Swiss find serious shortcomings at
JPMorgan in 1MDB case
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[December 21, 2017]
By Brenna Hughes Neghaiwi
ZURICH (Reuters) - Swiss financial watchdog
FINMA said on Thursday the Swiss subsidiary of U.S. bank JPMorgan
<JPM.N> had committed serious anti-money laundering breaches in relation
to Malaysian sovereign wealth fund 1MDB.
The case adds to the political storm that has raged for more than two
years over the scandal at 1Malaysia Development Berhad (1MDB), the focus
of money-laundering investigations in at least six countries including
Singapore, Switzerland and the United States.
Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak, who chaired 1MDB's advisory board,
has denied any wrongdoing.
The case has already swept up Swiss private banks Edmond de Rotschild,
BSI and Falcon; the international arm of the British queen's bank
Coutts, and big banks UBS <UBSG.S> and Credit Suisse <CSGN.S>.
"Enforcement proceedings conducted by FINMA between May 2016 and June
2017 uncovered serious shortcomings in the anti-money laundering
controls of J.P. Morgan (Switzerland) Ltd in connection with business
relationships and transactions associated with the allegedly corrupt
Malaysian sovereign wealth fund 1MDB," FINMA said in a statement.
The ruling, which imposed a monitor on the bank but did not involve any
monetary penalties or business restrictions, had not been appealed and
was final, FINMA said.
The bank had failed to identify heightened risks in some instances,
FINMA said, while in others it failed to adequately manage risks after
identifying clients as politically exposed persons requiring special
scrutiny.
"The bank failed in particular to identify the money-laundering risks
relating to cash flows between business accounts and personal accounts,"
the supervisor said.
"In one case, it credited hundreds of millions of U.S. dollars from the
1MDB sovereign wealth fund, allegedly earmarked for the purchase of a
company, to the personal account of an individual with close ties to a
1MDB business partner."
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Foliage partly covers a 1 Malaysia Development Berhad (1MDB)
billboard at the funds flagship Tun Razak Exchange development in
Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, July 3, 2015.REUTERS/Olivia Harris
Part of that money was then transferred to a business account associated
with the person, FINMA said, without the bank having questioned the
purpose or procedure behind the transactions or the substantial sum that
stayed in the private account.
JPMorgan said the findings arose from activities which had since been
tightened.
"The resolution announced by FINMA relates to matters that took
place many years ago in the Swiss private bank, and since that time
we have increased training, added staff and made improvements in
monitoring and surveillance," the bank said.
A FINMA-appointed monitor would be carrying out an on-site review of
the "appropriateness and functioning" of the bank's controls, the
Bern-based agency said.
FINMA said one of a total of seven enforcement proceedings it had
brought against financial groups in relation to 1MDB remained open.
It did not name the final bank involved.
(Reporting by Brenna Hughes Neghaiwi; Editing by Michael Shields)
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