Santander fined £107.8m for repeated money-laundering failures and risking financial crime
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
Santander fined £107.8m for repeated money-laundering failures and risking financial crime
Santander UK has been fined £107.8m for "repeated money-laundering failures" by the financial conduct watchdog.
The Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) imposed the fine as business banking customers suffered due to "serious and persistent gaps in its anti-money laundering controls", it said.
The millions owed for the lapse come at a discounted rate. Had Santander not agreed to resolve the matter it would not have qualified for the 30% discount rate and be on the hook for nearly £154m.
More than half a million business customers were impacted by the bank's failure to properly oversee and manage its anti-money laundering (AML) systems, the FCA found.
That poor management "significantly impacted the account oversight" of more than 560,000 business customers between 31 December 2012 and 18 October 2017, it said.
AML measures are in place to make sure illegally obtained money is not disguised as legal funds.
The gaps in the AML systems meant information provided by customers on the business they would be doing was inadequately verified.
The lender also failed to properly monitor the money customers said would be going through their accounts compared to what actually was being deposited.
As a result, there was a "prolonged and severe risk of money laundering and financial crime", said Mark Steward, the FCA's executive director of enforcement and market oversight.
Santander said it accepted the findings and had fully co-operated fully with the FCA investigation. It said it is fully committed to the fight against financial crime and will continue to meet all applicable financial crime regulations and laws.
It noted the fine was based on a proportion of the revenues of Santander UK's business banking division over the relevant period and that business banking customers formed 4% of Santander UK's customer base in 2017.
"The FCA's investigation focused on the identification, assessment and management of higher risk customers, within the business banking division, including money services businesses," a company statement read.
"It has now concluded, and no further action is anticipated by the FCA or any other authority in respect of this matter."
Santander chief executive Mike Regnier apologised for the failings.
"Santander takes its responsibilities regarding financial crime extremely seriously. We are very sorry for the historical anti-money laundering related controls issues in our business banking division between 2012 and 2017 highlighted in the FCA's findings."
"While we took action to address our AML issues once they were identified, we accept that our AML framework 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."
Articles-Popular
- Main
- Contact Us
- Planetary Existences-2
- Planetary Existences
- TWO REVELATIONS-2
- Jeffery Epstein - The Saga - 9
- Jeffery Epstein - The Saga - 8
- Jeffery Epstein - The Saga - 10
- The Two Revelations
- The Fourth Way - Study of Oneself - P.D.Ouspensky
- Impeachment Investigators Subpoena White House - Ukraine
- Universality of Initiation
- The Path Of Initiation
- Initiation and the Devas
- The Participants In The Mysteries-2
- The Fourth Way - Wrong Functions - P.D Ouspensky
- The Final Initiation
- Statues are a mark of honour. Like Edward Colston, Cecil Rhodes and Oliver Cromwell have to go
- Discipleship - Group Relations - 2
- The Probationary Path - 2
- The Participants In The Mysteries
- Discipleship - Group Relationships
- Discipleship
- The Succeeding Two Initiations
- Jeffery Epstein - The Saga - 7
- Jeffery Epstein - The Saga - 6
Articles - Latest
- They Lied to Us! The Truth They Hid About Hitler’s Death — Gerard Williams
- Ramaposa Dragged Out of Parliament
- Madagascar Goverment Collapse
- The Reality of Digital Id
- Welcome To The End Of Western Dominance
- Why is the Sahel turning its back on France?
- Sarkozy gets 5 years in prison in Gadhafi case
- The EU in 2025: A union at the crossroads of chaos
- Deep distrust of EU leaves Italy's Meloni in a corner over bailout fund
- Regime crisis in France: Bayrou falls, now Macron must go!
- Idi Amin president of Uganda
- Anger at Starmer's 'surrender deal' that hands Spain control over Gibraltar border
- Iran doubles down as US signals Israel could strike during nuclear talks
- What could have caused Air India plane to crash in 30 seconds?
- WW3 fears explode as Britain now Russia's 'enemy number 1' - even ahead of Ukraine



