Subscribe

HSBC under investigation in US over WhatsApp use

J.D. Power

Bank cooperating with CFTC probe into business communications. This comes after JPMorgan was fined for messages outside work systems.

HSBC Holdings Plc is being investigated by U.S. regulators over bankers’ misuse of services such as WhatsApp.

The London-based bank is co-operating with the Commodity Futures Trading Commission probe into the use of “non-HSBC approved messaging platforms for business communications,” according to its annual report published alongside earnings on Tuesday.

HSBC Chief Executive Officer Noel Quinn told Bloomberg News the CFTC’s work was part of a broad investigation by U.S. authorities. “I don’t think it’s specific, I think it’s general across all financial institutions,” said Quinn in a phone interview.

“They’re looking at the use of mobiles and WhatsApp and text messages to make sure it’s appropriate,” he said.

In December, the CFTC and Securities and Exchange Commission fined JPMorgan Chase & Co. $200 million after finding that staff at the bank had for years shrugged off their surveillance duties and sent work-related messages using platforms such as WhatsApp or their personal email addresses.

“We obviously have internal procedures and requirements as to the use of nonbank platforms,” HSBC Chief Financial Officer Ewen Stevenson said in a phone interview.

Independence still popular as recruiting recovers

Related Topics: , , ,

Learn more about reprints and licensing for this article.

Recent Articles by Author

Spurs co-owner Sixth Street laying ground for debut sports fund

The San Francisco-based investment firm and NBA team stakeholder is reportedly in talks to raise its first vehicle for sports teams and leagues.

JPMorgan taps ChatGPT for new thematic investment suite

The banking giant’s generative AI-powered strategy, IndexGPT, is the latest attempt by Wall Street to harness the nascent technology.

Tech stocks gain ahead of US jobs report

Labour market data is due at 8.30am ET.

Bond traders now think Fed will move faster

Yields have fallen since the central bank's latest decision.

Gold heading for worst weekly loss since February

Higher-for-longer rates expectation has weakened demand.

X

Subscribe and Save 60%

Premium Access
Print + Digital

Learn more
Subscribe to Print