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Resistance See other Resistance Articles Title: Counterparties: “You f—ing Americans. Who are you to tell us that we’re not going to deal with Iranians.” Just over a month ago, Standard Chartereds CEO urged bankers to regain their social legitimacy and asserted that good banking is never needed more than now. That message was in line with the banks image as boring but good, as one FT headline put it. Standard Chartered now stands accused of helping Iranian banks including the central bank circumvent US sanctions by concealing roughly 60,000 transactions involving at least $250 billion from US regulators, and having reaped hundreds of millions of dollars in fees for itself over a decade. The whole damning complaint is here, and Business Insider pulled the choicest bits here. In this section, a StanChart Group Executive Director provides a great example of banker braggadocio, now destined to rank among the industrys all-time PR lows: In short, SCB [Standard Chartered Bank] operated as a rogue institution. By 2006, even the New York branch was acutely concerned about the banks Iran dollar-clearing program. In October 2006, SCBs CEO for the Americas sent a panicked message to the Group Executive Director in London. Firstly, he wrote, we believe [the Iranian business] needs urgent reviewing at the Group level to evaluate if its returns and strategic benefits are
still commensurate with the potential to cause very serious or even catastrophic reputational damage to the Group. His plea to the home office continued: [s]econdly, there is equally importantly potential of risk of subjecting management in US and London (e.g. you and I) and elsewhere to personal reputational damages and/or serious criminal liability. Lest there be any doubt, SCBs obvious contempt for U.S. banking regulations was succinctly and unambiguously communicated by SCBs Group Executive Director in response. As quoted by an SCB New York branch officer, the Group Director caustically replied: You fing Americans. Who are you to tell us, the rest of the world, that were not going to deal with Iranians. The complaint also alleges that Deloitte & Touche aided StanChart, saying the consultancy intentionally omitted critical information in its independent report to regulators. And a footnote reveals further investigations into whether StanChart was involved in similar schemes with other countries under US sanctions, such as Libya, Myanmar and Sudan. If nothing else, perhaps this episode will make bank executives think twice before signing off on sanctimonious ad campaigns while theyre allegedly simultaneously leaving the US financial system vulnerable to terrorists, weapons dealers, drug kingpins and corrupt regimes. The voice-over from this 2010 Standard Chartered commercial has now been pushed painfully beyond absurdity: Can a bank really stand for something? Can it balance its ambition with its conscience? To do what it must. Not what it can. As not everything in life that counts can be counted. Can it look not only at the profit it makes but how it makes that profit? And stand beside people, not above them. Where every solution depends on each person. Simply by doing good, can a bank in fact be great? In the many places we call home, our purpose remains the same. To be here for people. Here for progress. Here for the long run. Here for good. Peter Rudegeair Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest
#1. To: X-15 (#0)
Good for StanChart.
The most dangerous man to any government is the man who is able to think things out... without regard to the prevailing superstitions and taboos. Almost inevitably he comes to the conclusion that the government he lives under is dishonest, insane, intolerable. ~ H. L. Mencken
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