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Allianz division agrees to pay $6 billion for defrauding teachers, religious groups and foundations

<i>Adobe Stock</i><br/>A US division of German insurance firm Allianz will pay more than $6 billion for what US investigators called a
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A US division of German insurance firm Allianz will pay more than $6 billion for what US investigators called a "massive fraudulent scheme" that involved the investments of public pensions

By Nicole Goodkind, CNN Business

A US division of German insurance firm Allianz will pay more than $6 billion for what US investigators called a “massive fraudulent scheme” that involved the investments of public pensions, religious organizations and other foundations.

The settlements with the US Department of Justice and US Securities and Exchange Commission are among the largest in corporate history. The company and three of its portfolio managers agreed to plead guilty to federal fraud charges as part of the settlements.

The Justice Department said Tuesday that Allianz Global Investors failed to stop a scheme to defraud investors in funds that collapsed during the 2020 Covid recession. AGI is a subsidiary of Allianz SE, one of the biggest names in the financial world with over $2 trillion in assets under management.

The scheme, said investigators, manipulated investors to put $11 billion into complex funds they dubbed “Structured Alpha.” The portfolio managers mislead investors about the risk levels and altered documents to make the funds look safer than they were, the DOJ and SEC said. The firm ultimately made about $550 million in fees associated with the funds.

The pitch to investors was simple enough: create a portfolio of debt or equity securities and use it as collateral to purchase and sell options. The strategy exposed investors to a lot of debt and equity that Alianz managers said was hedged just in case markets became volatile.

But executives failed repeatedly to make those hedges and inflated fund performance to boost their own pay while collecting 30% performance fees, said prosecutors.

The plan worked while markets thrived but quickly fell apart during the high volatility of the March 2020 market sell-off when the funds of hundreds of institutional investors, including the pensions that managed retirement plans of Arkansas teachers and New York City subway workers, lost billions of dollars.

The funds’ former chief investment officer, Gregoire Tournant, was indicted on criminal charges including conspiracy, securities fraud and obstruction of justice. Two other managers, Stephen Bond-Nelson and Trevor Taylor, pleaded guilty in February to charges including securities fraud.

“Allianz Global Investors admitted to defrauding investors over multiple years, concealing losses and downside risks of a complex strategy, and failing to implement key risk controls,” said US Securities and Exchange Commission chairman Gary Gensler Tuesday. “The victims of this misconduct include teachers, clergy, bus drivers and engineers, whose pensions are invested in institutional funds to support their retirement.”

Allianz said in a statement that the criminal misconduct was done by a few individuals who no longer work for the company and that the Justice Department’s investigation didn’t find misconduct elsewhere.

Because of the guilty settlement, Allianz is no longer permitted to perform advisory services for certain funds in the United States. The company announced Tuesday that it has a preliminary deal to transfer the management of about $120 billion in assets to Voya Financial.

Tournant’s lawyers, Seth L. Levine and Daniel R. Alonso, told CNN in a statement that they believe he is being scapegoated by the government for Covid-related losses that were out of his control.

“While the losses are regrettable, they are not the result of any crime,” they wrote. “The losses resulting from these market events were suffered by sophisticated institutional investors — including Greg himself who had a considerable investment in the fund.”

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