In a hodgepodge of squat low slung
single storey buildings, which were built more for function than for
aesthetics, sit some of Iceland’s finest bankers.
According to a March 2016 Bloomberg
article titled This Is Where Bad Bankers Go To Prison by Edward
Robinson and Omar Valdimarsson, Kviabryggja Prison is a converted
farmhouse nestled in between the frigid North Atlantic ocean on one side
and fields of bare, unyielding lava rock on the other.
Sigurdur
Einarsson who was the chairman of Kaupthing Bank, Iceland’s largest
bank before the 2008 financial crisis, and Hreidar Mar Sigurdsson who
was the bank’s former chief executive officer were convicted of market
manipulation and fraud leading up to the collapse of the former top
bank.
The same article highlights that they are kept in
the good company of Magnus Gudmundsoon who was the former CEO of
Kaupthing’s Luxembourg unit and Olafur Olafsson who was the second
largest shareholder in the bank at the time of its demise.
The
dream team is serving sentences up to five and a half years, which may
be low in criminal conviction terms but huge in a global financial
industry that saw not a single individual jailed in the United States or
the United Kingdom for misdeeds arising out of the greed derived
financial crisis.
Starting in 2010, the special
prosecutor for the Iceland banking cases had successfully prosecuted 26
banking officials by March 2016.
Following deregulation
in the early turn of the 21st Century, Iceland’s top three banks had
accessed European money markets and borrowed €14billion in 2005 alone,
which was double their intake in 2004 and paying 0.2 per cent over
benchmark interest rates.
The banks lent the funds back out to Icelanders at high
interest rates, raking in huge profits. Flush with easy credit,
Icelandic households bought flats in London, took shopping trips to
Paris and jammed Reykjavik’s streets with Range Rovers.
By
2008 the banks’ assets had swollen to ten times the Icelandic $17.5
billion economy. Once the 2008 financial crisis hit, the Icelandic banks
lost their short term funding and could no longer service their own
debts.
The local currency’s value fell, making loans
denominated in foreign currencies more expensive and leading to the top
three banks defaulting on more than $85 billion in debt and households
losing more than a fifth of their purchasing power, conclude Robinson
and Valdirmasson.
Further south in the Atlantic Ocean,
Ireland joined Iceland as the only other country to criminally convict
bankers for their pre-financial crisis misdeeds.
According
to a July 2016 article in the Irish Times by Ruadhan Mac Cormaic, three
former bankers were jailed for terms ranging from 3.5 years to two
years for their roles in a €7 billion fraud at the height of the
financial crisis.
Willie McAteer and John Bowe from
Anglo Irish Bank and Denis Casey the former CEO of Irish Life and
Permanent (ILP) were involved in setting up a circular scheme where
Anglo moved money to ILP and ILP sent the money back, via their
assurance firm Irish Life Assurance, to Anglo.
The
article describes further that the scheme was designed so that the
deposits came from the assurance company and would be treated as
customer deposits, which are considered a better measure of a bank’s
strength than inter-bank loans.
The sham transactions
were aimed at demonstrating that “Anglo Irish Bank had €7.2 billion more
in corporate deposits than it had.”
Kenya stands head
and shoulders with its Icelandic and Irish banking counterparts who have
had executives accused of market manipulation and fraud. Some
shareholders and executives of Imperial Bank and Chase Bank have been
taken to court by the Kenya Deposit Insurance Corporation for corporate
malfeasance.
However, these are civil suits aimed at
recovering the money and levying monetary penalties rather than
extracting criminal convictions for actions that have caused manifest
pain and suffering to both depositors and genuine borrowers.
These
cases may drag in court for years as history has shown us, rendering
very little present value vindication to those suffering today. But for
what it’s worth, it’s a good start and a large prick on the conscience
of many Kenyan bank boards today.
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