(Adds details, comments from banks, background)
By Kirstin Ridley
LONDON, Dec 11 (Reuters) - U.S law firm Hausfeld has filed a
lawsuit in London against major banks over alleged foreign
exchange (forex) rigging in a bid to take over a high-profile
British class action from compatriot Scott & Scott.
The new action, called FX Claim UK, seeks damages from
Barclays, Citibank, RBS, JPMorgan
, UBS and MUFG Bank over their role in forex
spot trading cartels between 2007 and 2013 and was filed at
London's Competition Appeal Tribunal (CAT) on Wednesday.
JPMorgan, UBS, Citigroup and MUFG declined to comment. RBS,
Citibank, Barclays did not immediately respond to requests for
comment.
Hausfeld and Scott & Scott co-led a similar U.S. action
against 15 banks, securing $2.3 billion for American claimants,
after some of the world's top banks paid more than a combined
$11 billion in fines to settle U.S. and European regulatory
allegations that traders rigged foreign exchange markets.
Banks now face another potentially huge class action in
Britain after being fined more than 1 billion euros ($1.1
billion) by the European Commission in May over cartels dubbed
"Essex Express" and "Three Way Banana Split".
"The fines do not go to those affected by the cartels.
Through this action, we want to hold the banks accountable for
their actions and secure compensation for affected customers,"
said Phil Evans, a former Competition and Markets Authority
inquiry chair, who is leading FX Claim UK.
The latest class action application was filed four months
after its rival and heralds a potential "carriage dispute", when
a court is asked to decide which group will prevail. At a court
hearing last month, judge Marcus Smith said there could be only
one representative for such a class action.
The first lawsuit, called UK FX Cartel Claim, is led by
Michael O'Higgins, the former chairman of British watchdog The
Pensions Regulator and funded by litigation funder Therium. FX
Claim UK is funded by Bench Walk Advisors.
Both have after-the-event insurance cover, should the claim
be unsuccessful.
Foreign exchange is seen as the crown jewel of London's
financial sector. With about 43% percent of the $6.6
trillion-per-day forex market traded there, lawyers have jostled
for position since the Consumer Rights Act introduced the first
"opt-out" class actions for breaches of UK or EU competition law
in 2015.
In such cases, UK-based members of a defined group will
automatically be bound into legal action unless they opt out,
while foreign-based claimants actively have to sign up.
($1 = 0.9073 euros)
(Reporting By Kirstin Ridley, editing by Sinead Cruise and
David Evans)