They
have been called “the
men who plundered Europe”, the “robbery
of the century”
and
“organised
crime in pinstripe suits”
Cum-ex
transactions work by trading shares at high speed on or just before
the dividend record date – the day the company checks its records
to identify shareholders – and then claiming two or more refunds
for capital gains tax which had in fact only been paid to the state
once. Financial experts have likened the practice to the banking
equivalent of parents claiming child benefit for multiple children
when they only have one.
Speaking
at a court in Bonn, Martin Shields, one of two former bankers on
trial for 34 instances of serious tax fraud between 2006 and 2011,
painted a picture of a London banking scene which lured in the
brightest scientists from the country’s top universities and used
them to boost their profit margins – without teaching them about
the moral and legal consequences of their actions in return.
“This
was the environment at that time: a financial industry that – at
least as far as I could see – was geared towards maximum profit
optimisation,” the 41-year-old told a courtroom on Wednesday.
“One
tool to achieve this goal was tax optimisation: avoiding taxation as
far as possible – and taking advantage of any opportunities that
could be found or created. This was not the clandestine approach of a
few. Rather, I saw it as the clear and openly communicated
expectation of most major banks and their customers.”
While
Shields did not respond directly to the charges of serious tax fraud
this week, he said in hindsight he had started to feel regret about
devising the schemes, which hoovered up money that could have
otherwise been spent on building roads, hospitals or nurseries.
https://www.theguardian.com/business/2019/sep/20/the-men-who-plundered-europe-city-of-london-practices-on-trial-in-bonn
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