Bangkok Post

Top bank agrees to pay record fine

Second case settled under new CEO

- PAULINA DURAN JONATHAN BARRETT

SYDNEY: Commonweal­th Bank of Australia (CBA) agreed yesterday to pay a record penalty of A$700 million (US$529.3 million) to settle explosive money laundering charges brought by Australia’s financial intelligen­ce agency.

The biggest financial penalty in Australian corporate history was almost double the amount CBA had set aside, signalling the tougher regulatory framework Australian banks face following revelation­s of widespread misconduct.

Even so, CBA shares were up 1.4% as investors breathed a sigh of relief that authoritie­s had not pursued much larger fines, in a case that shocked the country and triggered an executive shake-up at the bank.

It is the second major case new chief executive Matt Comyn, who replaced Ian Narev in the wake of the scandal, has settled with regulators in a month after admitting to rate-manipulati­on allegation­s.

Australia’s biggest bank admitted it had breached money laundering and terror financing laws on 53,750 occasions, according to an statement of facts tendered in court by both parties.

Suspicious transactio­ns were repeatedly not reported, and monitoring processes failed, it said.

“The money laundered through the CBA accounts included the proceeds of drug and firearms importatio­n and distributi­on syndicates — predominan­tly involving methamphet­amine,” the court document said.

CBA also failed to adequately notify the regulator of transactio­ns linked to several customers who posed “a potential risk of terrorism or terrorism financing”.

Many of the breaches carried maximum penalties of up to A$21 million each, exposing CBA to fines running into the billions of dollars.

“While we had not factored in a fine above $375 million given a wide variety of potential outcomes, we note that many in the market had expected a fine as large as $1 billion,” UBS said in a note to clients.

The breaches were first revealed in August last year.

CBA blamed them on a computer error but the case triggered a share selldown and a board shake-up, with Narev announcing his retirement two weeks later amid a public outcry.

“While not deliberate, we fully appreciate the seriousnes­s of the mistakes we made,” new Comyn said in a statement. “Our agreement today is a clear acknowledg­ement of our failures and is an important step towards moving the bank forward.”

Australian Treasurer Scott Morrison told reporters it was now time for CBA to “get on with the job of restoring trust”.

As part of the settlement — which must be approved by the Federal Court — the bank acknowledg­ed it did not take all the necessary steps to identify, mitigate and manage money laundering and terrorism financing risks.

The bank said it would book a A$700 million provision in its fiscal 2018 results, to be released in August.

Last month, CBA was ordered to carry an additional $1 billion in reserve capital until it satisfies regulators that it has improved oversight to avoid similar breaches in the future.

The bank is still facing two separate class actions by shareholde­rs linked to losses suffered from the money-laundering breaches.

The Australian government has pledged to boost oversight of the financial sector and increase penalties for corporate crimes in light of widespread misconduct revealed by an ongoing inquiry into the country’s banks and wealth managers.

One of CBA’s main rivals, Australia and New Zealand Banking Group Ltd, is facing criminal cartel charges, along with underwrite­rs Deutsche Bank AG and Citigroup Inc, over a $2.3 billion share issue.

 ?? AFP ?? People walk past a branch of Commonweal­th Bank of Australia in Melbourne.
AFP People walk past a branch of Commonweal­th Bank of Australia in Melbourne.

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