Legal
Australian Regulator Adds To CBA's Woes With Legal Action Over Rate Rigging; New CEO Named

CBA may have hoped the announcement of a new CEO might have been the start of a quieter time for the scandal-hit bank, but Australia's financial watchdog is taking legal action over rate manipulation.
Scandal-hit Commonwealth
Bank of Australia faces fresh woes, with Australia’s national
financial regulator saying it has started legal proceedings
against the bank for “unconscionable conduct” and rate rigging,
adding to actions authorities have taken against other banks in
the country. The news broke shortly after CBA announced a new
chief executive had been appointed.
The Australian Securities and Investments Commission said it has
begun legal action in the Federal Court in Melbourne against the
bank, relating to the lender’s involvement in setting the bank
bill swap reference rate (BBSW) between 31 January 2012 and
October 2012.
The BBSW is the primary interest rate benchmark used in
Australian financial markets and was administered by the
Australian Financial Markets Association during the relevant
period. On 27 September 2013, AFMA changed the method by which
the BBSW is calculated. The conduct covered by the legal case
took place before the new approach was created.
“During the relevant period CBA had a large number of products
which were priced or valued off BBSW. ASIC alleges that on three
specific occasions CBA traded with the intention of affecting the
level at which BBSW was set so as to maximise its profits or
minimise its losses to the detriment of those holding opposite
positions to CBA's,” ASIC said.
“ASIC alleges it was unconscionable for CBA to trade in this way,
and also to enter into products priced off the BBSW without
disclosing its trading practices to its customers and
counterparties. ASIC also alleges that CBA's trading created an
artificial price and a false appearance with respect to the
market for some of these products,” it said.
ASIC said it seeks statements from CBA that it broke various
regulations; the watchdog said it also wants financial penalties
imposed on the bank and for the lender to put a compliance
programme in place.
"Commonwealth Bank has fully co-operated with ASIC’s
investigation over the last two years. Commonwealth Bank disputes
the allegations made by ASIC. As this matter is before the
courts, it is not appropriate to comment further at this
time," CBA said in an emailed statement to this publication.
The case is one of a number of regulatory actions against banks
for rigging market benchmarks since the financial markets crisis
of 2008. Interbank interest rate benchmarks such as LIBOR, for
example, had been fiddled by banks, prompting an overhaul of the
system. Banks have hired compliance staff and in some cases, seen
high-level executives depart. One of the first cases
internationally involved UK-listed lender Barclays. In 2012
Barclays’ high-profile chief executive, Bob Diamond,
resigned amid the LIBOR (London Interbank Offered Rate)
saga.
New boss
ASIC’s announcement happened a day after CBA announced that Matt
Comyn, 42, has been named the new chief executive, effective 9
April 2018, replacing Ian Narev, who announced in August that he
would retire before the end of this financial year, after more
than six years in the role. Media reports billed Comyn as
something of an outsider, although he has had a 20-year career at
CBA includes experience across divisions including business,
institutional, retail and wealth management.
Narev’s announcement last summer that he was stepping down came
amid claims that CBA had tolerated lax controls relating to money
laundering and terrorism finance. Matters led to a sharp fall in
CBA’s shares, prompting investor anger and legal action. CBA has
admitted a number of failures although it has contested other
ones. (See
article here.) This news service reported in September,
meanwhile, that the chief executive of its wealth management
unit, Annabel Spring, was leaving in December. According to the
statement at the time, Spring “has decided to leave” following
the bank's announcement that it will sell off its Australian and
New Zealand life insurance business to Asia-focused insurer AIA
Group for A$3.8 billion ($3.1 billion), the bank said.
Other cases
Explaining the background to the latest case, ASIC said that in
the case of other lenders, it started legal action against the
Australia and New Zealand Banking Group on 4 March 2016 and
versus National Australia Bank on 7 June 2016. In November last
year, the Federal Court declared that each of ANZ and NAB had
attempted to engage in unconscionable conduct in attempting to
seek to change where the BBSW set on certain dates and that each
bank failed to do all things necessary to ensure that they
provided financial services honestly and fairly. Penalties of
A$10 million ($8.05 million) each were imposed on the
banks.
In April 2016, ASIC also started legal proceedings against the
Westpac Banking Corporation. That case awaits judgment.
ASIC has previously accepted enforceable undertakings relating to
BBSW from UBS, BNP Paribas and Royal Bank of Scotland. The
institutions also made voluntary contributions totaling A$3.6
million to fund independent financial literacy projects in
Australia.