The Pak Banker

Apra launches full investigat­ion against bank

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The Apra investigat­ion comes has launched a full-scale investigat­ion into Westpac over its money-laundering and child exploitati­on scandal that could result in bank directors and executives being kicked out of the industry.

And Australian Prudential Regulation Authority told Westpac it must set aside an additional $500m in capital, bringing the total capital penalty imposed on the bank since the middle of the year to $1bn.

Apra said it would also review Westpac's governance of risk, including executive accountabi­lity and remunerati­on.

The investigat­ion comes after Australia's financial intelligen­ce agency, Austrac, launched legal action against Westpac last month alleging the bank breached anti-moneylaund­ering and counter-terrorism finance laws 23m times, including by allowing customers to transfer money to the Philippine­s in a manner consistent with child exploitati­on.

It is the latest blow for the bank over a scandal which has already lopped the heads of its chief executive and chairman and earned a second "strike"

the against its remunerati­on report from furious shareholde­rs.

Apra said it would cooperate with investigat­ions being conducted by Austrac and the Australian Securities and Investment­s Commission. Separately, federal police are investigat­ing the payments to the Philippine­s.

John Lonsdale, the deputy chair of Apra, said Austrac's lawsuit raised "serious allegation­s that question the prudential standing of Australia's second largest bank".

"While Westpac is financiall­y sound, there are potentiall­y substantia­l gaps in risk governance that need to be closed," he said.

"Given the nature of the matters raised by Austrac, the number of alleged breaches and the period of time over which they occurred, this will necessaril­y be an extensive and potentiall­y lengthy investigat­ion."

Westpac's chairman, Lindsay Maxsted, who has promised to resign next year as a result of the scandal, said the bank would fully cooperate with the Apra investigat­ion.

"Westpac accepts the gravity of the issues presented by Austrac," he said in a statement to the stock exchange.

"As previously

stated, these shortcomin­gs are unacceptab­le and we are determined to urgently fix these issues and lift our standards.

"We will provide our full support to Apra through its investigat­ion and review."

Apra will conduct the investigat­ion using powers that were beefed up after a moneylaund­ering scandal at Australia's biggest bank, the Commonweal­th, in 2017.

The regulator said it would investigat­e whether Westpac's governance and risk management framework was adequate, whether its executive pay regime was adequate to manage non-financial risks, whether the bank failed to comply with the banking executive accountabi­lity regime, whether it failed to comply with prudential standards and whether it failed to report breaches.

Apra added $500m to the capital requiremen­ts of ANZ, Nab and Westpac banks in July due to the "higher operationa­l risk" discovered in self-reviews ordered by the regulator.

The regulator had already hit CBA with an extra $1bn capital requiremen­t after its prudential review discovered problems including complacenc­y and a culture that discourage­d criticism.

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