TODAY'S BUSINESS HEADLINES

DOF rejects plea for retention of income-tax holiday in top 4 tourist destinations

Meralco unit, 4 other firms to bid for MRT3 maintenance contract

PAL to ditch India flights

PSEi climbs near 7,400-mark after record close on Wall Street

Philippines opens new tourism market with 1st air deal with Brazil

HSBC shares dive in Hong Kong after apology

Los Angeles branch of HSBC. AFP PHOTO

InterAksyon.com means BUSINESS

HONG KONG - Shares in global banking giant HSBC fell more than two percent in Hong Kong on Wednesday after a top executive resigned over the lender's failure to control money laundering and terrorist financing.

London-based HSBC apologised Tuesday for failing to apply anti-laundering rules as US lawmakers accused it of giving Iran, terrorists and drug dealers access to the US financial system.

Its shares listed on the Hong Kong stock exchange fell 2.06 percent to close at HK$66.55, while the Hang Seng index slipped 1.11 percent.

"We deeply regret and apologise for the fact that HSBC did not live up to the expectations of our regulators, our customers, our employees, and the general public," HSBC Bank USA (HBUS) President Irene Dorner told a hearing of the Senate Homeland Security Subcommittee on Investigations.

"HSBC's compliance history, as examined today, is unacceptable."

Before reading his own testimony, David Bagley, the head of group compliance for HSBC, stepped down from his post in the wake of the subcommittee's report on the bank's operations.

"I recognise that there have been some significant areas of failure," he said. "This clearly took far too long to resolve."

The Senate report found that HSBC had allowed affiliates in countries such as Mexico, Saudi Arabia and Bangladesh to move billions of dollars in suspect funds into the United States without adequate controls.

Lawmakers said money laundered through HSBC-linked accounts benefited Mexican drug lords and terrorist networks, and skirted US sanctions on Iran.

"It's pretty shocking stuff," subcommittee chairman Senator Carl Levin said.

Among the findings was the revelation that HSBC and its US affiliate concealed more than $16 billion in sensitive transactions to Iran.

 

InterAksyon.com means BUSINESS

BUSINESS NEWS  
OTHER BUSINESS STORIES  

Business DOF rejects plea for retention of income-tax holiday in top 4 tourist destinations
Business Meralco unit, 4 other firms to bid for MRT3 maintenance contract
Business PAL to ditch India flights
Business PSEi climbs near 7,400-mark after record close on Wall Street
Business Philippines opens new tourism market with 1st air deal with Brazil
Business Sarah Jessica Parker inaugurated 'illegally' built SM mall, BCDA says
National | Business EXCLUSIVE | Zest Air suspends flights to Taiwan
Business | National BIG WINNERS IN 2013 ELECTIONS | Networks GMA, ABS-CBN report advertising windfall
Business MINDANAO POWER CRISIS | US aid sought in sprucing up relic of Fil-Am relations
Business SEC warns public against new pyramiding scam
Business Real estate exposure of banks not yet worrisome, Tetangco says
Business Asean, 6 trade partners begin talks for FTA to rival US-led trans-Pacific initiative
Business DOF to push for higher public float requirement on listed firms