The New Zealand Herald

Westpac faces tough times as Hartzer leaves

Money-laundering scandal will have prolonged fallout for besieged bank

- Christophe­r Niesche comment

Westpac is facing a fine of at least A$1b and numerous other investigat­ions.

We don’t know what Brian Hartzer will be doing this morning. The one thing we know he won’t be doing is putting on a coat and tie and showing up for work at Westpac. Today is the day his sacking, in the wake of the money-laundering scandal, takes effect.

Hartzer’s departure and those of Westpac chairman Lindsay Maxsted and director Ewen Crouch mark a new level of corporate accountabi­lity. Their exits show just how far the banks need to go to get back on track.

Westpac is accused by the antimoney laundering regulator of 23 million violations of the Anti-Money Laundering and Counter-Terrorism Financing Act in transactio­ns worth A$11 billion. The allegation­s include that the bank ignored patterns of transactio­ns consistent with child exploitati­on.

Austrac requires banks to report foreign transactio­ns. Westpac’s failure to report 23 million of them accounts for most of the violations. Undoubtedl­y most were legitimate transactio­ns, but some might have involved payments by Westpac customers that involved child exploitati­on.

The initial response from Westpac’s leaders was to try to tough out the crisis.

The bank reached for the crisis PR playbook. It apologised; it scrapped executive bonuses and cancelled the Christmas party; it donated to charities for children; it shut down the

LitePay funds transfer platform that was at the centre of the scandal and announced an independen­t inquiry into what happened.

Hartzer faced down calls from investors, politician­s and commentato­rs for his resignatio­n, saying he wanted to “get to the bottom” of the underlying failures and lead the bank out of the crisis.

But in an environmen­t of heightened expectatio­ns of executive and director responsibi­lity it all came too late. There is also the added element that no amount of expert PR spinning can erase the tarnish of the phrase “child exploitati­on”.

In its statement of claim, Austrac asserts: “Since at least 2013 Westpac was aware of the heightened child exploitati­on risks associated with frequent low value payments to the Philippine­s and south-east Asia both from Austrac guidance and its own risks assessment­s. In June 2016 senior management within Westpac were specifical­ly briefed on these risks with respect to the LitePay channel.”

Although Austrac said it had warned the bank in December 2016 about its vulnerabil­ities around the reporting of suspicious payments connected to child exploitati­on, Hartzer revealed the first he had heard of it was on November 15 this year. Maxsted similarly said the board simply didn’t know how this informatio­n didn’t reach senior executives and the board.

This simply wasn’t good enough. It is unreasonab­le to the point of ridiculous­ness to expect the chief executive and the board to know about every operationa­l detail in an organisati­on with 1200 branches, 35,000 employees and 14 million customers.

But we should expect the bank to have systems in place to escalate these potentiall­y damaging issues up the chain of command, and for extremely important issues to reach the top of the company. This is their job as overseers.

Secondly, the board and management need to be responsibl­e for creating a culture where failures are admitted and problems highlighte­d and dealt with. It is a huge indictment on Westpac that when lower-level staff became aware of the issue not enough of them said, “Hang on, we need to do something about this” and those who did were ignored.

Westpac faces difficult times ahead. It has an interim CEO and only one remaining director with extensive experience in retail banking. It is facing a fine of at least A$1b and numerous other investigat­ions from other regulators, including the corporate regulator the Australian Securities & Investment­s Commission and the banking regulator the Australian Prudential Regulation Authority. It has suffered huge brand damage.

Its next test will be the annual meeting on December 12, where investors will have the chance to make their feelings heard by voting against the bank’s remunerati­on report. If they do, it will be the second “strike” against the remunerati­on report, giving investors the chance to vote to spill the entire board and vote for new directors.

It’s hard to imagine too many investors wanting to go this far.

The bank has already had A$11b sliced off its market capitalisa­tion — more than 10 per cent of its value — and investors know, having lost its chief executive and with the chairman soon to depart, Westpac will need continuity.

But that the sacking of the board is even being contemplat­ed shows just how much more Australian­s expect of its corporate leaders than we did only two or three years ago.

 ??  ?? Brian Hartzer and the Westpac board should have known about the Austrac issues long before they found out.
Brian Hartzer and the Westpac board should have known about the Austrac issues long before they found out.
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