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'You need to own this client:' How Goldman Sachs landed a Libyan 'elephant'

Tai, an Indian female elephant stands in the middle of a couple's home in a performance art piece by English artist Banksy, Friday, Sept. 15, 2006, in a downtown Los Angeles warehouse. The Banksy exhibition which opened today called Barely Legal, is billed as a
Tai, an Indian female elephant stands in the middle of a couple's home in a performance art piece by English artist Banksy, Friday, Sept. 15, 2006, in a downtown Los Angeles warehouse. The Banksy exhibition which opened today called Barely Legal, is billed as a

AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes

Senior Goldman Sachs managers encouraged a former salesman to "own" the Libyan Investment Authority as a client because of the potential for large profit margins on complex trades, a London court heard on Thursday.

The LIA was set up in 2006 to invest Libya's oil wealth internationally. The organisation claims Goldman Sachs took advantage of the low level of financial literacy of LIA staff and suggested large and risky trades that led to heavy losses for it and profits for the bank.

Lawyers for Goldman Sachs, responding to the claims earlier, said that the LIA was suffering from "buyers remorse," and that the bank wasn't responsible for the losses, which happened amid the 2008 credit crunch and financial crisis.

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On Thursday, a lawyer for the LIA questioned Andrea Vella, a partner at Goldman Sachs, on how the bank developed a relationship with the Libyan authority and whether it considered it financially unsophisticated.

Vella agreed that the LIA was perceived as being capable of carrying out deals of a "significant" size, when asked by LIA's barrister, Phillip Edey QC. 

"I think if you asked certain people at Goldman Sachs at the time they would have described them as elephant," Vella, now based in Hong Kong, told the court in quiet, lightly Italian-accented English.

The reference to elephants came from a chapter in the book "Why I Left Goldman Sachs" by Greg Smith, called "Hunting for Elephants" and referenced as evidence by Edey.

Vella was pressed by Edey as to whether "as a general rule on Wall Street, the less transparent a transaction is the more money it makes for the firm."

"No, I think that is not accurate," Vella replied.

The Libyan Investment Authority is claiming it lost more than $1 billion (£750 million) on nine trades executed by Goldman Sachs in 2008 on banks such as Citigroup and UniCredit, as well as the French company EDF.

The LIA claims it bought complex equity derivatives rather than the underlying stock without fully knowing the risks of the transactions it was buying into.

The bank made more than $200 million in profit on the trades, exploiting the LIA's relative financial naivety, according to the LIA's lawyers.

Goldman Sachs has said it would defend against the claims "vigorously," calling them "without merit" when the case started.

Vella said in a witness statement made available to journalists that his impression of Mohamed Layas, the CEO of the LIA, was that he was "an experienced and capable financial professional" and capable of understanding the trades carried out with Goldman Sachs.

goldman sachs trader patch
goldman sachs trader patch

AP Photo/Damian DovarganesEdey read an excerpt of an email from ex-Goldman Sachs partner Yusuf Aliredha which said: "The investment opportunity with this client is one of the largest I've ever seen. We're all over them."

Vella said it was natural to wish to "dedicate resources" to develop a client relationship.

Edey also read excerpts of emails from former Goldman Sachs Partner Driss Ben-Brahim to Youssef Kabbaj, a former Goldman Sachs salesman embedded with the LIA, that said: "Stay super-close to the client on a daily basis. Teach them, train them, dine them. You need to own this client, it's a once in a career opportunity."

Goldman Sachs became close to the LIA after Kabbaj was embedded within the organisation in 2007. Kabbaj befriended Haitem Zarti, the younger brother of a senior LIA official.

Zarti was taken on holiday to Morocco and to a conference in Dubai, where Kabbaj allegedly paid for business-class flights and five-star hotel rooms and, according to the LIA lawyers, procured prostitutes for them both. Zarti was also granted a coveted internship at the bank.

The court heard claims earlier that Kabbaj exchanged texts with a prostitute, known as Michella, to organise entertainment for him and Zarti in Dubai in February 2008, according to LIA's lawyers.

Last week the court heard that Goldman Sachs acted "like a swarm," presenting different teams and products to the LIA in 2007 "one after the other and almost relentlessly," according to testimony from Ali Jallal Baruni, a consultant for the LIA, said in a witness statement distributed to journalists.

Baruni claimed Goldman Sachs even introduced the son of Sir Martin Sorrell, CEO of advertising giant WPP, as part of the team.

"I felt almost under attack as different Goldman Sachs teams and products were presented to me, one after the other and almost relentlessly, without me even being given the opportunity to ask questions or reflect on them," Baruni said in the statement.

The trial is scheduled to last until August.

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