Commonwealth Bank blames
'coding error' for alleged money-laundering breaches
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[August 07, 2017]
By Paulina Duran and Tom Westbrook
SYDNEY (Reuters) - The Commonwealth Bank of
Australia (CBA) on Monday said a software error was behind most of the
roughly 53,700 times it allegedly broke anti-money laundering law, in a
case that could see the country's biggest lender fined several billion
dollars.
Financial intelligence agency AUSTRAC filed a civil case on Thursday
accusing the bank of several breaches of law including failing to
identify, monitor and report money transfers over $10,000, in
contravention of the anti-money laundering and counter-terrorism
financing Act.
It also said the bank did not act upon police instruction to suspend
accounts linked to criminal activity.
The following day, the bank's share price saw its steepest one-day
decline in 18 months.
CBA said intelligent deposit machines introduced in 2012 did not create
so-called threshold transaction reports (TTRs), which would have alerted
it to any suspicious activity, due to a coding error that went unnoticed
until it was fixed in September 2015.
"Within a month of discovering it, we notified AUSTRAC, delivered the
missing TTRs and fixed the coding issue," CBA said in a statement on
Monday. "The vast majority of the reporting failures alleged in the
statement of claim (approximately 53,000) relate specifically to this
coding error."
As such, it said penalties should be just and appropriate.
CBA Chief Executive Officer Ian Narev told The Australian Financial
Review he would work through the "difficult matters" and that it was for
the board to decide whether his job was on the line.
Stephen Mayne, a director at the Australian Shareholders' Association,
which aggregates about A$500 million worth of CBA's shareholders proxy
votes, said the issue was a very serious challenge for the bank's board.
"At this point, we don't want to hear from management, but from the
independent Chairman Catherine Livingstone, on what she and the board
think about the allegations against management."
The bank's share price ended up 1 percent on Monday, in line with the
benchmark index.
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Pedestrians are reflected in a Commonwealth Bank of Australia logo
which adorns the wall of a branch in Sydney, Australia, August 7,
2017. REUTERS/David Gray
CRIMINAL ACTIVITY
AUSTRAC also said the bank failed on several occasions to follow
instructions from law enforcement to suspend accounts flagged as
suspicious and linked to criminal activity.
"We recognize that there are other serious allegations in the claim
unrelated to the TTRs," the bank said.
AUSTRAC said some accounts were used for "cuckoo smurfing", a form of
money laundering involving multiple people such as a syndicate that make
numerous small deposits to avoid detection. The syndicate then obtains
details of a bank customer to make seemingly legitimate money transfers
in that customer's name.
"These are really serious accusations," said Daniel Smith, general
manager at CGI Glass Lewis, which advises local funds with assets over
A$1 trillion. "We are interested in how the board determines
responsibility and how vigorously the bank disputes these accusations."
The case comes less than half a year after AUSTRAC fined bookmaker
Tabcorp Holdings Ltd almost A$420,000 ($333,000) for each of 108
breaches, resulting in the biggest civil penalty in Australian corporate
history at A$45 million.
The maximum penalty per breach is A$18 million. Based on the Tabcorp
case, analysts at wealth manager Shaw and Partners put CBA's potential
fine at A$22 billion.
Mayne said it would be appropriate for the bank to note a contingent
liability for a potential fine in the financial accounts to be released
on Wednesday.
(Reporting by Paulina Duran and Tom Westbrook; Editing by Susan Fenton
and Christopher Cushing)
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