Monday, April 18, 2016

Ministry of Finance Inc has defaulted, Minister For Finance And Prime Minister Must Go; Only Tengku Razaleigh can restore confidence

by Ganesh Sahathevan



Tengku Razaleigh Hamzah



The repercussions of IPIC putting both 1 MDB and  the  Malaysian Minister Of Finance Inc (MOF) into default are already being felt, with the sell-off of 1 MDB bonds which started yesterday, Monday 18 April 2016.


1MDB’s dollar bond prices slumped on Monday (April 18) to the lowest since November, according to Bloomberg-compiled prices. The yield rose 252 basis points to 8.27 percent. It was trading around 5.7 percent last week from almost 10 percent in October as graft allegations intensified.

The MOF Inc's attempts to localize the matter to 1 MDB is irrelevant, given that international financial markets will now penalize Malaysia for the default, regardless of the MOF's assurances. The damage has been done.

Given the circumstances Malaysia has no choice but to have the Minister for Finance and Prime Minister, Najib Razak,  replaced immediately in order to restore confidence in the country's finances and its management. It may have been possible elsewhere to simply remove the Minister For Finance but given the reality of Malaysian politics where the Prime Minister is also the Finance Minister, the post of prime minister must also be vacated. 


A failure to do so will cost the country, for what has now occurred is a loss of confidence. Changing the leadership is the only way in which confidence can be restored. This comment is made without reference to the ongoing scandal that Najib finds himself in. Such is the enormity of the situation. 


The  MOF has attempted to limit damage to 1 MDB, but, given the now 2 year history of scandal, debt defaults, and the like at 1 MDB overseen by Najib only the most committed of his supporters are likely to believe Najib
Indeed, 1 MDB official seem to understand the gravity of the consequences , at least for themselves:

Officials at 1MDB have told the Malaysian Ministry of Finance that a default on the $3.5 billion in debt could push investors to sell off their currency and bonds, potentially tarnishing the country’s image in global financial markets, according to the memo viewed by the Journal. Cross-default clauses in other 1MDB agreements could also be triggered if the deal between IPIC and 1MDB collapses, putting the fund in default on several billion dollars more of debt, according to the memo viewed by the Journal.

There is an immdeiate need to have a new Prime Minister and Minister For Finance appointed and the only person within the Malaysia's constellation of leaders who fits the bill is the former Minister For Finance and potential prime minister, Tengku Razaleigh Hamzah. It is hard to see anyone else capable of commanding the respect and confidence of buyers and sellers in the  international financial markets who  are deciding the country's fate even as this commentary is written.

END 


Sunday, April 17, 2016

1 MDB bond default : The Al-Nahyans of Abu Dhabi can respond to Najib's belligerence with Xavier Jutso, Brian Lord,Khadem Al-Qubaisi etc etc etc......

by Ganesh Sahathevan



Khalifa bin Zayed bin Sultan Al Nahyan  
President of the United Arab Emirates,
the Emir of Abu Dhabi and the commander
of the Union Defence Force.





Leslie Lopez of ST Singapore has just reported:


Last week, IPIC informed 1MDB that the KL entity was in default of a complex bond agreement between the two, according to Malaysian government officials and financial executives close to the situation.

Malaysian government officials, who spoke to The Straits Times on condition of anonymity, said IPIC has informally told 1MDB that it has no intention of honouring the interest payment because of the alleged default of the bond agreement. For its part, the Najib government has taken the position that it will not step in to cover the payment because it has done nothing wrong.



This is a classic case of believing in one's own publicity, and of forgetting that in any legal dispute the facts of the matter are almost always paramount.In this matter the facts are simple, well known, count against Najib, 1 MDB and Malaysia.  The  facts in essence are these:

a) Sitting in a Thai prison courtesy of a compliant Thai judiciary is a PetroSaudi director named Xavier Justo who has an entire database of emails detailing Najib's "friend of the family"  Low Taek Jho's dealings with PetroSaudi and IPIC , which have attracted the attention of government investigators from the US, Switzerland, the UK, Singapore , Hong Kong and Luxembourg.

b) Sitting pretty in London and Dubai is one Brian Lord, the former QCHQ man who at various times let it be known that he has full and complete access to the Justo database and more.

c) Sitting one presumes with a very high degree anxiety in Dubai under house arrest is Khadem Al-Qubaisi, the former managing director of IPIC, who has clearly angered Sheikh Mansour bin Zayed Al Nahyan, who heads IPIC , and the brother of Sheikh Khalifa bin Zayed Al Nahyan, the Abu Dhabi ruler and United Arab Emirates president.


All three , if not at least Lord and Khadem, are well within the control of the Al-Nahyans. All too easy for the family to rebut Najib's "we have dome nothing wrong", in fora and media of their choosing.
All this over payments that IPIC has assumed subject to a guarantee it provided 1 MDB.
END















http://www.straitstimes.com/asia/se-asia/state-fund-dispute-puts-1mdb-at-risk-of-default

Saturday, April 16, 2016

I admit Saudi Arabia has used a fraudulent BVI company to channel hundreds of millions to Najib:Saudi FM's admission read together with "Prince Saud" letter throws up interesting matters

by Ganesh Sahathevan


Saudi Foreign Minister Adel Al-Jubeir is reported to have said with regards the USD 681 million found in PM Najib Razak's private accounts: 

"It is a genuine donation with nothing expected in return. And we are also fully aware that the attorney general of Malaysia has thoroughly investigated the matter and found no wrongdoing," Al-Jubeir said. "So, as far as we are concerned, the matter is closed."

Adel is however not the only person whose statements have been relied on to explain the donation,there is this letter from a certain "Prince Saud": 


In the letter "Prince Saud" makes reference to Blackstone Real Estate Partners Asia, and states that it is a company under his control which he will use to channel funds to PM Najib. That company has been shown to be part of a scam currently investigated by authorities in a number of jurisdictions. (See Sarawak Report story below). Adel may consider the matter closed,but his confirmation of that "donation" opens up issues on a number of regulatory fronts all over the world.
Most serious of these is his apparent admission to financing jihadi activities in South East 
Asia. The matter is described in the story at this link:

Saudi Government admits to using shell companies,tax havens, to finance Islamists in South East Asia-Wells Fargo ,Australia's ANZ ,now implicated in terrorist financing

END 







NEW 1MDB BOMBSHELL - Second Jho Low Company Paid Hundreds of Millions To Both Najib Razak AND Khadem Al Qubaisi - EXCLUSIVE!

NEW 1MDB BOMBSHELL - Second Jho Low Company Paid Hundreds of Millions To Both Najib Razak AND Khadem Al Qubaisi - EXCLUSIVE!

Khadem signs the deal while Najib looks on - but where did all the money go from the 1MDB/Aabar "strategic partnership"?
Khadem signs the deal while Najib looks on – but where did all the money go from the 1MDB/Aabar “strategic partnership”?
Sarawak Report can reveal that a second Jho Low company, Blackstone Asia Real Estate Partners Limited, has paid hundreds of millions of dollars into the personal accounts of both the Malaysian Prime Minister, Najib Razak and also the ex-Chairman of Abu Dhabi’s Aabar fund, Khadem al Qubaisi.
Aabar, a subsidiary of the IPIC sovereign wealth fund, has been enmeshed in a series of highly questionable and loss making deals with the scandal-torn Malaysian development fund 1MDB, which is directly controlled by Razak, using Jho Low as his proxy.
A Sarawak Report investigation has established that Blackstone, a BVI registered company which gives an address in Singapore, has been cited as the sender of a series of enormous dollar currency payments to both men between 2011 and 2012.  Our information includes telegraphic transfer documents passed through the American banking system.
The off-shore company uses a tactic familiar to watchers of Jho Low, in that it apparently seeks to give the impression that it is associated with the US global investment giant, the Blackstone Group. However, there is no link whatsoever between the legitimate multi-national and this secretive shell company.
Jho Low and Li Lin live it up on the high life
Jho Low and Li Lin enjoying the high life
In fact documents obtained by international investigators have ascertained that the signatory for the company is none other that Jho Low’s deputy, Seet Li Lin.  Seet also acted in the same capacity for the notorious companyGood Star Limited, which lies at the heart of the 1MDB scandal and of which Low was the sole shareholder.
The records show that before it was liquidated in early 2013, just three years after starting operations, Blackstone Asia Real Estate Partners Limited transferred well over half a billion dollars into accounts belonging to the two men. This was exactly the period when two major loss-making power purchase deals were funded through billion dollar bond issues raised under a joint guarantee by the two funds. Much of that money appears to be unaccounted for, forming a large part of 1MDB’s current debt problems.

Khadem scooped nearly half a billion dollars (RM2 bn)

Documents obtained by Sarawak Report show that four separate payments were made to Khadem Al Qubaisi’s Luxembourg account at Banque Privee Edmond de Rothschilde Europe (headquartered in Switzerland) in 2012.  The sums were enormous.
Firstly, on 29th May 2012 Blackstone Asia Real Estate Partners transfered US$158,000,000 million into Al Qubaisi’s account, held under the name of the The Vasco Trust, of which he was the sole beneficial owner.
Documents in the possession of SR confirm Al Qubaisi is the shareholder of Vasco Trust
Blackstone BVI is registered under an address in an office rental block in Singapore – 36 Robinson Road.  Documents in the possession of SR confirm Al Qubaisi is the shareholder of Vasco Trust
Three further payments on August 3rd, October 31st and December 4th comprised US$100,750,000, US$129,000,000 and US$85,000,000 respectively.  It makes for a total of just under half a billion dollars – over two billion ringgit at current exchange rates, paid from a shady BVI company into the hands of the salaried Abu Dhabi fund manager over just six months.
How did this ex-fund manager legitimately earn this sum - or was it a kickback?
How did this ex-fund manager legitimately earn this sum – or was it a kickback?
Insiders have confirmed to Sarawak Report that these payments were regarded as kickbacks linked to Al Qubaisi’s involvement in 1MDB.

Tell tale connections with Good Star, Jho Low and Najib Razak

There was just one other major external transaction paid into Al Qubaisi’s Vasco account during the same financial year – US$20,750,000 was transferred from the other secret Jho Low owned company Good Star Limited on 20th February 2013.
Transfer from Good Star into the same beneficiary account belonging to Vasco at BPERE - acc no 390 610
Transfer from Good Star into the same beneficiary account belonging to Vasco at BPERE – acc no 390 610
Had there been a shortfall on the agreed Blackstone transfers, which was made up by Jho Low’s other company Good Star?
Otherwise, can the now sacked Mr Al Qubaisi explain these extraordinary secret payments into his accounts, just in the very period when Aabar and 1MDB were entering into a series of ‘joint investment’ deals from which billions have gone missing?

Payment to the Prime Minister!

There is an even more serious angle to this explosive set of discoveries.  Sarawak Report has learnt that the on-going 1MDB investigation into Najib Razak’s AmPrivate Bank accounts in KL has also established that enormous payments came in from the very same source a few months earlier.
In 2011 Blackstone Asia Real Estate Partners Limited paid a total of US$170 million into the same private account belonging to Najib Razak which later received US$680 million in 2013, as reported by Sarawak Report, along with the Wall Street Journal.
Sarawak Report has already reported there had been earlier payments, which had brought the final sum in the account to well over a billion dollars.  After the election over US$600 million was in fact sent exported back into personal accounts belonging to the Prime Minister in Singapore (now frozen) and the AmBank account closed.
Party mode - Al Qubaisi has poured hundreds of millions into buying up nightclubs in Vegas
Party mode – Al Qubaisi has poured hundreds of millions into buying up nightclubs in Vegas
We are now able to disclose that the first of those series of payments, totalling US$170 million came from Blackstone Asia Real Estate Partners Limited (BVI) and it was supported by the very same identical letter of guarantee provided by the bogus sheikh ‘Saud Abdulaziz Majid al-Saud’, which also backed the later US$680 million ‘donation’ via yet another off-shore BVI company, Tanore Finance Corporation, in 2013.
As we have detailed, Saud Abdulaziz Majid al-Saud has turned out not to exist and the series of identical letters provide no details of his address or credentials.
No wonder the task force investigations into 1MDB ended up querying these enormous payments as part of their remit into Malaysia’s missing development funds.
The official investigators had clearly concluded (before they were rudely shut down, arrested, sacked and in one case murdered) that these transfers into Najib’s accounts were directly linked to the disappearances of vast sums of money from the company’s accounts.

History of an impersonator company

So what of this BVI based company, which suddenly transferred so much money into the accounts of the bosses behind Aabar and 1MDB?
Blackstone Group does indeed have a subsidiary called Blackstone Real Estate Partners Asia.  However, the major global player has responded to enquiries to confirm that the almost identically named Blackstone Asia Real Estate Partners (BVI) has nothing to do with their business.
Research into the shadowy world of BVI corporations has revealed that this particular shell company was incorporated on November 1st 2010 under the name of Foreign FX Trading Limited and changed its name to Blackstone Asia Real Estate Partners on 26th May 2011:
Short lived history of a shell company used to transfer hundreds of millions of dollars
Short lived history of a shell company used to transfer hundreds of millions of dollars
Having transferred the hundreds of millions of dollars into both Najib and Khadem Al Qubaisi’s accounts the company was put into liquidation on 30th April 2013, just before the Malaysian general election.
Time to close down this short-lived multi-million dollar operation?
Time to close down this short-lived multi-million dollar operation?
Sarawak Report contends that the explanation for this series of events is that Blackstone Asia Real Estate Partners Limited (BVI) was merely another of Jho Low’s secretive vehicles for transferring money, which he habitually named to sound as if they belonged to more credible working concerns.
Other such companies which we have identified as being linked to Jho Low’s laundering activities are PetroSaudi International Limited (Seychelles); SRG (Strategic Resouces Global); Aabar Investments PJSLtd and Merryl Capital.
Najib must explain why his anonymous donor appears to be Jho Low
Najib must explain why his anonymous donor appears to be Jho Low
The same London based company, Offshore Incorporations Centre, was employed to incorporate both Good Star Limited in the Seychelles and the Blackstone bogus company in BVI.  Sarawak Report has already confirmedthat international investigators have now established that the sole shareholder of Good Star is indeed none other than Jho Low.
Prime Minister Najib must surely now address what has now become increasingly plain and obvious, which is that much of the money recorded as having gone missing from the 1MDB/Aabar joint ventures, appears to now have been traced into bank accounts belonging to the two main players in these transactions – himself and Khadem Al Qubaisi.
The facilitator in the Blackstone BVI transactions was plainly once more Jho Low, using yet another of his web of off-shore vehicles to shift the cash, before he liquidated it (like Good Star) in an attempt to obliterate the evidence.



Wednesday, April 13, 2016

1 MDB & PM Najib: Foreign agencies can inflict pain and suffering long before sovereign immunity becomes an issue

by Ganesh Sahathevan

PM Najib's lawyer Mohd  Hafarizam Harun is reported to have said:



"The first issue you should look at is whether they have jurisdiction to take action against a prime minister of Malaysia, who is a Malaysian citizen and not the citizen of Switzerland, Germany or even the US.

"So can you (foreign investigators) extend your extra-territorial jurisdiction outside your country and bind a non-citizen?"

With the greatest respect to his learnedness, the "first issue" is going to be preventing the forfeiture and freezing of assets and bank accounts related to the investigation into 1 MDB and PM Najib Razak, which has already occurred in Singapore and  Switzerland.

Then, given the   investigations in the United States, it is useful to consider the powers of the  US Justice Department and in particular the workings of its kleptocracy unit, as well as that of its Asset Forfeiture and Money Laundering Section (AFMLS). Taken together, these sections can seize assets in the US and foreign  jurisdictions, and trace monies through the international banking system, imposing fines and sanctions against banks anywhere that deal in US dollars and which have correspondent banking arrangements with banks in the US. Banks which refuse to comply can therefore not only be faced with balance sheet breaking fines, they could also be frozen out of the international banking system. Consequently, while Malaysian banks may refuse to freeze or forfeit assets related to the 1 MDB scandal, they could find their businesses limited to Malaysian shores. No Malaysian bank can afford that type of isolation. 
Appealing  decisions of the US Department Of Justice will require petitions before courts  in the United States ie submitting to US jurisdiction. Obviously , then, sovereign immunity cannot be raised. 
With regards criminal proceedings against PM Najib personally, it is important to remember that sovereign immunity  is usually recognized when the head of state or head of government is acting in his official capacity. Given all that has been said about donations to PM Najib personally, asserting now that the movement of billions of dollars into and out of  Najib's personal accounts is a matter of state will not provide a shield. Asserting that Najib used it for party political purposes also will not work, no matter how strongly UMNO and BN feel about their ownership of the Government of Malaysia.The party is not the State. 
END 
  



Friday, April 8, 2016

1 MDB chief Arul Kanda in US Treasury cross-hairs: Justification of shady US Dollar transactions makes Arul equally guilty of US AML/CTF breaches

by Ganesh Sahathevan


Now that the Parliament of Malaysia's Public Accounts Committee has found that there were in fact
multiple breaches of AMLCTF laws involving US dollars, the focus falls back on the current CEO Arul Kandsamy who has at various times sighted those transactions, defended them and declared that he was satisfied that the transactions were all above board.In fact, he often did so when the legality of those transactions was called into question.

Subsequently Kanda is at very least an accomplice to these AML/CTF crimes and given that the transactions were primarily in US Dollars, comes well within the jurisdiction of US regulators.
His friends and accomplices at ANZ and AMMB are well placed to attest to that fact,given ANZ's rather expensive experience in that type of matter.

END

Tuesday, March 8, 2016

Goldman Sachs's Lloyd Blankfein & Tim Liessner: Which is the greater sin, writing a reference for employment at a competitor ,or knowingly buying sovereigns as junk?




by Ganesh Sahathevan
The WSJ has reported that Tim Leissner quit Goldman Sachs after he was ordered to explain an apparent breach of company policy, ie sending "an unauthorized reference letter on behalf of an individual to another financial firm in 2015."


Compare this Mr Leissner's record breaking, reality defying,1 MDB bond deal, where Goldman put together a scheme where it bought unrated bonds from 1 MDB, got them rated as sovereigns ,which they were, and then sold them at a massive profit. Bloomberg provides a summary:

Unrated Bonds

1MDB’s bonds were unrated when Goldman bought them and got an A- grade, the same as on sovereign debt, from Standard & Poor’s on April 12. The sale matched a Petroliam Nasional Bhd. deal in 2009 as the largest by a Malaysian company in the international market, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. It made Goldman the second-biggest underwriter of Malaysian dollar bonds after Citigroup Inc., with 18.5 percent of the market, the data show.

Part of the $500 million came from Goldman buying the notes at a discount to face value before marking them up to sell to investors, said the person familiar with the deal.

Goldman purchased the bonds for 91 cents on the dollar, according to the person. At that price, the notes yielded about 5.6 percent, or 364 basis points more than Treasuries and 261 basis points more than the rate on Malaysia’s sovereign Islamic dollar debt due July 2021. Quasi-sovereign bonds due in seven to 10 years yielded 2.3 percent on average, according to data compiled by Bank of America Corp.

While it is true that sharp investment bankers like Mr Leissner are very good at picking up mispriced assets, this was clearly a case where all parties involved agreed to pretend that the Rolls Royce was a very ordinary Proton.One would think that this ,more than some "unauthorized reference letter on behalf of an individual to another financial firm " would be of greater concern, but not it seems at Goldman Sachs.It is obvious that Goldman is finding any excuse it can to break any nexus between its partners and CEO and chairman, Lloyd Blankfein.


END 


Goldman Adviser to 1MDB, Tim Leissner, Quit After Alleged Bank-Policy Violations

Leissner was firm’s point man with Malaysian state fund


Tim Leissner, Goldman Sachs’s top banker to 1MDB, and his wife Kimora Lee SimmonsTim Leissner, Goldman Sachs’s top banker to 1MDB, and his wife Kimora Lee Simmons
PHOTO: PRESLEY ANN/PATRICK MCMULLAN
By JUSTIN BAER and KEN BROWN Updated March 8, 2016 4:09 a.m.                           The Goldman Sachs Group Inc. partner who handled deals for a controversial Malaysian government investment fund was suspended and later quit after bank investigators found he allegedly violated company policies, said a person familiar with the matter.Goldman placed Tim Leissner, the firm’s Southeast Asia chairman, on leave after a review of his email found that he had allegedly sent an unauthorized reference letter on behalf of an individual to another financial firm in 2015, the person said.The letter also included statements that Goldman believes to be inaccurate, the person said. Mr. Leissner was placed on leave in January and he resigned a day later, several people said. His last day was Feb. 23, the people said.The letter allegedly sent by Mr. Leissner wasn’t linked to business that Goldman did for the Malaysian fund, and the firm has found nothing wrong with his dealings with the fund, the people said.

MALAYSIA’S 1MDB DECODED
Meanwhile, Mr. Leissner has been subpoenaedby U.S. investigators probing possible wrongdoing at the fund, a person familiar with the matter said. News of the subpoena was first reported by Bloomberg News.
Mr. Leissner was Goldman’s top banker to 1Malaysia Development Bhd., a Malaysian government-investment fund now engulfed in scandal over its alleged connection to transfers of funds into the personal accounts of the Asian country’s prime minister. As authorities​ in five countries probed the fund, Goldman quietly began its own inquiry into Mr. Leissner’s role, the people said.
1MDB didn’t respond to a request for comment.
The email review also came as Goldman resigned from a potentially lucrative mining deal in Indonesia being led by Mr. Leissner because of the involvement of someone in the deal who the bank believed could hurt the firm’s reputation, said one person familiar with the matter. Bank investigators found that Mr. Leissner had offered an internship to a child of the individual, the person said.
The decision to back out of the project irritated Mr. Leissner, who argued that Goldman was scrutinizing his deals more heavily because of his involvement in the 1MDB controversy, people familiar with the matter said. He was also frustrated with Goldman for failing to support his request to move to Los Angeles. He is married to fashion designer Kimora Lee Simmons, who is based there.
The departure of its star banker in the region and the resignation from the mining deal are blows to Goldman’s lucrative business in Southeast Asia, which Mr. Leissner built in over a decade on the ground.
Goldman had been helping a group of investors secure financing in their potential bid for the controlling stake of an Indonesian copper-mining operation when the firm’s executives grew concerned about an adviser to one member of the group. The person’s name appeared on many emails involving the deal, which were seen by Goldman investigators looking at Mr. Leissner’s activities, people familiar with the matter said.
The person involved in the deal also asked Mr. Leissner if Goldman could hire his child as an intern, and Mr. Leissner agreed, a person familiar with the matter said.
The presence of the person, whose identity couldn’t be learned, caused Goldman to pull out of the deal.
The deal, which included financing and hedging, would have generated more than $50 million in revenue for the bank, making it one of the biggest transactions in the region since three big bond offerings by the Malaysian fund in 2012 and 2013, which generated hundreds of millions of dollars in revenue for Goldman.
The bidders hired Credit Suisse Group AG after Goldman withdrew, the people said. The deal is still being negotiated. A spokesman for Newmont Mining Corp., the U.S. company that controls the copper-mining operations, declined to comment.
At a Feb. 29 mining conference in Florida, Newmont Chief Executive Gary Goldberg said that “Newmont and our partner, Sumitomo, are in discussions with certain interested parties” over the potential sale of the mine.
“But to date,” he added, “none have secured fully committed financing or deal terms.” Newmont said the mine, called Batu Hijau, is located on the island of Sumbawa​and is one of the world’s biggest copper mines. It is partially owned by the government.
Mr. Leissner arrived in Southeast Asia when it was considered by many to be a financial backwater and helped the bank forge key relationships in business and government. When Malaysia established 1MDB in 2009 to spur economic development, Mr. Leissner became a key adviser to the fund.
The Wall Street Journal reported this month that global investigators believe $1 billion that originated with 1MDB was transferred to personal accounts of Najib Razak,Malaysia’s prime minister. In October, the Journal reported that U.S. investigators had begun to examine Goldman’s dealings with the fund.
Investigators in two of the countries probing 1MDB, while agreeing most of the money transferred to Mr. Najib’s account ultimately was returned, believe the money originated with 1MDB, according to people familiar with the probes.
Mr. Najib has denied wrongdoing or taking any money for personal gain. The 1MDB fund said in a statement on Feb. 19 that it “has not paid any funds to the personal accounts of the Prime Minister.” Malaysia’s attorney general said the money that went into Mr. Najib’s account was a legal donation from a member of Saudi Arabia’s royal family, and most was returned. The attorney general said there was nothing improper and it was time to stop scrutinizing the deposits, a notion echoed by Mr. Najib.
Mr. Leissner’s departure from Goldman despite his commercial success underlines Wall Street’s heightened concerns over the risks posed by employees operating far from the watchful gaze of compliance officers and lawyers back at their headquarters. Those fears have deepened with each regulatory probe into allegations of money laundering, corruption and improper ties to government employees or their children.
Offering internships to relatives of clients or potential clients had been common business practice for big banks in Asia. But the practice has some under scrutiny for possible violations of U.S. bribery laws and Goldman is among several international banks being investigated for hiring relatives of top Chinese government officials, according to regulatory filings. Goldman officials have declined to comment on the probes.
​Goldman is expected to disclose some details on Mr. Leissner’s departure in his file with the U.S. securities industry’s self-regulating arm, Finra, people familiar with the matter said.
One person familiar with the matter said Mr. Leissner left Goldman quietly in January and by last month had ceased communicating with some of his closest colleagues in Asia.
Goldman’s investment-banking executives didn’t note his resignation with a memorandum to their employees, a step normally taken with partners who leave the firm in good standing, according to a person familiar with the matter.
​After leaving Goldman, Mr. Leissner took on an advisory role with Wildcat Capital Management, the family office of private-equity giant David Bonderman. Mr. Leissner is close with executives in Asia at TPG Capital, the firm founded by Mr. Bonderman. A person familiar with the matter said Mr. Leissner was no longer an adviser to his firm. It is unclear why he ended his relationship with the family office.
—Tom Wright contributed to this article.
Write to Justin Baer at justin.baer@wsj.com and Ken Brown at ken.brown@wsj.com