Australia's biggest bank rejects fresh laundering claims

AFP  |  Sydney 

Australia's largest the Commonwealth today denied a slew of new claims by the country's agency that it breached anti-laws, and rejected a major class action over the allegations. The lender, Australia's biggest company by market capitalisation, has had a torrid few months amid a flurry of action by regulators. They include a court case filed by agency in August that alleged the engaged in "serious and systemic non-compliance" of anti-laws involving thousands of transactions. in December filed 100 other claims regarding the of Australia's (CBA) alleged failure to disclose suspicious transactions on time, or not at all.

The maximum penalty for each breach is up to 21 million Australian dollar (USD16 million). In response to the additional claims, the today admitted 11 allegations in part and denied 89 in full. "We understand that we play a key role in enforcement and we take our anti-and counter-financing obligations extremely seriously," the added. last year admitted to the late submission of 53,506 reports to for cash transactions of 10,000 Australian dollar or more at ATMs, but said today they "should be treated as a single course of conduct". The financial giant could face a massive fine, with the matter due in court next month. added that it would "categorically deny all allegations of liability" in an open shareholder class action filed by firm and litigation funder IMF Bentham. The class action -- which the firm said could become Australia's largest -- claimed had not informed shareholders of the risk of action and neglected its disclosure obligations as a listed firm. But the said "there was no price sensitive information about the matters raised in the proceeding that required disclosure ... and maintains that it at all times complied with its continuous disclosure obligations". "first became aware of AUSTRAC's proceeding on the day it filed its statement of claim with the on 3 August 2017," it added. The lender is also facing court action by corporate watchdog (ASIC) over the alleged rigging of the benchmark interest rate, which is used to set the price of domestic such as bonds and loans. In reporting a half-year cash profit of 4.87 billion Australian dollar earlier this month, said it had put aside 375 million Australian dollar to pay potential fines from the money-laundering scandal.

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First Published: Fri, February 23 2018. 09:30 IST
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