Tough penalty for JPMorgan over Madoff scandal
JPMorgan Chase has agreed to pay $US2.6 billion ($2.9
billion) to the US government and Bernard Madoff victims to settle
allegations that the bank failed to tell authorities about its
suspicions of fraud at Madoff's fund.
Even as the bank cut its exposure to Madoff's fund to
minimise its losses in what ended up being a $US17.3 billion Ponzi
scheme, JPMorgan never shared its doubts with US authorities, government
prosecutors said.
"The bank connected the dots when it mattered to its own
profit but was not so diligent when it came to its legal obligations,"
Manhattan U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara said at a press conference.
"In part because of that failure, for decades, Bernie Madoff
was able to launder billions of dollars in Ponzi proceeds essentially
through a single set of accounts at JPMorgan," Bharara added.
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The bank's $US1.7 billion settlement with the Department of
Justice, part of the larger deal announced Tuesday, is the largest
forfeiture a bank has ever had to pay to resolve anti-money laundering
violations. The deal does not include charges against individuals.
The settlement is only the latest of JPMorgan's legal
difficulties. In November, the bank agreed to a $US13 billion settlement
with the US government over the bank's mortgage bonds.
JPMorgan still faces at least eight other government probes,
covering everything from its hiring practices in China to whether it
manipulated the Libor benchmark interest rate.
These are big payouts, even to a bank whose profit has topped
$US20 billion a year. The Madoff settlement underscores how being the
largest US bank can be a hindrance as well as a benefit to JPMorgan.
Like its Wall Street rivals, JPMorgan a colossus in which internal
communication is often imperfect.
"We recognise we could have done a better job pulling
together various pieces of information and concerns about Madoff from
different parts of the bank over time," JPMorgan spokesman Joe
Evangelisti said in an email. The bank filed a notice of suspicious
activity with regulators in London in October 2008, but not in the
United States, he acknowledged.
He added: "We do not believe that any JPMorgan Chase employee knowingly assisted Madoff's Ponzi scheme."
The Department of Justice agreed to a two-year deferred
prosecution agreement with the bank as part of its settlement. Tuesday's
deal also settles probes by multiple bank regulators into failures in
JPMorgan's anti-money laundering policies. The bank agreed to improve
its controls.
Experts viewed the $US1.7 billion forfeiture as a tough
penalty for JPMorgan, but several questioned why no individuals faced
charges over the bank's failure to alert authorities for more than a
decade to concerns about Madoff.
"Despite those egregious facts, it appears that no person, no
bank official, no bank employee, not a single one, is going to be held
personally accountable for the scandal," said former Treasury Department
official Jimmy Gurule, now a professor at Notre Dame University's law
school.
JPMorgan said Tuesday afternoon that the tab for the
settlements will reduce fourth-quarter results by about $US850 million,
after the bank had already set aside money to cover most of the
expenses. In the third quarter, the bank set aside another $7.2 billion
to cover expected legal losses, bringing the total funds it had
stockpiled for settlements to $23 billion. The settlement payments
announced on Tuesday are not tax-deductible, the company said.
The company had been expected to make about $US5.13 billion
in the quarter, according to analysts' estimates compiled by Thomson
Reuters. Shares of JPMorgan fell 1.3 per cent to $US58.26 on Tuesday.
The settlement also includes a $US350 million penalty from
the US Office of the Comptroller of the Currency. In private litigation,
the bank will pay $US218 million to settle the class action suit and
$US325 million to settle a US bankruptcy trustee's suit. The Department
of Justice portion of the payout will go to Madoff's victims.
"The bank was clearly willfully blind, I think, to detecting
and reporting suspicious transactions to the Treasury Department,"
Gurule said.
Even if the transactions had been reported, it is not clear
if Madoff would have been shut down. Analyst Harry Markopolos told the
Securities and Exchange Commission multiple times about his suspicions
about Madoff's consistently good returns, and was ignored by the agency.
Madoff was a quiet force for years on Wall Street, serving at
one time as the chairman of the Nasdaq Stock Market. Through his
Bernard L. Madoff Investment Securities LLC hedge fund, he operated the
largest Ponzi scheme that has ever been uncovered. It collapsed in
December 2008 after he told senior employees at his firm "it's all just
one big lie" and turned himself in to the Federal Bureau of
Investigation.
Madoff pleaded guilty in 2009 of defrauding thousands of
investors and is serving a 150-year prison sentence. Investors lost
$US17.3 billion in principal, the bankruptcy court trustee has said.
From 1986 until his arrest in 2008, Madoff kept an account at
JPMorgan Chase, or banks it had bought, according to the statement of
facts the bank agreed to disclose as part of its settlement with the
Justice Department.
The account at the bank received deposits and transfers of
about $US150 billion, almost exclusively from investors in Madoff
Securities, yet the money was not used to buy securities as Madoff had
promised, according to the statement.
According to the statement, in the 1990's Madoff routinely
transferred money between two accounts, one held at an undisclosed bank
and one at JPMorgan held by Norman Levy, one of its most important
private banking clients. Levy is described only as a "private bank
client" in the government's statement of facts, but he is named in the
lawsuit filed against JPMorgan by the Madoff bankruptcy trustee Irving
Picard, according to a source familiar with an unredacted copy of the
lawsuit.
Levy died in 2005 at the age of 93.
According to the statement of facts, Levy and Madoff wrote
checks back and forth to each other each day to take advantage of normal
delays in the check-clearing process and make it seem as though the
accounts had more money than they did.
JPMorgan paid interest on the inflated amount in Levy's
account and continued dealing with Madoff even after the other bank
notified it of the scheme, according to the statement.
An employee of JPMorgan's private bank said in a 1994 memo
that "the daily cost associated" with Madoff's withdrawals was
"outrageous." But when the employee tried to tell Levy about the scheme,
Levy responded: "If Bernie is using the float, it is fine with me; he
makes a lot of money for my account."
While people in some parts of JPMorgan failed to take their
suspicions about Madoff's results to people in other parts of the giant
company and the US government, they moved quickly enough to withdraw
money from Madoff-related entities and save the company some $US200
million right before Madoff was arrested, according to the statement of
facts.
In the first two weeks of October 2008, JPMorgan's "Equity
Exotics Desk" sought to reduce its exposure to hedge funds following the
collapse of Lehman Brothers and JPMorgan's earlier takeover of Bear
Stearns. On October 16, 2008, an analyst in Equity Exotics assigned to
scrutinize investments wrote a long email compiling suspicions about
Madoff, including his "lack of transparency," use of small and unknown
accounting firms and resistance "to provide meaningful disclosure" on
his exceptionally good returns, according to the statement of facts.
A JPMorgan official in London reviewed the analyst's memo and
filed a suspicious activity report with the UK Serious Organised Crime
Agency saying Madoff's consistently superior performance seemed "to
appear too good to be true - meaning that it probably is."
The report said JPMorgan was redeeming 300 million euros from
two Madoff feeder funds out of a total of 350 million euros. JPMorgan
took additional steps involving structured products linked to Madoff
funds to limit possible losses. Without these steps, JPMorgan would have
lost $US250 million instead of the $US40 million loss it booked,
according to the statement of facts.
If JPMorgan's deferred prosecution agreement with prosecutors
runs a normal course, Bharara will seek to dismiss the criminal charges
against the bank at the end of the two-year period. The settlement does
not include detailed descriptions of how JPMorgan is expected to
improve its anti-money laundering efforts.
Reuters