Many of the LIA’s assets have
been frozen under international sanctions
against Muammar Gaddafi's regime.
HSBC
and
Royal Bank of Scotland
were among major global banks which held
billions of dollars of Libyan state funds, a
leaked report
reveals.
The world's biggest banks led by
France's Société Générale, and including Goldman
Sachs and Nomura, were involved in $5bn (£3.1bn)
of deals involving
Libya,
according to an internal report for the Libyan
Investment Authority obtained by UK campaign
group Global Witness.
It reveals the scale of the
banks' involvement with Muammar Gaddafi's
regime. Many of the LIA's assets have been
frozen under international sanctions since
February.
The document, dated June 2010,
outlines where Libya's oil riches of $53bn were
invested. HSBC held $293m in 10 cash accounts,
and invested $275m in a hedge fund, while
another $110m of Libyan money was invested in a
private equity fund managed by RBS. Goldman
Sachs had $44m in four cash accounts.
The report shows that almost $4bn was held in
investment funds and structured products with
banks and hedge funds, with Société Générale
alone holding $1bn, while JP Morgan Chase had
$171m and the New York hedge fund Och-Ziff
$329m.
The bulk of the LIA's deposits – $19bn – was
held by Libyan and Middle Eastern banks,
however, including the Central Bank of Libya,
the Arab Banking Corporation and the British
Arab Commercial Bank. The report shows that
Libya suffered heavy losses on the investment
products sold by global banks – one of the most
eye-catching losses was a 98.5% fall in the
value of the sovereign wealth fund's $1.2bn
equity derivatives portfolio.
HSBC and RBS refused to comment, citing client
confidentiality.
"It is completely absurd that banks like HSBC
and Goldman Sachs can hide behind customer
confidentiality in a case like this. These are
state accounts, so the customer is effectively
the Libyan people and these banks are
withholding vital information from them," said
Charmian Gooch, director of Global Witness. She
called on governments to force banks and
investment managers to disclose the state-owned
funds they manage.
The Libyan authority held $5.2bn
in shares and $3.4bn in bonds. The document
outlines the stakes owned by the sovereign
wealth fund in global companies such as BP,
General Electric, Vivendi, Citigroup and
Deutsche Telekom. It has
already been reported
that the fund owned chunks of Italy's UniCredit
bank, industrial group Finmeccanica, UK
publishing group Pearson, owner of the Financial
Times, and telecoms company Vodafone.
The Gaddafi family has
significant personal control over the state
funds invested in the LIA. According to the
prosecutor of the international criminal court:
"Gaddafi makes no distinction between his
personal assets and the resources of the
country."