Investment - Articles - FCA fines Nationwide £44m for financial crime failings


The FCA has fined Nationwide Building Society £44m for inadequate anti-financial crime systems and controls between October 2016 to July 2021. During this period, Nationwide had ineffective systems for keeping up-to-date due diligence and risk assessments for all its personal current account customers and for monitoring their transactions.

Nationwide was also aware that some of those customers were using their personal accounts for business activity, in breach of its terms. Nationwide did not offer business current accounts at this point, so did not have the right processes in place to manage the financial crime risks from business activity.   

This meant Nationwide was unable to effectively identify, assess, monitor or manage the money laundering risks among its personal current account customers. It also meant Nationwide did not have an accurate picture of its customers who presented a higher risk of financial crime.

In one serious case, Nationwide missed opportunities to identify a customer using personal current accounts to receive fraudulent Covid furlough payments. The customer received 24 payments totalling £27.3m over 13 months, with £26.01m of this deposited over 8 days. His Majesty’s Revenue & Customs (HMRC) recovered £26.5m, but approximately £800,000 remains unrecovered.

Therese Chambers, joint executive director of enforcement and market oversight at the FCA, said: 'Nationwide failed to get a proper grip of the financial crime risks lurking within its customer base. It took too long to address its flawed systems and weak controls, meaning red flags were missed with serious consequences. Building societies and banks have a key role in the fight against financial crime. Firms must remain vigilant in this fight.'

Nationwide was aware of weaknesses in its systems and controls and undertook work to make improvements. However, it failed to adequately address those weaknesses in a timely manner. Nationwide subsequently commenced a large-scale financial crime transformation programme in July 2021.

 

Read the Final Notice: Nationwide Building society (PDF).
Nationwide would have been fined £62,969,297, but it agreed to resolve these matters and so qualified for a 30% discount under the FCA's processes. The total fine is £44,078,500.
The FCA continues to supervise firms to improve standards and ensure that they have the right systems and controls to manage financial crime risks. Since 2021, the FCA has imposed 13 fines – totalling £300,767,526 – on banks for anti-money laundering systems and controls failings.
Fighting financial crime is a priority in the FCA’s 5-year strategy.
The FCA enables a fair and thriving financial services market for the good of consumers and the economy.

Back to Index


Similar News to this Story

Middle East de-escalation gathers pace
FTSE 100 opens higher. More peace talks possible after ceasefire on Israel’s northern border. Brent Crude dips but Strait of Hormuz remains closed. US
FCA Year 2 Consumer Duty Board Reports
Consumer Duty Board reports help turn governance into real change and better outcomes for consumers. Firms have improved, but more progress is needed.
Stocks stage a rapid comeback but oil remains elevated
Markets snap back with FTSE 100 and S&P 500 up on the year. Oil stays above $90 as Hormuz risk remains.UK GDP bounced in February, but growth is expec

Site Search

Exact   Any  

Latest Actuarial Jobs

Actuarial Login

Email
Password
 Jobseeker    Client
Reminder Logon

APA Sponsors

Actuarial Jobs & News Feeds

Jobs RSS News RSS

WikiActuary

Be the first to contribute to our definitive actuarial reference forum. Built by actuaries for actuaries.