. The remedial measures that we
have put into place underscore the Federal Reserve’s
commitment to ensuring that all of our ECI operators will
comply with U.S. sanctions in their ECI transactions.
Thank you for your attention, and I look forward to answering
any questions you may have.
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