The Star Malaysia - StarBiz

The Goldman lunch that set the scene for 1MDB probe

- By ANDREA TAN

IN a private dining room at Singapore’s Taste Paradise restaurant, over a meal of abalone and suckling pig, two Goldman Sachs Group Inc bankers were explaining a US$1.75bil bond offering to six executives of a Swiss bank.

It was early 2012, and joining Goldman bankers Roger Ng and Tim Leissner that day were a young Malaysian financier named Low Taek Jho and an official from state investment fund 1Malaysia Developmen­t Bhd, known as 1MDB, which had hired the New York bank to underwrite the bond sale.

Now, people familiar with the matter say, investigat­ors from Singapore to the United States are looking more closely at the roles of Ng and Leissner, who’ve both left Goldman.

And they’re asking what happened in that private dining room named after the first emperor of a unified China, Qin Shi Huang.

In particular, they’re examining how US$577mil in proceeds from a bond sale that May ended up a day later in an account at BSI SA in Switzerlan­d – the same bank whose executives were at the Taste Paradise.

The lunch, previously unreported, brought together the key parties in what has become the biggest financial scandal in Malaysia’s history, involving the alleged misappropr­iation of US$4.5bil of 1MDB funds.

It was the culminatio­n of numerous conversati­ons as BSI bankers and compliance officials sought clarity on the deal. The BSI account belonged to a British Virgin Islands entity known as Aabar Investment­s PJS Ltd, which US court documents say was used to siphon off about US$1.4bil from two 2012 bond sales, including the offering discussed at the lunch.

The man who led BSI bank into the abyss

Leissner, Goldman’s former chairman of South-East Asia and lead banker for three 1MDB bond sales, is now barred from the world of finance in Singapore and the United States.

Prosecutor­s in Malaysia and Singapore are turning their attention to Ng, Leissner’s junior, who introduced several parties central to the scandal, the people said. Malaysian authoritie­s are said to be preparing a warrant for Ng’s arrest, people familiar with the matter said earlier this month.

Ng couldn’t be reached for comment. A lawyer for Leissner, Marc Harris, declined to comment, as did Edward Naylor, a Hong Kong-based spokesman for Goldman Sachs, and an official at EFG Internatio­nal AG, which acquired BSI in 2016. A representa­tive for Low didn’t reply to emails.

Recouping fees

The 1MDB investigat­ion has quickened since Malaysian Prime Minister Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad returned to power in May. Dr Mahathir has called former premier Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak, who set up the fund in 2009, a thief and made resolving the case one of his priorities.

Several arrest warrants – including one for Low, described by prosecutor­s as a key figure in the plot – have already been issued.

Dr Mahathir said in a June 22 Bloomberg Television interview that Malaysia is also seeking to recoup some of the almost US$600mil in fees Goldman made from the three deals, which were arranged by the bank’s London-based unit.

“What we earned from the debt transac- tions reflected the risks we assumed at the time, specifical­ly movement in credit spreads tied to the specific bonds, hedging costs and underlying market conditions,” Naylor, the Goldman spokesman, said last week in response to Dr Mahathir’s comments.

Najib has repeatedly denied wrongdoing and called the probe “political revenge.”

Genteel banker

Ng, a well-connected Malaysian banker, joined Goldman in 2005 from Deutsche Bank AG, where he won mandates for several bond deals.

He provided an introducti­on to lawmakers in the state of Terengganu, which in 2009 hired Goldman to advise it on the creation of the Terengganu Investment Authority (TIA), the people said.

Ng was promoted that year.

At TIA, which eventually became 1MDB, Ng crossed paths with Low, a Malaysian dealmaker and adviser to the fund.

As Goldman won deals from 1MDB, Ng and Leissner forged a friendship, which extended to their wives, according to the people.

Investigat­ors are now also looking at a transfer shortly after the May 2012 bond sale of US$17.5mil to Ng’s wife, Malaysian lawyer Lim Hwee Bin, from Leissner’s former wife Judy Chan, who runs a vineyard in China, the people said.

Lim and Chan didn’t reply to emails and phone calls.

Ng is described by those who know him as to managing director the antithesis of a Wall Street investment banker – genteel, valuing personal ties and averse to asking hard questions.

He was content letting his boss champion the 1MDB deals. Leissner, who arrived late at the 2012 lunch and left early to catch a flight, made most of the presentati­on, leaving Ng and Low to fill in the gaps, according to the people familiar with the meeting.

While Ng played an important role facilitati­ng the US$1.75bil bond deal, dubbed Project Magnolia, he wasn’t involved in the two other bonds Goldman underwrote for 1MDB, the people said.

Ng left the bank in 2014, a few months before the missing 1MDB funds became public.

Now managing director for Asia at energy-drinks company Celsius Holdings Inc, where Leissner and his current wife Kimora Lee are both investors, Ng has been barred from travelling by the Malaysian AntiCorrup­tion Commission, the people said.

He and his wife live in a gated community in Damansara Heights in Kuala Lumpur, where houses sell for RM5mil (US$1.2mil) to RM25mil.

Ng joined Boca Raton, Florida-based Celsius in 2016, the same year Leissner became co-chairman of the board.

Leissner resigned in May 2017, though he remains one of Celsius’ largest shareholde­rs. Hong Kong billionair­e Li Ka-shing and Russell Simmons, the former husband of Leissner’s current wife, are also investors.

Megan Bell, a spokeswoma­n for declined to comment. — Bloomberg Celsius,

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