Wednesday, November 4, 2015

Deutsche Bank to pay US$258m for violating US sanctions

Deutsche Bank to pay US$258m for violating US sanctions

[WASHINGTON] German banking giant Deutsche Bank will pay US$258 million in fines for doing business with US-sanctioned entities and countries like Iran and Syria, US regulators said on Wednesday.
"The firm did not have sufficient policies and procedures to ensure that activities conducted at its offices outside of the United States complied with US sanctions laws," said the Federal Reserve, which announced the penalties along with the New York State Department of Financial Services.
Deutsche Bank will pay US$200 million to the NYDFS and US$58 million to the Federal Reserve.
In addition, Germany's largest bank will install an independent monitor and fire six employees who were involved in the sanctions-evasion scheme, and bar three other employees from any work involving the company's US operations.
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From at least 1999 through 2006, Deutsche Bank disguised 27,200 dollar-clearing transactions valued at more than US$10.86 billion to skirt US sanctions, the authorities said.
The customers involved in the transactions included Iranian, Libyan, Myanmar, Syrian and Sudanese entities.
Deutsche Bank decided to pursue a "lucrative" US dollar business for sanctioned customers, the NYDFS said.
To disguise the transactions, the bank altered the information included on the payment message, a method known as wire stripping, before the message was passed to the correspondent clearing bank in the US.
Deutsche Bank told sanctioned customers it was crucial to note "Do not mention our bank's name" in the message for payments that may involve the US to avoid raising a red flag.
"Otherwise it is possible that the (payment) instruction would be sent immediately to the USA with your full details," the bank said, according to the New York regulator.
Another bank instruction said: "Important: no Iranian names to be mentioned when making payment to New York." Deutsche Bank also concealed the true nature of the transactions by splitting an incoming payment message into two: one that included all the details, sent to the beneficiary's bank, and a second that excluded details about the underlying parties to the transaction, sent to Deutsche Bank New York or another clearing bank in the US.
"The special processing that the Bank used to handle sanctioned payments was anything but business as usual; it required manual intervention to identify and process the payments that needed 'repair' so as to avoid triggering any sanctions-related suspicions in the US," the NYDFS said.
Anthony Albanese, acting chief of NYDFS, said the US authorities were "pleased" that Deutsche Bank had worked with them to resolve the matter and take action against employees who engaged in the misconduct.
"To truly deter future wrongdoing, it is important to focus not just on corporate accountability, but also individual accountability," he said.
Deutsche Bank welcomed the closure of the case.
"The conduct ceased several years ago, and since then we have terminated all business with parties from the countries involved," said Renee Calabro, a spokesman for Deutsche Bank New York, in an emailed statement.
The penalties announced Wednesday are dwarfed by the fines for sanctions violations paid by French banks BNP Paribas and Credit Agricole, at US$8.9 billion and US$787 million, respectively.
The NYDFS, which has been aggressive in the sanctions cases and other large enforcement cases involving foreign banks, is also far along in discussions with Deutsche Bank on investigations into manipulating the foreign exchange market and facilitating money laundering in Russia, a person familiar with the matter told AFP on Tuesday.
Deutsche Bank is also among about two dozen large banks being sued for allegedly rigging the US Treasury bond market.
The German bank was fined a record US$2.5 billion in May for its involvement in rigging interest rates.
AFP

French FN founder Le Pen's home searched in tax fraud probe: legal sources

French FN founder Le Pen's home searched in tax fraud probe: legal sources

[PARIS] French police searched the manor house and offices of far-right National Front (FN) founder Jean-Marie Le Pen on Wednesday as part of investigations into suspected tax fraud, judicial sources told AFP.
Financial prosecutors opened a preliminary probe in June over suspicions Le Pen had stashed money abroad and failed to declare his assets, which he is required to do as a member of the European Parliament, a source said.
They then filed a formal complaint on September 24, naming both Le Pen and his wife Jany, the source added.
Another complaint has been lodged against Le Pen's personal assistant, Gerald Gerin, who is suspected of acting as a front for a secret bank account, it said.
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Le Pen, 87, was expelled on August 20 from the party he founded after a bustup with his daughter Marine over remarks he made about the Holocaust.
Investigators searched Le Pen's home in La Celle-Saint-Cloud in the upmarket western Paris suburbs, his former home in nearby Rueil-Malmaison and his offices in Saint-Cloud, as well as Gerin's home.
Le Pen was abroad on holiday at the time of the operation.
He branded the search as an "unjustified act of judicial violence." His attorney, Frederic Joachim, said the operation was "done to sully a leading politician... they want to kill a man off. It's tantamount to torture."
Gerin told AFP that the search of his house lasted "between four and five hours" and the investigators took away "minor stuff" and his computer. "I feel violated," he said.
The online investigative news site Mediapart reported late April that Tracfin, a specialist anti-laundering unit at the finance ministry, was probing a trust fund in Geneva whose executor was Le Pen's aide.
The fund was worth 2.2 million euros (S$3.4 million), 1.7 million euros of which were in gold bullion and coins, it said.
Tracfin was also interested in a trust fund based in the British Virgin Islands and managed in Geneva for Le Pen's assistant, a source close to the investigation told AFP.
That account was closed in 2014 and the funds transferred to a bank in the Bahamas.
"I once again deny in any way breaking the law," Le Pen said Wednesday.
In 2013, he acknowledged he had a bank account in Switzerland, which he said had been opened in 1981 in order to finance a record company that he had at the time.
"I have been subject to minute, even inquisitorial, attention by tax authorities for dozens of years." "As always, whether it's under a left or right government, it seems the electoral calendar demands these legal and if possible media trials," he added.
AFP

Pakistan factory collapse kills 18, dozens trapped

Pakistan factory collapse kills 18, dozens trapped

[LAHORE] At least 18 people were killed and 51 injured when the roof of a factory collapsed near the eastern Pakistani city of Lahore Wednesday, officials said, with around a hundred more still trapped.
The incident comes less than two weeks after a powerful 7.5-magnitude earthquake ripped across Afghanistan and Pakistan, killing nearly 390 people, levelling thousands of homes, and causing structural damage to major buildings.
"We have recovered 18 dead bodies and more than 70 people alive, 51 of them are injured and have been taken to hospitals," said Mohammad Usman, the top administration official in Lahore who was coordinating the response to the disaster in the city, the capital of Punjab province.
"Rescue work is ongoing," he said as teams of rescuers, police and soldiers worked through the night under lights searching for survivors beneath the rubble of the four-storey factory.
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The army said it was deploying specialist search teams and engineers to help the rescue effort.
The collapse occurred at a Rajput Polyester polythene bag factory in the Sundar industrial estate around 45km south-west of the city centre.
Jam Sajjad Hussain, a spokesman for the rescue services, said 100 people were still trapped several hours after the roof collapsed, while ambulances were taking the injured to hospital.
"All our rescue workers are on site but it is such a big incident that we have called rescue workers from other nearby districts," he added.
Punjab chief minister Shahbaz Sharif said it was possible the building had been damaged after the October 26 earthquake.
"I have heard about the earthquake affecting the building, but according to labourers the owner continued to build an extension," he told reporters.
Three cranes, a bulldozer and more than 40 emergency rescue vehicles were working at the site, a rescue official said.
But provincial spokesman Zaeem Qadri told reporters that progress was slow because the factory was at the end of a narrow lane making it difficult for excavators to reach the site.
He added that an emergency has been declared at all local hospitals.
Chief doctor Zia Ullah of Jinnah Hospital where some injured have been taken said most of the victims were young workers, with many suffering head injuries and fractured limbs.
Pakistan has a poor safety record in the construction and maintenance of buildings.
Last year, a mosque collapsed in the same city, killing at least 24 people.
More than 200 people lost their lives to collapsed roofs following torrential rainfall and flooding in 2014.
In 2012, more than 255 workers were killed when a fire tore through a clothing factory in Karachi, one of the deadliest industrial accidents in Pakistani history.
A judicial probe into the blaze was damning, pointing to a lack of emergency exits, poor safety training of workers, the packing in of machinery and the failure of government inspectors to spot any of these faults.
A murder case was registered against the factory owners, but it has never come to trial.
AFP

US: Wall Street ends down after energy slide, Yellen comments

US: Wall Street ends down after energy slide, Yellen comments


[NEW YORK] US stocks edged lower on Wednesday, retracing recent gains along with energy shares, while comments by Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen pointing to a possible interest rate hike in December added to investor caution.
S&P energy, down 1.0 per cent, led the day's decline as US crude oil closed down 3.3 per cent. The fall snapped a run of five straight days of gains in the energy index.
Stocks added to losses after comments by Ms Yellen, who told Congress the Fed expects the economy to continue to grow at a pace that returns inflation to policy-makers' target and that"if the incoming information supports that expectation ... December would be a live possibility" for a rate increase.
Still, S&P utilities, which tend to fall in a higher-rate environment, were up 0.4 per cent, making it the day's best-performing sector.

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The market is consolidating after a big rally, said Michael O'Rourke, chief market strategist at JonesTrading in Greenwich, Connecticut. "The gains have been strong over the past five weeks, and we're due for more of a breather here," he said.
The Dow Jones industrial average fell 50.57 points, or 0.28 per cent, to 17,867.58; the S&P 500 lost 7.48 points, or 0.35 per cent, to 2,102.31; and the Nasdaq Composite dropped 2.65 points, or 0.05 per cent, to 5,142.48.
On Friday, Wall Street registered its strongest monthly performance in four years and posted a fifth straight week of gains.
Stocks rallied after the Fed's statement last week, when it signaled a December rate hike was still on the table, yet the ongoing debate over when the Fed will make its move has added to investor uncertainty. "It's really that uncertainty - investors don't know whether to applaud a rate hike or to fear it," said Bruce Zaro, chief technical strategist at Bolton Global Asset Management in Boston.
A raft of data on Wednesday, including a report showing U.S. private employers maintained a steady pace of hiring in October, suggested the economy was strong enough to support ending an era of near-zero interest rates.
Time Warner, down 6.6 per cent at US$72.20, weighed on the S&P 500 the most after the company said ratings for its"key" domestic entertainment networks have dropped more than anticipated. Shares of Twenty-First Century Fox Inc dropped 5.2 per cent to US$29.65 after it reported lower-than-expected quarterly revenue.
Other media stocks, such as Walt Disney Co, also fell.
US health insurers also slid, with UnitedHealth down 2.6 per cent at US$114.64, the biggest drag on the Dow after WellCare Health Plans Inc announced that its new Iowa Medicaid contract will be net unprofitable over its three-year contract life. WellCare shares dropped 9.1 per cent to US$81.11.
After the bell, shares of Facebook hit an all-time high of US$109.34 following its earnings report, before paring gains to about 4 percent at US$108.00. Whole Foods Market shares dropped 7.2 per cent to US$28.55, also after its results.
Declining issues outnumbered advancing ones on the NYSE by 1,849 to 1,214, while on the Nasdaq, 1,398 issues fell and 1,362 advanced. The S&P 500 posted 16 new 52-week highs and one new low; the Nasdaq recorded 69 new highs and 43 new lows.
About 7.4 billion shares changed hands on US exchanges, compared with the 7.0 billion daily average for the past 20 trading days, according to Thomson Reuters data.
REUTERS

Bomb on Russian plane is 'highly possible scenario': US official

Bomb on Russian plane is 'highly possible scenario': US official

[WASHINGTON] It is "highly possible" that the Russian airliner that crashed in Egypt was brought down by a bomb, a US official said Wednesday.
"A bomb is a highly possible scenario," the official told AFP, four days after the Airbus crashed in the Sinai, killing all 224 people on board.
"It would be something that ISIL would want to do," he added, using an alternate acronym for the Islamic State group.
But the official cautioned: "I am not saying it's a definitive statement of what happened." The Egypt branch of IS has said it was responsible for downing the plane but provided no details, prompting skepticism about the claim.
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If confirmed, it would be the first ever Islamic State bomb attack on a passenger plane.
Britain suspended flights from the Red Sea resort of Sharm el-Sheikh on Wednesday, saying it was concerned the airliner may have been downed by a bomb.
US media reported that the latest American intelligence suggested - though it was not yet established - that IS or one of its affiliates downed the plane with a bomb.
One official quoted by CNN said: "There is a definite feeling it was an explosive device planted in luggage or somewhere on the plane." The assessment was reached by looking at intelligence gathered before and after the plane crashed while travelling from Egypt to Russia, the official told CNN.
Washington did not have evidence of a specific threat prior to the crash. But prior to the crash "there had been additional activity in Sinai that had caught our attention," the official said.
AFP

CapitaLand-Norges joint venture out of Asia Square deal - for now

CapitaLand-Norges joint venture out of Asia Square deal - for now

BlackRock said to be in talks with ARA-led group to buy Tower 1 in what could be Singapore's biggest office transaction

By
Singapore
NEGOTIATIONS are off "for now" between BlackRock and a consortium that includes CapitaLand and Norges Bank Investment Management (NBIM) on the sale of Asia Square Tower 1 in what could be the biggest office transaction in Singapore.
NBIM manages Norway's sovereign wealth fund, while BlackRock is the world's largest asset manager.
Word in the market is that BlackRock has been talking to another party that was shortlisted following the close of an expression of interest exercise for the sale of the tower in August. The potential buyer is believed to be a consortium being stitched together by ARA Asset Management that includes South Korean SWF Korea Investment Corporation (KIC) and the California Public Employees' Retirement System (Calpers). Attempts to reach ARA for a comment were unsuccessful by press time.
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BlackRock may also pursue discussions with other bidders that have expressed interest in the asset - including Singapore's Keppel Land; a tie-up between Abu Dhabi Investment Authority and Lend Lease; and China's Ping An Insurance (Group).
Last month, CapitaLand confirmed that together with other parties, it was in negotiations with the vendor of Asia Square Tower 1 for a potential deal.
In an announcement on the Singapore Exchange on Wednesday morning, CapitaLand said the parties have "for now ceased negotiations regarding the potential acquisition.
"CapitaLand will continue to explore opportunities which fit in the group's strategy and the terms of which allow the group to generate the required returns."
Bloomberg had earlier reported that a consortium of Norway's sovereign wealth fund and CapitaLand had been chosen as the preferred bidder.
BT understands that BlackRock had shortlisted two parties following the EOI - with the CapitaLand-NBIM consortium as its top choice, followed by the ARA-arranged group that includes KIC and Calpers.
The Asia Square Tower deal is seen as potentially the biggest office deal in Singapore.
When news broke in June that the 43-storey tower was on the market, the price tag was at least S$4 billion or around S$3,200 per square foot on net lettable area. Subsequent reports put the price at around S$3.5 billion or S$2,800 psf; even at this price, observers reckon that the deal would have included some income support given weakening office rents and the vacancy in the tower - especially when Google moves to Mapletree Business City (II) in the Pasir Panjang area some time next year.
The BlackRock fund that owns Asia Square Tower 1 is said to expire in mid-2017. "Whatever income guarantee made by the vendor will be only till then. Once the fund life ends, no one would be held accountable," a property agent suggested to BT.
Bloomberg said in a report on Wednesday that CapitaLand pulled out of negotiations after disagreeing over terms of the deal, according to a person familiar with the matter, who asked not to be identified because the process is private.
BT understands CapitaLand was attempting to raise a new fund to buy the Asia Square property. It was to have put in some of its own money and secured NBIM as a cornerstone investor; at the same time CapitaLand was also looking for other investors in the fund although this may be challenging in the current climate.
Still, suggested a market watcher, the wording of CapitaLand's statement on Wednesday suggests the group may not be completely out of the picture for Asia Square; it could be just that negotiations have halted for now.
When contacted on the reasons for this outcome, a CapitaLand spokeswoman said the group is "unable to comment any further" beyond its statement.
BlackRock Real Estate's head of Asia-Pacific John Saunders said in a statement issued on Wednesday that negotiations with potential buyers of the Asia Square asset continue.
"While we are not in a position to comment on the details, we are pleased to have received significant global interest in this high-quality asset and are currently working to achieve the best outcome for our investors."
He added: "Asia Square is a trophy grade-A office building in Singapore, often considered as one of Asia's best such developments . . ."
Besides Google, other tenants in Tower 1 of the development include Citi and Julius Baer.
Savills Singapore expects the average monthly rental value for its AAA office basket to ease 11.8 per cent for the whole of this year to S$11.94 per square foot after rising 24.9 per cent last year. Rents are expected to decline further next year, marked by the start of a big wave of office completions. Demand growth, on the other hand, is expected to remain lacklustre.
"Tenants are cognisant they have the upper hand in negotiations," said Savills Singapore research head Alan Cheong. "CBD Grade A office dynamics are undergoing an epochal change with major space users such as global banks reducing their real estate footprint and tech companies moving to business parks in the suburbs. This comes at a time when Singapore office supply is expected to balloon in the coming years," he added.
Based on Savills' estimates, the net absorption of CBD Grade A offices on the island was only about 240,400 sq ft in Q3 2015, less than half of the 499,800 sq ft achieved in the preceding quarter. Global economic uncertainties have continued to weaken sentiment in the local business community. "This has made companies hesitant to relocate or expand as cost saving and revenue generation have become priorities," Savills said.

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