The State of Qatar v Banque Havilland SA (a company incorporated under the laws of Luxembourg)

JurisdictionEngland & Wales
JudgeDavid Edwards
Judgment Date30 July 2021
Neutral Citation[2021] EWHC 2172 (Comm)
Docket NumberCase No: CL-20190-00238
CourtQueen's Bench Division (Commercial Court)
Between:
The State of Qatar
Claimant
and
(1) Banque Havilland SA (a company incorporated under the laws of Luxembourg)
(2) Vladimir Bolelyy
Defendants

[2021] EWHC 2172 (Comm)

Before:

David Edwards QC

SITTING AS A JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT

Case No: CL-20190-00238

IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE

QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION

COMMERCIAL COURT

Royal Courts of Justice

Strand, London, WC2A 2LL

David Mumford QC, Mr Thomas Munby and Mr Hugo Leith (instructed by Macfarlanes LLP) for the Claimant

David Quest QC and Mr Philip Hinks (instructed by Reed Smith LLP) for the Defendants

Hearing dates: 21 June 2021

Approved Judgment

I direct that no official shorthand note shall be taken of this Judgment and that copies of this version as handed down may be treated as authentic.

David Edwards QC

David Edwards QC:

Introduction

1

On 5 March 2020 a first case management conference (“CMC”) in this action was heard by Cockerill J. Her order gave directions to trial in the usual way. Paragraph 15 provided that there should be a further CMC on the first available date after 9 December 2020 for the determination of any outstanding matters relating to disclosure and expert evidence.

2

In the event, the second CMC was heard by me on 21 June 2021. Most of the matters that arose were dealt with at the hearing. This judgment deals with the one matter on which I reserved judgment, namely an application made by the Claimant seeking various orders in relation to the Defendants' disclosure, and an issue that has arisen since the hearing concerning one of the proposed issues for expert evidence.

Factual Background

(i) The parties

3

The Claimant in this action is The State of Qatar (“Qatar”).

4

The First Defendant, Banque Havilland SA (“the Bank”), is incorporated in Luxembourg and has a London branch. The Bank's shares are held subject to a discretionary trust of which the enforcer is David Rowland, an English businessman. A number of members of Mr Rowland's family are, or have at one time been, employees and/or directors of the Bank.

5

The Second Defendant, Vladimir Bolelyy (“Mr Bolelyy”), is a former employee of the Bank who worked at its London branch with the title Senior Investment Analyst until 9 November 2017, when he resigned.

(ii) The alleged conspiracy

6

On 5 June 2017 a number of Arab nations, including Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, severed diplomatic ties with, and took a number of other measures against, Qatar, including the closure of sea, land and air borders. Those actions have become popularly known as “the blockade”. The precise reasons for those actions are unimportant, at least in the context of the present application.

7

This action concerns an alleged conspiracy, which is said by Qatar to have coincided with, and to have been entered into by the alleged conspirators in order to further the policy reflected in, the blockade. Its alleged aim was to attack the Qatari economy and to cause financial damage to Qatar by:

i) Manipulating the market in the currency issued by the Qatar Central Bank, the Qatari Riyal (“QAR”) and, by so doing, to exert pressure on the pegged exchange rate maintained by the Central Bank between the QAR and the United States dollar; and

ii) Manipulating the market in United States dollar-denominated debt instruments issues by Qatar (“USD Qatari Bonds”).

8

The parties to the alleged conspiracy are said to have included a number of Saudi Arabian and United Arab Emirates banks. Proceedings have been commenced by Qatar against four of the banks allegedly involved in New York and England, but these are currently stayed pending or with a view to settlement. I am told that Qatar has engaged in pre-action correspondence with other alleged conspirators.

9

The Bank and Mr Bolelyy are alleged by Qatar to have been participants in this alleged conspiracy. The case made against them is principally, but not solely, based on the preparation by Mr Bolelyy in 2017 (according to the Bank and Mr Bolelyy in September 2017), while employed at the Bank, and the alleged subsequent dissemination, of a seven-page slide presentation entitled “Distressed Countries Fund” (“the Presentation”).

10

The origin, nature and purpose of the Presentation, and the extent to which it was disseminated and acted upon by the Bank (if at all), are all matters for trial. The strategy described on pages 3 to 5 of the Presentation, however, described how:

i) A pool of existing Qatari bond holdings would be placed into a protected cell company to maintain confidentiality;

ii) An execution strategy would be adopted for trading in QAR and Credit Default Swaps (“CDSs”) which would include “ mak[ing] targeted use of investment banks' friendship with Qatar to affect loyalty and add confusion to the marketplace”;

iii) There would be established “ a crossing transaction arrangement whereby another affiliated party sells the same bond holdings back to the original seller and thereby creates additional downward pressure”; and

iv) Steps would be taken to “ fire up the PR machine to remind people there is a problem with Qatar” and to “ focus on the prospect of restricted access to US Dollar and now-doubtful stability of the country”.

11

The Presentation was prepared by Mr Bolelyy in 2017 – accordingly to the Bank and Mr Bolelyy in mid-September 2017 – and it appears that at least one other Bank employee, David Weller, the Bank's Head of Asset Management, was involved in its creation at least to some extent. There is a dispute between the parties as to who else within the Bank was involved and as to the extent (if at all) to which the Presentation was disseminated outside the Bank.

12

The Presentation was referred to in an article published by the news website “Business Standard” on 12 October 2017. It featured more substantively in a lengthy article published by a US website entitled “The Intercept” on 9 November 2017 under the headline: “Leaked Documents Expose Stunning Plan to Wage Financial War on Qatar – and Steal the World Cup” (“the Intercept Article”).

13

The flavour of the Intercept Article can be gleaned from its first three paragraphs:

“A plan for the United Arab Emirates to wage financial war against its Gulf rival Qatar was found in the task folder of an email account belonging to UAE Ambassador to the United States Yousef al-Otaiba and subsequently obtained by The Intercept.

The economic warfare involved an attack on Qatar's currency using bond and derivative manipulation. The plan, laid out in a slide deck provided to The Intercept through the group Global Leaks, was aimed at tanking Qatar's economy, according to documents drawn up by a bank outlining the strategy.

The outline, prepared by Banque Havilland, a private Luxembourg-based bank owned by the family of controversial British financier David Rowland, laid out a scheme to drive down the value of Qatar's bonds and increase the cost of insuring them, with the ultimate goal of creating a currency crisis that would drain the currency's cash reserves.”

14

The Intercept Article went on to explain that the metadata for the Presentation had been obtained by The Intercept and that it identified Mr Bolelyy as its creator. There were embedded screenshots within the article of particular slides.

(iii) The claim against the Defendants, and their defence

15

The claim by Qatar against the Bank and Mr Bolelyy, based on their alleged participation in this alleged conspiracy, is advanced in tort for unlawful means conspiracy, unlawful purpose conspiracy and/or causing loss by unlawful means. The damages claimed are substantial – the Particulars of Claim refer to figures running into the $billions – but are not presently particularised (at least adequately).

16

The Bank and Mr Bolelyy deny the claim. In essence, whilst they do not admit the existence of the alleged conspiracy, they deny in their Amended Defence that they were themselves party to, or took any action in furtherance of, any such conspiracy, in particular, in the case of the Bank, denying that they took steps to establish a protected cell company or that they carried out any material trades in QAR or USD Qatari Bonds.

17

In a Response to a Request for Further Information dated 15 April 2020, the Defendants said the following about the purpose for which, and the circumstances in which, the Presentation was prepared:

“On 3 August 2017, David Rowland and Edmund Rowland met socially with Khaldoon Al Mubarak [CEO of the Abu Dhabi sovereign wealth fund, Mubadala], as he happened to be in London at the time. There was no particular purpose or agenda for the meeting.

At the end of the meeting, while David Rowland was temporarily absent, Mr Al Mubarak mentioned to Edmund Rowland that UAE banks had holdings of Qatari bonds and were considering strategies to ring-fence and hedge the risk associated with those holdings. Mr Al Mubarak did not give further details.

On or about 12 September 2017, Edmund Rowland asked Mr Bolelyy to research and put together a short document on a hedging strategy for Qatari bonds. Edmund Rowland was planning to visit Abu Dhabi with David Rowland at the end of September and envisaged meeting with Mr Al Mubarak. He wanted to have the document available in case the issue came up.

Mr Bolelyy prepared and drafted the Fund Presentation between 12 September and 18 September 2017. During that period, he had input from David Weller (an employee of Banque Havilland) and David Henry (a consultant to Liwathon Limited).

Mr Bolelyy completed drafting the Fund Presentation on 18 September 2017. The Defendants did not engage in any further consideration of the Fund Presentation or the matters...

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