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Lawsky puts the shackles on Standard Chartered after repeat offense

By
Geoffrey Smith
Geoffrey Smith
By
Geoffrey Smith
Geoffrey Smith
August 20, 2014, 4:44 AM ET
HONG KONG-BRITAIN-US-STANDARDCHARTERED-BANKING-COMPANY
People walk past a Standard Chartered bank branch in Hong Kong on August 6, 2014. Standard Chartered confirmed that it faces fresh US fines over alleged breaches in its anti-money laundering systems, two years after it paid massive penalties for violating American sanctions. AFP PHOTO / ALEX OGLE (Photo credit should read Alex Ogle/AFP/Getty Images)ALEX OGLE/AFP--Getty Images

New York’s Department of Financial Services slapped a $300 million fine on U.K.-based emerging markets bank Standard Chartered Plc, and put wide-ranging limits on its business in the U.S. After a second violation of anti-money laundering regulations within two years.

The DFS said Standard Chartered would be banned from clearing dollar payments for high-risk clients at its Hong Kong subsidiary and would have to stop processing payments for high-risk small and medium business clients at its business in the United Arab Emirates within 90 days. It also banned Standard Chartered from opening any dollar accounts for new customers in New York without its permission.

“If a bank fails to live up to its commitments, there should be consequences,” DFS head Benjamin Lawsky said in a statement. “That is particularly true in an area as serious as anti-money-laundering compliance, which is vital to helping prevent terrorism and vile human rights abuses.”

However, as with French bank BNP Paribas (BNPQY), which was fined $8.9 billion for violating anti-money laundering rules over the best part of a decade, Standard Chartered was allowed to keep its banking license.

As part of the settlement, the DFS-appointed monitor that has been at Standard Chartered for the last two years (since it was first found to have violated anti-money laundering regulations) will stay for another two years.

The bank said in a statement that it “accepts responsibility for and regrets the deficiencies in the anti-money laundering transaction surveillance system at its New York branch.”

It said it had already begun “extensive remediation efforts” and would complete them “with utmost urgency.”

It noted that it is trying to exit the UAE business as part of a strategic refocusing.

About the Author
By Geoffrey Smith
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