A proposed settlement with prosecutors from the Parquet National Financier is expected to be reviewed by a Paris judge at a court hearing in the next few weeks, said the people, who spoke on condition of anonymity.
As part of the overall deal, London-based
The full agreement would cover the fine to end the PNF case as well as the tax bill, said one of the people. That corresponds to the amount
The tentative deal comes after Crédit Agricole SA's investment banking arm agreed in September to pay about €134 million ($156 million) in fines and back taxes related to Cum-Cum trades. The move would increase the pressure on a group of other banks — BNP Paribas SA and its Exane SA subsidiary, Société Générale SA and Natixis SA — whose premises were targeted by PNF raids in 2023 of unprecedented scale and scope. None of them has been accused of wrongdoing.
Cum-Cum transactions involving banks in France may have cost some €4.5 billion in lost tax revenue, authorities said earlier this year. Officials are trying to claw back those amounts. The alleged
In its handling of settlements, the PNF has made the payment of Cum-Cum tax bills a prerequisite to settle criminal cases. But
While French financial prosecutors have described Cum-Cum trades as widespread, they said at the hearing to approve Crédit Agricole's deal that the lender wasn't a major player, suggesting other banks are more deeply entangled in the controversial practice.
A PNF prosecutor said at the time that while they consider the transactions are hardly in a gray zone, "some banks continue to claim" that dividend arbitrage, as Cum-Cum trades are sometimes referred to, "doesn't exist."
Crédit Agricole partly acknowledged that stance by saying that its internal investigation turned up certain transactions that "had no primary economic reality" and only served to "evade withholding tax for the benefit of French shareholders located abroad."
As part of their parallel audits, French tax authorities began by examining local lenders. But Bloomberg reported in July that they had expanded their focus to also audit Wall Street banks with trading floors in Paris, including Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and Bank of America Corp.
So far, foreign institutional investors such as asset managers or hedge funds on the other side of some of these transactions appear to have been spared by French authorities. Bank of France data shows non-residents owned 49.5% of all the stock of CAC 40 companies at the end of 2023.






