blogs  
 
yournews
   
 
Video Photos Finance Travel Weather Discussion TV Shows
| |
 
  Home ›
 
Business News

 

Japan's Marubeni rejects Lehman Bros lawsuit
Posted: 13 April 2008 0138 hrs

 
 
Photos  of

   
 



TOKYO : Japan's Marubeni Corp. Saturday rejected a 352-million-dollar lawsuit by Lehman Brothers over a bogus investment scheme allegedly involving two employees of the trading giant.

In a statement, Marubeni said it had "no payment obligation whatsoever" to the US investment bank, which two weeks ago filed a lawsuit with the Tokyo District Court seeking compensation as a victim of fraud.

"The case would never have occurred if Lehman had exercised the due care typically expected and required in light of the extraordinary financial amount of the alleged transaction," Marubeni said.

Lehman Brothers said it was defrauded out of 35.2 billion yen (352 million dollars) through a hoax in which Marubeni employees used forged documents and an impostor to solicit funds supposedly to refurbish hospitals.

"The transaction in question was so irregular, and from the amateurish contents of the forged documents, (that) Lehman should have naturally been suspicious," Marubeni's statement read.

Marubeni, a trading giant whose interests span chemicals, energy, textiles and aerospace, has denied any responsibility.

Two Marubeni employees -- who were fired in early March -- and a venture called Asclepius Ltd. allegedly used faked documents which promised Marubeni would assume debt repayments in the event of insolvency of the firm.

Asclepius, a wholly owned unit of medical consulting firm LTT Bio-Pharma Co., has since filed for bankruptcy.

Under the scheme, Asclepius lent funds to hospitals through a third party for the purchase of medical equipment from Asclepius or Marubeni. Investors in the funds were supposed to receive repayment with interest later.

The two former employees and Asclepius told investors to expect a 10 percent return even if the projects failed, and more if they went well, Japanese media said, quoting sources close to the case.

They used a conference room at Marubeni for meetings with investors and presented a fake in-house Marubeni document to make investors believe Marubeni executives had endorsed the projects, media said.

The incident came to light on March 6 when an investor contacted Marubeni after failing to receive any payments.

- AFP /ls

 


Other business News
Eurozone sets conditions for Greek bailout
Banks agree US$25b deal for US homeowners
China releases Jan trade data
Flights back to normal Friday after strike: Air France
M'sia trade expected to grow at slower pace
US stocks gain on Greece, bank mortgage deal
Euro edges up as Greece inks reform deal
Oil prices rise on Greek deal
Eurozone stalls Greek cash aid pending new conditions
China says January exports expected to have dropped
Greece says agreement reached on austerity measures: ECB
ECB holds key interest rate steady at 1.0%
OPEC cuts 2012 oil demand forecast
China's January inflation hits 3-month high
Spain's economy to worsen in Q1
Indonesia cuts interest rate to record low
Malaysia sees record trade in 2011
Rio Tinto earnings down 59% on aluminium write-down
Asia stocks mixed on Greek fears, China inflation
China's Alibaba raising US$3b for Yahoo! stake

 

 
Affiliate Sites:
 
About Us  |  Contact Us  |  Advertise with Us  |  Terms & Conditions