*Banyak petinggi tinggi-tinggi rezim neo-Mojopahit turut serta dalam kasus
membankrutkan Bank Centrury dan oleh sebab kasusnya itu diputar-putar
junkir balik supaya tidak selesai penyelesain hukumnya untuk
petinggi-petinggi tsb masuk kandang tikus*.


https://www.asiasentinel.com/econ-business/ghost-indonesia-bank-century-scandal-reappears/


*Ghost of Indonesia’s Bank Century Scandal Reappears*

 May 11, 2019

By: John Berthelsen


Most of the executives at the deeply troubled Bank JTrust Indonesia appear
to have been forced out or quietly departed over recent months amid rumors
that the Indonesian Bank Deposit Insurance Corporation is about to once
again take control of the bank and sell it to new owners.

Takeover candidates are said to be either the Bandung-based PT Bank Jabar
Banten, owned by East Java government interests, PT Bank Sinarmas,
affiliated with the Sinar Mas conglomerate, or Saikyo Bank Japan.

The sale is rumored at the equivalent of US$50 million, which means the
Tokyo-based J Trust Co. Ltd. would have potentially incurred losses
exceeding US$300 million. That is a far cry from the US$366.65 million the
bank was allegedly sold for when J Trust bought it under questionable
circumstances in 2014.

*Departure widely expected*

The departure of J Trust is widely expected as it faces liquidity issues in
Japan and fraud charges lodged by Group Lease PCL, a Thailand-based
hire-purchase company, in Cambodia. On Nov. 19, 2018, the President and CEO
Nobuyoshi Fujisawa, at J Trust’s presentation of its second-quarter 2018
results <https://www.jt-corp.co.jp/en/ir/library/results_briefing/> in
Tokyo, said J Trust was seeking to sell off 40 percent of the bank and cede
operational control to anybody who wanted to take it over.


Fujisawa acknowledged that “We bought a failed bank, but we did not expect
to fail not only once but twice in our restructuring efforts.  If we had
never bought J Trust Bank Indonesia, I suppose our earnings would be
better.”

So far, the Indonesian unit’s furloughed President Director, Rituso Ando,
the head of credit risk Haryanto Budi Purnomo, the head of treasury,
foreign exchange and derivatives Rio Lanasier and managing director Helmi
Arief Hidayat as well as all the treasury department’s treasurers and all
the commercial loan collection officers are said to have left, been fired
or are leaving the bank, which is now down to only two directors, neither
of whom have any experience running a treasury or deposit-taking book at
the bank.


*Mismanagement and corruption*

The bank boasts a spectacular history of mismanagement and corruption. It
was born as Bank Century in 2004 and capsized in 2008, its demise and
bailout ensnaring cabinet ministers and top Bank Indonesia officials, with
more than US$1.5 billion stolen and moved overseas by former management led
by the bank’s president, Robert Tantular, and his family.  The bank is
widely believed in Jakarta to have been the repository of hundreds of
millions of dollars in slush funds belonging to the Indonesian Democratic
Party headed by former President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono.


As Asia Sentinel reported on April 10
<http://www.asiasentinel.com/econ-business/indonesia-rogue-bank/>, vast
sums disappeared out of Bank Century under the quasi-government bank
deposit insurance corporation’s management in 2008 and 2009 as the
Indonesian government struggled to save it. The bank was expropriated by
the LPS, led by Bank Mandiri, on November 20, 2008 when ex-Mandiri
executives Maryono and Ahmed Fajar arrived at only to discover the bank had
a negative net worth of US$ 816.8 million and only US$512.46 million in
assets.

According to a report by UK money-laundering expert Peter Barrie- Brown,
enormous amounts went into and out of FBME Bank and Saab Financial (Jersey)
Ltd from 2006 to 2014, a dissolved company whose now-liquidated successor
and alter ego is known as Saab Financial (Bermuda) Ltd, itself now also in
liquidation.

In his report, Barrie-Brown said: “The number of separate reasons for being
suspicious are so many in total that I rate the whole arrangement and its
operation to be the greatest collection of suspicious circumstances I have
ever encountered in real life.”

*Enter Bank Mutiara*

Bank Century was recapitalized as Bank Mutiara in 2008 and 2009 under the
administration of the Bank Deposit Insurance Corporation, more widely known
by its Indonesian acronym LPS, which reports directly to the office of the
Indonesian president.

The LPS went in search of buyers in 2014. Although it was offered to 18
would-be purchasers, it found few takers and the bank was eventually sold
to J Trust in a transaction that appears to have been anything but
arms-length. The LPS sale in fact appeared to be structured so that J Trust
was the only bidder, with preferential, predetermined terms negotiated by
the former LPS CEO, Kartika Wirjoatmodjo and Nobuyoshi Fujisawa, the J
Trust CEO. The Japanese concern renamed it Bank JTrust after supposedly
agreeing to pay the equivalent of US$366.65 million in cash.

But the LPS audit records make it look like J Trust paid nothing for the
bank. Wire transfer records from J Trust Co. do not indicate a payment of
Rp4.455.1 trillion on Nov. 20, 2008 and the LPS audits document a full loss
of IDR 8.011 trillion for the FYE 2015 booked as a payment against
insurance claim reserves. Asia Sentinel has repeatedly sought a response
from J Trust executives without reply.

*Allegations of laundering*

 Since its takeover by J Trust, allegations have arisen in several court
jurisdictions of hundreds of millions of dollars moved overseas by the
Japanese, some of it to the notorious FBME unit in Cyprus via Saab
Financial, both of which were closed for good at the behest of US
authorities in 2017 amid allegations of money-laundering for Russian
Mafiosi, sub-Saharan satraps, pornographers, internet scam authors and
others.

The bank has been the victim of severe mismanagement, having now dissipated
all of the 2008 to 2019 LPS and J Trust capital injections totaling Rp10.9
trillion (US$1.001 billion), partly because of problems with its inherited
US$914.7 million non-performing loan portfolio.

In addition, J Trust’s affiliated unit, PT JTrust Investments Indonesia,
has been the recipient of more than US$300 million of Bank JTrust’s
nonperforming loan portfolio since 2015 and is now reported by J Trust,
according to the company’s financial reports, to have a negative net worth
of $70 million as of Dec 31, 2018, with another US$92 million in bad loans
expected to be injected into PT JTrust Investments Indonesia or sold to
Sinarmas by the end of May.

There are additional questions over the propriety of the recently rumored
sale of Bank JTrust to Bank Jabar Banten, also known as Bank BJB, which is
said to have troubling loan portfolio problems of its own. Rio Lanasier,
the highly regarded former Bank JTrust treasury director, is expected to
become the new chief financial officer of Bank BJB shortly. Bank BJB is
jointly owned by the West Java Provincial Government and a long list of
individual West Java cities and districts. The recently installed
President- Director, Yuddy Renaldi, was an NPL workout officer at Bank
Mandiri and Bank Negara, reporting to Kartika Wirjoatmodjo and  then Achmad
Baiquni, the CEO of the state-owned Bank Negara Indonesia.


*National bank ambitions*


Baiquni and Kartika, the president and CEO of the state-owned bank Mandiri,
the country’s biggest bank, are said to be overseeing the potential sale or
merger into Bank BJB in a bid to become a national bank otherwise known as
a BAKU Bank 4. The rumored transaction has little time to close before any
reported changes in President Widodo’s cabinet appointing new ministers who
could block it, potentially forcing Bank JTrust’s bankruptcy and insolvency
yet again.

Reporting by Asia Sentinel since 2016 over the sale of the bank and other
controversies has since stirred an investigation by Indonesia’s formidable
Corruption Eradication Commission, better known by its initials KPK. Among
targets of the investigation are said to be the widely respected former
Indonesian Vice President Boediono, who served as the Bank Indonesia
governor, Kartika, then the head of the Bank Insurance Deposit Corporation,
now the president director of Bank Mandiri, the country’s biggest bank and
Tantular, Bank JTrust’s previous owner and controlling shareholder, who was
recently released from jail.

Sources in Jakarta say as many as 40 current and previous LPS, Bank
Indonesia and government officials have been interviewed. Officials at Bank
JTrust, J Trust Co and the LPS appear to be attempting to hide records of
more than US$6 billion in money laundering trails and a further US$6
billion in audit fraud, all of which has to be produced in the global
courts of Thailand, Cambodia, Cyprus, Hong Kong, the BVI, Mauritius and
Singapore.


*Cash flow problems*


In the meantime, J Trust Co. is believed to have severe cash flow problems
of its own stemming from US$1.8 billion in condominium loan guarantees in
Japan. Its share price has rebounded slightly off its recent low of 344
(US$3.13) to 428 although that is still a long way from its 2013 high of
¥3940 (US$35.40).

JTrust Asia PTE, the subsidiary fighting Group Lease Thailand for US$256
million, reported in December that it is almost out of cash and J Trust’s
CEO Fujisawa is also reported to have fled Singapore for Tokyo to oversee
what may be J Trusts’ final days.

Major shareholders, many of which have bailed out, still include the
Kirkland, Washington-based Taiyo Pacific Funds LLP, whose former chief
investment officer was Wilbur Ross, President Donald Trump’s commerce
secretary. Others are Vanguard, BlackRock, Dimensional Fund Advisers and
State Street, all primarily index funds, as well as Merrill Lynch and Co.
and Goldman Sachs according to Bloomberg reports.

J Trust faces more than US$1 billion in fraud and money laundering lawsuits
in several countries over its operations and has run into financial
difficulty with several of its units.  It is heavily invested in Tokyo’s
flagging condominium market and market reports say the financial
conglomerate’s liquidity and Japanese regulatory problems are growing.

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