European banks, states have serious dirty-money shortcomings, says EU Commission

European banks, states have serious dirty-money shortcomings, says EU Commission

by Joseph Anthony
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FILE PHOTO: Danske Bank

The European Commission said on Wednesday more should be done to counter the multi-billion-euro flow of dirty money in the European Union as major shortcomings have emerged in the way banks and governments handle the issue.

After a recent string of money-laundering scandals at several lenders in the 28-country bloc, the EU reviewed existing rules and practices to identify the main shortfalls, as well as counter illegal flows that Europol estimates could amount to more than 200 billion euros ($222.7 billion) a year.

Under the review, whose results were published on Wednesday, the EU executive assessed 10 known cases of money laundering at banks which were reported mostly between 2012 and 2018.

The case studies included lenders that have been at the centre of large scandals such as Danske Bank, Denmarkโ€™s biggest bank, which has admitted to having handled through its Estonian branch 200 billion euros ($225 billion) of suspicious transactions between 2007 and 2015 โ€“ as reported by Reuters last month.

The review also encompassed lenders that have been shut because of money-laundering woes, like Latviaโ€™s ABLV, Maltaโ€™s Pilatus Bank and Cyprusโ€™ FBME Bank. In addition, it covered cases of financial crime that led to fines or financial settlements at some of EUโ€™s largest banks, like Deutsche Bank , the Dutch giant ING, Finland-based Nordea , and Franceโ€™s Societe Generale.

Other reviewed banks were Maltaโ€™s Satabank, whose activities were frozen by domestic authorities last year, and Estoniaโ€™s Versobank, whose licence was revoked last year amid a money-laundering investigation.

Brussels concluded that banks often did not comply with anti-money laundering requirements, while watchdogs in member states failed to prevent and effectively address the shortfalls.

โ€œThese deficiencies point to outstanding structural issues in the implementation of EU rules,โ€ a Commission statement said.

It suggested making EU anti-money laundering rules โ€“ now often at variance in their application โ€“ directly binding on member states, and considering improvements in banking supervision.

โ€œWe donโ€™t want any weak links in the EU that criminals could exploit,โ€ EU justice commissioner Vera Jourova said.

FLASHPOINTS

The outgoing EU executive, whose five-year mandate will lapse at the end of October, also said that states should consider whether to give more powers to the EU to improve the oversight of financial crime at banks.

The commissioner in charge of financial services, Valdis Dombrovskis, has long refrained from proposing the establishment of an EU supervisory body on money laundering, as many states oppose the idea, fearing a loss of national powers.

The European Central Bank and the EU Parliament have instead urged the creation of a fully-fledged EU supervisory agency, on top of a minor reform of anti-money laundering powers at the EU banking watchdog EBA that was agreed this year.

In a separate report, also released on Wednesday, the Commission added professional football, free ports, and visa-for sale schemes to the list of sectors that are at higher risk of money laundering, in addition to traditionally risky areas like cash transfers, financial services, gambling and non-profit organisations.

The commission said that professional footballโ€™s lack of transparency has created โ€œfertile ground for the use of illegal resourcesโ€.

It also said free ports, which legally enjoy privileged tax treatments within the EU, could be abused for trade of counterfeited goods, money laundering and other crime if no sufficient checks are carried out to identify the owners of companies using them.

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