The next focusIR Investor Webinar takes places on 14th May with guest speakers from Blue Whale Growth Fund, Taseko Mines, Kavango Resources and CQS Natural Resources fund. Please register here.

Less Ads, More Data, More Tools Register for FREE

Pin to quick picksHSBC Holdings Share News (HSBA)

Share Price Information for HSBC Holdings (HSBA)

London Stock Exchange
Share Price is delayed by 15 minutes
Get Live Data
Share Price: 705.50
Bid: 707.20
Ask: 707.30
Change: 0.50 (0.07%)
Spread: 0.10 (0.014%)
Open: 706.50
High: 714.40
Low: 705.00
Prev. Close: 705.00
HSBA Live PriceLast checked at -

Watchlists are a member only feature

Login to your account

Alerts are a premium feature

Login to your account

U.S. Treasury wants banks to peer behind shell companies

Wed, 20th Mar 2013 18:03

By Brett Wolf and Aruna Viswanatha

WASHINGTON, March 20 (Reuters) - The U.S. TreasuryDepartment is trying to strike a balance between the need forinformation from banks to help it nab hidden account owners andadministrative demands that a rule toward that end might createfor the banks.

Senior Treasury officials said the department will releasein coming weeks a proposal aimed at money laundering that wouldforce financial institutions to report the "beneficial," ortrue, owners of certain accounts.

Banks have been anxiously awaiting the proposal's language,fearing that a strict approach could mean they have to spendhuge amounts of time and money investigating the beneficialowners of thousands of legal entities they do business with.

David Cohen, a top Treasury official, said in an interviewthat he expects the rule to require different degrees of inquiryin different circumstances.

"There is a recognition that the financial sector iscomplex, and one-size-fits-all is not suitable here," saidCohen, Treasury's undersecretary for terrorism and financialintelligence, in an interview last week.

Cohen declined to discuss specifics of the rule, but he saidthe extra information will help the U.S. government pursue moneylaunderers trying to hide their identities behind shellcompanies and other legal entities, even if banks don't fullycheck the accuracy of the information.

"One of the motivations is for law enforcement during thecourse of their investigations to not hit that brick wall and beable to get behind the account holder," Cohen said.

U.S. authorities have stepped up their enforcement ofanti-money laundering laws in an effort to clamp down on conductranging from drug trafficking to terrorism, and have enteredinto cease and desist orders with top banks including JPMorgan and Citibank related to weak internal controls.

In December, HSBC agreed to pay a record $1.9billion, in part to resolve charges that it failed to detect ariver of drug money flowing from Mexico into the United States.

Treasury said in February 2012 it planned to propose a ruleto force financial institutions to determine the true owners ofaccounts held in the names of legal entities such ascorporations. It held five public hearings around the country and received around 90 comment letters, but has not yet come outwith its proposal.

Some banks, broker-dealers and other firms already seek suchinformation about their riskiest accounts, but the rule wasenvisioned as a way to provide a more uniform approach for theindustry and determine exactly when banks need to obtain suchinformation.

Some firms expressed skepticism about how valuable thatinformation could be, since many states don't even collectinformation about who a beneficial owner is when incorporating anew company, making it difficult for banks to vet the detailswithout launching a full-scale investigation into each account.

"At this point, it is simply not feasible to imposebroad-based beneficial ownership requirements on U.S. financialinstitutions in the absence of congressional legislationrequiring the collection and maintenance of publicly availablebeneficial ownership information at the time legal entities arecreated in the United States," the Financial Services Roundtablesaid in its comments about the rule last year.

But just having the name of a beneficial owner, even if itisn't verified, is still useful, officials said. If an accountsignatory lies about who the owner is, it could be amisrepresentation that authorities can act on.

"Make somebody say 'I'm the beneficial owner, I'm not thebeneficial owner.' Make that a real person," Chip Poncy, whoheads the Treasury office of strategic policy for terroristfinancing and financial crimes, said at an industry conferencein Florida last month.

Law enforcement officials "have insisted ... this is useful,either for purposes of proving criminal intent or just as havingleverage in an investigation," he said.

Treasury officials have also expressed support forlegislation that would require the government to collect moreinformation about ownership when legal entities incorporate.

During a speech at a separate anti-money launderingconference in Florida on Tuesday, Jennifer Shasky-Calvery, whoheads Treasury's anti-money laundering unit, the FinancialCrimes Enforcement Network, or FinCEN, said the government mustdo more to make information about beneficial ownershipavailable.

Cohen also said in the interview that enforcement bodieshave stepped up efforts to build cases against individuals, inaddition to institutions, for money laundering lapses.

U.S. authorities faced public backlash after the HSBCsettlement for failing to punish any bankers, either criminallyor civilly, and Cohen said FinCEN is looking more closely atexisting powers that could be used to hold individualsresponsible.

"All of these entities act through people," Cohen said. "That had not been a priority in FinCEN enforcement actions inthe past."

More News
29 Nov 2023 12:02

LONDON MARKET MIDDAY: FTSE 100 underperforms ahead of US data

(Alliance News) - European equities were largely higher heading into Wednesday afternoon's US gross domestic product reading, though London's FTSE 100 underperformed as China-exposed shares and international earners declined.

Read more
29 Nov 2023 11:13

IN BRIEF: Pets At Home starts GBP25 million 2nd half of share buyback

Pets At Home Group PLC - Cheshire, England-based pet supplies and veterinary services - Launches GBP25 million second tranche of GBP50 million share buyback. Commissions HSBC Bank PLC, part of HSBC Holdings PLC, to conduct the buyback tranche, which will end by March 28 next year. The overall programme was started in June. The launch of the second tranche follows the release of interim results on Tuesday. Pretax profit declined 35% to GBP34.7 million in the 28 weeks to October 12 from GBP53.4 million a year prior, as a 6.5% revenue increase was offset by higher cost of sales and administrative expenses. Pets at Home had maintained its interim dividend at 4.5 pence per share.

Read more
27 Nov 2023 17:08

LONDON MARKET CLOSE: Downbeat China data hurts exposed FTSE 100 stocks

(Alliance News) - Stock prices in London closed down on Monday, as underwhelming industrial data from China hurt Asia-exposed stocks and oil majors, while new homes figures in the US also disappointed.

Read more
27 Nov 2023 11:58

LONDON MARKET MIDDAY: Downbeat China headlines hurt FTSE 100

(Alliance News) - London's FTSE 100 made an uncertain start to the week, with share price falls for miners, oil majors and China-exposed stocks sending the large-cap benchmark into the red heading into Monday afternoon.

Read more
27 Nov 2023 06:47

UPDATE: HSBC UK says banking services return after Black Friday outage

(Alliance News) - HSBC Holdings PLC said its digital services are returning to normal after UK customers were left struggling to access mobile and online banking on one of the busiest shopping days of the year.

Read more
24 Nov 2023 11:48

HSBC UK investigating as customers struggle to access banking services

(Alliance News) - HSBC UK is investigating "as a matter of urgency" as customers have been struggling to access banking services on Black Friday.

Read more
24 Nov 2023 11:01

HSBC apologises after online banking outage

(Sharecast News) - HSBC issued an apology on Friday morning after a disruption to its mobile and online banking services left many UK customers unable to access their accounts on one of the year's biggest shopping days.

Read more
23 Nov 2023 11:28

Greencore signs new GBP350 million sustainability-linked facility

(Alliance News) - Greencore Group PLC on Thursday said it signed a new five-year GBP350 million sustainability-linked revolving credit facility.

Read more
22 Nov 2023 15:12

London close: Stocks mixed as investors digest Autumn Statement

(Sharecast News) - London markets closed with a mixed performance on Wednesday, influenced by the Chancellor's Autumn Statement and big moves from the likes of Sage and Kingfisher.

Read more
22 Nov 2023 09:48

LONDON BROKER RATINGS: RBC cuts HSBC; Liberum cuts Glencore

(Alliance News) - The following London-listed shares received analyst recommendations Wednesday morning and Tuesday:

Read more
22 Nov 2023 07:50

RBC Capital downgrades HSBC, says shares looking 'more fair value'

(Sharecast News) - RBC Capital Markets downgraded HSBC on Wednesday to 'sector perform' from 'outperform' and cut the price target to 775p from 825p as it said the shares are looking more fair value.

Read more
22 Nov 2023 07:47

LONDON BRIEFING: SigmaRoc signs USD1 billion deal for CRH lime assets

(Alliance News) - Stocks are expected to edge higher at Wednesday's market open in London, as investors look ahead to the latest fiscal announcements from the UK government.

Read more
21 Nov 2023 06:24

Banks accused of 'lack of transparency' over green finance activities

(Alliance News) - Europe's 20 largest banks have been accused of a "structural lack of transparency" over their green finance activities.

Read more
14 Nov 2023 13:44

Halifax, First Direct, HSBC UK among lenders cutting UK mortgage rates

(Alliance News) - Major lenders have announced new mortgage rate cuts in the UK, widening the choice for borrowers searching for deals under the 5% mark.

Read more
13 Nov 2023 12:27

Chinese credit growth ticks higher in October but rate of money supply increase slows

(Sharecast News) - Lending growth in the People's Republic of China ticked higher last month, but the details of the latest figures attested to cooling domestic demand even amid increased fiscal stimulus.

Read more

Login to your account

Don't have an account? Click here to register.

Quickpicks are a member only feature

Login to your account

Don't have an account? Click here to register.