The Asian Commercial Sex Scene  

Go Back   The Asian Commercial Sex Scene > For stuff you can't discuss with your Facebook Account > Coffee Shop Talk of a non sexual Nature

Notices

Coffee Shop Talk of a non sexual Nature Visit Sam's Alfresco Heaven. Singapore's best Alfresco Coffee Experience! If you're up to your ears with all this Sex Talk and would like to take a break from it all to discuss other interesting aspects of life in Singapore,  pop over and join in the fun.

User Tag List

Reply
 
Thread Tools
  #1  
Old 12-12-2015, 12:50 AM
Sammyboy RSS Feed Sammyboy RSS Feed is offline
Sam's RSS Feed Bot - I'm not Human. Don't talk to me.
 
Join Date: Aug 2001
Posts: 467,140
Mentioned: 0 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 22 Post(s)
My Reputation: Points: 10000241 / Power: 3357
Sammyboy RSS Feed has a reputation beyond reputeSammyboy RSS Feed has a reputation beyond reputeSammyboy RSS Feed has a reputation beyond reputeSammyboy RSS Feed has a reputation beyond reputeSammyboy RSS Feed has a reputation beyond reputeSammyboy RSS Feed has a reputation beyond reputeSammyboy RSS Feed has a reputation beyond reputeSammyboy RSS Feed has a reputation beyond reputeSammyboy RSS Feed has a reputation beyond reputeSammyboy RSS Feed has a reputation beyond reputeSammyboy RSS Feed has a reputation beyond repute
Thumbs up Bitch PRC Citibank trader fired for fixing currency, sues to get back $19K job

An honorable member of the Coffee Shop Has Just Posted the Following:

This kind of fucking bitch is a FT? $19K a month job, Citigroup cannot find a sinkie to do it?No sinkies want to earn $19K a month? Fucking PAP and their importation policy.

Citigroup Trader Fired Over Currency Probe Sues in Singapore


A former Citigroup Inc. trader fired over claims she and a colleague colluded to rig the currency market sued the bank in Singapore for wrongful dismissal.

Tian Yuhui, fired the day she returned to work after a four-month maternity leave, is suing for loss of income, deferred stocks and cash awards and for her job to be reinstated, according to a lawsuit filed in August at the Singapore High Court. She’s also asking Citicorp Investment Bank (Singapore) Ltd., the bank’s local unit, to rescind “adverse notifications” sent to regulators.

Citigroup was entitled to terminate the currency spot options trader in May, the bank said in its defense filed with the court in October. The bank in a 2014 internal probe uncovered five chats from 2011 to 2013 with a Japanese colleague, according to court papers. The bank claims the chats revealed her “intention to trade with a view to affect or manipulate” the U.S. dollar-Japanese yen spot price around the time of the 3 p.m. Tokyo fix, a key currency market benchmark.

The dollar-yen is a major currency pair in the $5.3 trillion-a-day foreign exchange market.

“She’s been unfairly dismissed without notice,” Tian’s lawyer Wong Siew Hong said. “She was very surprised to come back from maternity leave and be summarily dismissed.” Citigroup spokesman James Griffiths said the bank will defend its position. A closed hearing is scheduled for Dec. 17.

Banks have paid out more than $10 billion in fines as a result of a scandal involving alleged currency rigging, with criminal investigations in the U.S. and the U.K. still pending. At least 30 traders at a number of banks have been fired, suspended or put on leave in the last two years, since the scandal broke.

“You are the best,” Tian told her Japanese colleague in a chat, after he told her he placed a “fake bid” to defend the dollar-yen spot rate at 84.01, according to court papers. Tian also told her colleague to “push the fix,” according to transcripts of the chats reproduced in court papers. The Japanese trader has also been fired, according to court papers.

Tian said her choice of words may not have been appropriate and may have given the wrong impression about her intentions, according to court papers. She added that she didn’t tell the Japanese trader to place a fake bid, and that the chats reflected a “common practice” of entering a bid order, and later withdrawing it.

Her bids were “too small” to manipulate the $978 billion dollar-yen spot market, Tian said in court papers. The trader, who was last paid S$18,900 ($13,500) a month, said she felt her duty was to make money for Citigroup, according to court papers.

The case is Tian Yuhui v Citicorp Investment Bank (Singapore) Ltd. S877/2015. Singapore High Court.


Click here to view the whole thread at www.sammyboy.com.
Advert Space Available
Bypass censorship with https://1.1.1.1

Cloudflare 1.1.1.1
Reply



Bookmarks

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off


t Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Bitch PRC Citibank trader fired for fixing currency, sues to get back $19K job Sammyboy RSS Feed Coffee Shop Talk of a non sexual Nature 0 11-12-2015 11:00 PM
Bitch PRC Citibank trader fired for fixing currency, sues to get back $19K job Sammyboy RSS Feed Coffee Shop Talk of a non sexual Nature 0 11-12-2015 10:40 PM
Maxicash sues 3 customers to get back $275k that they accidentally overpaid them Sammyboy RSS Feed Coffee Shop Talk of a non sexual Nature 0 03-04-2015 07:10 PM
Maxicash sues 3 customers to get back $275k that they accidentally overpaid them Sammyboy RSS Feed Coffee Shop Talk of a non sexual Nature 0 03-04-2015 06:30 PM
Maxicash sues 3 customers to get back $275k that they accidentally overpaid them Sammyboy RSS Feed Coffee Shop Talk of a non sexual Nature 0 03-04-2015 06:10 PM


All times are GMT +8. The time now is 08:34 PM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.10
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.
User Alert System provided by Advanced User Tagging (Pro) - vBulletin Mods & Addons Copyright © 2024 DragonByte Technologies Ltd.
Copywrong © Samuel Leong 2006 ~ 2025 ph