JP Morgan pays $264m to settle China 'bribery' probe
The
Department of Justice called the scheme "bribery by any other name"
and said it threatened national security.
The
Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and the Justice Department (DoJ) began
an investigation in 2013.
The
bank will pay the SEC $130m for violations under the Foreign Corrupt Practices
Act.
It
is also expected to pay $72m to the US Justice Department and $61.9m to the
Federal Reserve Board of Governors.
The
Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, which effectively bans US companies from paying
foreign government officials to help them secure business, is one of the
strictest bribery laws in the world.
JP
Morgan was found to have designed a scheme to hire otherwise unqualified
candidates for prestigious investment banking jobs solely because they were
introduced to the bank by officials who could give it business.
JPMorgan
did not pay Chinese officials directly, but the US authorities decided what it
was doing amounted to the same thing.
'Too lucrative'
In
some cases, the DoJ said that candidates were hired on the understanding that
the job was linked to the award of specific business. It said amounted to
corruption.
The
SEC said that over seven years, about 100 interns and full-time employees were
hired at the request of foreign government officials, enabling JP Morgan to win
or retain business that generated more than $100m in revenues.
It
said: "JP Morgan employees knew the firm was potentially violating the
[Foreign Corrupt Practices Act], yet persisted with the improper hiring program
because the business rewards and new deals were deemed too lucrative."
Kara
Brockmeyer, of the SEC, said the misconduct was "so blatant that JP Morgan
investment bankers created 'referral hires vs revenue' spreadsheets" to
track the money flow.
The
DoJ's William Sweeney said: "When foreign officials are among those
involved in the bribe, the international free market system and our national
security are among the major threats we face."
Shares
in JP Morgan rose 1.1% in New York to $78.25 and are up by almost a fifth this
year.

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