Over its role in a price-rigging scandal that broke in South Africa last month, Global banking giant, Citibank, has agreed to pay a fine of 69.5m rand ($5.5m, £4.5m).
According to Ceoafrica, Citibank is one of 17 banks which regulators accuse of colluding to manipulate the value of national currency, the rand.
Barclays, JP Morgan and HSBC were among other high-profile banks named as a result of a two-year investigation from the Competition Commission.
It says that the banks used online chat rooms to co-ordinate fictitious bids and offers in order to sway the market.
When the news broke, South Africans took to social media to express their anger at the findings, calling for criminal charges against the banks implicated.
The Competition Commission now wants Citibank to testify against the other financial institutions on their list, which would see them paying a lesser fine than the other banks.
As things stand, the watchdog wants the banks to be fined 10% of in-country annual turnover.
The rand is the highest it has been in almost two years, recovering some of its value after a five-year plunge, as the country went through crisis.