Goldman Sachs ends 1MDB fraud lawsuit with agreement-in-principle

Goldman Sachs ends 1MDB fraud lawsuit with agreement-in-principle

NEW YORK, April 23 — Goldman ‌Sachs has agreed to settle a class-action ​lawsuit accusing the Wall Street bank of defrauding shareholders about its work for 1MDB, a Malaysian sovereign ‌wealth fund that became embroiled in a corruption scandal.

In a ​letter filed on Wednesday in Manhattan federal court, Goldman and the shareholders said they reached an agreement-in-principle to settle, and plan to submit a settlement ​for preliminary approval by May 20.

Goldman declined to comment. Lawyers for shareholders led by the Swedish pension fund Sjunde AP-Fonden did not immediately respond to requests for comment. Terms were not disclosed.

Former Malaysian Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib ‌Razak set up 1MDB to promote economic development, with help ⁠from Malaysian financier Jho Low, who ⁠is now a fugitive.

US and Malaysian ⁠authorities have said US$4.5 billion (RM18 billion) was siphoned ⁠away from ⁠1MDB, with some diverted to offshore bank accounts and shell companies linked to Low.

Goldman helped 1MDB sell US$6.5 billion of bonds, ⁠and collected an estimated US$600 million of fees. Shareholders accused the bank of lying about its role in the fraud while repeatedly touting its supposedly robust risk management.

They said Goldman’s share price tumbled after investors realized Goldman “actively facilitated – and handsomely profited from” the fraud.

Goldman ⁠agreed in 2020 to pay US$2.9 billion in penalties and have a Malaysian unit admit criminal wrongdoing to settle 1MDB probes ⁠by the US Justice Department and other authorities.

A Brooklyn, New ⁠York ⁠judge formally ended the US criminal case against Goldman in May 2024, ​after the bank successfully completed a ​three-year deferred prosecution agreement.

One Goldman ‌banker was convicted of helping loot ​1MDB, and another pleaded guilty. — Reuters

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