Oman Daily Observer

Australia’s CBA says CEO Narev to stand down

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SYDNEY: Commonweal­th Bank of Australia CEO Ian Narev will retire by next June, Australia’s No 2 lender said on Monday, after a week of damaging publicity about a money-laundering lawsuit led to calls for the longservin­g chief to resign.

Narev, 50, would be gone by the end of the current financial year after almost seven years in the job, a tenure marked as much by record profits as allegation­s of serious misconduct including insurance scams and poor financial advice.

CBA Chairwoman Catherine Livingston­e said Narev’s departure had nothing to do with the latest scandal, allegation­s by the financial intelligen­ce agency that criminals and terror financiers laundered millions of dollars through CBA accounts.

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

“This statement has not been rushed,” Livingston­e told journalist­s, referring to the timing of Narev’s retirement announceme­nt amid daily negative headlines for the bank.

Investors have been rattled by the third misconduct scandal under Narev’s watch. CBA shares have fallen 3.7 per cent, wiping nearly Aus$5 billion ($3.95 billion) off its market value.

A better-than-expected 4.6 per cent rise in annual profit to A$9.88 billion, posted on August 9, failed to appease investors’ concerns. It was the bank’s eighth straight record cash profit. CBA shares were up 0.8 per cent on Monday, against a 0.5 per cent gain on the broader market.

CBA’s annual report revealed that Narev, who has led the bank since December 2011, took a 46 per cent pay cut because of the “significan­t damage caused to the group’s trust and reputation” in light of the lawsuit.

— Reuters

 ?? — Reuters ?? CBA CEO Ian Narev appears at a news conference in Sydney.
— Reuters CBA CEO Ian Narev appears at a news conference in Sydney.

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