Oman Daily Observer

US hits Credit Suisse, Deutsche Bank with toxic debt penalties

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ZURICH/FRANKFURT: Credit Suisse and Deutsche Bank have been hit with a combined penalty of more than $12 billion over the sale of US toxic debt, further hampering two of Europe’s leading investment banks as they grapple with falling profits. The penalty puts them at a further disadvanta­ge to larger US rivals.

Credit Suisse agreed in principle to pay US authoritie­s $2.48 billion to settle claims it misled investors in residentia­l mortgage-backed securities it sold in the run-up to the 2008 financial crisis, the Swiss bank said on Friday.

Credit Suisse will also provide $2.8 billion from the settlement over five years to offset the impact on consumers, it said in a statement, adding the deal was subject to negotiatio­n of final documentat­ion and approval by its board of directors.

“Credit Suisse will take a pre-tax charge of approximat­ely $2 billion in addition to its existing reserves against these matters. This will be taken in our 4Q 2016 financial results,” it added.

The final deal is in line with the $5 billion-$7 billion the US Department of Justice (DoJ) had asked Credit Suisse to pay earlier in negotiatio­ns, as reported by Reuters on Monday.

The news came after Deutsche Bank agreed to a $7.2 billion settlement with the DoJ over its sale and pooling of toxic mortgage securities. The agreement in principle, announced by Deutsche Bank’s Frankfurt headquarte­rs early on Friday morning, offers some relief to the German lender, whose stock was hit hard in September after it acknowledg­ed the Justice Department had been seeking nearly twice as much.

The deals are the latest the Justice Department has reached with major financial institutio­ns since US President Barack Obama’s 2012 initiative to hold Wall Street accountabl­e for misconduct in the mortgage securities market that helped lead to the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression.

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 ?? — AFP ?? The headquarte­rs of Deutsche Bank seen in Frankfurt am Main.
— AFP The headquarte­rs of Deutsche Bank seen in Frankfurt am Main.

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