Tuesday, December 30, 2025
ADVT 
International

Two Indian-Americans Charged With Deceptive Trading Practices

IANS, 30 Jan, 2018 01:22 PM

    Two Indian-Americans are among eight individuals charged with deceptive trading practices on commodities markets in the US.

     

    Jitesh Thakkar, 41, of Naperville, Illinois, has been charged in a criminal complaint with conspiracy and spoofing offences, along with six others.

     

    Spoofing is an illegal trading practice that can be used to manipulate the commodities markets.

     

    Krishna Mohan, 33, of New York has been charged in a criminal complaint filed in the Southern District of Texas with commodities fraud.

     

    Other than the individuals identified, only three others have ever been publicly charged with the crime of spoofing.

     

    Of those identified, five were traders employed by global financial institutions, two were traders at large commodities trading firms, and one was the owner of a technology consulting firm, the Justice Department said.

     

    The defendants and their co-conspirators are alleged to have defrauded market participants and manipulated these markets by placing hundreds, and in some cases, thousands of orders that they did not intend to trade, or “spoof orders”, to create the appearance of substantial false supply and demand and to induce other market participants to trade at prices, quantities, and times that they otherwise would not have traded.

     

    The charges announced on Monday aggressively target, among other things, the practice of spoofing, which was allegedly employed in various forms by these defendants and/or their co-conspirators to manipulate the market for futures contracts traded on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME), the Chicago Board of Trade (CBOT), and the Commodity Exchange Inc(COMEX).

     

    According to the charging documents, the spoof orders often had the effect of artificially depressing or artificially inflating the prices of futures contracts traded on CME, CBOT and COMEX.

     

    In order to take advantage of the artificial price levels created by their spoof orders, the defendants and/or their co-conspirators are alleged to have executed real, genuine orders to buy (at the artificially low prices) or to sell (at the artificially high prices) in order to generate trading profits or to illicitly mitigate other trading losses.

     

    “Spoofing is a particularly pernicious example of bad actors seeking to manipulate the market through the abuse of technology,” said Director James McDonald of the US Commodity Futures Trading Commission’s (CFTC) Division of Enforcement.

     

    According to the chargesheet, Thakkar allegedly developed a software programme that was used by Thakkar’s co-conspirator to engage in spoofing through the placement of thousands of orders on the CME when Thakkar was the founder and principal of Edge Financial Technologies Inc (Edge), an information technology consulting firm located in Chicago.

     

    Mohan is charged with commodities fraud and spoofing offences when he was employed as a programmer and trader at a proprietary trading firm in Chicago. According to the complaint, data analysis identified that Mohan engaged in a pattern of spoofing over a thousand times in a two-month period.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    WATCH: Pakistani Airline Pilot Lets Chinese Woman Into Cockpit For 2 Hours

    WATCH: Pakistani Airline Pilot Lets Chinese Woman Into Cockpit For 2 Hours
    Captain Shahzad Aziz invited the Chinese woman into the cockpit during PIA flight PK-853 from Tokyo to Beijing

    WATCH: Pakistani Airline Pilot Lets Chinese Woman Into Cockpit For 2 Hours

    United Again. Indian-Origin Man Alleges Ticket Cancelled For Filming Fight

    United Again. Indian-Origin Man Alleges Ticket Cancelled For Filming Fight
    Navang Oza, was refused entry on a flight to the West Coast after he started recording his experience on his cellphone.

    United Again. Indian-Origin Man Alleges Ticket Cancelled For Filming Fight

    Police Say Father, Son Found Dead, Woman Still Missing Near B.C. River

    Police Say Father, Son Found Dead, Woman Still Missing Near B.C. River
    BURNABY, B.C. — RCMP in Burnaby, B.C., say a search continues along the banks of the Fraser River in Richmond for a 36-year-old woman who went missing with two other members of her family on Sunday.

    Police Say Father, Son Found Dead, Woman Still Missing Near B.C. River

    Indian-Origin Businessman Harsikander Dhillon Spared Jail Time For Selling Faulty Cars In UK

    Indian-Origin Businessman Harsikander Dhillon Spared Jail Time For Selling Faulty Cars In UK
    An Indian-origin businessman has been spared jail time by a UK court after he refunded thousands of pounds to people he conned into buying faulty second-hand cars.

    Indian-Origin Businessman Harsikander Dhillon Spared Jail Time For Selling Faulty Cars In UK

    US School Teacher Rips Off 8-Year-Old's Hijab For 'Misbehaving' In Class, FIRED

    US School Teacher Rips Off 8-Year-Old's Hijab For 'Misbehaving' In Class, FIRED
    The Girl Was Misbehaving In Class And Sitting In The Teacher's Chair Without His Permission.

    US School Teacher Rips Off 8-Year-Old's Hijab For 'Misbehaving' In Class, FIRED

    India Won't Sit Idly If Its Soldiers Are Attacked: US Lawmaker Joe Crowley On Pak Terrorists

    India Won't Sit Idly If Its Soldiers Are Attacked: US Lawmaker Joe Crowley On Pak Terrorists
    The lawmaker hoped that there would be an India-specific doctrine in place before PM Narendra Modi and US President Donald Trump meet

    India Won't Sit Idly If Its Soldiers Are Attacked: US Lawmaker Joe Crowley On Pak Terrorists