A Seven-Year Probe Ends with a Fine
Swedbank just wrote the last check in a long U.S. legal saga. The Stockholm-based lender paid $50 million to New York's financial watchdog, the Department of Financial Services. That $50 million payment brought to a close a U.S. probe that had lasted seven years and involved three different authorities.
The money is not for the laundering itself. It is for what the bank did not tell the regulator. That failure is what drew the fine.
This settlement is the final piece of a seven-year stretch for the bank. Back in 2020, Swedish authorities already hit Swedbank with a 4 billion kronor penalty ($415 million) for violating anti-money-laundering rules. The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission concluded its own probe in September without taking further action.
Get the market news that matters in a five-minute read with Market Briefs, our free daily newsletter
The Department of Justice closed its investigation in January without imposing penalties.
The $50 million fine, even though it is small next to the $415 million penalty from Swedish regulators in 2020, underscores the bank's pattern of failing to cooperate with international authorities. The resolution of these probes removes a key obstacle that had hindered Swedbank's ability to return capital to shareholders and focus on its core business.
The Bigger Scandal Behind the Headlines
To understand why U.S. regulators were interested in the first place, you have to go back to a much larger mess. Several Nordic banks, such as Swedbank and Danske Bank A/S, were caught up in a massive Estonian money-laundering scheme totaling $230 billion that lasted from 2007 to 2015. The scandal originated in Estonia, where non-resident customers used the banks to move large sums of money, much of it from Russia and former Soviet states. Both lenders faced intense scrutiny from regulators across multiple countries.
In 2024, a Swedish court convicted former Swedbank CEO Birgitte Bonnesen for releasing deceptive information to journalists about the affair. However, the Supreme Court overturned that conviction in April. That decision, together with the conclusion of U.S. settlements, eliminates a key legal burden that had weighed on the bank for years.
The massive flow of questionable funds through these Baltic units drew attention from authorities in Estonia, Sweden, and the United States. For Swedbank, the non-resident portfolio at its Estonian branch was at the heart of the allegations, with internal whistleblowers and leaked documents revealing how high-risk clients moved money across borders with little oversight. The bank has since overhauled its compliance systems and exited the non-resident business entirely, but the legal fallout took years to resolve.
What This Means for Shareholders
For investors, the key word here is certainty. Bloomberg Intelligence's Maryana Black said, "This outcome closes the book on years of examination and allows the bank to return extra capital to shareholders." When the Justice Department ended its inquiry in January, Swedbank's stock hit an all-time peak and the bank advanced further toward returning extra capital.
Join Market Briefs, our free daily newsletter, for a quick daily rundown of the markets
