Abstract:The British banking giant HSBC Holdings Plc has announced a potential $1.1 billion charge connected to the long-running Bernard Madoff Ponzi scheme, following a legal ruling in Luxembourg. The claim stems from Herald Fund, a European investment fund that sued HSBC over alleged losses related to the Madoff fraud.

The British banking giant HSBC Holdings Plc has announced a potential $1.1 billion charge connected to the long-running Bernard Madoff Ponzi scheme, following a legal ruling in Luxembourg. The claim stems from Herald Fund, a European investment fund that sued HSBC over alleged losses related to the Madoff fraud.
The Herald Fund lawsuit was first filed in 2009, demanding that HSBC return $1.1 billion in investor funds linked to Madoff‘s fraudulent investment network. On October 24, 2025, a Luxembourg court dismissed HSBC’s appeal, marking another setback for the bank.
HSBC announced that it will record the amount as a “significant matter to note” in its upcoming third-quarter financial report, which is set to be released tomorrow. The bank said it continues to dispute the claim and intends to pursue a second appeal.
Bernard L. Madoff, once one of Wall Streets most trusted figures, ran what became the largest Ponzi scheme in financial history, defrauding tens of thousands of investors worldwide. The fraud was exposed in 2008 during the global financial crisis, when Madoff could no longer meet the growing number of investor redemption requests.
He was sentenced to 150 years in prison in 2009 after admitting to orchestrating a multi-decade investment scam. Madoff died in prison in 2021 due to kidney failure. His case remains one of the most infamous examples of large-scale financial fraud in modern history.
In response to the Luxembourg courts latest decision, HSBC stated that it plans to file a second appeal. The bank also noted that if it loses the appeal, it will challenge the total amount claimed by Herald Fund, suggesting that the final financial impact could vary significantly.
HSBC emphasized that it continues to evaluate its exposure to Madoff-related litigation and that any charges will be reflected transparently in its upcoming financial disclosures.
More than a decade after Madoffs conviction, the financial and legal repercussions of his Ponzi scheme are still being felt across the global banking system. Financial institutions that handled Madoff-related funds—including HSBC and several European asset managers—have faced lawsuits, restitution claims, and reputational damage.
The latest HSBC Madoff case highlights how the aftershocks of financial crimes can persist long after the perpetrators are gone, underscoring the need for stronger due diligence and compliance in global fund management.


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