Goldman Sachs agrees to $3.9 billion deal with Malaysia to settle criminal probe into 1MDB scandal

Finance

Copies of the Financial Daily newspaper featuring a front page report on Goldman Sachs Group Inc. are displayed for sale at a stand in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, on Tuesday, Dec. 18, 2018.

Nadirah Zakariya | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Goldman Sachs said Friday that it settled a key part of an international scandal by agreeing to a $3.9 billion deal with Malaysia to settle criminal and regulatory probes.

The bank will pay $2.5 billion in cash to the government of Malaysia for its central role in the 1MDB debacle and guarantee the country will receive at least $1.4 billion in proceeds from assets seized around the world.

“This settlement by Goldman Sachs represents its acknowledgment of the misconduct of two of its former employees in the broader 1MDB fraudulent and corruption scheme,” Malaysia’s finance minister said in a statement.

The deal paves the way for Goldman to settle with U.S. authorities for its role in the event, according to a person with knowledge of the situation. A settlement with the Department of Justice has been expected since the start of this year, and reportedly has been delayed as Goldman seeks to avoid a guilty plea in the case.

When it happens, a settlement with the U.S. would remove a cloud that has hung over CEO David Solomon since he took over at Goldman in late 2018. Goldman bankers were accused of helping a Malaysian financier plunder billions of dollars from the $6.5 billion 1MDB fund, money that was supposed to help develop the country’s economy.

Instead, money raised in bond deals facilitated by Goldman in 2012 and 2013 was allegedly used by Malaysian financier Low Taek Jho to fund a spending spree of epic proportions, including real estate and art around the world, a $250 million yacht, and a stake in the Martin Scorsese film “The Wolf of Wall Street.”

Malaysia is withdrawing pending criminal charges and said it wouldn’t seek charges against the bank and its employees, except for Tim Leissner and Roger Ng, the former Goldman bankers accused of helping Low.  While Leissner has pleaded guilty for his role in the scheme, Ng has pleaded not guilty and last year was extradited to the U.S. to face the Justice Department charges.

Goldman said it would “materially increase” its litigation provisions for the second quarter, a period where the bank posted blockbuster earnings amid a boom in Wall Street trading.

The company’s total bill for the episode, deemed by many to be its worst scandal since the financial crisis, will likely be $4.5 billion after it settles with the U.S. for $2 billion, according to Wells Fargo banking analyst Mike Mayo. That is “well below” the top estimate of $10 billion in expenses assumed by some investors, he said. The bank had reaped about $600 million in fees tied to the 1MDB bond deals.

The $1.4 billion in asset guarantees for Malaysia isn’t likely to cost the bank much, Mayo said.

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