Danske Bank A/S is being kicked out of Estonia as authorities in the country react to a deepening money-laundering scandal that this week led to formal investigations being launched into the conduct of the lender’s regulators.
The Financial Supervisory Authority in Tallinn took the extraordinary step yesterday of ordering Danske to close its operations in the Baltic country. The agency is giving Denmark’s biggest bank eight months to return deposits to customers and either sell or transfer loans to another lender.
The news surfaced not long after it emerged that the financial supervisory authorities in Estonia and Denmark were being investigated by the European Banking Authority as it tries to find out whether they did enough to prevent one of the bloc’s worst ever money laundering scandals.
Danske admitted in September that much of about $230bn that was processed at its Tallinn-based unit was probably tainted. The bank is now under criminal investigation in several jurisdictions, including in the US, and is facing fines potentially in the billions of dollars. Danske shut down the Estonian non-resident portfolio at the heart of the scandal in 2016, but its branch in the country still handles local accounts.
Kilvar Kessler, the head of the Estonian FSA head, said that his office has “every right to put an end once and for all to this very exceptional and unfortunate case, as serious and large-scale violations of the local rules have been committed in Estonia through the branch of a foreign bank.”
The Danske case “has dealt a serious blow to the transparency, credibility and reputation of the Estonian financial market, while the supervisory authority of the home country has handled the bank softly,” he said.
Danske said in May last year it was focusing its operations in Estonia on providing banking services to the subsidiaries of its Nordic and international corporate customers. It still has about 238 employees in the country, down from 317 a year earlier. According to Danske’s website in December, the Estonian branch was being serviced by Bank of America for its correspondent banking needs.
The EBA said yesterday it will investigate whether the two watchdogs were in “possible breach of Union law” in their oversight of Danske. The authority started looking into the actions taken by Danske’s supervisors back in September, following a request by the European Commission. The EBA now has two months to complete its investigation.
The Danish regulator issued a scathing report in May last year that focused on the governance issues around the scandal, and forced Danske to add to its capital reserves as part of a series of measures designed to deal with the case. But it was subsequently criticised for not taking tougher actions against the bank. The FSA countered that much of the information it received from Danske over the years had been misleading, making it hard for the watchdog to act.
Meanwhile, the Danish and Estonian supervisory authorities have been embroiled in a blame game as to who should have done what. Denmark has insisted its role was to focus on governance issues, while the Estonians have complained that their warnings largely went unheeded. 
What happens after a formal investigation is announced? The EBA must submit recommendations to the national authority on how to comply with Union law no later than two months after it announces a formal probe.
The national supervisor then has 10 working days to comply or explain how it intends to comply; a failure to respond may lead to intervention by the Commission.
The EBA may then bypass national supervisors and order a financial institution to take action to comply with Union law, including “cessation of any practice.”
It’s also worth noting that the former chairman of the Danish FSA’s board, Henrik Ramlau-Hansen, had been chief financial officer at Danske. He stepped down from the watchdog last year amid widespread criticism that his presence raised serious doubts about the impartiality of the FSA in the case.
The current director general of the FSA, Jesper Berg, took on the role in late 2015. He was preceded by Ulrik Nodgaard, who ran the watchdog from 2009. Nodgaard is the current head of the Danish Bankers’ Association, a lobby organization that represents the interests of the financial industry.
Danish Business Minister Rasmus Jarlov has said he sees no reason to believe that the FSA did anything wrong. Since the Danske scandal came to light, Denmark has significantly stepped up its efforts to fight money laundering, including raising fines by 700% and adding the specter of prison sentences to the list of penalties executives may face if caught breaching the rules.
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