The Manila Times

Australia’s biggest bank vows to fight class action

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SYDNEY: Australia’s biggest bank, the Commonweal­th, vowed Monday to fight what could become the country’s largest shareholde­r class action over alleged breaches of anti-money laundering laws.

- tion funder IMF Bentham in the Federal Court in Melbourne Monday, followed a civil case launched agency AUSTRAC in August.

AUSTRAC alleged the bank engaged in “serious and systemic non-compliance” of anti-money laundering laws involving thousands of transactio­ns.

The class action claims CBA neglected its disclosure obligation­s as a listed company, hurting shareholde­rs who bought its stock.

CBA has more than 800,000 shareholde­rs, with millions more holding stock through pension funds, according to this year’s annual report.

In a brief statement, the bank - capitalisa­tion -- said it “intends to vigorously defend this claim”.

The case specifical­ly names senior CBA executives -- including chief executive Ian Narev -claiming they had “early knowledge of the AUSTRAC compliance issues which remained undisclose­d until this year”, Maurice Blackburn said.

Narev has been one of the ca- sualties in the fallout, with CBA announcing he would retire by

The AUSTRAC case also prompted other Australian regu the bank over its handling of the alleged breaches and its organisati­onal culture.

Shares in CBA, which have slipped since the AUSTRAC announceme­nt, edged up by 0.45 percent to Aus$ 76.62 in midafterno­on trade.

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