Reuters
Britain’s vote to leave the European Union and the rise of US presidential nominee Donald Trump have paralysed efforts by Western governments to encourage already highly reluctant international banks to do business with Iran.
Uncertainty is frustrating Tehran’s push for foreign investment to revive its struggling economy: over Britain’s political and economic future, over whether Trump – who wants to scrap a nuclear deal with Iran – will get into the White House, and over whether banks will fall foul of US sanctions if they process transactions with the Islamic Republic.
Iran’s failure to get full access to the global financial system a year after it signed the nuclear deal with world powers has intensified domestic political infighting. It has also turned up the heat on President Hassan Rouhani, a pragmatist facing re-election next year, who has gambled on attracting foreign investment to help raise voters’ living standards.
Under the deal, international financial sanctions on Iran were officially lifted in January this year and yet it has secured banking ties with only a limited number of smaller foreign institutions.
One senior Iranian official said Tehran was examining alternatives. “Iran will continue to work with small banks, institutions as long as major European banks are reluctant to return to Iran,” said the official.
“Our estimation is that this uncertainty will continue for a few years. We are in talks with many countries, mainly China, Russia and African countries to widen our banking cooperation aimed at resolving existing banking, financial problems.”
US banks are still forbidden to do business with Iran under domestic sanctions that remain in force. European lenders also face major problems, notably rules prohibiting transactions with Iran in dollars – the world’s main business currency – from being processed through the US financial system.
Banks remain nervous following a string of heavy US penalties, including a $9 billion fine on France’s BNP Paribas in 2014, largely for violating US financial sanctions.
WATCH AND SEE
Britain says it remains committed to tackling the banks’ concerns, while the US Treasury says it won’t stand in the way of legitimate business with the country.
However, Iranian officials and foreign bankers believe the British political upheaval after last month’s referendum has distracted governments in London and other European capitals, while the possibility that the shock will send the British economy into recession has deepened banks’ caution yet further.
“Fear over Brexit’s financial consequences have made Britain and other European countries more careful over their interaction with Iran. Most of them have adopted the policy of watch and see,” another senior Iranian official told Reuters.
“The British banks and authorities have a very big problem to deal with and since the vote, they have been less eager about Iran and I can even say almost not interested. Of course, we believe we can still work with British banks and have told them so.”
European banks have generally cited the US elections as a political risk, while avoiding detailed comment on how a victory for the Republican nominee Trump might affect their business.
However, another Iranian official, who also declined to be identified, said the election and Trump’s promise to tear up the Iran nuclear deal if he wins was complicating Tehran’s efforts.
“Major European banks are worried about its outcome. An official from a German bank told us recently that they could not risk getting involved in Iran especially when Trump was a candidate,” the official said.
Many large banks also fear breaking the remaining US restrictions on Iran, including on dealing with the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC) – a military force that has extensive business interests including through front companies.
“Banks appear to be increasingly reluctant to do business now with Iran,” said a sanctions manager at a UK-based bank. “It’s the unidentifiable IRGC links – there is extreme nervousness about that whole issue from a reputational risk perspective.”
In June, FATF, a global group of government anti-money-laundering agencies, decided to keep Iran on its blacklist of high-risk countries. FATF did welcome Iranian promises to improve and called for a one-year suspension of some restrictions, but this did little to ease the banks’ fears.
It’s hard to quantify how much financing Iran has received since the sanctions were lifted but the sums are small by international standards.
“The first signs of a real economic improvement will not be seen before 2019, assuming everything goes smoothly,” another Iranian official said. “This issue is crippling the economy, blocks the government’s economic plans and that is why the government is pushing hard in many ways to resolve this issue.”
Hardliners in Iran are blaming Rouhani’s faction for the failure of the deal to deliver a swift improvement in living standards, at a time when prices for oil exports are low and the promised foreign investment has yet to arrive.
“The government has to fight on two fronts: at home and abroad. Rivals of the president do their utmost to weaken him, by criticising the shortcomings and the slow pace of economic improvement,” a separate official close to Rouhani said.
The search for alternatives is on. The top adviser to Supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has been to Russia several times since the nuclear deal, while Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif has also visited African countries in recent days, with Iran expressing willingness to boost economic cooperation.
Chinese President Xi Jinping visited Iran in January, discussing trade opportunities. That same month a top Iranian central bank official said the Industrial and Commercial Bank of China wanted to open branches in Iran.
FEAR FACTOR
A failure to revive the economy may boost the hardliners who are much more hostile to the West than Rouhani’s faction. But any pressure from Western governments on the banks to play ball seems to have achieved little.
The Royal Bank of Scotland declined to comment, but Lloyds Bank said it was mindful that “Iran remains a higher risk country with which to do business”.
Standard Chartered said it will not “undertake any new transactions involving Iran or any party in Iran”. HSBC reiterated it had no intention of doing any new business involving the country.