StanChart CEO criticizes media coverage of bank's Iran
sanctions controls: memo
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[October 09, 2018]
LONDON (Reuters) - Standard
Chartered <STAN.L> Chief Executive Bill Winters hit back at critical
media coverage of the bank's attempts to improve its financial crime
controls, in a memo sent to hundreds of senior managers at the bank on
Tuesday.
Winters sought to reassure staff about StanChart's recent financial
performance and progress mending flaws in regulatory compliance, after
media reported last week that the lender faced a possible $1.5 billion
fine for past Iran-related sanctions violations.
"You'll have undoubtedly seen recent articles commenting on our
financial performance and speculating about a financial penalty for the
U.S. investigation regarding our historical sanctions conduct and
controls," Winters wrote in the memo obtained by Reuters.
"I'd like to briefly address each because I don't think they reflect the
progress we are making as a Bank," Winters wrote.
A spokesman for the London-based bank confirmed the contents of the memo
but declined to comment further.
The unusual step of criticizing media coverage in a memo sent to
hundreds of the bank's 'business leadership team' reflects a bolder
stance in StanChart's efforts to rehabilitate its public image following
years of costly fines.
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Bill Winters, Group Chief Executive Officer of Standard Chartered
Bank, looks on during the World Economic Forum (WEF) annual meeting
in Davos, Switzerland January 24, 2018. REUTERS/Denis Balibouse
Media reports last week said the fine of around $1.5 billion was a preliminary
assessment based on some of the communications between the bank and regulators,
and that final discussions had not yet begun.
StanChart last week declined to comment on the size of the possible fine but
said it was "engaged in ongoing discussions with U.S. authorities".
The bank has been subject to a deferred prosecution agreement (DPA) with the
United States since 2012. The DPA was extended in 2014 and again earlier this
year. It is due to expire in December.
The current negotiations with U.S. authorities and the possible fine relate to
whether the bank violated Iranian sanctions after 2007, when it said it would no
longer do business with Iran-related entities.
(Reporting by Lawrence White; Editing by Sinead Cruise/Edmund Blair/Susan
Fenton)
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