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Financial crime

Market manipulation (Market manipulation (Article 12 UK MAR))

Market manipulation is conduct that distorts, or is likely to distort, the price or trading of financial instruments. Defined in Article 12 of the UK Market Abuse Regulation, it includes misleading transactions, price positioning, dissemination of false information and benchmark manipulation, and is prohibited by Article 15.

Market manipulation is one of the two pillars of the market abuse regime, alongside insider dealing. It is defined in Article 12 of the UK Market Abuse Regulation (UK MAR) and prohibited by Article 15, which bans both engaging in and attempting to engage in manipulation. The prohibition protects market integrity by ensuring prices reflect genuine supply and demand rather than artificial or deceptive activity.

The main types of manipulation

Article 12 sets out several categories. Trade-based manipulation covers transactions or orders that give, or are likely to give, false or misleading signals as to supply, demand or price, or that secure the price at an abnormal or artificial level, including practices such as wash trades, marking the close and spoofing. Fictitious-device manipulation involves transactions employing deception or contrivance. Information-based manipulation covers the dissemination of false or misleading information through any medium, including the internet. Benchmark manipulation, captured at Article 12(1)(d), covers conduct that distorts the calculation of a benchmark.

Why it matters

Market manipulation can attract unlimited financial penalties imposed by the FCA, public censure and, where the criminal offences under the Financial Services Act 2012 apply, prosecution and imprisonment. Firms must operate surveillance systems and submit Suspicious Transaction and Order Reports (STORs) where they have reasonable suspicion of manipulation, so the regime imposes a detection-and-reporting duty as well as a prohibition on the conduct itself.

Who it applies to

Anyone trading or facilitating trading in financial instruments admitted to UK trading venues, including investment banks, brokers, trading firms, asset managers and individual traders.

MAR, STOR and inside information.

Frequently asked questions

What counts as market manipulation under UK MAR?
Article 12 of the UK Market Abuse Regulation defines market manipulation as transactions or orders that give false or misleading signals about supply, demand or price, or that secure an abnormal or artificial price; transactions using fictitious devices or deception; dissemination of false or misleading information; and the manipulation of benchmarks. Article 15 prohibits engaging in, or attempting to engage in, such conduct.
What is benchmark manipulation?
Benchmark manipulation is the transmission of false or misleading information, or any conduct, that manipulates the calculation of a benchmark such as an interest-rate or commodity reference rate. It is expressly captured as market manipulation under Article 12(1)(d) of the UK Market Abuse Regulation, and was a central feature of the LIBOR enforcement cases.

Reviewed by Margaret Hassett

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