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Morgan Stanley downgraded Goldman Sachs’s (GS) stock to “equal-weight” on Wednesday, citing regulatory risks that could come from the U.S. Justice Department’s investigation into its role in an international corruption scandal centered around the 1Malaysia Development Bhd., a Malaysian state investment fund.
In early November, the Justice Department unsealed documents alleging that senior-level Goldman bankers Tim Leissner and Roger Ng bribed and laundered money through relationships with 1MDB, in violation of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act.
1MDB was the center of a huge political scandal that engulfed former Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak, who was charged with funneling fund money into his personal account to purchase expensive jewelry for his wife.
The fallout appears far from over. The Wall Street Journal reported Wednesday that an Abu Dhabi sovereign wealth fund is now suing Goldman Sachs, alleging the bank had a “central role” in the scheme. The fund guaranteed $3.5 billion in bonds to 1MDB over a year and is now taking Goldman to court to “protect its business interests against an international conspiracy.” Goldman Sachs says it arranged about $6.5 billion of debt securities for 1MDB, which helped the bank pocket about $600 million in fees.
In filings dated November 2, Goldman Sachs said it is cooperating with the Justice Department and all other regulatory investigations related to 1MDB but said it cannot predict the outcome of those investigations.
Morgan Stanley is projecting fines of $1.2 billion in addition to a return of its $600 million in collected fees.
“These risks, coupled with potential headline risks in the coming months (additional lawsuits, additional regulatory probes, internal reviews), drive our Equal-weight rating,” Morgan Stanley wrote.
Goldman on the defense
Goldman did not respond to requests for comment on the latest 1MDB-related developments. Between the second and third quarters of 2018, Goldman slightly increased its reserves for existing and estimable legal matters from around $1.5 billion to $1.8 billion.
The company has also beefed up its legal team to handle the probes. The Financial Times reported November 6 that it hired former Justice Department deputy attorney general Mark Filip, who has a close friendship with the department’s current criminal division chief, Brian Benczkowski.
Michael Volkov, a former deputy assistant attorney general who knew both individuals during his time at the DOJ, told Yahoo Finance he does not think Benczkowski will recuse himself in the case.