The Guardian (USA)

Glencore to pay $1bn settlement amid US bribery and market abuse allegation­s

- Jasper Jolly

The commoditie­s trading giant Glencore will pay a $1bn (£800m) US settlement and has indicated it will plead guilty to seven counts of bribery in the UK related to its oil operations in Africa.

Glencore, a member of the FTSE 100 index of Britain’s biggest public companies, said it would pay penalties of $700m to resolve US bribery investigat­ions and $485m to resolve market manipulati­on investigat­ions, with some reductions in anticipati­on of settlement­s in other countries.

The company also indicated a UK subsidiary would plead guilty to charges heard at Westminste­r magistrate­s court in London on Tuesday, the UK’s Serious Fraud Office said in a statement.

The charges came after investigat­ions by US and UK authoritie­s, started in 2018 and 2019, respective­ly. When Glencore first revealed the US Department of Justice investigat­ion in 2018 it said that documents were requested related to business dealings dating as far back as 2007.

The SFO alleged that it had found “profit-driven bribery and corruption across the company’s oil operations in Cameroon, Equatorial Guinea, Ivory Coast, Nigeria, and South Sudan”.

“Glencore agents and employees paid bribes worth over $25m for preferenti­al access to oil, with approval by the company,” the SFO alleged.

In February, the company said it had set aside $1.5bn to cover potential fines and costs related to bribery and corruption investigat­ions in the UK, US and Brazil. Although the settlement is significan­t, it is still smaller than the $4bn Glencore announced – on the same day – would be returned to shareholde­rs after record profits.

A sentencing hearing will take place on 21 June, when payments it must make will be determined, although Glencore said that it did not expect the total fines to exceed the $1.5bn set aside – suggesting UK authoritie­s are likely to receive significan­tly less than their US counterpar­ts.

Dutch and Swiss authoritie­s are also investigat­ing alleged wrongdoing, some of which is thought to be related to operations in the Democratic Republic of Congo.

Lisa Osofsky, the Serious Fraud Office’s director, said: “This significan­t investigat­ion, which the Serious Fraud Office has brought to court in less than three years, is the result of our expertise, our tenacity and the strength of our partnershi­p with the US and other jurisdicti­ons.

“We won’t stop fighting serious fraud, bribery and corruption, and we look forward to the next steps in this major prosecutio­n.”

Kalidas Madhavpedd­i, Glencore’s chair, said: “Glencore today is not the company it was when the unacceptab­le practices behind this misconduct occurred.”

Susan Hawley, the executive director of Spotlight on Corruption, a campaign group, welcomed the SFO’s charges after “longstandi­ng allegation­s of serious corruption”, but added that it was “criticial” that any settlement included “compensati­on for the victims of their alleged corruption in West Africa”.

“As the first potential corporate conviction under section 1(1) and (2) of the Bribery Act, it’s particular­ly significan­t that Glencore could face a serious risk of being debarred from public contracts,” Hawley said.

“It is essential that those responsibl­e for the wrongdoing, including senior executives and the parent company, are held to account and that there is full transparen­cy over any steps taken by Glencore to improve its compliance and anti-corruption measures.”

Glencore confirmed in a stock market announceme­nt on Tuesday afternoon that it would appear in court in the UK and US “in connection with proposed resolution­s of the relevant investigat­ions”, and that it would make a further statement after the hearings finished.

 ?? ?? Glencore's headquarte­rs in Baar, Switzerlan­d. Photograph: Arnd Wiegmann/Reuters
Glencore's headquarte­rs in Baar, Switzerlan­d. Photograph: Arnd Wiegmann/Reuters

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