Showing posts with label probe. Show all posts
Showing posts with label probe. Show all posts

Thursday, September 6

Take us $150 M in Hezbollah money laundering probe

NEW YORK--US authorities said on Monday that she suspected of $150 million from a Lebanese Bank, was at the heart of international money laundering seized rules in connection with the Lebanese Shiite Hezbollah group.

In February 2011 the US Treasury the Lebanese Canadian Bank called "primary money laundering concern". The privately owned bank then together with the Lebanese subsidiary of Societe Generale.

Federal prosecutors in Manhattan and the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration accused Bank officials knowingly in a scheme in which money was sent cars in the United States of various individuals and companies in Beirut from the Lebanon used to buy. The cars were then sold in West Africa, and Hezbollah-linked groups help would smuggle the proceeds in Lebanon authorities said.

Hezbollah is a Shiite Islamist guerrilla and political movement, which with the help of Iran after the Israeli invasion of Lebanon founded in the year 1982.

Washington considers to be Hezbollah a terrorist group. U.S. officials say that it has engaged the distribution and sale of cocaine in West Africa increasingly to drug trafficking to facilitate.

The money was seized corresponding accounts with five different banks in the United States, including Citibank and London Bank Standard Chartered. The five banks have accused any wrong-doing.

A lawyer for the Lebanese Canadian Bank back a call seeking comment does not immediately.

Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters.

Wednesday, July 18

Big banks targeted as rate-fixing probe widens

An international probe into alleged interest rate fixing that led to $453 million in fines against Barclays Bank is taking aim at four other banks, including Citigroup, UBS, HSBC and Royal Bank of Scotland, British officials said Thursday.

Investors were punishing bank shares amid worries that the banks will also be hit with hefty fines.

British Treasury chief George Osborne said the four banks were being probed for allegedly providing false figures on key interest rates upon which mortgages and consumer loans are priced.

On Wednesday, U.S and British regulators imposed the fines on Barclays for manipulating the so-called LIBOR — the London interbank offered rate — to its advantage from 2005 to 2009.

The probe is part of a multiyear investigation into whether banks manipulated the key rate during the financial crisis to help boost profits and hide their ailing financial condition. The Wall Street Journal, which initially raised questions about the rate in a series of stories in 2008, said the fine against Barclays was the biggest victory yet for regulators in the probe.

Barclays made the deal with regulators in the U.S. and in Britain.

"Banks were clearly acting in concert," said Andrew Tyrie, a British lawmaker, who is also chairman of the influential Treasury Committee in the House of Commons. "I fear it's not going to be the end of the story, that we are going to find that other banks have been involved."

Tyrie said his committee would summon Barclays chief executive Bob Diamond to explain what happened at the bank.

Diamond has decided to waive his 2012 bonus in wake of the fines and is facing calls to step down.

Prime Minister David Cameron, when asked whether Diamond should resign, said he thinks "the whole management team have got some serious questions to answer. Let them answer those questions first."

The massive fines are unlikely to be the end of the pain for Barclays. The cost of lawsuits related to the LIBOR scandal will likely be bigger, said Sandy Chen, banking analyst at Cenkos Securities.

"Since Royal Bank of Scotland, HSBC and Lloyds Banking Group have also been named in lawsuits, we expect they will also face significant fines and damages. We are penciling in multiyear provisions that could run into the billions," Chen said.

The LIBOR is an average rate set by banks each morning that measures how much they're going to charge each other for loans. That rate, in turn, affects rates on many loans for consumers and businesses.

The U.S. Justice Department said Barclays would not face criminal prosecution, subject to certain conditions, but individual employees or officers could be prosecuted.

Diamond waived any bonus for this year, as did finance director Chris Lucas, chief operating officer Jerry del Missier and Rich Ricci, the chief executive of corporate and investment banking. Diamond said the decision reflected "our collective responsibility as leaders."

Martin Taylor, who was CEO of Barclays between 1995 and 1998, said the bank's board will have to make a decision whether Diamond can carry on in his post.

Though Taylor does not believe Diamond ordered anyone to fiddle the rates, and thinks Diamond should stay if he can "help clean out the stables," he told BBC radio that only the board can make that judgment.

The traders involved in the manipulations worked in Barclays Capital, the investment bank which Diamond headed between 2005 and 2009.

Former Barclays chief Taylor said he was confident that Diamond hadn't sanctioned the misbehavior in the unit, but added that the company's culture might have been a factor behind the misdemeanors.

"Bob runs an extraordinarily competitive and aggressive ship, and that is one reason why Barclays Capital has been very successful in the first decade of the century," Taylor said.

"And I think that when people are pushed to go to the limit, you know what traders are like, they sometimes go beyond it. They don't need to have an instruction from headquarters to go beyond it, they think it is what the bank might expect, perhaps."

"Somebody at senior level somewhere will certainly have known. I can't believe that Barclays haven't identified who that is," Taylor added.

Reuters contributed to this report.

CNBC's Kelly Evans reports Barclays has serious questions to answer over an investigation on whether the banking giant manipulated interbank lending rates over several years.

Tuesday, January 3

Olympus offices, homes raided in accounting probe

TOKYO — Dozens of black-suited investigators, marching double-file, raided the office building of three small Olympus Corp subsidiaries on Wednesday, one of 20 sites searched in a probe of a $1.7 billion accounting scandal that threatens the once-proud Japanese medical device maker's survival.


Other teams were seen waiting patiently to be buzzed inside a luxury condominium - the home of a former company president - and piling from a van in an underground car park at Olympus' high-rise headquarters.


The raids, telegraphed in advance to the media, are part of a rare joint probe by Tokyo prosecutors, police and financial regulators targeting the 92-year-old company, which has admitted to concealing investment losses via questionable M&A deals and other accounting tricks stretching back over two decades.


Investigators moved into high gear after a panel of experts appointed by Olympus to probe the scandal said early this month that two senior former executives masterminded the scheme with the help of investment bankers.


It also found that three ex-presidents, including Tsuyoshi Kikukawa who resigned in October over the scandal and whose condo home was raided on Wednesday, knew about the cover-up.


Olympus acknowledged the raids in a statement.


"We will continue to cooperate fully with investigative authorities in order to bring the facts to light," it said.


"We would again like to apologise deeply for causing great trouble and worry for our shareholders, investors and those we do business with."


Moving on
Olympus last week filed five years of corrected accounts, plus overdue first-half results, meeting a Tokyo Stock Exchange deadline to avoid a humiliating delisting, but revealing a much-depleted balance sheet as it tries to put the scandal behind it.


The company could still face delisting if the exchange deems that the company's accounting deceit was sufficiently grave.


Ex-CEO Michael Woodford, who blew the whistle on the scandal after being fired in October, is campaigning to get his job back, but faces long odds in his battle with current management, which is expected to get backing from its bankers for a plan to bring in outside investors to bolster the company's finances.


"I'm tremendously sad that it's come to this, especially when it could have been avoided depending on the actions of upper management," Olympus employee Masaharu Hamada said outside the company's headquarters as it was being raided.


Hamada has taken legal action against the company in a case unrelated to the accounting scandal, charging that he was subjected to harassment by management after reporting a compliance breach by his supervisor. A Tokyo court has ruled in his favour and the case is now going to the high court.


Several dozen reporters and TV crews waited near the entrance to Olympus' headquarters after word leaked that raids were likely during the day, although the investigators chose to make their entrance via the underground garage. Local media said prosecutors also visited the homes of other former executives.


Media are often tipped off ahead of prosecutors' raids so that TV cameras can film them.


Future prospects
Olympus' shares closed 1.4 percent lower at 1,050 yen, giving up early gains that extended Tuesday's 16 percent jump.


The shares had been under pressure as expectations of a capital raising by the company to shore up its finances stoked fears that existing shareholdings would be diluted, but the market's attention has shifted to the company's finances and future prospects.


"It's becoming likely that Olympus will stay listed and there's already talk of a capital injection," said Tetsuro Ii, the president of Commons Asset Management, adding he didn't think the prosecutors' raids or any subsequent arrests would have a major impact on the stock.


The market took a favourable view of a media report on Tuesday that Olympus plans to issue about 100 billion yen ($1.3 billion) in new shares.


Olympus has selected SMBC Nikko Securities, Citigroup Global Markets Japan and Mitsubishi UFJ Morgan Stanley Securities as financial advisers in its capital raising plans, sources familiar with the matter said on Wednesday.


Japanese high-tech blue-chips such as Sony and Fujifilm are seen among possible buyers of new Olympus shares, the sources said.


Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters.

Sunday, December 11

Probe finds dense cover-up at ‘rotten’ Olympus

TOKYO — A panel probing an accounting scandal at Japan's Olympus Corp. said Tuesday an elaborate scheme to cover up $1.5 billion of investment losses was orchestrated by a group of top executives who were "rotten to the core."


The panel also credited the company's ex-CEO, Michael Woodford, for bringing the deception at the camera and medical equipment maker to light. Woodford, a Briton, was fired in October after questioning the dubious transactions that have become one of Japan's biggest corporate fiascos.


Led by former Supreme Court judge Tatsuo Kainaka, the panel found that as of 2003, Olympus had racked up 117.7 billion yen ($1.5 billion) in investment losses dating back to the 1990s.


"The management was rotten to the core and contaminated what was around it, creating in the worst sense a group mentality of the typical salarymen," the report said in a reference to Japan's culture of corporate loyalty.


It said it found no involvement of "anti-social groups," a euphemism for Japanese criminal gangs, as some news reports have speculated. The panel said it traced the money and the various funds used to cover up investment losses, and no underworld groups were involved.


Olympus initially denied any wrongdoing, but later admitted it had used a $687 million fee for financial advice when it bought British medical instruments maker Gyrus Group, as well as overpayments for acquisitions, to hide losses from past investments gone bad.


The panel identified at least six Olympus employees as part of the scheme, including President Tsuyoshi Kikukawa, Executive Vice President Hisashi Mori and auditor Hideo Yamada, all of whom have resigned.


It said other board members were familiar with the cover-up that started from about 2006 and lasted through last year, and recommended they resign too.


It urged Olympus to beef up its corporate governance to prevent future problems, pointing to a small group of people who engineered the deception but were protected from scrutiny so that the dubious accounting could be kept secret for so long.


The panel pointed to one board meeting in which a part of the scheme was approved in just 15 minutes.


Woodford praised the panel for calling for a new board, as he had earlier, and said he wanted to work with shareholders and employees to revitalize Olympus.


"Today's report must be the beginning, and not the end, of our efforts to discover what has happened at Olympus," he said in a statement. "Elucidating the full extent of the wrondgoing cited in the panel's report will require a wide-ranging investigation."


The Tokyo Stock Exchange said it is looking at the panel's report for possible reasons to remove Olympus from the stock market. The company was already at risk of delisting after failing to report its earnings. It was given a new deadline of Dec. 14.


The panel stressed its findings, summarized in a 24-page document released at a press conference at a Tokyo hall Tuesday, were based on voluntary hearings and analysis of company computers, but that it was not authorized to pursue a criminal investigation.


Japanese financial and criminal authorities are investigating the Olympus scandal.


Kainaka, the former judge, said that some Olympus people may face criminal charges, while declining to give names. He said none had pocketed the money for personal gain.


Olympus risks being delisted from the Tokyo Stock Exchange if it doesn't rectify past filings with regulators by reporting revised earnings by Dec. 14.


The company's bookkeeping is now under investigation in Japan, the U.S. and Great Britain. Woodford has met with authorities in all three countries.


The scandal has cast a harsh light on Japanese corporate governance, which has been criticized as lagging global standards.


Last week, Economy Minister Yukio Edano defended Japan, saying its corporate governance standards were on par with the U.S. or even better. He didn't specify any cases, but there have been a string of accounting scandals at major U.S. companies, including Enron and AIG.


Kainaka denied the Olympus scandal exemplified Japan Inc.


"This is not just a Japan problem. It could have happened anywhere in the world," he said.


But others say Japan needs more transparent, accountable and knowledgeable boards at companies.


Nicholas Benes, head of The Board Director Training Institute of Japan, a nonprofit group that specializes in corporate governance training, said the panel was a start but it lacks legal authority under Japanese law.


"I applaud, but obviously its work hasn't been finished," he said.


Tuesday's panel report raps the Olympus board as insular, calling for better outside members.


"Most board members were mere yes-men," it said.


Olympus stock, which at one point lost 80 percent of its value after Woodford's whistleblowing, has recovered over the last three weeks, and surged 9 percent Tuesday amid optimism the company may avoid delisting. The panel released its findings after trading ended in Tokyo.


Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Friday, July 29

Credit Suisse targeted in the United States tax evasion probe

Geneva - the Ministry of Justice of the United States is examining whether to evade taxes by the fact that money in secret accounts the Swiss Bank helped, said Friday the American customers wealthy Credit Suisse Group.

The investigation is part of a major checkpoint in edge role played in facilitating tax evasion by U.S. citizens.

Credit Suisse is highest profile Swiss Bank forwarded, as rival UBS AG to help three years ago, in the Switzerland and elsewhere US clients admitted hiding money in offshore accounts. It ended up paying a 780 million fine and give U.S. authorities information on thousands of American account holders.

RS to soften strict bank secrecy offering rules with the agreed Switzerland prompted more information to foreign authorities investigate alleged tax evasion.

Credit Suisse said it was informed of the investigation by letter Thursday and will cooperate with US authorities in the framework of Swiss banking secrecy banking laws.

The bank providing stopped cross-border private banking services for Americans in 2008.

The Switzerland Supreme Court on Friday confirmed the Swiss Government to shop right on the data of UBS customers, a move that has been provided by some of the affected clients in question. The Federal Tribunal in Lausanne said the Government has the right to prevent emergency powers with "serious and virtually uncontrollable economic consequences for the Switzerland", that failed, to order the version of the files.

Observers had expected that a formal investigation against Credit Suisse Bank accused American tax by three former and one current employee of US authorities in February on charges of conspiracy to help, cheats.

Analysts at Zurich Kantonalbank, that a new Treaty, which currently discussed by Bern and Washington - which would automatically control the accounts of the American Bank customers in the Switzerland - could the pressure on the Credit Suisse and other Swiss banks facilitate.

A spokesman for the Swiss Finance Department, Mario Tuor, said the associated press last month that the talks aimed at it, would reach a "comprehensive solution", covering all past tax violations by US-clients and Swiss banks.

Tax experts say that Switzerland has few assets, the links to play during the US authorities pile of evidence against Swiss banks from voluntary information from U.S. clients, which is a reduced accumulable are punishment for tax evasion.

"What the Swiss to do try solved this whole thing only get," said Milan k. Patel, a Zurich tax attorney. When she reach no agreement, said Swiss banks could lose their license to operate in the United States and face could be tracking, corporate executives he.

Shares in Credit Suisse, which the results of the second quarter July 28 releases, closed 1.5 percent of lower 30.12 Swiss francs ($36.91) on the Zurich stock exchange.

Copyright 2011 associated press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Wednesday, March 9

Mubarak family finance probe sought

CAIRO — Anti-corruption campaigners pressed Egypt's chief prosecutor Thursday for an investigation into the assets of Hosni Mubarak and his family, handing over documents that they say spotlight the kind of potentially improper financial dealings that may have allowed the former ruler and his relatives to amass a large fortune.


The family's wealth — speculation has put it at anywhere from $1 billion to $70 billion — has come under growing scrutiny since Mubarak's Feb. 11 ouster opened the floodgates to three decades of pent-up anger at the regime.


Watchdog groups allege that under Mubarak, top officials and tycoons were given preferential treatment in land contracts, allowed to buy state industries at a fraction of their value during Egypt's privatization process launched in the early 1990s, and got other perks that enabled them to increase their wealth exponentially. The perks came at a price — and the Mubaraks were major beneficiaries, the activists say.

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"This is the single largest plot against Egypt's wealth by one family," said Mamdouh Hamza, a participant in Thursday's meeting with the chief prosecutor.


Since his ouster, Mubarak has remained secluded in a gated villa in the Red Sea resort of Sharm el-Sheikh, according to a government official who dismissed rumors that Egypt's ruler of 30 years has left for exile.


The Mubaraks have not commented publicly on the issue and do not have a spokesman. No evidence has been published to back up claims that Mubarak and his sons hold a vast fortune.


The chief prosecutor has imposed travel bans and frozen assets of several former senior officials and leading businessmen, but has not taken steps against the Mubaraks. The prosecutor does not have a spokesman.


At the center of the activists' complaint are records that raise questions about offshore companies and funds based or registered in Cyprus, the Bahamas, the British Virgin Islands and the Cayman Islands, Hamza said.


The most prominent of these is Bullion Co. Ltd., a Cyprus-registered firm in which both Alaa and Gamal Mubarak are listed as board members, according to documents filed with the Registrar's Office in the island nation. Bullion, meanwhile, also owns the London-based Medinvest Associates, which was set up by Gamal Mubarak in 1996.


Appearing on the board of both companies or in the funds are individuals who serve on the board, or in top executive positions, of EFG-Hermes, the Cairo-based Mideast investment bank. EFG Hermes has said Gamal Mubarak holds an 18 percent share in a subsidiary, EFG Hermes Private Equity, and that his link to the bank was made public before his political career.


The investment bank denied Thursday that it or any of the funds it manages has received any special treatment from the former regime.


EFG Hermes also said in a statement that it "does not manage any funds or portfolios for the family of the former president of Egypt." It stressed that it "received a statement from its executives confirming that they have no direct or indirect personal or financial ties" to Mubarak or his family, either locally or globally.


One of Bullion's board members, Izzet Ziwar Jarrah, told the AP: "I'm not involved, I'm not active on this."


Asked how he was on the board and not involved, he replied: "I'm on the board, like that. I'm not concerned at all."


Efforts to contact other Bullion's board members were unsuccessful.


None of the documents presented to the prosecutor — and previously reviewed by The Associated Press — necessarily indicate illegality in business dealings.


Prosecutor's turn
Hamza's group has been doing its own research, downloading bank documents and reviewing what has been published on the Mubaraks so far. The prosecutor must now take over, appointing lawyers and finance experts to the job, Hamza said.


He said the prosecutor did not say what his next step would be, but is likely to meet with the activists again next week.


Many of the top officials and army generals running Egypt in the transition period had close ties to the former regime, raising concerns by opposition activists that the interim rulers might shy away from investigating the Mubaraks.


Hamza said he believed the prosecutor is open to pursuing the case.


A delegation from the Egyptian Lawyers' Union met separately with the prosecutor Monday to press for an investigation. The group asked the prosecutor to request records from the Central Bank of Egypt and obtain information on properties the family owns.

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Mubarak's salary as president was set by law, as stipulated under the constitution. A report published by the Cairo-based Ahram Center for Strategic and International Studies said that in fiscal 2007-08, Mubarak's salary, including stipends and various allowances, amounted to 4,500 Egyptian pounds ($765). Activists say the salary is now closer to 20,000 Egyptian pounds ($3,400).


The former president "was from a very modest family and didn't inherit wealth from his father," said Mohammed al-Damati, a member of the group. "Since the constitution prevents the president from using his position to do any business, any other wealth he has outside of his salary is considered acquired illegally."


Unlike other Arab leaders, particularly those in the oil rich Gulf nations, Mubarak was far from ostentatious. Whatever wealth he and his family may have had was rarely — if ever — flaunted.


The most prominent symbol of their presumed fortune that has surfaced was a townhouse in London's exclusive Knightsbridge district, which is listed to Gamal Mubarak and where he was said to have lived while working as an investment banker in the early 1990s.


The townhouse has become a focal point for many in Egypt as foreign governments begin to either enact, or consider imposing freezes on their assets.


Frozen assets
Switzerland was the first to say it was moving to identify and freeze assets of Mubarak and his family.


The European Union said Tuesday it was considering a request from Egypt to freeze the assets of Mubarak's top aides. The EU said, however, that no such request had been submitted about Mubarak or his family.


On Thursday, the U.S. office in charge of preventing money laundering said it was ordering banks to apply greater scrutiny to accounts and transactions linked to Egypt political leaders.


Egypt has so far asked for asset freezes for one top Egyptian businessman and former ruling party official, as well as four former Cabinet ministers, according to Foreign Ministry spokesman Hossam Zaki. The request was made to "almost to all countries in the world, pre-emptively," he said. "It is mentioned that it is pre-emptive because there is no specific information of assets here or there."


Pressing the claims poses risks for Egypt's economy, with no clear consensus emerging yet on the part of anti-corruption campaigners and others on how far to push a potential case against the Mubaraks. The concerns stem from the way that many of the country's largest companies reached their size, say economists and experts.


"The businessmen you see today are the product of the regime," said John Sfakianakis, chief economist with the Riyadh, Saudi Arabia-based Banque Saudi Fransi. "Everybody who made money in Mubarak's times is part of this."


The risk the country faces in this process is that the names of well-funded and reputable companies in which investors have pumped billions of dollars could be sullied by the association with businessmen or officials who either founded them or had direct dealings with them.


These companies could be "sidelined and excluded from potential foreign investors who might see them as a liability," he said.

Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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