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French court orders bank to pay ex-trader damages

June 7, 2016

French bank Societe Generale has been ordered to pay rogue trader Jerome Kerviel thousands of euros for unfair dismissal. Kerviel has been accused of perpetrating one of history's biggest trading frauds.

https://p.dw.com/p/1J2BO
French trader Jerome Kerviel leaves the courthouse of Paris
Image: Getty Images/AFP/K. Tribouillard

A trader whose unauthorized transactions cost French bank Societe Generale billions of euros was wrongly dismissed, a labor court ruled on Tuesday.

The labor arbitration court ordered the bank to pay over 450,000 euros ($511,170) to former trader Jerome Kerviel for firing him "without real and serious cause."

In 2008, Societe Generale revealed it lost 4.9 billion euros ($7 billion at the time) due to Kerviel's unauthorized trades - almost toppling one of Europe's largest banks.

Kerviel maintains that his superiors knew about his dubious financial dealings and allowed them as long as they brought in money. Societe Generale denies these claims and accused Kerviel of covering up his unauthorized trades.

He was fired after news of the trades surfaced and later sued for wrongful dismissal.

A stunned Societe Generale called Tuesday's ruling "incomprehensible" and vowed to appeal the decision.

"Congratulations to my lawyers! The fight continues … until the end," tweeted Kerviel on Tuesday.

Kerviel's lawyer David Koubbi tweeted a simple "VICTORY!" following Tuesday's decision.

The ex-trader, 39, was sent to jail after being convicted of fraud, breach of trust and manipulation of data in October 2010. At the time, he was ordered to pay the bank all 4.9 billion euros in losses, but France's highest court annulled the damages, saying the bank shared responsibility.

A new trial is set to take place next week in Versailles to determine how much Kerviel should pay.

rs/bw (AP, dpa, Reuters)