'Underage' investor sues unit of Credit Suisse for $900k loss
Title: 'Underage' investor sues unit of Credit Suisse for $900k loss
Source: Straits Times
Author: Jonathan Kwok & Anita Gabriel
A FATHER and son are suing a unit of Swiss banking giant Credit Suisse over major trading losses incurred by the son when, they say, he was still a minor and legally too young to trade.
Mr Ow Weng Fye and his son Ian Ow Tuc Yun are claiming $896,871.18 from Clariden Leu, a private banking unit of Credit Suisse.
In a High Court suit filed last October, they say the bank, including their former relationship manager Aaron Chwee Toh Yee, the second defendant, should not have let the son carry out trades and should now return the sum he lost.
The Ows argue that Clariden was fully aware, through Mr Chwee, that Mr Ian Ow was a minor in 2007 when, aged 20, he traded in MSCI Singapore Free Index (SiMSCI) futures contracts, which bet on the future direction of the SiMSCI stock index.
They say the trades were carried out at the 'instigation' of Mr Chwee without consulting the elder Mr Ow, who did not know about or approve the trades.
The elder Mr Ow was an executive director of a stockbroking firm, Millenium Securities. He left after it was sold to Hong Leong Finance in 1990.
In Singapore, the legal age for entering into contracts, such as trading shares, was 21 until 2009, when it was amended to 18 for most contracts. Since then, those 18 and older may trade shares.
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