UBS and a French shipping tycoon are set to face a civil claim of around $1.5 billion (CHF1.3 billion) stemming from Credit Suisse’s role in a fundraising scandal in Mozambique, the UK’s top judges said, the first time a court has put a figure on the size of the suit. The bank and a shipbuilder owned by billionaire Iskandar Safa are gearing up to defend themselves in a civil trial due to start early next month in London over the government-guaranteed loans in the so-called “tuna bond” case. The scandal saw hundreds of millions looted from Mozambique and tipped the southern African nation into economic crisis. + Credit Suisse seeks to strike out Mozambique ‘tuna bonds’ case The Mozambican government’s claim is now worth around $1.5 billion, including more than $1 billion in lost international grants, the UK Supreme Court said in a ruling on Wednesday. The court declared that shipbuilder Privinvest couldn’t rely on arbitration agreements to postpone the London suit. The...