Standard Chartered reportedly lost $400 million on risky loans to a cadre of diamond barons

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Standard Chartered reportedly lost $400 million on risky loans to a cadre of diamond barons

diamonds

Kim Alaniz

Diamonds didn't turn out to be Standard Chartered's best friend.

In 2009, while most banks were reeling from the financial crisis and paring back risk, Standard Chartered dove headlong into the dangerous game of diamond lending, according to a report from Franz Wild, Thomas Biesheuvel and Stephen Morris in Bloomberg Businessweek.

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The London-based bank began courting a cadre of diamond barons, whose companies would eventually borrow billions to finance their business of buying rough stones from miners like De Beers, cleaning them up, and then selling them to retailers, according to the report.

According to the report, Kishore Lall and other leaders of the diamond-lending unit pushed ahead full steam in their initiative to be the premier financier, ignoring warning signs and flouting risk-control practices along the way, according to the report.

When consumer demand flagged and diamond prices dropped - they've fallen 20% in the past few years, according to Bloomberg - Standard Chartered was caught holding the bag on hefty sum of bad debt.

Since 2013, Standard Chartered has booked losses of some $400 million to these clients on loans that once reached as much as $3 billion. With $1.7 billion in loans still outstanding, the losses could rise, and CEO Bill Winters is "still trying to clean up the mess," according to Bloomberg.

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Read the full story at Bloomberg Businessweek.