Petroleum
News: Shell settles federal trade charges: Week
of January 15, 2006 Federal
commodity-trading regulators on Jan. 4 announced
that a subsidiary of Royal Dutch Shell PLC has
agreed to pay a $200,000 penalty to settle
charges of making “fictitious” trades of crude
oil futures contracts.
The Commodity Futures Trading Commission
said Shell International Trading and Shipping
Co. of London engaged in prearranged
“non-competitive” trades on the New York
Mercantile Exchange with a U.S.-based Shell
subsidiary, Shell Trading US Co., on five
occasions between November 2003 and March 2004.
“In each instance, the traders prearranged
the trade by agreeing on the quantity and the
settlement month, and agreeing to take the
opposite positions of the trade. There was no
prearrangement as to price,” the CFTC said in an
order detailing the case against Shell. The head
trader at Shell Trading, Nigel Catterall of
Sugarland, Texas, will pay an additional
$100,000 to settle the charges. Catterall was
involved in three of the five instances of
alleged abuses, the CFTC said.
A spokeswoman for Shell said the company
did not immediately have any response. As part
of its agreement to pay the fines, Shell neither
admitted nor denied the CFTC’s findings.
—The Associated Press |