The Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) has pledged to "pursue serious financial crime control failings by regulated firms" after it fined Credit Suisse International, Credit Suisse Securities (Europe) and Credit Suisse AG a total of more than £147m, Pinsent Masons said today (2 November) in a briefing note.
The UK regulator imposed the penalty on Credit Suisse in a final notice on 19 October 20201 after it determined the institution had breached its obligations to establish, implement and maintain adequate systems and controls to counter the risk of being used to facilitate financial crime, failed to act with due skill, care and diligence to adhere to the systems and controls they had put in place, and not properly assessed, monitored and managed the risk of financial crime.
Credit Suisse said it has "already taken decisive steps to strengthen its relevant governance and processes".
The case relates to loans and a bond exchange worth over $1.3bn, which the bank arranged involving the Republic of Mozambique between October 2012 and March 2016. These loans and bond exchange were found to be tainted by corruption.
According to the FCA, due diligence carried out by Credit Suisse identified risks with a contractor involved in the transactions. This contractor paid significant kickbacks, estimated at over $50 million, to members of Credit Suisse's then deal team. Those individuals took steps to conceal the kickbacks, but the FCA found fault with Credit Suisse's control functions and said that there were enough red flags for the institution to have identified the risk of bribery and acted.
The FCA said that Credit Suisse failed to prioritise the mitigation of financial crime risks, including corruption risks, within its emerging markets business sufficiently. In addition, it identified inadequacies in its financial crime strategy for the management of those risks.
The FCA fine is part of an approximate $475 million global settlement that Credit Suisse has agreed that also involves the US Department of Justice, the US Securities and Exchange Commission, and the Swiss Financial Market Supervisory Authority (FINMA). As part of its settlement with the FCA, the institution has undertaken to "forgive $200 million of debt owed by the Republic of Mozambique".
Anti-bribery and corruption expert Neil McInnes of Pinsent Masons, the law firm behind Out-Law, said: "The FCA's final notice highlights their view that risk factors need to be considered not only individually but holistically, ensuring that all the threads of intelligence within an organisation are pulled together to determine risks and mitigation measures. Corruption red flags will often be - rather than direct evidence of corruption or bribery - apparent from the context of the transaction, sector, jurisdiction and counterparty. Effective compliance programmes should ensure risks factors and red flags are consistently and sufficiently investigated, challenged and scrutinised."