- U.S. investigators are said to seek more than $10 billion in fines, a guilty plea and the suspension of dollar-clearing operations to settle the probe into France’s biggest bank’s dealing in countries including Iran and Sudan.
- As the world’s reserve currency, dollars are used internationally in trades of goods ranging from oil to airliners.
France’s Noyer Says BNP May Prompt Shift Away From Dollar
- Bank of France Governor Christian Noyer said the U.S. investigation into BNP Paribas SA (BNP)’s dealings with sanctioned nations may encourage companies to stop using dollars in international transactions.
- “We could say that companies would have maximum interest to do the most possible transactions in other currencies,”
- Noyer, who is also a member of the European Central Bank’s Governing Council, said yesterday on BFM television.
- “Trade between China and Europe — do it in euros, do it in renminbi, stop doing it in dollars. This is an affair that will leave marks.”
- Noyer’s remarks are the strongest yet from French authorities protesting the size of the possible fine BNP Paribas may face in the matter. A suspension of BNP Paribas’s right to clear dollar trades might disrupt markets and hamper lending at a time when the ECB is trying to get more funding to the economy, Noyer said.
- Noyer said – The threat suspension of ability to settle in dollars in the U.S. is
- “something that can put in danger the good functioning of the international financial system because BNP Paribas is a big player in this area,”
- “I hope if there are sanctions in this area, they are limited in a way that is not dangerous.”
- A $10 billion fine could more than wipe out this year’s earnings for BNP Paribas, estimated at 5.64 billion euros ($7.6 billion) by analysts.
- It would also represent more than three times the combined fines paid by
- HSBC Holdings Plc (HSBA),
- Standard Chartered Plc (STAN) and
- ING Groep NV (INGA) in 2012 for sanctions violations.
- French President Francois Hollande and his finance and foreign ministers said last week that such a heavy fine for BNP Paribas may increase opposition to a free trade agreement being negotiated between the U.S. and the European Union.
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2014-06-11/ecb-s-noyer-says-bnp-may-prompt-shift-away-from-dollar.html