The Libyan Investment Authority (LIA), which was set up in 2006 to handle the country's oil revenues, accuses the investment bank of gaining the "trust and confidence" of its inexperienced managers, before advising them to enter into "inadequately documented" derivative trades into companies including Citigroup, EdF, Santander and ENI.
The nine deals, totalling USD 1 billion, were entered into in early 2008 but turned sour during the financial crisis,according to details made available by the High Court today.
Despite the losses, the fund claims that the bank still walked away with profits of USD 350 million.
A spokeswoman for the bank called the claims "without merit" and said they would "defend them vigorously."
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Kabbaj, chief of Goldman's Libyan operations, and Ben-Brahim, the bank's head of trading for emerging markets, "reassured the LIA they were one of Goldman's key strategic clients," according to the fund's suit, which was filed last week.
Managers of the USD 60 billion fund were apparently confused about what they were investing in due to their "extremely limited in-house financial expertise", and were exploited by "Goldman's considerable financial experience," added the submission.