Cape Times

Major board shake-up at CBA

- Paulina Duran and Byron Kaye

COMMONWEAL­TH Bank of Australia, the country’s biggest lender, announced a major board shake-up yesterday as it scrambles to shore up investor support following allegation­s that it oversaw thousands of breaches of anti-money laundering rules.

But the ouster of a third of the bank’s non-executive board, including the first two directors to leave since the allegation­s were made public on August 3, failed to impress shareholde­rs as CBA stock touched 10-month intraday lows on the news.

The board overhaul came as CBA faced the first day of court hearings into the allegation­s, and while it did not deny that illicit transfers had taken place, it said it would contest its level of responsibi­lity.

CBA has been under mounting pressure to respond more aggressive­ly to the crisis, which has damaged its already tarnished reputation and exposed it to billions of dollars in potential fines.

Directors and audit committee members Launa Inman and Harrison Young would step down on November 16, while a third director, Andrew Mohl, would leave in a year, CBA said, without giving a reason for the departures.

CBA announced on August 14 that chief executive Ian Narev would leave by mid2018, although it said that his departure was not related to the money-laundering scandal. Narev has blamed a coding error for most of the alleged breaches.

Robert Whitfield, a former head of institutio­nal banking at CBA rival Westpac Banking, would be appointed to the board, CBA said yesterday, without naming any other new appointees. Whitfield could be in the running to replace Narev, said Omkar Joshi of Regal Funds Management, a CBA shareholde­r.

“It is unlikely now that you can really have an internal

candidate for that role – rightly or wrongly internal candidates have been tainted with that same brush,” he said.

CBA shares touched 10-month intra-day lows before closing down 1.42 percent at A$74.41 (R175), while the broader market was down 0.39 percent. The shares have dropped 12 percent since the scandal erupted last month wiping roughly A$17 billion off its market value.

First hearing Financial crime fighting agency Austrac alleges CBA oversaw tens of thousands of illicit transfers amounting to A$624.7 million from 2012 to 2015, including some by known criminal gangs.

CBA’s lawyers told the Federal Court yesterday the bank would not “in large part” contest the main facts of the legal action, but said they planned to file a defence.

Austrac’s lawyers told the court they expected the bank would try to prove that it took reasonable precaution­s against money laundering and terror financing.

Judge David Yates gave CBA until December 15 to file a defence. The next hearing was set for April 2, 2018.

The Austrac case has triggered a landslide of bad news for CBA, with two other Australian regulators subsequent­ly launching investigat­ions and a law firm threatenin­g to file a class action on behalf of shareholde­rs.

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

 ?? PHOTO: BLOOMBERG ?? The Commonweal­th Bank of Australia logo displayed on a sign outside a branch in Sydney, Australia. The bank has been sued by the government’s financial crime agency over 53 700 alleged breaches of money laundering and terrorism financing laws.
PHOTO: BLOOMBERG The Commonweal­th Bank of Australia logo displayed on a sign outside a branch in Sydney, Australia. The bank has been sued by the government’s financial crime agency over 53 700 alleged breaches of money laundering and terrorism financing laws.

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