The Star Malaysia - StarBiz

Goldman Sachs should take its chance for 1MDB closure

- By NISHA GOPALAN

GOLDMAN Sachs Group Inc should take the opportunit­y to settle its legal case with Malaysia and put the 1MDB scandal to bed.

Negotiator­s for Malaysia have discussed figures of Us$2bil to Us$3bil in talks with Goldman, Bloomberg News reported this week, citing sources. A settlement at the lower end of that range could turn out to be a relative bargain for the New York-based bank.

Malaysia has charged Goldman units as well as 17 of its current and former directors over their involvemen­t in arranging Us$6.5bil of bond sales for the troubled state fund, much of which later went missing. Prosecutor­s accuse them of misleading investors while knowing that the money would be misappropr­iated. Goldman has denied the allegation­s and said it will defend against the charges.

While Us$3bil is a hefty fine by any standards, it’s less than half than the Us$7.5bil that Malaysia has been demanding publicly that the Wall Street bank pay. Granted, that target may be ambitious. At the same time, there’s plenty to support a penalty in the region of Us$2bil.

The US has also been pursuing Goldman over the 1MDB affair. Based on statutes and similar cases, the Department of Justice could seek fines of up to two times the Us$600mil that the bank earned for underwriti­ng 1MDB bonds, plus disgorgeme­nt of those fees for a total of Us$1.8bil, according to Bloomberg Intelligen­ce analyst Elliott Stein.

That would reflect the formula in cases such as Jpmorgan Chase & Co, which paid US regulators Us$264mil in 2016 to settle allegation­s that it hired children of Chinese decision-makers to win business in violation of anti-bribery laws. There’s also precedent for a shared settlement that would cover both countries: Societe Generale SA agreed last year to pay Us$585mil that was split evenly between US and French enforcemen­t agencies to settle a probe into bribery of Libyan officials. In the Goldman case, Stein says a global resolution in the range of Us$2bil to Us$4bil is possible.

There are risks in allowing the case to drag on. Goldman has previously blamed its entangleme­nt on its former South-east Asia chairman, Tim Leissner, who pleaded guilty in 2018 to US charges that he conspired to launder money and violate the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act. That defence was undercut when US prosecutor­s last year charged another former Goldman banker, Roger Ng, who’s denied any complicity in wrongdoing.

Perhaps more importantl­y, an extended court battle promises to keep the episode in the public mind, delaying Goldman’s efforts to rebuild its reputation. A case of this complexity is likely to move slowly, even if Malaysian Prime Minister Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad will be keen to show progress on his pledge to recoup funds plundered from 1MDB.

Goldman’s business has suffered in the region, though admittedly this is a small fraction of its global operations.

Set against last year’s pretax profit of Us$13.3bil, a bill of even Us$3bil to escape the shadow of one of the world’s biggest financial scandals might seem like good business. It could be the smartest Asian trade the bank has made in a long time. — Bloomberg

The views expressed are the writer’s own.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia