Icelandic bank's top executives indicted

Kaupthing chief Einarsson among nine charged Icelandic banker Sigurdur “Siggi” Einarsson, who ran Kaupthing bank until its collapse five years ago, is among nine former senior staff who have been charged in Reykjavik with orchestrating five large-scale market manipulation conspiracies.

March 20, 2013 02:38 pm | Updated 02:38 pm IST

Further details, to be released by the courts later this week, are expected to allege a conspiracy by Kaupthing executive chairman Einarsson and other bosses at Iceland’s largest bank, claiming they secretly used the bank’s funds to indirectly buy Kaupthing shares in the hope of propping up its share price.

According to an Icelandic parliamentary report, almost 42 per cent of Kaupthing shares were held by the bank as loan collateral at the end of September 2008, much of that without the knowledge of other stakeholders in the bank.

The criminal case is the largest in a series of fraud prosecutions brought to court in Iceland in recent years, and may be one of the largest alleged market manipulation conspiracies ever seen in Europe.

Among the Kaupthing clients who could be named in papers released later this week is British retail tycoon Kevin Stanford -- though there will be no allegation of wrongdoing on his part. A letter from his lawyers, leaked to a newspaper two years ago, said the bank had loaned Stanford about GBP130m for purchases of his Kaupthing shares. It claimed this was part of a pattern of “activities with the express purpose of artificially maintaining its share price”.

Three years earlier an internal summary of Kaupthing’s big client loan book appeared on WikiLeaks showing Stanford as the bank’s fourth largest shareholder with a stake of 4.2 per cent.

Einarsson is already on trial in Reykjavik over unconnected market manipulation allegations concerning a controversial purchase of a 5% stake in the bank by Sheikh Mohammed Bin Khalifa al-Thani of Qatar weeks before the bank collapsed in 2008. Prosecutors claim the bank effectively financed this purchase while encouraging investors to believe the risk was taken by Sheikh Mohammed.

Since the bank failed in October 2008 Einarsson has found himself linked to several criminal inquiries. In 2009 The Observer reported that the London-based banker was the first head of a European bank to be formally classed as a criminal suspect, when Iceland’s special prosecutor Olafur Hauksson focused on his activities. The following year Einarsson declined to leave London and return to Iceland to be interviewed by prosecutors. It was not until he appeared on Interpol’s wanted list that he agreed to travel.

As well as charges laid against former Kaupthing bosses, Hauksson has also this week issued an unconnected indictment against former Landsbanki chief executive Sigurjon Arnason and five ex-colleagues, also alleging market manipulation. © Guardian News & Media 2013

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