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Credit Agricole's Caceis UK censured, pays $42 million to WealthTek clients (updated)

UPDATE 1-Credit Agricole's Caceis UK censured, pays $42 million to WealthTek clients

Caceis UK takes voluntary WealthTek contributions to £57 million

FCA says clients were exposed to financial crime

Barclays, Sapia Partners have also made voluntary contributions

WealthTek ceased operations in 2023, criminal trial in 2027

Adds details throughout

By Kirstin Ridley

- Credit Agricole's CAGR.PA Caceis UK, an asset servicing bank, will pay £31.7 million ($42 million) to clients of failed British wealth manager WealthTek, bringing to £57 million the total secured so far by Britain's financial markets watchdog.

The Financial Conduct Authority on Thursday censured Caceis UK, which became WealthTek's sub-custodian in November 2020, for failing to act on information that left clients exposed to risks of financial crime. It is the watchdog's third enforcement action since WealthTek's collapse in 2023.

The FCA did not impose a fine, citing Caceis UK's voluntary payment and "extensive co-operation" during a 13-month investigation.

The third voluntary contribution secured by the FCA since it ordered WealthTek to cease operations and appoint special administrators will be distributed to WealthTek clients who have not recovered their funds in full.

Caceis said in a statement that it remained committed to fraud prevention and treating customers fairly, adding it had reviewed its procedures and that no specific remediation plan had been requested by the regulator.

The FCA fined Barclays BARC.L more than £3 million last July for poor handling of financial crime risks linked to a client money account opened by WealthTek. The British bank also made a voluntary £6.3 million payment.

Sapia Partners, a financial services firm, followed with a £19.64 million voluntary payment in April after being censured for inadequate client safeguards.

The FCA said Caceis UK did not take sufficient action after identifying that WealthTek was not authorised to hold certain client assets, did not spot it was barred from holding client money and, nevertheless, opened client accounts for the firm that it then failed to properly monitor.

WealthTek's principal partner was charged in 2024 with offences including fraud and money laundering. A London trial is scheduled for 2027.

($1 = 0.7595 pounds)


(Reporting by Kirstin Ridley. Additional reporting by Ankita Bora in Bengaluru. Editing by Mark Potter)

((Kirstin.ridley@thomsonreuters.com))

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