Italy's UniCredit to Pay $1.3bln to Settle US Sanctions Probe
TEHRAN (Tasnim) – Italy’s top bank UniCredit SpA and two subsidiaries have agreed to pay $1.3 billion to US authorities to settle probes of alleged violations of US sanctions on Iran and other countries, US authorities said.
In addition, UniCredit Bank AG, the bank’s German unit, agreed to plead guilty to federal and New York state criminal charges for illegally moving hundreds of millions of dollars through the US financial system on behalf of sanctioned entities, the US Department of Justice and Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance Jr. said.
The resolution ends a six-year investigation that has hung over the bank and follows last week’s $1.1 billion settlement by London-based Standard Chartered Plc with US and British authorities over similar conduct.
The German unit’s guilty pleas are connected to violations of US sanctions programs, including those related to IRISL, the state-owned Iranian shipping company, authorities said.
Another unit, UniCredit Bank Austria AG, entered into non-prosecution agreements with federal and state authorities.
UniCredit Bank AG, Bank Austria and their parent entity, UniCredit SpA, also agreed to resolve parallel investigations with the US Department of Treasury, the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve, and the New York Department of Financial Services.
UniCredit said in a statement the penalties owed by each of the units were fully covered by provisions already made.
The bank had booked provisions beyond the settlement and, as a result, will have 300 million euros ($339 million) after tax in additional profits in the first quarter. Its Core Tier 1 ratio - an indication of financial strength - will rise by around 8.5 basis points, it said. The bank will report first quarter results on May 9.
UniCredit said it agreed to retain an independent consultant to assess its improvements and compliance program, as part of its settlements with the Federal Reserve and the New York Department of Financial Services (DFS).
UniCredit engaged in “billions of dollars of transactions with clients from sanctioned nations, including Iran, Libya and Cuba, and then work(ed) to cover their tracks to avoid detection,” acting New York Financial Services Superintendent Linda Lacewell claimed.
The German bank disguised transactions between 2002 and 2011 in part by stripping words like Sudan and Tehran from payment messages to New York financial institutions, the regulator said.
Ten banks other than UniCredit have been penalized by US and Manhattan authorities over the past decade for sanctions-related violations.