Strip clubs and fraud: the trial of an unconventional Swiss banker
One of the biggest fraud trials in Swiss financial history
is about to get underway. Pierin Vincenz, former CEO of Swiss bank Raiffeisen,
will be in court along with alleged accomplices including Beat Stocker, ex-boss
of digital payments company Aduno.
Vincenz and Stocker are accused of illegally lining their
pockets with millions of francs as they engineered a series of company
takeovers.
While Raiffeisen is not on trial, the bank’s reputation has
been dragged through the mud for authorising lavish foreign trips and strip
club outings on company expenses and for failing to spot a series of suspect
deals.
Raiffeisen touts itself as “the third-largest banking group
in Switzerland”, yet it is hardly known outside the Alpine state. That’s
because it is a cooperative of more than 200 local banks providing loans and
other services to their communities.
As a result, the trial of its former CEO is unlikely to have
the same global resonance as the latest scandals engulfing Credit Suisse or the
tax evasion woes of UBS. However, the Swiss Financial Market Supervisory
Authority (FINMA) recognises Raiffeisen’s importance to the economy and has
officially labelled the bank as “too big to fail” (or “systemically
importantExternal link”). This title comes with increased regulatory
supervision and demands to set aside extra reserve funds to cover losses.
As CEO between 1999 and 2015, Vincenz sought to raise
Raiffeisen’s profile through the force of his personality and a series of
strategic deals. Flamboyant, eager to engage with the media and known for bold
strategic gambles, Vincenz was the antithesis of a discreet Swiss banker.
He oversaw the purchase of two private banks with an
international footprint, Notenstein and La Roche (which have since been sold by
Raiffeisen). Vincenz also wanted to bring Raiffeisen’s chain of local branches
up to digital speed by taking stakes in financial technology firms. He chaired
Raiffeisen’s daughter company Aduno, with Stocker acting as its CEO.
Supervisory failings
But the rollercoaster ride of growth and ambition hit the
rails in early 2018 when Vincenz and Stocker were accused of fraud,
embezzlement and bribery – charges that they deny.
They stand accused of secretly accumulating stakes in
companies that were about to be taken over by Raiffeisen or Aduno, which rose
in value once the takeover was complete. The indictment also cites the taking
of "unauthorised expenses" and the alleged bribing of
co-conspirators.
Prosecutors are demanding that the two main defendants be
jailed for six years and pay back the millions in illicit gains should they be
found guilty.
Seven other people were also charged with offences in
connection with the alleged crimes, which include taking bribes.
Vincenz’s ex-wife, who once served as Raiffeisen’s chief
legal officer, was convicted in November of violating banking secrecy laws by
passing on confidential documents to her former husband.
Raiffeisen has already emerged from the affair in a poor
light. A 2018 FINMA investigation found a “serious breach of supervisory
lawExternal link”, saying that “Raiffeisen's board of directors failed to
adequately supervise its former CEO, thereby enabling him, at least
potentially, to generate personal financial gain at the bank’s expense.”
The banking group’s chair of the board, Johannes
Rüegg-Stürm, was forced to resignExternal link, followed by Vincenz’s successor
as CEO, Patrik Gisel, who was never implicated in the scandal but could not
shake off links with his former boss and found his position untenable.
The trial starts on January 25 and is expected to last
several months, if not years, due the complexity of the evidence. Given the
size of the case, the trial has been moved from the normal courthouse to a
large public building in Zurich that usually stages concerts.
List of scandals
Switzerland is not accustomed to such high-profile corporate
fraud cases. The last comparable event was the trial of Swissair executives in
2007External link, who were cleared of criminal malpractice after the airline
went bankrupt.
If Vincenz and Stocker are found guilty, their troubles may
not be over. They could be pursued for civil damages amounting to many millions
of francs.
What’s more, prosecutors in both Switzerland and
Liechtenstein are reportedly poised to launch money-laundering investigations
against the duo and a Swiss lawyer who processed payments on their behalf. A
guilty verdict in the Zurich trial could result in further charges if the
transactions are proven to be fraudulent.
For the discreet Swiss banking sector, the steady stream of
lurid headlines is the stuff of nightmares, adding to a growing list of
scandals engulfing the industry.
In 2020 Credit Suisse CEO Tidjane Thiam was forced to
resignExternal link after it emerged the bank had hired sleuths to spy on
former employees. Credit Suisse was also embroiled in a high-profile
embezzlement case in MozambiqueExternal link and incurred huge losses last year
in the collapsed Greensill and ArchegosExternal link investment schemes.
And only a few days' ago, António Horta-Osório had to step
down as chair of the board after flouting Covid-19 restrictions in both
Switzerland and Britain and the questionable use of a company private jet.
UBS also suffered a reputational setback in December when a
Paris appeal court confirmed the bank’s criminal convictionExternal link for
helping French citizens evade taxes for a number of years.
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