Legal
Wealthy Investor Tries To Appeal Singapore Ruling; Rejects Losses Claim Vs Citibank

An Indonesian investor is trying to appeal a ruling that rejected his claim to recover $1.9 million in losses over alleged unauthorised transactions from Citibank.
An Indonesian investor is trying to appeal a ruling that rejected
his claim to recover $1.9 million in losses over alleged
unauthorised transactions from Citibank, according to
The Straits Times (of Singapore).
High Court Justice Vinodh Coomaraswamy in Singapore found that
Chandra Winata Lie's "entire claim for unauthorised trading is an
abuse of process", the report said.
The judge, in a ruling last week, found Winata was unable to
"properly plead his cause of action, particularise it or to point
to some proof that is rationally connected to each essential
element".
Between May 2007 and October 2008, Winata's accounts at
Citibank's private banking division in Singapore saw significant
activity in sophisticated derivatives transactions in foreign
exchange and equities, the judge is reported by the publication
as having said. These transactions entailed substantial potential
liability for Winata, a high net worth individual residing in
Indonesia.
He had three investment accounts, two of which were in his own
name, and a third in the name of his offshore personal investment
trust company.
This liability became all too real when, amid the financial
crisis six years ago, his accounts reported heavy losses on
transactions made after March 2008.
The report said Winata filed a lawsuit against the US bank in
April last year on three causes of action: its failure to advise,
negligent misrepresentation and unauthorised trading.