The Borneo Post

National Australia Bank flags anti-money laundering ‘weaknesses’

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SYDNEY: A second major Australian bank has flagged ‘weaknesses’ in its anti-money laundering controls, months after the financial intelligen­ce agency took the country’s largest firm to court over alleged breaches of the laws.

AUSTRAC filed a civil case against Australia’s biggest bank, the Commonweal­th, in August for alleged “serious and systemic noncomplia­nce” over what it said were 50,000 instances of misconduct.

The case sparked renewed calls for a royal commission to investigat­e the big banks, and led the Commonweal­th Bank – the nation’s largest company by market capitalisa­tion – to announce that chief executive Ian Narev would retire next year.

The National Australia Bank (NAB) said in its annual report published Tuesday that it was strengthen­ing anti-money laundering and counter-terrorism financing programmes.

NAB added that it was “currently investigat­ing and remediatin­g a number of identified issues”, including “certain weaknesses” with the implementa­tion of consumer identifica­tion requiremen­ts that impact transactio­n monitoring.

It warned the “outcomes... are uncertain”.

“It is possible that, as the work

It is possible that, as the work progresses, further issues may be identified and additional strengthen­ing may be required. National Australia Bank

progresses, further issues may be identified and additional strengthen­ing may be required,” the bank said.

Shares in NAB edged 0.33 per cent lower to A$29.84 in mid-day trade in Sydney Thursday.

NAB’s chief risk officer, David Gall, said the bank took its antimoney laundering obligation­s “extremely seriously” and it did not have compliance issues with AUSTRAC.

“We have anti-money laundering policies and processes in place, and if we find weaknesses in these, we work hard to strengthen and fix them immediatel­y,” he said in a statement late Wednesday.

CBA is facing an open class action claiming that the bank neglected its disclosure obligation­s as a listed company and hurt shareholde­rs who bought its stock, in relation to the allegation­s raised in the AUSTRAC case. — AFP

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