The expletive-laden exclamation attributed to a senior Standard Chartered executive in 2006 may well come back to haunt the British bank. “You f***ing Americans. Who are you to tell us, the rest of the world, that we’re not going to deal with Iranians?”

For US authorities, who included the quote in a legal filing, the statement came to define StanChart’s “obvious contempt” for American banking regulations, including sanctions designed to cut Iran off from access to the US dollar. 

Nine years on, after paying nearly $1bn in fines to US regulators and law enforcement agencies for sanction breaches and compliance failures, StanChart seems no closer to ending its legal problems.

A Financial Times investigation has identified transactions involving Iran that could put the bank at risk of severe penalties ranging from further fines to suspension or loss of its crucial dollar clearing licence.

Documents seen by the FT suggest that StanChart continued to seek new business from Iranian and Iran-connected companies after it had committed in 2007 to stop working with such clients. These activities include foreign exchange transactions that, people familiar with StanChart operations say, would have involved the US dollar. The documents suggest the bank — a few months after a costly settlement with US authorities in 2012 — was still internally reviewing its client list and was unable to determine in certain cases whether customers were Iranian or not.

For Bill Winters, the American former JPMorgan investment banker who took over as StanChart’s chief executive in June, the stakes could hardly be higher. The London-listed lender, that specialises in Asia, the Middle East and Africa, is already grappling with slowing growth in emerging markets and a slide in commodity prices.

While it has relatively small operations in the US, the loss of its dollar clearing licence would deal a crippling blow to StanChart’s ability to finance the trade, energy and cross-border activities that have become its main focus.

Suspending the dollar clearing rights for banks accused of breaching sanctions is a rare punishment. But US regulators have cracked down hard on institutions for breaching sanctions on Iran, amid concerns about money flowing to the country’s nuclear programme or to militant Islamist organisations such as Hizbollah in Lebanon or the Palestinian group, Hamas. 

The US has mostly relied on levying heavy fines against non-US banks for using dollars to do business with Iran — frequently causing controversy in those banks’ home countries. BNP Paribas last year paid $8.9bn in fines and had some dollar clearing rights suspended temporarily for such breaches, prompting angry accusations from French politicians of US over-reach. 

‘Rogue institution’

The US Department of Justice, the Manhattan district attorney, the Federal Reserve, the New York Department of Financial Services (DFS) and most recently, the New York attorney-general’s office, are all investigating StanChart for potential new sanctions breaches.

The probes, most of which became public late last year, are scrutinising whether StanChart breached sanctions after the period covered by its 2012 settlement, when the bank declared it had “ceased all new business with Iranian customers in any currency” five years earlier. A pivotal issue is whether senior executives condoned the bank’s continuing business with Iran, according to people familiar with the investigations. 

FT investigation

Standard Chartered Iran Probe

More coverage of Standard Chartered in the Financial Times

Further reading 

StanChart — which closed its Tehran office in May 2012 — said, in a statement to the Financial Times, that it was co-operating with the investigation into “possible violations of US sanctions”. It added that “following its decision to exit the Iranian business in 2007 the group had a number of legacy obligations including dormant accounts, outstanding loans and trade-finance agreements. Those legacy obligations have been handled in an appropriate manner in non-US currencies and since 2007 it has been the group’s policy not to pursue any new business with known Iranian entities.” 

The bank added: “While we have made progress on our controls, this is a multiyear effort that requires sustained investment and management attention.”

In 2012, the threat by US regulators to withdraw StanChart’s dollar clearing licence led it to agree to pay $667m to settle allegations of sanction breaches up to 2007. At the time, the DFS, then headed by Benjamin Lawsky, shocked the bank by accusing it of being a “rogue institution” whose actions left the US financial system “vulnerable to terrorists, weapons dealers, drug kingpins and corrupt regimes”.

With shares in StanChart trading near 10-year lows, the latest investigations provide another big challenge for Mr Winters, who succeeded Peter Sands as StanChart’s chief executive. It also indicates that even as US President Barack Obama pushes for sanctions against Iran to be relaxed in return for curbs on its nuclear programme, there are no signs of US regulators losing their zeal for pursuing past transgressions involving the Islamic republic.

Tighter sanctions

The material reviewed by the FT depicts a bank — one of the few foreign lenders with a licence to operate in the country — determined to keep working with Iranian companies.

The status of numerous Iranian and Iran-connected entities was still being reviewed by StanChart as late as 2013, according to documents seen by the FT. These included entities that had internal “markers” and “blocks” placed against them, a way for the bank to flag up concern about links to Tehran.

Many accounts belonging to Iranian or Iran-connected entities were indeed closed by 2007, as StanChart promised. But some, like Bank Saderat — which had sanctions imposed in 2006, or Bank Sepah — still had open accounts with no markers against them. According to lawyers consulted by the FT, it is not illegal to hold accounts for entities under sanctions as long as they remain frozen.

Clients generating revenue included IFIC Holding AG, which in August 2010 was identified by the US Treasury as the German arm of an Iran government-owned entity and put under sanctions. An internal StanChart performance report, dated March 2012, that records transactions with Iran-connected companies — labelled “Iran Group” — cites revenue for IFIC Holding AG.

Non-US banks such as StanChart are allowed to conduct transactions with companies on the US sanctions list provided no US persons are involved and they do not involve the American financial system. However, in 2010 the US tightened its sanctions regime, introducing measures that gave US regulators the power to punish foreign banks engaging with Iran even if the contested transaction did not involve the US financial system. 

The move was a warning to companies that by choosing to do business with Iran they risk being cut out of the US financial system. Given the dollar’s ubiquity, this risk has led many international banks to halt business with US-sanctioned entities altogether.

Top performing clients in the so-called “Iran Group” also included Mapna International FZE, a subsidiary of Mapna Group, a sprawling Iranian industrial conglomerate, according to documents seen by the FT.

The Big Read Podcast

Standard Chartered: The Iranian connection

Podcast
http://podcast.ft.com/p/2987

FT reporters investigate transactions involving Iran that could put Standard Chartered at risk of further penalties.

Senior StanChart executives outlined one method to maintain the business in a note to staff dated October 2008, a day after the US placed the Export Development Bank of Iran on the sanctions list. 

StanChart was keen to avoid “delay or financial loss” to its Iranian clients. “We are working with the Designated Parties [companies under US sanctions] to settle outstanding USD obligations in an alternative freely convertible currency”, the memo says.

It adds that any foreign exchange deal to “convert the alternative currency into USD must be for the account of and in the name of the beneficiary and not for the account of the Designated Party, and any FX risk will be for account of the beneficiary”.

While this technique — finding currencies other than the US dollar to conclude transactions with Iranian clients — may not have been a breach of US sanctions, a former member of the bank’s Dubai team says it was “against the spirit of the sanctions”.

An email written in 2009 by a senior StanChart manager in Dubai, seen by the FT, shows a list of potential target clients, including the National Iranian Oil Company, which at the time was under sanctions. 

These potential new violations have angered a host of agencies, from the DoJ to the New York Fed and DFS. Although settlement talks have yet to begin, the bank is expected to be hit with harsh penalties — unless it can explain its conduct — because it is seen as a repeat offender, people familiar with the case say. In August 2014, New York’s DFS fined StanChart $300m for failing to resolve problems with its anti-money laundering compliance system. The regulator forced it to sell or shut as many as 8,000 small business accounts in the United Arab Emirates and banned it from clearing US dollar transactions for some Hong Kong clients.

Authorities are still in the process of obtaining information from the bank about the current probe, the people add. A deal, if it happens, could come at the end of this year or early in 2016. 

A whistleblower emerges

The FT has found that the US investigation into StanChart did not close after the 2012 settlement. Shortly after the deal was agreed, a whistleblower came forward with information that gave US regulators and law enforcement new ammunition against the bank, according to people familiar with the matter.

An internal StanChart document seen by the FT shows that the bank is again facing questions from regulators and law enforcement about its dealings with Iran, reaching back to at least 2005 — a period that had already been reviewed as part of the prior investigation.

A separate line of inquiry emerged from the authorities’ investigation into BNP Paribas. Among the French bank’s violations were transactions with Caspian Petrochemical FZE, an Iran-owned company based in Dubai, which acted as a front for an Iranian based energy group in Tehran, and was engaged in shipping liquefied petroleum gas. 

Evidence from the BNP probe led investigators to believe that StanChart may also have breached sanctions in its transactions with Caspian Petrochemical FZE. 

By March 2013 high-ranking StanChart executives were in denial about the gravity of the bank’s alleged sanctions busting. At a press conference that month, Sir John Peace, who has chaired the bank for six years, called its actions “clerical errors or mistakes” and denied that the bank had “wilfully” breached sanctions. Shortly afterward he retracted his statement and apologised after a rebuke by the DoJ and the Manhattan district attorney’s office. 

Standard Chartered and the US regulators 

●  October 2006 Standard Chartered informs the 
New York Federal Reserve that it is ending US dollar clearing activity for all Iranian banks.

●  August 2007 Standard Chartered introduces a policy to suspend all new Iranian business in any currency.

●  August 2012 Standard Chartered agrees to pay a civil penalty of $340m to New York’s Department of Financial Services to settle allegations of sanctions breaches from 2001 to 2007. DFS claims it involved transactions worth at least $250bn, but StanChart insists the transactions that breached sanctions only amounted to $14m.

  December 2012 StanChart settles with the Office of Foreign Assets Control and signs a deferred prosecution agreement with the US DoJ and the New York District Attorney’s office. The bank is fined an additional $327m.

  March 2013 StanChart chairman Sir John Peace says the transactions that gave rise to fines worth $667m were ‘clerical errors’ and that the bank had not wilfully avoided sanctions. Shortly afterwards US authorities forced him to retract his statement.

●  August 2014 New York’s DFS fines StanChart $300m for failures in its anti-money laundering systems. As part of the agreement the bank is forced to suspend clearing activity for ‘high-risk’ Hong Kong business clients and end certain client relationships at its branches in the United Arab Emirates. StanChart is also required to obtain approval from the DFS before accepting new customers for dollar-clearing.

●  June 2015 Bill Winters, a former JPMorgan banker, takes over from Peter Sands as chief executive of Standard Chartered.

Around the same time, an internal StanChart team worked alongside experts from Promontory — the financial consultancy that was recently fined $15m in relation to its prior work with StanChart — to resolve a series of requests and subpoenas from US law enforcement authorities. 

The teams also reviewed the due diligence done by the bank on clients at its Dubai branch — a particular focus of the US authorities’ continuing inquiry — and researched whether existing clients were Iranian or had Iranian connections. The emirate has long been a convenient hub for Iranians and those wanting to do business with Tehran. 

Of particular interest to the authorities was the bank’s online trading system, known as OLT3 (On-line Treasury), according to documents seen by the FT. It allowed approved customers to conduct trades online, including foreign exchange transactions. As StanChart’s team gathered information to respond to US requests, it noted significant flaws in the system, to which Bank Saderat at one point had direct access.

The system did not record timing of logins by clients and provided no audit trail of client access, according to a document seen by the FT. It also indicates that a former Bank Saderat Iran employee with direct access to the OLT3 had left the bank and moved to a UAE company but kept the same user ID.

It is unclear whether StanChart reported this flaw to the authorities of its own accord. The document says: “all ‘Iranian’ clients who received direct access to the system were domiciled outside of Iran”.

A former senior executive at StanChart, speaking on condition of anonymity, described a number of failings at the bank that led to the repeated probes. He described a “cavalier” culture, where management encouraged the sales staff to go after new business aggressively in frontier markets such as Iran and Iraq. The bank also failed to invest enough in compliance, he says. 

StanChart had sometimes been tricked into dealing with Iranian entities, such as by a client with three passports who only showed the two non-Iranian documents to the bank, he adds. 

But StanChart was also often let down by its technology. “The bank really isn’t very good at technology and often the system really wasn’t performing.”

Former staff members of StanChart in Dubai have told the FT the bank had global policies in place and they had to turn down business because of those policies of not dealing with sanctioned entities.

But as he reported disappointing results in August, Mr Winters said he intended to overhaul the bank’s culture and bolster its compliance operations, while warning of difficult times ahead.

In a possible signal of his priorities, one of Mr Winters’ first trips was to meet Mr Lawsky in his New York office.
Additional reporting by Martin Stabe

The Men at the helm

The news of Bill Winters’ appointment as chief executive of Standard Chartered in February initially sent shares in the bank up sharply, though they have fallen hard since the big-name American banker actually took charge in June. A Wharton MBA graduate, Mr Winters worked for JPMorgan for more than 25 years, starting in New York and moving to London to become co-head of its vast investment bank. But having been touted as a potential successor to chief executive Jamie Dimon, he left abruptly in 2009 after a falling out with his boss. Since then the 53-year-old has set up Renshaw Bay, an investment firm in London, and worked on Britain’s Independent Commission on Banking chaired by Sir John Vickers, which proposed the ringfencing of UK retail banks from riskier activities.

Standard Chartered has hired headhunters to find a replacement for its chairman Sir John Peace, who announced his plan to step down next year as he presented the change of the bank’s chief executive in February. Some shareholders have criticised Sir John for being overstretched and therefore not able to devote enough time and attention to StanChart when its performance started to go awry three years ago. As well as StanChart, the 66-year-old is also chairman of a second FTSE 100 company, fashion group Burberry, having stepped down from chairing a third Experian, the credit checking company, earlier this year. He took on the ceremonial role of Lord Lieutenant of Nottingham in July 2012. The son of a coal miner, he was knighted in 2011 for services to the voluntary sector.

Peter Sands stepped down as chief executive of Standard Chartered in June under pressure from shareholders in the emerging markets-focused bank amid worsening results and a sliding share price. The Oxford university graduate joined StanChart as finance director in 2002 from consultants McKinsey and stepped up to CEO four years later, overseeing almost a decade of double-digit annual growth in profits and revenues before the bank was hit by slowing growth in its key Asian and energy markets and was slapped with fines for breaching US sanctions in 2012. The 53-year-old advised the former Labour government on bailing out other banks during the financial crisis and is in talks to become an unpaid policy adviser to Prime Minister David Cameron.

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