(Bloomberg News) HSBC Holdings Plc, Europe's biggest bank, agreed to pay $62.5 million to settle a group lawsuit in New York, filed by investors in a fund that lost money in Bernard Madoff's fraud.

The accord, which needs court approval, applies to a class-action case against several HSBC units and other defendants by investors in the Ireland-based Thema International Fund Plc, whose assets were invested with Bernard L. Madoff Securities LLC, HSBC said in a statement today.

The settlement "shall in no way be construed" as an admission of fault, HSBC said in the statement. The London-based bank has "good defenses" against other Madoff-related lawsuits in Germany, Luxembourg and other countries, it said.

HSBC units acted as custodian for Thema and other funds that funneled money to Madoff. Irving Picard, the trustee liquidating New York-based Bernard L. Madoff Investment Securities LLC, in December sued HSBC and a dozen feeder funds for $9 billion in U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Manhattan, saying they should have known of the fraud.

HSBC didn't know of the fraud and lost $1 billion of its own money investing in funds that in turn put money with Madoff, the bank said last month in court papers seeking dismissal of Picard's lawsuit.

Warned Twice

The bank was warned twice by auditors that entrusting as much as $8 billion in client funds to Madoff opened it up to "fraud and operational risks," according to KPMG LLP reports obtained in March by Bloomberg News. The investors claim HSBC failed to act on the warnings.

HSBC in December was sued by a group of 650 mainly private German investors in Luxembourg seeking compensation for losses they suffered through Herald (Lux) US Absolute Return Fund, which placed assets with Madoff. That suit seeks about 25 million euros ($36.6 million) in damages.

Thema and another fund, AA (Alternative Advantage) Plc, sued HSBC in January 2009 in Dublin's High Court.

Documents from Madoff's company show the value of HSBC- serviced funds as of Nov. 30, 2008, was about $8.4 billion, including fake profit from Madoff's Ponzi scheme, according to HSBC's statement. The funds' actual transfers to Madoff's firm minus their actual withdrawals during the period HSBC acted as custodian, totaled about $4.3 billion, it said.