The Jerusalem Post

Qatar calls for probe of UAE bank for ‘financial warfare’

- • By DMITRY ZHDANNIKOV

LONDON (Reuters) – Qatar has asked US regulators to investigat­e the US subsidiary of the largest bank in the United Arab Emirates, accusing it of “bogus” foreign exchange deals designed to harm its economy as part of a blockade by Gulf neighbors.

The Central Bank of Qatar’s law firm has written a letter to the US Treasury asking it to investigat­e NBAD Americas, the US subsidiary of First Abu Dhabi Bank (FAB), which is majority state-owned.

In a second letter, the lawyers – Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison – asked the US Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) to investigat­e possible manipulati­on of Qatar’s currency, the riyal.

The request for an investigat­ion deepens the diplomatic crisis that erupted in June, when Saudi Arabia, Egypt, the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain imposed an economic boycott on Qatar, accusing it of supporting Islamist terrorists and Iran.

“We believe NBAD has participat­ed in an extraordin­ary and unlawful scheme to wage financial warfare against Qatar, including through the manipulati­on of Qatari currency and securities markets,” said the letter to the US Treasury dated February 26, which has been seen by Reuters.

“These actions should be halted immediatel­y, and we ask that you investigat­e whether NBAD has directly or indirectly supported the manipulati­on of Qatar’s markets, including through NBAD America’s dollar-clearing or correspond­ent banking services in the United States,” the letter said.

FAB, which was created from the merger of First Gulf Bank and National Bank of Abu Dhabi last year, did not respond to questions about details of the allegation­s.

“As the UAE’s largest bank and one of the world’s largest and safest financial institutio­ns, First Abu Dhabi Bank works closely with all of its regulators in the markets in which it operates, to sustain and uphold the high standards of governance and regulatory compliance across the group,” it said.

The UAE government did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

A Qatari government spokesman confirmed the letters had been sent to US regulators but declined to comment on their content. New York-based law firm Paul, Weiss declined to comment.

The US Treasury and CFTC did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment. QATAR’S CENTRAL bank said in December it had launched an investigat­ion into possible manipulati­on of its markets by the countries that had imposed the economic blockade.

Qatar, a small Gulf state and major gas exporter, denies the allegation­s that it has financed terrorism and says the blockade is an attempt to punish Doha for independen­t policies.

The UAE and Saudi Arabia have refused to soften their demands – which include Qatar cutting ties with Iran and shutting down state-funded broadcaste­r Al Jazeera.

Qatar, which is also home to the largest US military base in the region, has repeatedly reached out to Washington to mediate in the crisis but the attempts have failed so far.

Last week, US President Donald Trump, who has previously accused Qatar of sponsoring terrorism, sacked Rex Tillerson from his position as US secretary of state. Tillerson had publicly defended Qatar and pressured Trump to moderate his stance.

Tillerson’s sacking came ahead of a new diplomatic push to help mediate the dispute among America’s Gulf allies.

The US is due to host a Gulf Cooperatio­n Council summit later this year. Before that, Saudi Crown Prince Muhammad bin Salman, Abu Dhabi Crown Prince Sheikh Muhammad bin Zayed al Nahyan and Qatari Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad al Thani are all due in Washington for separate state visits.

The Qatari central bank has previously accused unnamed banks of trying to manipulate the riyal by trading it between themselves offshore at artificial­ly weak levels – to create an illusion Qatar’s economy was crumbling.

The riyal has been pegged to the US dollar at a rate of 3.64 for more than a decade, but in the initial months of the boycott it traded as low as 3.8950 offshore.

In the letter to the US Treasury, Qatar’s lawyers said they suspected NBAD was driving the riyal lower during illiquid periods, such as Islam’s Eid al-Adha holidays last year, “reinforcin­g the manufactur­ed narrative that Qatar’s currency was increasing­ly volatile and its economy was too unstable for investment.”

“NBAD’s quotes – and those of other banks involved in the manipulati­on – were likely all bogus,” the letter said, without naming the banks and referring to foreign exchange quotes posted by NBAD.

“There is evidence that at the same time NBAD was providing quotes with great frequency and at rates lower than the official rate of 3.64, its traders were unwilling to actually transact at those prices,” the letter said.

It cited one example on November 22, 2017. In that incident, a counter-party reached out to NBAD to execute a deal and was told by a representa­tive of NBAD that it had no riyal to trade.

FAB declined to comment when asked about the specific allegation.

The letter did not name the counter-party but said the central bank’s lawyers were ready to provide regulators with a recorded chat between the two sides, on a confidenti­al basis. It said NBAD stopped quoting the riyal in December after Qatar vowed to investigat­e.

The central bank also pledged on November 23 to satisfy any market demand for dollars and the riyal has since rebounded in offshore transactio­ns to trade close to its peg.

Many bankers in the region say that with more than $300 billion in central bank reserves and sovereign wealth fund assets, Qatar has more than enough financial firepower to block any attack on its currency.

 ?? (Naseem Zeitoon/Reuters) ?? THE QATAR Central Bank in Doha.
(Naseem Zeitoon/Reuters) THE QATAR Central Bank in Doha.

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