Reports
Fitch Frowns On Westpac After Capital Charge Hike

The Australian bank braces itself for potential further downgrades to its ratings after one of the world's main credit scoring firms frowned on its predicament. Westpac faces claims that it systematically failed to follow AML and anti-terror financing controls.
Fitch Ratings,
one of the world’s “Big Three” groups ranking credit status of
firms and nations, has frowned on the credit outlook of embattled
Australian lender Westpac. This follows
regulatory actions for systemic anti-money laundering
failings.
The bank may have to set aside more money to cover enforcement
actions, Fitch warned.
The agency commented yesterday after the
Australian Prudential Regulation Authority said it was
raising Westpac’s capital charge and starting a probe into
possible breaches of the Banking Act 1959. Those actions came in
November after the
Australian Transaction Reports and Analysis Centre claimed
that the bank was guilty of systemic non-compliance with
anti-money laundering rules.
Fitch said it had a negative outlook on the bank’s long-term
issuer default rating. The agency said further negative comments
could follow. The other two main rating agencies are Moody's
and Standard & Poor's. Ironically, less than a month before the
Westpac AML and terrorism financing breaches saga broke out,
S&P actually raised Westpac's stand-alone credit profile and
the rating on certain capital instruments. Moody's said in a
statement in November that the Austrac claims against the bank
were a "credit negative".
In late November, Westpac said that Brian Hartzer, chief
executive,
had resigned because of the failures. His departure
added to those of other CEOs around the world brought down
by lapses in handling potentially dirty money in recent years.
Hartzer was replaced on an acting basis by Peter King, who is
chief financial officer.
Australia’s banking and wealth management sector has been hit by a number of misdeeds and oversights. Late in 2017, the government created a Royal Commission to probe into a raft of problems over mis-selling, weak AML controls and lapses, and other regulatory matters. Senior figures at a number of banks have resigned and been replaced. (See an overview of these stories here.)
Challenges
In a statement, Fitch said that APRA's actions will “further
challenge the bank, but should ultimately result in WBC being
better placed to address evolving industry risks”.
If regulators find against Westpac, the bank will have to set
aside more money to cover its costs. There are risks of further
management turmoil and instability, hitting operations.
“Fitch believes further operational risk charges, management
changes and remediation could arise should the bank's
deficiencies in non-financial risk management exceed the
regulator's expectation or if breaches of the Banking Act,
including the Banking Executive Accountability Regime, are found.
This would place further pressure on the bank's ongoing
business,” it said.
APRA's additional capital charge raises WBC's total operational
risk capital add-on charge to A$1 billion, placing it on par with
Commonwealth Bank of Australia (AA-/Negative/aa-).
Westpac expects the capital charge to reduce its common equity
Tier 1 ratio by 16 basis points. Fitch said such a cut will not
affect the bank's ability to meet APRA's “unquestionably strong”
minimum of 10.5 per cent.
Fitch has an AA-/Negative/aa- rating on Westpac.
AML lapses and breaches of sanctions of countries such as Iran,
Sudan and Cuba have prompted a wave of fines, C-suite
resignations and licence cancellations in jurisdictions such as
Singapore, Denmark, France and Australia. In Europe, to give one
example, Copenhagen-based Danske Bank’s executive leadership has
been replaced over AML failings linked to its Estonia branch.
Other European banks have been allegedly implicated.
In Asia, a massive corruption scandal centred on the
state-created fund, 1MDB, has prompted criminal investgations in
Singapore, Switzerland and the US. Singapore’s regulator has
kicked out Falcon Private Bank and BSI, both Swiss firms, from
the Asian city-state. The US government has slapped heavy fines
on banks such as BNP Paribas ($8.9 billion, May 2015) for
sanctions breaches. In the small Mediterranean island of Malta,
the jurisdiction has been rocked by claims – hotly denied by
Prime Minister Joseph Muscat – that he and ministers used
offshore Panama accounts to launder money. Several senior Malta
government ministers have resigned. Maltese regulators removed a
banking licence from the lender Pilatus exactly a year ago for
AML failings.
The profusion of AML cases raises questions about what systems
banks should use when onboarding clients and handling existing
ones, such as making better use of technology to flag up problems
early on. The way that bankers are remunerated, and the corporate
ethos they should have to protect the reputation of a bank, are
also hot topics for this industry.