Arab Times

ABN Amro flags possible money laundering fines

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ABN Amro said it faces possible money laundering fines, which combined with a gloomy interest rate outlook overshadow­ed an unexpected quarterly profit rise, knocking the Dutch bank’s shares on Wednesday.

The Dutch central bank (DNB) has ordered ABN to review all retail clients in the Netherland­s for possible money laundering or other criminal activities, and warned that these investigat­ions could lead to fines for the bank.

Banks have been forced to keep better track of client behaviour after Dutch bank ING was forced to pay a record $900 million fine in September for failing to spot criminal activities financed through its accounts.

Beyond The Netherland­s, Denmark’s Danske Bank is involved in a money laundering scandal in Estonia, and Germany’s biggest, Deutsche Bank, also faces money laundering allegation­s.

ABN said it took extra measures to increase customer due diligence at a cost of 114 million euros ($128 million) in the second quarter, and has now dedicated more than 1,000 employees to the fight against money laundering.

“Across the bank, we will take all remedial actions necessary to ensure full compliance with legislatio­n”, Chief Executive Kees van Dijkhuizen said.

Despite the extra expenses, ABN reported a 1% rise in second-quarter net profit to 693 million euros.

That topped the 638 million euros analysts had expected, according to a company-compiled poll, and was up from 688 million a year earlier. But ABN shares were down 3% to 16.06 euros at 0947 GMT, after having already lost 40% of their value since reaching a 28 euros peak on Jan 12.

“The results are a side issue here”, KBC Securities analyst Jason Kalambouss­is said, highlighti­ng potential money laundering fines and further fallout from the investigat­ions.

“Add a strong net interest income warning and a lower than expected interim dividend and this does not bode well for the next 12 months”, the analyst said.

ABN said low interest rates would put pressure on future earnings, as it now expected them to shave off 20 million euros of net interest income per quarter until the end of next year.

The bank had previously forecast a 10 million euro quarterly reduction in interest earnings due to low rates.

Lower interest income and rising regulatory costs have also made the bank’s target of reaching a cost-income ratio of 56-58% next year look “challengin­g”, Chief Financial Officer Clifford Abrahams said. (RTRS)

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