ICBC Tells Clients to Reroute Some Trades After Cyber Issue

ICBC Tells Clients to Reroute Some Trades After Cyber Issue · Bloomberg

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(Bloomberg) -- Industrial & Commercial Bank of China Ltd. was hit by a cyberattack that prevented it from clearing swathes of trades, forcing US clients of the world’s largest lender by assets to reroute transactions and leaving brokers and traders scrambling to assess the extent of the impact.

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The state-owned bank alerted market makers, banks and brokerages that trading of Treasuries is being impacted by the issue which started last night, according to people familiar with the matter who asked not to be identified discussing private information.

ICBC has told market participants that its US subsidiary appears to be experiencing the issue and is working to resolve US Treasury transactions as soon as possible, one of the people familiar said. The bank has hired cybersecurity firm Mandiant and has been offered assistance from the FBI and CISA, the person said.

ICBC confirmed in a statement that a ransomware attack at its ICBC Financial Services unit disrupted some of its systems. The bank said it’s conducting a thorough investigation and progressing its recovery efforts. Its head office and other domestic and overseas units weren’t affected, it added.

“We are aware of the cybersecurity issue and are in regular contact with key financial sector participants, in addition to federal regulators. We continue to monitor the situation,” a spokesman for the US Treasury Department said in an emailed statement.

A spokeswoman for the SEC declined to comment.

The extent of the disruption caused wasn’t immediately clear, though Treasury market participants reported liquidity was being affected. The Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association, or Sifma, held a call with members about the matter on Thursday, some of the people familiar said. A representative for the trade organization declined to comment.

The attack on ICBC is suspected of being orchestrated by the prolific gang known as Lockbit, according to people familiar with the situation, who asked not to be identified because the information isn’t public. That’s the the same group that has — just in the past year — also hit Boeing Co., ION Trading UK and the UK’s Royal Mail.

Lockbit, a criminal gang with ties to Russia, specializes in using malicious software known as ransomware to encrypt files on its victims’ computers, then demanding payment to unlock the files. Earlier this year, it took credit for an attack against ION that paralyzed derivatives trading across markets for everything from commodities to bonds and forced several banks and brokers to process trades manually.