Search This Blog

May 4, 2011

Glencore lists fraud, criminal case among IPO risks - Yahoo! Finance

Glencore lists fraud, criminal case among IPO risks

On Wednesday May 4, 2011, 1:23 pm

By Clara Ferreira-Marques and Quentin Webb

LONDON (Reuters) - Commodity trader Glencore, set to list this month in one of London's largest-ever offerings, has detailed its involvement in a Belgian criminal probe as it outlines risks to investors, including fraud and corruption.

Glencore said in a prospectus on Wednesday, ahead of its planned $11 billion listing, that its subsidiary Glencore Grain Rotterdam, a former employee and a current employee had been charged in a criminal case in Belgium.

Glencore said the criminal investigation was probing a public official, the European Commission's Directorate General for Agriculture and others for "violation of professional secrecy, corruption of an international civil servant and criminal conspiracy."

Glencore's unit and its current and former employees have been charged with having committed corruption in exchange for information on European export subsidies, it added.

The case was initiated in 2003, with co-operation from Dutch and French police, and covers facts dating from 1999 to 2003.

Commission agriculture spokesman Roger Waite confirmed that the EU executive expected a trial into alleged corruption by former agriculture department official Karel Brus.

Brus, a Dutch national, is accused of having passed confidential information relating to EU export subsidy application decisions to a French farming lobbyist between 1999 and 2003.

"As far as the Commission is concerned, we cannot comment further on an ongoing investigation," Waite said.

Glencore declined to comment on the case beyond details included in the prospectus. It says it is not involved in legal proceedings which could have a material impact on its profits.

Belgium's federal prosecutor confirmed on Wednesday that there is a criminal case against Glencore but declined to comment further. The case will be heard in Brussels on May 12.

The Commission, the European Union's executive arm, has become a civil party to the case, Glencore said.

FRAUD RISK

Glencore also listed in its prospectus over 30 other risks to the broader company, its marketing and trading operations.

The formerly publicity-averse trader and miner operates around the world and says its willingness to move into riskier countries in Eastern Europe, Central Africa and South America before rivals gives it a "first-mover advantage."

Companies typically outline a vast number of risks to future performance in the run-up to a listing, in order to satisfy requirements to provide a full picture for future investors.

Glencore, however, detailed more than many, with risks including declines in demand for commodities, geopolitical risk and the risk it may not be able to retain key employees.

It also raised the risk of fraud and corruption, "both internally and externally."

"Glencore's marketing operations are large in scale, which may make fraudulent or accidental transactions difficult to detect. In addition, some of Glencore's industrial activities are located in countries where corruption is generally understood to exist," the company said.

Glencore said it has internal controls, external due diligence and compliance policies.

(Additional reporting by Ben Deighton and Charlie Dunmore in Brussels; Editing by Alexander Smith and Mike Nesbit)

No comments:

Post a Comment

Commented on MasterMetals

ShareThis

MasterMetals’ Tweets

Tags

IFTTT Twitter MasterMetals News Gold MssterMetalsNews MasterMetalsNews mining stocks Commodities Mining GLD Silver COPPER Oil China Metals Dollar Energy Precious Metals MasterEnergy GDX trading Hedge Funds EV Platinum Battery Metals exploration Finance Glencore USA GDXJ Africa ETF Canada Nickel Charts Chile Euro Technical Analysis BHP Base Metals LME Lithium Australia DRC Futures Iron Ore Latin America Palladium central banks Cobalt IPO RIO South Africa Uranium zinc Barrick CME SIL SLV TSX middle east Anglo American Asia FED India PSLV Russia Trafigura Venezuela comex AEM AngloGold Argentina Batteries Bonds Chavez Debt Ecuador IVN Kinross NEM PGM PPLT Renewables coal currencies Bitcoin Iran JPMorgan Chase Japan Mexico Newmont Peru Switzerland TSXV VALE Agriculture BP Brazil EQX Education FCX Gas Ivanhoe Mines London Lundin Metals Streaming NYMEX Nuclear Oreninc Roxgold Royalties SWF Sprott Strategic Metals Turkey UK Vitol WGC infographic AU Amplats Autonomous Vehicles Azimut Banks BlockChain CFTC CODELCO COT Cerrado Gold Colombia Cote d'Ivoire Critical Metals EDV Egypt Electricity FIL FSM Filo Financings GATA GMIN Goldman Sachs Guinea HFT Indonesia Irak LSE LUG Loonie M&A MENA Mongolia NDM NGEx Orion Oro PIIGS RUP Rare Earths REE Rhodium Robert Friedland Rupert Resource S&P SBSW SQM Saudi Arabia Tsingshan UAE VALT VC VW Valterra Yuan money quebec rare earths $MAU 1971 1979 AAUC ADM AGI ALB ARIS ASX ATH ATY AUY AZM Abu Dhabi Agarwal Alaska Antimony B BIS BTG Bill Clinton Bin Laden CBX CCB CITGO CMOC Cameco Cargill Cars Chuquicamata Clice Capital Cobalt27 CoronaVirus Covid19 Crypto DFC DJIA DOJ DPM Defense Demographics Djibouti E-Waste ECB EGO EM EPA ESG El Dorado Endowments Environment Europe FVI Fav Finland Food ForEx Frank Giustra Freeport McMoran GBP GDP GFI GFMS GTWO Ghana Graphite Great Be Greece Green Energy Gundlach Gunvor Guyana HPX Haftium IAG IOC Inflation KGC KL Kamoa Kazakhstan Kipushi Kurdistan LBMA Louis Dreyfus Lunahuasi MAKO MF Global Mercuria NAK Nevada Nigeria Northern Dynasty Oman Osisko PDVSA PEA PEMEX PG Pebble Pebble Project Platreef Politics Private Equity Qatar Rabbit Recycling Repsol Research Rhenium Rusal SKE SSRM Sensors Shale TGZ Tariffs Tech Teck Tesla Texas Trump Ukraine VGCX VIX Victoria Gold WPIC WPM Warren Buffett XAU XGD XStrata YPF Yen Yukon Zambia diamonds gold price spoofing stocks supply chain zinc News

Master Sites