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Westpac Pays Record A$1.3 Billion to Settle Laundering Suit - msnNOW

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(Bloomberg) -- Westpac Banking Corp. will pay a record A$1.3 billion ($920 million) fine to settle Australia’s biggest breach of anti-money laundering laws, capping a saga that shredded the bank’s reputation and cost former Chief Executive Officer Brian Hartzer his job.

a group of people walking on a city street: Pedestrians walk past a Westpac Banking Corp. branch in Sydney, Australia, on Tuesday, June 23, 2020. While the Australian economy lost more than 800,000 jobs in April and May, more timely indicators are painting a better picture. Outside of a small outbreak in the southern state of Victoria, authorities have flattened the Covid-19 infection curve and are reopening the economy earlier than expected. © Bloomberg Pedestrians walk past a Westpac Banking Corp. branch in Sydney, Australia, on Tuesday, June 23, 2020. While the Australian economy lost more than 800,000 jobs in April and May, more timely indicators are painting a better picture. Outside of a small outbreak in the southern state of Victoria, authorities have flattened the Covid-19 infection curve and are reopening the economy earlier than expected.

The fine, the largest levied against an Australian company, is more than the A$900 million Westpac had set aside for a potential penalty, and almost double the A$700 million that rival Commonwealth Bank of Australia paid to settle its own money-laundering breaches in 2018.

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In reaching the agreement, Westpac admitted to about 76,000 additional breaches on top of the 23 million contraventions in the original suit, the financial crimes agency said in a statement Thursday. These included failing to monitor customers for transactions related to possible child abuse, or conducting adequate risk assessment of overseas banks.

The settlement closes a sorry 10-month chapter in the history of Australia’s oldest bank. In the immediate aftermath of the suit, intense investor pressure led to Hartzer’s resignation and the early retirement of Lindsay Maxsted as chairman. An investigation excoriated the lender for an “immature and reactive” risk culture, and found staff lacked the skills, expertise and experience to effectively manage risk.

The agreement comes with the global financial industry again falling under the spotlight after a cache of leaked documents showed years of transactions handled by the world’s largest banks linked to money laundering, corruption and fraud.

Read more: Deutsche, JPMorgan Top Banks Flagged in Fraud Report: Highlights

Westpac’s settlement “sends a strong message that Austrac will take action to ensure our financial system remains strong so it can’t be exploited by criminals,” the financial crimes regulator’s CEO Nicole Rose said in a statement. “Our role is to harden the financial system against serious crime and terrorism financing and this penalty reflects the serious and systemic nature of Westpac’s non-compliance.”

Westpac shares fell as much as 2.4% in early Sydney trade. The stock is down 34% this year, making it the worst performing of Australia’s big four banks.

The fine is equal to the bank’s first-half cash profit. It will take a further A$404 million provision to account for the higher penalty, and pay Austrac’s legal costs of A$3.75 million.

CEO Peter King again apologized for the bank’s failings. “We are committed to fixing the issues to ensure that these mistakes do not happen again,” he said in a statement. “This has been my number one priority. We have also closed down relevant products and reported all relevant historical transactions.”

(Adds comment from regulator in sixth paragraph, share price.)

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