Danske Bank boss quits over $234 billion money
laundering scandal
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[September 19, 2018]
By Jacob Gronholt-Pedersen and Teis Jensen
COPENHAGEN (Reuters) - Danske Bank's <DANSKE.CO>
chief executive Thomas Borgen resigned on Wednesday after a
investigation revealed payments totalling 200 billion euros ($234
billion) through its Estonian branch, many of which the bank said were
suspicious.
The Danish bank detailed compliance and control failings amid growing
calls for a new European Union watchdog to crack down on financial crime
after a series of money laundering scandals which have attracted the
attention of U.S. authorities.
"Even though I was personally cleared from a legal point of view, I hold
the ultimate responsibility. There is no doubt that we as an
organization have failed in this situation and did not live up to
expectations," Borgen, who will stay on until a new CEO is appointed,
told a press conference.
Borgen, 54, was in charge of Danske Bank's international operations,
including Estonia, between 2009 and 2012.
Danske Bank said in a summary of a report covering around 15,000
customers and 9.5 million payments between 2007 and 2015 that Borgen,
Chairman Ole Andersen and the board "did not breach their legal
obligations".
Andersen said the bank had made an assessment of whether it violated
U.S. laws, a key concern for shareholders, but declined to share its
conclusion when asked at a press conference.
The Estonian non-resident portfolio included customers from Russia,
Azerbaijan, Ukraine and other ex-Soviet states, the investigation, which
began a year ago after the Berlingske newspaper revealed alleged
misconduct at the branch, found.
Danske Bank, whose already battered shares fell by nearly 8 percent
during morning trading, said some 6,200 customers had been examined so
far and it expected "a significant part of the payments to be
suspicious".
Shares in Danske Bank had doubled in value from when Borgen took over as
CEO in 2013 until July 2017, but have since lost more than a third as
allegations of suspicious transactions increased and Denmark and Estonia
began criminal investigations.
The bank said it had taken action including "warnings, dismissals, loss
of bonus payments and reporting to the authorities" against current and
former staff, as well as overhauling the systems which had contributed
to the lapses.
In an indication of the potential costs such failings can have on a
bank, Dutch bank ING <INGA.AS> agreed to pay 775 million euros ($900
million) this month after admitting criminals had been able to launder
money through its accounts.
And earlier this year U.S. authorities accused Latvia's ABLV of covering
up money laundering, leading to the bank being denied U.S. dollar
funding and its swift collapse.
While Danske does not have a banking license in the United States,
banning U.S. correspondent banks from dealing with it would amount to
shutting it out of the global financial network.
[to top of second column] |
Danske Bank flag
flutters at the bank's Estonian branch in Tallinn, Estonia August 3,
2018. REUTERS/Ints Kalnins/File Photo
GRAPHIC: Danske Bank share price performance - https://reut.rs/2plB6Om
SERIOUS SHORTCOMINGS
The report found that Danske Bank failed to take proper action in 2007 when it
was criticized by the Estonian regulator and received information from its
Danish counterpart that pointed to "criminal activity in its pure form,
including money laundering" estimated at "billions of roubles monthly".
And when a whistleblower raised problems at the Estonian branch in early 2014
the allegations were not properly investigated and were not shared with the
board, Danske said, adding that measures to get its business there under control
had been insufficient.
Danske Bank also said the Estonian branch did not employ its anti-money
laundering procedures because it had decided not to migrate its Baltic banking
activities onto the bank's IT platform, because it would have been too
expensive.
"The report describes serious shortcomings in the organization of Danske Bank,
where risk-appetite and risk control were not in balance," the head of Estonia's
FSA financial regulator Kilvar Kessler said in a statement.
Danske Bank, which cut its forecast for annual net profit to 16-17 billion
Danish crowns, from a previous 18-20 billion, has successfully overcome previous
traumas.
The government had to step in and ensure it could pay its short-term dollar debt
when international markets froze in 2008 and in 2012 it was criticized for an
advertising campaign that sought to improve its image, borrowing symbols linked
to the anti-establishment movement Occupy Wall Street.
Prior to the money laundering scandal, Borgen had managed to improve the bank's
image and earnings in part by cutting costs, shifting its focus to wealthier
clients and expanding in Sweden and Norway to rival the Nordic region's biggest
bank, Nordea <NDA.ST>.
($1 = 0.8553 euros)
(Reporting by Jacob Gronholt-Pedersen and Teis Jensen, additional reporting by
Emil Gjerding Nielson; editing by Jason Neely and Alexander Smith)
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