Standard Chartered, the British bank, has agreed to pay New York’s
top banking regulator $340 million to settle claims that it laundered hundreds
of billions of dollars in tainted money for Iran and lied to regulators.
The agreement is a victory for Benjamin M. Lawsky and his 10-month
old agency, the New York Department of Financial Services, which took on the
bank alone in charging that it schemed for nearly a decade with Iran to hide
from regulators 60,000 transactions worth $250 billion.
The deal, however, has the potential to undercut a sweeping
settlement between the bank and federal regulators, including the Federal
Reserve and the Treasury Department. They are also investigating Standard
Chartered, a 150-year-old bank based in London with operations across the
globe.
The $340 million deal is a huge amount for a single state regulator,
and it falls near the middle of the collective settlements that federal
agencies and state prosecutors have reached with other global banks in recent
years over money laundering charges, from $619 million with ING bank in June to
$298 million with Barclays in 2010.
Standard Chartered has maintained that only $14 million of the $250
billion in transactions violated federal regulations. In a statement announcing
the settlement, Mr. Lawsky said, “The parties have agreed that the conduct at
issue involved transactions of at least $250 billion.”
The bank has not admitted any wrongdoing, and it said in a
regulatory filing Tuesday that “a formal agreement containing the detailed
terms of the settlement is expected to be concluded shortly.” Standard
Chartered “continues to engage constructively with the other relevant U.S.
authorities. The timing of any resolution will be communicated in due course,”
the filing said.
After frantic negotiations with Mr. Lawsky’s office, which
threatened to revoke the bank’s state license at a hearing scheduled for
Wednesday, Standard Chartered made a calculation to settle, in part, to resolve
the public relations headache, according to people briefed on the matter.
The agreement ends a weeklong international drama that thrust the
upstart regulator into the spotlight and pitted Mr. Lawsky against federal
authorities who thought he was overstepping his bounds and British authorities
who accused him of tarnishing the reputation of their banks.
The size of the settlement is puzzling to some federal officials,
including the Justice Department, because there is still widespread
disagreement about the extent of the bank’s wrongdoing, according to regulators
briefed on the matter.
In the weeks leading up to Mr. Lawsky’s move against the bank, the
Justice Department was on the brink of deciding not to pursue criminal charges,
after concluding that virtually all of the transactions with Iran had complied with
United States law, current and former authorities said.
Until 2008, federal law allowed foreign banks to transfer money for
Iranian clients through their American subsidiaries to another foreign
institution. Mr. Lawsky claimed the 60,000 transactions occurred from January
2001 through 2007, as United States authorities suspected Iranians of using
their banks to finance terrorism and nuclear weapons development.
Standard Chartered maintains that “99.9 percent” of the transactions
under scrutiny involved legitimate Iranian banks and corporations and that none
of the payments had anything to do with supporting terrorist activities.
Because the bank did not properly report the transactions that had been routed
through its New York branch, Mr. Lawsky’s office has said it was impossible to
know how the money was used by the Iranians.
Mr. Lawsky based his case, in large part, on claims that the bank
had violated state law by masking the identities of its Iranian clients, lying
to regulators and thwarting American efforts to detect money laundering.
Particularly difficult for the bank, people with knowledge of the
settlement talks said, were a trove of e-mails and memos detailing an elaborate
strategy devised by the bank’s executives. An e-mail from a lawyer to bank
executives in 2001 said that payment instructions for Iranian clients “should
not identify the client or the purpose of the payment,” according Mr. Lawsky’s
order.
One Iranian client was told to use “NO NAME GIVEN” in paperwork to
transfer money, to escape scrutiny and “not appear to N.Y. to have come from an
Iranian bank,” according to a 2003 e-mail from a bank official cited in the
order.
In 2006, according to the order, the bank’s chief executive for the
Americas wrote his bosses in London that the transactions with Iran had “the
potential to cause very serious or even catastrophic reputational damage to the
group.”
While violating the spirit of the law, the stripping of data that
identified Iranian clients was not typically illegal until 2008 because foreign
banks didn’t have to provide much information to their American units as long
as they had thoroughly scoured the transactions for suspicious activity.
For Standard Chartered, the settlement signals a strategic shift.
Last week, it said it “strongly rejects the position and portrayal of facts” by
the agency.
The settlement is far more than the $5 million that the bank had
been willing to pay to settle the case earlier this year, people with knowledge
of the case said.
Even so, “it’s a small number to pay for the privilege of continuing
to do billions of dollars of business through its New York branch,” said Sarah
Jane Hughes, a banking law professor at the Indiana University Maurer School of
Law.
Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo of New York lauded the Department of Financial
Services, which was formed last year through a merger of existing banking and
insurance departments. He said in a statement that the “result demonstrates the
effectiveness and leadership” of the agency “and I commend the state
Legislature for creating a modern regulator for today’s financial marketplace.”
The $340 million will go entirely to Mr. Lawsky’s department and
then into the state government’s general fund.
Over the weekend, Standard Chartered worked closely with Mr.
Lawsky’s office to hash out some kind of agreement, with the bank’s chief
executive, Peter Sands, flying to New York from London early this week.
Mr. Lawsky has been unapologetic in his approach to the bank, even
while weathering some criticism for going on the offensive against the bank on
his own rather than moving in concert with other regulators.
The bank said that in 2010 it voluntarily turned over to several
United States regulators a battery of e-mails and other internal bank documents
detailing its dealings with Iran. But Mr. Lawsky felt he couldn’t wait any
longer for federal regulators after an examination by his office revealed
persistent failures in its compliance with bank secrecy and money-laundering
laws, according to people with knowledge of the review.
As part of the settlement, the bank will install a monitor for at
least two years to vet the bank’s money-laundering controls and put in permanent
officials who will audit the bank’s internal procedures.
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