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UniCredit Nears $900 Million Deal With U.S. Over Iran Sanctions

UniCredit Nears $900 Million Deal With U.S. Over Iran Sanctions

(Bloomberg) -- UniCredit SpA is nearing an agreement with U.S. authorities over allegations that the bank provided dollar-clearing services to Iranian clients in violation of U.S. sanctions, people with the knowledge of the matter said. The deal would cost the Italian lender about $900 million but spare it from criminal prosecution, the people said.

A settlement of that size would be one of the largest for violations of U.S. sanctions laws, exceeded only by agreements reached with Societe Generale SA, Commerzbank AG, HSBC Holdings Plc and BNP Paribas SA. Among them, only BNP Paribas admitted guilt. The others entered into deferred-prosecution agreements.

“This is very positive for UniCredit because it eliminates one of the remaining pending risks for the bank,” said Fidentiis Equities analyst Fabrizio Bernardi. “This can improve UniCredit’s valuation for the future.

Chief Executive Officer Jean Pierre Mustier inherited the case from previous management when he took the helm in July 2016. He announced provisions related to the probe in November and said he didn’t expect it to have a material impact on the bank’s accounts.

UniCredit Nears $900 Million Deal With U.S. Over Iran Sanctions

A deal is expected in the coming weeks, the people said. It would resolve investigations of UniCredit by the U.S. Justice Department, the Treasury Department’s Office of Foreign Assets Control, the Federal Reserve, the Manhattan district attorney’s office and New York’s Department of Financial Services.

Representatives from those offices declined to comment or didn’t immediately respond to messages. A UniCredit spokesman declined to comment.

UniCredit rose as much as 2.3 percent in Milan trading and was priced at 12.10 euros as of 9:14 a.m. The stock has gained 21 percent this year, boosting the company’s market value to about 26 billion euros.

UniCredit’s German unit, HypoVereinsbank, was subpoenaed in March 2011 by the New York district attorney’s office over transactions with certain Iranian entities that were subject to U.S. sanctions. The lender set aside 741 million euros ($831 million) in provisions and charges, including funds to eventually settle the allegations in the third quarter. Additional funds were provisioned by HVB in the first half, according to the unit’s financial report.

UniCredit has declined to disclose the total amount of provisioning related to the sanctions. The bank’s provisions for the settlement are expected to fully cover the fine, one of the people familiar with the matter said.

Italy’s biggest bank, UniCredit is one of several European financial institutions settling cases for alleged sanctions-busting. Fifteen European banks have paid more than $18.5 billion over the last 15 years for violating U.S. sanctions on certain countries, particularly Iran. BNP Paribas’ $8.97 billion penalty in 2014 was by far the largest.

Standard Chartered Plc may also be getting close to settling allegations that it violated Iran sanctions. On Monday, it agreed to a short extension of its non-prosecution agreement with supervising authorities to “allow for additional time to resolve the outstanding investigation into our historical U.S. sanctions compliance.”

The UniCredit settlement would be the second by an Italian bank. Intesa Sanpaolo SpA, the country’s second-biggest bank, agreed to pay $235 million in December 2016 to resolve a New York regulator’s allegations that it flouted money-laundering controls for a decade.

--With assistance from Nicholas Comfort and Tom Schoenberg.

To contact the reporters on this story: Sonia Sirletti in Milan at ssirletti@bloomberg.net;Greg Farrell in New York at gregfarrell@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Dale Crofts at dcrofts@bloomberg.net, Ross Larsen

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