Court orders ex-SocGen trader to pay bank 1 million euros in damages

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[September 23, 2016]  PARIS (Reuters) - A French appeals court on Friday ordered disgraced former Societe Generale trader Jerome Kerviel to pay the bank 1 million euros ($1.12 million) in damages for multi-billion dollar losses he racked up from equity derivative trades.

Former trader Jerome Kerviel (L) and his lawyer David Koubbi (R) stand inside the courthouse in Versailles, France, September 23, 2016. REUTERS/Charles Platiau
 

The ruling by the Versailles Court of Appeals means the government could reclaim a 2.2 billion euro ($2.47 billion) tax break that SocGen benefited from, a move industry analysts have said would put its dividend at risk and hurt its capital ratios.

Kerviel was sentenced to three years in prison after being convicted by a Paris court in October 2010 of breach of trust and fraud over 4.9 billion euros of losses from equity derivatives trades in 2008.

Kerviel was initially ordered to repay the whole sum, but subsequent rulings have struck down that decision. In June, a public prosecutor said the bank "had left the door open" for Kerviel to act illegally.

Earlier on Friday, Junior Budget Minister Christian Eckert told Europe 1 radio: "We will act on the court judgments as soon as we know what they are."

A lawyer for SocGen said the bank had "no worries" over the tax deduction.

(Reporting by Jean-Baptiste Vey and Richard Lough, Editing by Dominique Vidalon and Susan Thomas)

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