HSBC takes £826m hit after Bernie Madoff fraud ruling

The London-headquartered lender will put by the provision in third quarter results due to be published on Tuesday.

HSBC takes £826m hit after Bernie Madoff fraud rulingPA Media

Banking giant HSBC has revealed it will set aside 1.1bn US dollars (£826m) following a court ruling related to a long-running lawsuit brought by investors who lost money in Bernard Madoff’s investment fraud.

The British lender, which reports third quarter results on Tuesday, said the provision comes after it lost part of an appeal in a Luxembourg court ruling last Friday.

It follows a case brought by Herald Fund SPC, which in 2009 sued HSBC Securities Services Luxembourg (HSSL), claiming losses of cash and securities linked to Madoff’s Ponzi scheme, which was one of the largest financial scandals in history.

Bernard Madoff (left) died in prison in 2021.PA Media
Bernard Madoff (left) died in prison in 2021.

Last week, the Luxembourg Court of Cassation rejected HSSL’s appeal on Herald’s securities restitution claim, but upheld its appeal concerning the cash restitution claim.

HSSL now plans to pursue a second appeal before the Luxembourg Court of Appeal to contest the amount it may be required to pay.

Shares in HSBC fell as much as 2% in early morning trading on Monday.

Mr Madoff, who died in prison in 2021, admitted in 2009 to defrauding thousands of investors of around 65bn US dollars (£48.8bn).

HSBC said the provision would be made in its third quarter results and would hit its so-called common equity tier one capital ratio, a key measure of financial strength for banks, although it cautioned the final financial impact remains uncertain due to the complexity of the case and the ongoing appeals process.

The UK-headquartered group said in its interim results in July that it provided “custodial, administration and similar services to a number of funds incorporated outside the US whose assets were invested with Madoff Securities”.

It added that various HSBC companies had been named as defendants in lawsuits arising out of the Madoff fraud scandal.

Herald Fund SPC is a European fund that put money into Madoff investment funds, for which HSBC’s Luxembourg securities arm, HSSL, was the custodian.

HSBC said in July’s results that Herald, which is in liquidation, was seeking the restitution of securities and cash worth 2.5bn US dollars (£1.9bn) plus interest, or damages of 5.6bn US dollars (£4.2bn ) plus interest.

The hit marks the latest blow to its financial strength after HSBC unveiled plans last month for a 13.6bn US dollar (£10.2bn) deal to take its troubled Hong Kong-listed business Hang Seng Bank private, which it said would knock its common equity tier one capital ratio.

HSBC also said it would suspended share buybacks for the next three quarters due to the acquisition of Hang Seng Bank to boost cash reserves needed for the deal.

This saw shares tumble after the deal was announced.

It marks the latest blow for HSBC, which in July revealed a 2.1bn US dollar (£1.6bn) charge to cover losses related to its stake in the Chinese Bank of Communications, as well as costs linked to exiting its businesses in Canada and Argentina.

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