Oman Daily Observer

Germany’s Deutsche Bank hit by new laundering report

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FRANKFURT: Deutsche Bank defended its record in fighting money laundering after the Financial Times reported it had processed 31 billion euros ($35 billion) more in questionab­le funds for Danske Bank than previously thought.

A Deutsche Bank spokesman declined to comment on the FT article. He said, however, that it was not Deutsche’s responsibi­lity to vet Danske Bank’s customers and that business ties with the Danish bank had been cut in 2015.

The sum came on top of $150 billion Deutsche cleared for Danske’s Estonian branch from 2007-15, meaning it handled four-fifths of the flows from the Danish bank’s clients in Russia and the former Soviet Union, the FT reported, citing people familiar with the matter.

“We have continuous­ly intensifie­d our efforts over the past years against money laundering and tax evasion,” Deutsche’s Chief Financial Officer, James von Moltke, said in a statement.

The bank is also under investigat­ion in a separate German case linked to the so-called Panama Papers, a trove of documents from Panamanian law firm Mossack Fonseca that was leaked to the media in April 2016.

Prosecutor­s raided Deutsche’s Frankfurt offices for two days last week as part of a probe into whether it may have helped customers set up companies in tax havens to skirt moneylaund­ering safeguards. Von Moltke, speaking earlier to CNBC, said he was not aware of any wrongdoing on Deutsche’s part in the Panama Papers case and noted that a subsidiary under investigat­ion was sold earlier this year.

A whistleblo­wer who revealed alleged money-laundering involving Danske Bank said last month that a major European bank had helped process up to $150 billion in suspicious payments. A source with direct knowledge of the matter said he was referring to Deutsche Bank.

Deutsche has said only that it processed payments for Danske but severed ties after identifyin­g suspicious transactio­ns.

Deutsche’s shares slid by 4 per cent on Thursday to a new historic low, dealing a fresh blow to Chief Executive Christian Sewing’s bid to stabilise the bank after three years of losses under previous management.

Speaking on CNBC, von Moltke said the share price was a concern but reiterated that Deutsche would hit its targets and return to profit this year. Asked whether clients were withdrawin­g money, he said the reaction of customers was very limited.

Deutsche shares have shed more than half their value this year, and now value the bank at 16.7 billion euros ($19 billion).

 ?? — Reuters ?? The headquarte­rs of Deutsche Bank is pictured in Frankfurt, Germany.
— Reuters The headquarte­rs of Deutsche Bank is pictured in Frankfurt, Germany.

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