Santander has been fined £107.8m over “serious and persistent gaps” in its anti-money laundering controls which opened the door to “financial crime”.
The financial watchdog said the bank “failed to properly oversee and manage” systems aimed at verifying information provided by business customers.
Santander also failed to properly monitor the money customers had going through their accounts.
The bank said it was “very sorry” for the failings and had taken action.
Mark Steward, executive director of enforcement and market oversight at the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA), said: “Santander’s poor management of their anti-money laundering systems and their inadequate attempts to address the problems created a prolonged and severe risk of money laundering and financial crime.
The failings affected the oversight of accounts held by more than 560,000 business customers between 31 December 2012 and 18 October 2017, and led to more than £298m passing through the bank before it closed accounts.
The FCA said that in one case, a new customer opened an account as a small translations business with expected monthly deposits of £5,000. Within six months it was receiving millions in deposits, and swiftly transferring the money to separate accounts.
Although the account was recommended for closure by the bank’s own anti-money laundering team in March 2014, the FCA said that poor processes by Santander meant that it was not acted upon until September 2015.
As a result, the customer continued to receive and transfer millions of pounds through its account.
The City watchdog identified several other business banking accounts which Santander failed to manage correctly, leaving the bank open to “serious money laundering risk”.
Santander chief executive Mike Regnier said: “We are very sorry for the historical anti-money laundering related controls issues in our Business Banking division between 2012-17 highlighted in the FCA’s findings.”
He said the bank took action to address the issues once they were identified, but accepted that its anti-money laundering controls at the time should have been stronger.
“We have since made significant changes to address this by overhauling our financial crime technology, systems and processes, he said, adding that more than 4,400 Santander staff are now focused on preventing financial crime.
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