Bangkok Post

FEARS CONFIRMED

Lender ends share buyback programme

- TEIS JENSEN

Danske Bank is being probed by US authoritie­s over a money-laundering scandal.

COPENHAGEN: Danske Bank A/S is being investigat­ed by the US Department of Justice over a €200 billion ($230 billion) money laundering scandal involving its Estonian branch, confirming long-held investor fears.

Denmark’s largest bank said in a statement yesterday that it had “received requests for informatio­n from the US Department of Justice (DOJ) in connection with a criminal investigat­ion relating to the bank’s Estonian branch”.

The bank, which this week appointed Jesper Nielsen as interim chief executive to handle the growing crisis after the resignatio­n last month of Thomas Borgen, said it was cooperatin­g with the US authoritie­s.

Shares in Danske Bank fell by 3% to 160 Danish crowns, their lowest level since January 2015 and a 33% decline so far this year, as investors digested the latest developmen­ts at the bank.

Shareholde­rs have fretted for months over the possibilit­y of US authoritie­s investigat­ing whether Danske Bank broke US rules in allowing payments through its Estonian operation because of the potential for significan­t penalties.

France’s BNP Paribas SA reached a record $8.9 billion settlement with US authoritie­s in 2015 to resolve claims that it violated sanctions against Sudan, Cuba and Iran.

Many of the non-resident accounts at Denmark’s Estonia branch were held by entities or individual­s in Russia, which is the subject of sanctions by the United States.

Banks doing business in Estonia handled more than $1 trillion in cross-border flows between 2008 and 2017, the country’s central bank said on Wednesday.

Sweden’s Swedbank AB said yesterday that there were “no ongoing investigat­ions” into its anti-money laundering practices by any of its regulators.

In a sign of the impact criminal and regulatory investigat­ions in Estonia, Denmark and the Britain are having on the lender, Danske Bank said it would end its share buyback programme after reassessin­g its capital targets.

It had initially planned to buy shares back worth 10 billion Danish crowns ($1.5 billion) under the programme, which should have run until Feb 1 next year. It had repurchase­d shares worth 6.8 billion under the programme as of the end of last week.

This followed an assessment by Denmark’s Financial Services Authority which said Danske Bank’s compliance and reputation­al risks were now higher than previously thought in May.

The FSA did not mention the US authoritie­s in its 12 page follow-up report published via Danske Bank yesterday.

The FSA said in May that the bank’s Pillar II capital requiremen­ts should increase by five billion Danish crowns but it has now ordered Danske to reassess its solvency need “with a view to increase the add-on to an absolute minimum of 10 billion crowns”.

The bank has therefore raised its CET1 capital ratio target to around 16% from a target of 14-15% and its total capital ratio to be above 20% from an earlier target of above 19%.

By end of the second quarter the bank’s CET1 ratio stood at 15.9% and its total capital ratio stood at 21.6%.

Last month the bank said in an internal report commission­ed by Borgen that payments totalling €200 billion, many of which it described as “suspicious”, had been moved through its tiny Estonian branch between 2007 and 2015.

The findings of the report led to Borgen taking “ultimate responsibi­lity” and stepping down, although he said he was cleared from a legal point of view, and prompted regulators across the European Union to question their oversight.

Politician­s in Europe are calling for stricter measures to prevent money laundering in the bloc’s banks, after Dutch financial group ING Groep NV was fined €775 million last month after admitting criminals had been able to launder cash through its accounts.

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