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Australia banking watchdog says probe to dig deep into CBA culture

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SYDNEY: Australia’s banking regulator spelled out plans yesterday for an major investigat­ion into back-to-back scandals at Commonweal­th Bank of Australia, warning that public trust in the financial sector was at rock bottom.

The watchdog, which has the authority to remove company directors, named a high-powered panel to dig into the structural failures that led to Australia’s largest lender being sued for alleged money-laundering last month.

“There’s no quick fix here, it’s a deep-seated issue in the view of the community that there is a lack of trust,” Australian Prudential Regulation Authority (APRA) chairman Wayne Byers said at a business lunch in Sydney.

APRA said its probe aimed to identify whether “any core organisati­onal and cultural drivers” had contribute­d to the troubles at CBA in recent years.

The inquiry, launched after financial intelligen­ce agency AUSTRAC sued Commonweal­th Bank on Aug 3 for suspected money-laundering breaches, comes amid demands for a powerful quasi-judicial inquiry into the financial sector more broadly.

Reserve Bank deputy governor Guy Debelle said the public had a right to feel concerned about governance standards at Australia’s major lenders, four of which control 80% of the market and are deemed too big to fail.

“The drip feed of issue after issue after issue just reinforces the view that’s out there,” he said in a speech at the same lunch.

“It’d be very nice to have some comfort actually that the cupboard is now bare, that there isn’t anything more.”

In the latest scandal to engulf a major Australian bank, AUSTRAC accused Commonweal­th of “serious and systemic non-compliance” with anti-money laundering rules that allowed criminals and terror financiers to wash millions of dollars through its systems.

Last year, CBA admitted using unscrupulo­us practices to cheat people out of life insurance payments, and in 2014 chief executive officer Ian Narev publicly apologised after the bank’s advisers were found to have given poor financial advice.

The AUSTRAC lawsuit is the first of its kind against a major Australian bank and could expose CBA to the biggest corporate fine in Australian history, potentiall­y amounting to billions of dollars.

In addition to APRA’s follow-up probe, corporate watchdog the Australian Securities and Investment­s Commission has opened a separate investigat­ion into the lender, while a class action law firm is planning a suit on behalf of shareholde­rs.

The bank says a coding error was to blame for most of the suspi- cious transactio­ns and plans to defend itself in court.

Even so, in the wake of the crisis it has slashed executive bonuses, cut a third of its non-executive directors and flagged that CEO Narev would stand down by mid2018.

Heavy hitters

APRA said in a statement its inquiry – the first time it has made an investigat­ion public – would examine risk management, compliance, remunerati­on and accountabi­lity at CBA.

The inquiry would be run by former Reserve Bank of Australia director Jillian Broadbent, former APRA chairman John Laker and former Australian Competitio­n and Consumer Commission chairman Graeme Samuel.

It would deliver a progress report by Jan 31 and a final report by April 30.

CBA said it would cooperate with the inquiry. The bank’s shares fell 1%, with other financial stocks, while the broader market was down 0.4%.

 ?? — Reuters ?? Trouble at CBA: Debelle says the public had a right to feel concerned about governance standards at Australia’s major lenders.
— Reuters Trouble at CBA: Debelle says the public had a right to feel concerned about governance standards at Australia’s major lenders.

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