New Straits Times

GOLDMAN COMPENSATI­ON NOT ENOUGH, SAYS DR M

RM1 billion ‘little’ compared with ‘huge killing’ bank made, says Dr M

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GOLDMAN Sachs Group Inc offered Malaysia RM1 billion as compensati­on for the role it played in raising funds for 1Malaysia Developmen­t Bhd (1MDB) that were later allegedly misappropr­iated, Prime Minister Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad said, calling the amount “little” compared with the “huge killing” that the bank made.

A reasonable sum would amount to the commission that Goldman received in raising US$6.5 billion (RM27 billion) of bonds for 1MDB, Dr Mahathir said at the Bloomberg Asean Business Summit here on Friday. Goldman earned about US$593 million for its work on the 1MDB debt sales, which exceeded what banks typically make from government deals.

“They did offer some little compensati­on, it’s not enough,” Dr Mahathir said in an interview with Bloomberg Television’s Haslinda Amin. “We wanted to settle in-house if possible, but it seems that they are not willing to offer a reasonable sum of money.”

Goldman arranged the sales for 1MDB in 2012 and 2013. The bank’s revenue from the deals amounted to 7.7 per cent of the face value of the securities. Underwrite­rs collected average fees of 1.32 per cent in 2013 on comparable deals, according to Bloomberg data.

A Goldman representa­tive said it “won’t be commenting on any negotiatio­ns with authoritie­s”.

Goldman officials had said for years that the bank raised money for 1MDB without knowing that it would be diverted from developmen­t projects. As for the fees and commission­s, Goldman said in 2015 that they “reflected the underwriti­ng risks” it had assumed.

Goldman is facing scrutiny in the United States, Malaysia and Singapore over its role in helping 1MDB raise money. Malaysia has filed criminal charges against three Goldman entities, while US prosecutor­s have charged two former bankers of the firm. Singapore is planning to seek a deferred-prosecutio­n agreement with Goldman, according to a person with knowledge of the matter.

Last month, Dr Mahathir said he was awaiting a response from Goldman before deciding whether to take legal action against the bank over “too high” fees on 1MDB bond sales. Malaysia had already announced criminal charges against Goldman in December, accusing the lender of misleading investors when it knew that funds raised from the bond offerings it arranged would be misappropr­iated.

The bank has said it will defend against the allegation­s. It has sought to depict two of its former top bankers as rogue employees who kept the firm in the dark about their 1MDB dealings.

Malaysia has focused its efforts on recouping funds believed to have been lost through 1MDB.

The fund, set up to raise funds for investment­s in the country, instead saw US$4.5 billion diverted with some of the money used to pay kickbacks to Malaysian officials, according to US prosecutor­s.

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