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Dubai Regulator Fines Former BNP Paribas Private Banker For Fraud
Sandra Kilhof
25 September 2013
The Dubai Financial Services Authority has fined a former
private banker for , to pay a financial penalty of AED73,400 ($20,000)
and be restricted from performing any financial services functions in the Dubai
International Financial Centre over the next six years. Nikhil Das has been under investigation by the DFSA after he
executed two transactions, valued at AED12,478,000 ($3.4 million) and AED18,350,000
($5 million) respectively, on behalf of a client without his consent. Both
incidents happened between July 2012 and January 2013 and while Das was
employed by the French banking giant BNP Paribas in Dubai, which is regulated by the DFSA. “The DFSA expects private bankers who provide services in or
from the DIFC to act ethically and with integrity. The DFSA will continue to
uphold high standards of probity and will not permit any individual, who does
not meet its standards, to provide financial services in the DIFC,” said Ian
Johnston, chief executive of the DFSA. According to the regulator, Das also forged the client’s
signature on a number of documents and sent account statements containing false
and misleading information about his investments. “The client did not suffer any financial loss as a
consequence of Das’ fraudulent conduct and unauthorised investments,” a
statement explained. Das co-operated fully with the regulator’s investigation and
acknowledged forging the client’s signature, executing unauthorised investments
and providing the client with falsified documents. As such, he agreed to a
settlement offer, in the form of an Enforceable Undertaking, to comply with the
aforementioned DFSA sanctions. This publication is currently in contact with BNP Paribas,
but has not yet received a comment on the case.