UBS has whistleblower deal in Brazil currency investigation - paper

SAO PAULO (Reuters) - Swiss lender UBS AG made a whistleblower deal with Brazilian authorities investigating the suspected rigging of Brazil's currency market and will receive no punishment in the case, a local newspaper reported on Friday.

The investigation, which involves 15 of the world's largest banks, began following the presentation of evidence by UBS, Valor Economico reported, without naming its sources.

A UBS press representative did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

In a document released Thursday, antitrust watchdog Cade alleged the banks colluded to influence benchmark currency rates in Brazil by aligning positions and pushing transactions in a way that deterred competitors from the market between 2007 and 2013, at least. Foreign exchange trading in Brazil is estimated at about $3 trillion a year, excluding swaps and derivative transactions.

The banks named in the Cade probe are Bank of America Merrill Lynch , Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ, Barclays Plc , Citigroup Inc , Credit Suisse Group AG , Deutsche Bank AG , HSBC Holdings Plc , JPMorgan Chase & Co , Morgan Stanley , Nomura Holdings Inc <8604.T>, Royal Bank of Canada , Royal Bank of Scotland Group , Standard Bank Group Ltd , Standard Chartered Plc and UBS.

(Reporting by Asher Levine; Editing by Jeffrey Benkoe)