Mega Financial's new
chairman promises reform after U.S. fine
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[September 02, 2016]
By Faith Hung and Liang-Sa Loh
TAIPEI (Reuters) - Mega Financial
Holding's new chairman said the Taiwan state-controlled firm
will strengthen risk management after its banking unit was hit by a
U.S. fine for anti-money laundering violations, a case that has
hugely embarrassed the island's government.
"There are lots of doubts about us. We'll do whatever we can to find
out what has happened," Michael C.S. Chang, 68, told reporters on
Friday. "We are going to have a deep review and thorough reform."
Chang, who took up his post on Friday, will have to clean up what
Taiwan President Tsai Ing-wen has called a "ridiculous and
incredible" matter, which is threatening to seriously undermine her
three-month-old administration.
New York authorities in mid-August slapped Mega International
Commercial Bank with a $180 million fine for violations that
included lax attention to risk exposure in Panama, the first time in
a decade that a Taiwan-based financial institution has been
penalized by U.S. authorities.
Taiwanese financial regulators flew to Panama and New York this week
to continue their investigation into whether Mega's activities led
to breach of any Taiwanese laws.
In 2009, Mega’s banking unit also ran afoul of Australian
authorities over compliance and anti-money laundering rules.
A trained accountant, Chang is known as a firefighter who has dealt
with Taiwanese lenders in crisis before.
Taiwan's ruling Democratic Progressive Party (DPP), during its
previous term in office, appointed Chang as chairman of First
Financial Holding Co <2892.TW>, another major state-controlled
financial firm, where he held the position from 2006 to 2008.
Chang’s predecessor, Shiu Kuang-si, quit on Wednesday two weeks
after being appointed as chairman, in a bid to address allegations
of conflicts of interest. Shiu was president of Mega when the
suspect transactions took place, and he is the brother-in-law of
Taiwan’s central bank chief.
Another former Mega chairman, Tsai Yeou-tsair, who resigned in
March, has been banned from travel abroad, while a former finance
minister has been questioned by prosecutors.
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A sign of Mega Financial Holding Co is seen outside its headquarters
in Taipei, Taiwan August 23, 2016. REUTERS/Tyrone Siu - RTX2MO7Q
Taiwan Premier Lin Chuan has also had to weather calls to resign, with critics
blaming him because the boards of state-controlled financial institutions are
packed with government-selected appointees.
The case has embroiled the central bank, which prides itself on being an
independent institution and has been headed by Governor Perng Fai-nan, 77, for
18 years.
This week the central bank was forced to issue rare statements stating Perng was
involved in the Mega case only at the request of other financial regulators in
Taiwan.
Financial Supervisory Commission Vice Chairman Kuei Hsien-nung in early August
requested Perng's help to plead with U.S. authorities, including the Federal
Reserve Bank of New York, for more time for Mega to deal with the case.
“At the time, there was no information that showed Mega was related to any
criminal liability,” Kuei told Reuters this week. “This was all done for the
country. We would not have selfish intentions,” he said.
(Writing by J.R. Wu; Editing by Stephen Coates and Muralikumar Anantharaman)
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