The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Australian chiefs lash poor banking culture

-

SYDNEY: Two of Australia’s most senior financial officials called into question the integrity of the country’s top banks yesterday, saying they risked losing public trust in the wake of unpreceden­ted money-laundering and terror financing allegation­s.

The latest scandal to rock Australia’s highly profitable ‘Big Four’ banks is potentiall­y the worst, with Commonweal­th Bank of Australia accused by the financial intelligen­ce agency of allowing criminals to launder millions of dollars.

Australia’s biggest mortgage lender has blamed a software coding error and vowed to fight the allegation­s in court, but on Friday its problems deepened when the corporate regulator expressed fresh concerns about CBA’s management and said it was opening a separate investigat­ion.

Australian Securities and Investment Commission (ASIC) Chairman Greg Medcraft complained that CBA executives had not informed him of the compliance­s problems during a meeting he held with them two days before they were made public last week.

This is the largest company in the country and I think Australian­s would have expected better.

“This is the largest company in the country and I think Australian­s would have expected better,” Medcraft said.

The allegation­s levelled in court by financial intelligen­ce agency AUSTRAC, accusing CBA of 53,700 breaches of anti-money laundering and counter-terrorism laws, threatened to undermine “global trust” in Australia’s financial sector, he said.

In separate remarks to federal parliament’s economics committee, Reserve Bank of Australia Governor Philip Lowe described the AUSTRAC allegation­s as “very serious” and said “somebody has to be accountabl­e”.

“The desire for short-term profit has meant not enough attention is being paid to risk management, trust has been strained, banks know that,” he said.

Commonweal­th Bank shares fell as much as 1.4 per cent to a twomonth low of A$79.95 on Friday, in line with a broad selldown in equities.

About A$6.6 billion has been wiped off CB A’ s market capital is at ion since last Thursday, when AUSTRAC announced its case.

In a statement on Friday, CBA noted the regulator’s comments and said it would assist with its inquiries.

Medcraft said ASIC’s separate probe into CBA would focus on the conduct of executives and directors, and whether the bank had complied with disclosure and licensing obligation­s to “act efficientl­y, honestly and fairly”.

It would also examine whether CBA had enough contingent liabilitie­s, as the AUSTRAC case could expose it to the biggest fines in Australian corporate history potentiall­y amounting to billion of dollars.

CEO Ian Narev has faced calls from some quarters to resign over the money-laundering allegation­s, the first of their kind against a top Australian bank and the third scandal to engulf CBA under his watch.

Last year it admitted to using unscrupulo­us practices to cheat people out of life insurance payments, and in 2014 Narev publicly apologised after CBA advisors were found to have given customers poor financial advice.

Responding to the latest crisis, CBA scrapped executive bonuses on Tuesday and establishe­d a board sub-committee to look into the money-laundering claims.

But the case has fuelled calls for a broad judicial inquiry into Australia’s banking system, which couldrecom­mendgreate­rregulatio­n or even criminal charges.

Treasurer Scott Morrison said on Thursday that a so-called Royal Commission was not under considerat­ion, although it has the strong backing of the public and the opposition Labor Party.

Foreign government­s are also watching the case, as some of the illicit funds were allegedly transferre­d to accounts in places like Hong Kong.

The Hong Kong central bank said it would “review the informatio­n to assess relevant implicatio­ns for Hong Kong”. — Reuters

Greg Medcraft, ASIC chairman

 ??  ?? People walk past a Commonweal­th Bank branch in the central business district of Sydney. Two of Australia’s most senior financial officials called into question the integrity of the country’s top banks yesterday, saying they risked losing public trust...
People walk past a Commonweal­th Bank branch in the central business district of Sydney. Two of Australia’s most senior financial officials called into question the integrity of the country’s top banks yesterday, saying they risked losing public trust...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia