"HSBC and BNY Mellon sued over ‘minibonds’
By Justine Lau
Published: March 13 2009 18:44 | Last updated: March 13 2009 18:44
A group of investors has sued HSBC and Bank of New York Mellon, alleging that the banks failed to protect Hong Kong buyers that bought into complex derivative instruments known as “minibonds” linked to the now defunct Lehman Brothers.
The class-action lawsuit filed in New York calls for $1.6bn of collateral held by HSBC and BNY Mellon to be released to investors. Minibonds have lost most of their value since the collapse of Lehman.
According to the complaint, HSBC is the issuer, trustee and custodian of the minibonds, while BNY Mellon is custodian of some assets held by the products.
The complaint named Lehman as one of the defendants. The class action was filed by the US law firm Coughlin Stoia, which also represented a group of Enron investors.
“The trustee failed to protect the collateral backing the minibonds. The issuer failed to execute the terms of the deal so that the promised high-quality collateral would be purchased and safeguarded, and also failed to give notice of negative information about the derivatives underlying the minibonds,” according to the complaint.
HSBC said it was the trustee of the minibonds, but not the issuer. The bank said it did not know whether it was a custodian.
“Any suggestion that we were involved with the design or selling of the minibonds is wrong. We were the trustee and we provided services on that basis,” HSBC said.
BNY Mellon declined to comment.
About 34,000 investors in Hong Kong bought HK$13.9bn (US$1.79bn) worth of the Lehman minibonds from 23 local banks and brokers.
The products were sold for at least five years before the US bank filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection last year.
The minibonds were also sold in Singapore, although this class action focuses on Hong Kong.
Controversy surrounding the minibonds has sparked an outcry in Hong Kong, as angry investors, mostly retirees and pensioners, alleged that they had been misled to believe the minibonds were as safe as bonds.
“Although these minibonds were marketed as low-risk, safe and secure, in reality they were backed by numerous credit default swaps and synthetic collateralised debt obligations – the kinds of toxic financial instruments that are at the heart of the current financial crisis,” the complaint said.
Peter Chan, chairman of the Allied Victims of Lehman Products in Hong Kong, said the lawsuit was a “milestone”, adding: “We have suffered a lot in the last few months. I hope this would bring us closer to an end.”
Some minibond holders in Hong Kong have filed court cases against individual banks in the territory, which does not have a class action suit system.
Hong Kong’s legislative council has formed a special committee to investigate the issue and any mis-selling, while the Securities and Futures Commission, the market regulator, is also looking into it.
In January, Sun Hung Kai Investment Services, a local broker, agreed to refund HK$85m to more than 300 buyers in full for their losses on the minibonds."