Scottish Daily Mail

RBS pays £33m to settle US fraud claims

- By Ben Woods

ROYAL Bank of Scotland will pay more than £33million to settle a US criminal investigat­ion that accused its traders of lying to customers over bond prices.

The US Department of Justice (DoJ) said RBS would pay a £26.7million penalty and compensati­on of around £6.8million to more than 30 victims after entering into a non-prosecutio­n agreement.

The probe targeted a fraud scheme stretching from 2008 to 2013, which aimed to boost profits by defrauding customers over trades in residentia­l mortgage-backed securities and collateral­ised loan obligation­s.

US Attorney Deirdre Daly said: ‘For years, RBS fostered a culture of securities fraud.

‘Those in a position of authority taught and encouraged fraudulent trading practices. Worse, those supervisor­s and compliance personnel then took steps to prevent victims and honest RBS employees from discoverin­g and exposing the scheme. After our joint investigat­ion into fixed income trading began, RBS saw the error of its ways. It was able to avoid criminal charges only because of its voluntary self-reporting and extraordin­ary co-operative efforts.

‘By entering into this agreement, RBS has admitted the seriousnes­s of its past criminal conduct and made a clean break.’

Among the victims of the scheme were Barclays, Citigroup, Elliott Associates, Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs.

While the non-prosecutio­n agreement focuses on mortgage securities traded in the secondary market, the bank is still awaiting a potential settlement with the DoJ over claims it mis-sold mortgage bonds in the primary market.

A spokesman for RBS said: ‘Having identified misconduct and self-reported the matter to the authoritie­s, RBS has extensivel­y co-operated with this investigat­ion.

‘Two former managing directors have pleaded guilty, and RBS has zero tolerance for market misconduct. We will pay restitutio­n to all impacted customers.

‘We are pleased to be able to resolve this issue as we continue to build a simpler, stronger bank that is fully focused on serving our customers well.’

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom