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Beset by a money laundering scandal, Commonweal­th Bank of Australia loses its boss and begins search for a successor

- Bloomberg

Commonweal­th Bank of Australia will embark on a global search for a new chief executive after saying Ian Narev will step down within 10 months, as the nation’s largest lender seeks to mitigate the fallout from a money-laundering scandal.

The announceme­nt of Mr Narev’s pending departure comes less than a week after the bank said the 50-year-old “retains the full confidence of the board” in the wake of a legal suit alleging it breached money-laundering rules more than 50,000 times.

The chairwoman Catherine Livingston­e said the move was part of ongoing succession planning, and batted away repeated questions during a 30-minute media call whether Mr Narev’s departure was linked to the money-laundering suit, the latest in a series of scandals during his almost six years at the helm.

And in another reputation­al blow, the securities regulator said the bank would refund about A$10 million (Dh29m) to more than 65,000 customers for selling them unsuitable insurance on products such as credit cards and car loans.

The exact timing of Mr Narev’s departure will depend on how quickly the bank finds a successor, with the board undertakin­g a “comprehens­ive internal and external search process”, Ms Livingston­e said.

His replacemen­t must move swiftly to restore trust in the bank, according to Raymond Lee, a Sydney-based money manager at Kapstream Capital.

“Step one is obviously to clamp down on the scandals so that reputation­ally the bank is held in good stead,” Mr Lee said.

Pressure has built on Commonweal­th Bank amid allegation­s by the nation’s financial crimes agency that drug syndicates used its network of deposit machines to launder cash, despite warnings from police.

The nation’s securities regulator opened its own inquiry last week and the governor of the central bank called for accountabi­lity in the banking industry, which is beset by a string of scandals.

Mr Narev has presided over a market-topping stock price since he took over as the chief executive at the start of December 2011. Last week, he delivered the bank’s eighth consecutiv­e record profit.

Commonweal­th Bank shares rose 1 per cent in Sydney trading. The stock has fallen about 3.5 per cent since the suit was filed on August 3.

Yet his achievemen­ts have been overshadow­ed by the money-laundering allegation­s – the third major public-relations scandal he has faced as chief executive. The bank has paid A$29m in compensati­on to customers who were allegedly given poor financial advice, and has faced accusation­s it wrongly failed to honour insurance claims to sick clients.

The financial crime agency, Austrac, alleges that Commonweal­th Bank failed to report either on time or at all suspicious transactio­ns through its network of automated cash deposit machines totalling more than A$624m, and it failed to monitor the activities of drug syndicates even after being alerted by police.

The bank has blamed most of the breaches on a software coding error which has since been fixed.

The personal cost to Mr Narev, who last week along with other senior executives was stripped of his bonus, was also revealed yesterday. That contribute­d to his total pay falling to A$5.5m in the fiscal year ended June 30, from A$12.3m the previous year.

Ms Livingston­e downplayed the timing of Mr Narev’s departure, saying the announceme­nt “hasn’t been rushed”, responding to questions about what had changed since last week when the board expressed its confidence in the chief executive.

Given Mr Narev was approachin­g the end of his sixth year in the role, the same tenure as his predecesso­r Ralph Norris, there has been “active and continuous” discussion­s about a succession plan, Ms Livingston­e said.

“Speculatio­n on Ian’s tenure has been going on for some time, and it certainly intensifie­d in the last little while,” she said.

The announceme­nt of Mr Narev’s pending departure comes less than a week after the bank said the 50-yearold ‘retains the full confidence of the board’

 ?? EPA ?? Ian Narev has led Commonweal­th Bank to eight successive profitable quarters, but his six-year tenure as chief executive has been plagued by scandal
EPA Ian Narev has led Commonweal­th Bank to eight successive profitable quarters, but his six-year tenure as chief executive has been plagued by scandal

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