In the Market: Inside Wall Street's scramble after ICBC hack
FILE PHOTO: The logo of Industrial and Commercial Bank of China is seen at its branch at its headquarters in Beijing · Reuters

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By Paritosh Bansal

(Reuters) -The cyber hack of Industrial and Commercial Bank of China's U.S. broker-dealer was so extensive on Wednesday, even the corporate email stopped working and forced employees to switch to Google mail, according to two people familiar with the situation.

The blackout left the brokerage temporarily owing BNY Mellon $9 billion, an amount many times larger than its net capital, a measure of resources at hand to promptly satisfy claims.

Those details and what happened next, some of which are reported here for the first time, show how the ransomware attack pushed the firm owned by China’s largest bank close to the brink. And they serve as a wakeup call for the financial sector and raise some concerns about the resilience of the $26 trillion Treasury market.

ICBC's New York-based unit, called ICBC Financial Services, got a cash injection from its Chinese parent to help pay back BNY, and it manually processed trades with the custody bank's help, Reuters reported on Friday.

ICBC told market participants on an industry call on Friday afternoon that it was working with a cybersecurity firm, called MoxFive, to set up secure systems that would allow it to resume normal business on Wall Street, according to the sources. But ICBC expected that process to take at least until Monday, they said.

In the interim, the firm had asked its clients to temporarily suspend business and clear trades elsewhere, the sources said. Other market participants, meanwhile, looked through their own books to see whether they had any exposure and sought to reroute trades, one of the sources said.

ICBC Financial Services could not be reached for comment. ICBC did not respond to a request for comment.

On a notice on its website, the brokerage said it has been "progressing its recovery efforts with the support of its professional team of information security experts." It said it had cleared Treasury trades executed on Wednesday and repo financing trades done on Thursday.

Moxfive executives did not respond to requests for comment.

The ransomware attack, claimed by cybercrime gang Lockbit, comes at a time of heightened worries about the resiliency of the Treasury market, which is essential to the plumbing of global finance. After upheavals there - most recently during the pandemic in March 2020 - threatened financial stability, U.S. authorities launched a broad review of its functioning.

While market participants and officials have said the impact of the ICBC hack on Treasury market functioning was limited, the full extent of it is not yet understood. There is some debate, for example, about whether it had affected a major auction of Treasury bonds on Thursday.