Business Day

BNP Paribas expects US probe to end ‘soon’ with $9bn fine

- MATTHIAS BLAMONT and MAYA NIKOLAEVA Paris

BNP Paribas CEO Jean-Laurent Bonnafe in a message to employees seen by Reuters has warned that the French bank is facing heavy penalties following a US probe into breaking sanctions which should end “very soon”.

BNP Paribas declined to comment but sources have said the French bank is expected to plead guilty to a federal criminal charge and pay nearly $9bn as part of a larger settlement with multiple enforcemen­t authoritie­s.

An announceme­nt by US authoritie­s on the settlement is expected today, a source familiar with the matter said on Friday.

“I want to say it clearly here: we will receive a heavy penalty,” Mr Bonnafe said in an internal message sent on Friday and seen by Reuters on Saturday. “However, the difficulti­es that we are currently experienci­ng must not affect our plans for the future.”

US authoritie­s are examining whether BNP Paribas evaded US sanctions relating primarily to Sudan between 2002 and 2009 and whether it stripped identifyin­g informatio­n from wire trans- fers so they could pass through the US financial system without raising red flags, sources have said.

“This is good news for all staff and for our clients,” Mr Bonnafe said. “It will enable us to remove the uncertaint­ies weighing on our group. We will be able to put behind us these occurrence­s, which belong to the past.”

BNP Paribas is likely to be suspended from converting foreign currencies to dollars on behalf of clients in some businesses for as long as a year, sources familiar with the matter said last week.

Mr Bonnafe took over a bank in December 2011 that had emerged a winner from the financial crisis and sought to raise revenues outside its traditiona­l European markets, while tougher financial regulation made banking a less profitable business.

BNP has only said publicly that it is in discussion­s with US authoritie­s about “certain US dollar payments involving countries, persons and entities that could have been subject to economic sanctions”.

It has set aside $1.1bn for the fine but told shareholde­rs it could be far higher than that. Last month the company said it had improved control processes to ensure that such mistakes did not occur again.

BNP plans to lower its dividend and raise funds by selling billions of euros of bonds next week, the Wall Street Journal reported on Friday.

Analysts have already bet on a cut in BNP’s dividends and some, such as Deutsche Bank, factored in a zero dividend payout for this year in their forecasts for BNP, based on a $9bn fine.

That would help the French bank maintain its core equity Tier 1 ratio at close to 10%. “When the announceme­nt is made, I will again be in contact with all of you,” Mr Bonnafe said.

BNP struck a confident tone on its outlook earlier in March, promising a double-digit percentage net earnings per share rise over the next three years and an increase in dividend payout to 45% of earnings by 2016 from 41% last year.

 ?? Picture: AFP/LOIC VENANCE ?? INVESTIGAT­ION: BNP Paribas is expected to plead guilty to a federal criminal charge and pay nearly $9bn as part of a larger settlement with multiple enforcemen­t authoritie­s.
Picture: AFP/LOIC VENANCE INVESTIGAT­ION: BNP Paribas is expected to plead guilty to a federal criminal charge and pay nearly $9bn as part of a larger settlement with multiple enforcemen­t authoritie­s.

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