Compliance
Edmond de Rothschild Fined $10 Million; Could Be 1MDB-Linked, Say Reports

Edmond de Rothschild could be the latest private bank to be snagged in regulators' nets amid worldwide probes into alleged money laundering connected to 1MDB.
Luxembourg officials said yesterday they have fined the local arm
of Swiss private bank Edmond de
Rothschild more than $10 million, and media reports have
claimed the penalty is linked to a Malaysian scandal-hit
fund.
The Commission de Surveillance du Secteur Financier (CSSF) said
in a statement that Edmond de Rothschild had been fined nearly €9
million ($10.1 million) for failing to implement adequate
safeguards against money laundering.
Although there was no mention of 1Malaysia Development Berhad,
more commonly known as 1MDB, in the statement, Reuters
reported that the fine was a result of Edmond de Rothschild
handling funds connected to the fund, citing a source familiar
with the matter.
1MDB, Malaysia's state-owned investment fund, is subject of
probes
into alleged money laundering in at least six countries
including the US, Singapore and Switzerland.
If Reuters' report is correct, Edmond de Rothschild will
be the latest Swiss bank to be swept up in the 1MDB case.
The scandal has already resulted in the closure of BSI and Falcon
Private Bank in Singapore, and numerous jail sentences, fines and
indictments have been handed to former banks over their
affiliations with the fund.
WealthBriefing has reached out to Edmond de Rothschild
for comment.
In January, a New Zealand court ruled that the family of Low Taek
Jho, a flamboyant Malaysian financier at the epicentre of 1MDB
probes,
could replace its former trustee, Rothschild, with Cayman
Islands-based FFP.