
Bank of Baroda’s $600m NMC settlement punctuates a week of global enforcement actions
The Indian state lender’s payout to resolve insolvency claims coincides with an identical sum from Alibaba for US drug-sales allegations, as authorities from Abu Dhabi to Washington pursue corporate accountability.
Bank of Baroda’s agreement to pay $600 million to administrators of the collapsed UAE healthcare group NMC Health sent its shares down 4% on Thursday, as investors absorbed a settlement more than double the $253 million exposure the bank had reported when the account entered insolvency in 2020. The payout, equivalent to roughly ₹5,700 crore and nearly matching the bank’s net profit for the March 2026 quarter, resolves civil recovery proceedings in the Abu Dhabi Global Market courts and the High Court of England and Wales without any admission of liability.
At the centre of the dispute were allegations by joint administrators Alvarez & Marsal that the bank’s Abu Dhabi branch processed payments it knew were fraudulent, failed to follow anti-money laundering and know-your-customer procedures, and conducted insufficient due diligence on accounts used for pass-through payments via fake invoices. The administrators argued that such transactions enabled the concealment of more than $4 billion in undisclosed debt, prolonging the fraud and increasing losses for creditors. Bank of Baroda has consistently denied wrongdoing, and the settlement agreement, described as confidential, explicitly records no admission of liability by either side.
The same day, the US Justice Department announced that Alibaba and its US-based payment processor had agreed to pay $600 million to resolve allegations that they failed to prevent the sale and importation of illegal drugs, chemicals and pill presses through the company’s e-commerce platforms. Alibaba admitted that from 2016 to 2024 it did not stop roughly 80,000 product sales with a combined merchandise value exceeding $200 million. The parallel settlements, though unrelated, underscore a pattern of large financial resolutions in cross-border cases where compliance failures are alleged to have facilitated illicit activity.
In India, the Enforcement Directorate disclosed that it has terminated or compounded more than 150 cases under the Foreign Exchange Management Act in the past 15 months, obtaining no-objection certificates from the Reserve Bank of India to settle matters ranging from Apollo Hospitals’ ₹850 crore alleged violation to a ₹2.8 lakh payment by Myntra. The directorate’s shift from a punitive model to a facilitative one, as described by its director, aims to reduce litigation and improve the ease of doing business. Meanwhile, Dubai Customs and Police announced the seizure of 278,850 Pregabalin pills and the arrest of a four-member gang, an operation triggered by AI-powered risk engines that flagged a suspicious shipment from an Asian country.
The Bank of Baroda settlement will now channel funds to NMC’s creditors, including Gulf banks and bondholders, under insolvency priorities. The ADGM trial, which began in March 2026, is expected to be discontinued, and the parallel English proceedings, which had been stayed, will also conclude. Attention turns to the bank’s quarterly results and the accounting treatment of the one-off charge, which analysts in Mumbai view as manageable given the lender’s balance-sheet size.
How the same story is told elsewhere.
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India's Bank of Baroda has agreed to pay $600 million to settle claims arising from the collapse of NMC Health, ending years of cross-border litigation without admitting liability. The out-of-court resolution is framed as a pragmatic step to avoid protracted legal battles. Separately, Indian enforcement agencies are increasingly compounding foreign exchange cases to reduce court backlogs.
Dubai authorities, using AI-driven risk systems, intercepted a massive shipment of 278,850 narcotic pills and dismantled a four-member criminal gang. The operation is hailed as a major security achievement, showcasing seamless institutional integration between customs and police. The seizure reinforces Dubai's image as a fortress against drug trafficking.
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