Business

TD Bank shakes up leadership amid scandal around anti-money-laundering program

TD Bank Group, which is mired in a money-laundering scandal in the U.S., said Raymond Chun will replace chief executive Bharat Masrani, who is retiring next year.

Chun, who stepped into the role of head of Canadian personal banking last December, will become chief operating officer on Nov. 1 before taking over the top job when Masrani officially steps down on April 10.

The leadership shakeup was announced Thursday, and also includes several other executive changes. It comes as the bank works to resolve investigations into deficiencies in its anti-money-laundering program in the U.S., which allegedly allowed hundreds of millions of dollars of illicit drug profits to flow through the bank.

Masrani, in announcing his retirement after 38 years at the bank and a decade in charge, said the shortcomings in the program were his to bear.

“This took place on my watch as CEO, and I take full responsibility,” he said on a conference call.

TD Bank CEO Bharat Masrani speaks at the bank’s annual general meeting in Toronto in March 2018. Masrani is stepping down as CEO in April. (Chris Young/The Canadian Press)

“I will continue to advance and direct the critical remediation program required to meet our obligations and responsibilities and strengthen our risk and control foundation.”

The investigations have been a major overhang for the bank and helped scuttle its proposed $13.4-billion US acquisition of U.S. bank First Horizon in May last year.

Chun said on the call that remediation is the top priority as the bank looks to write its next chapter.

“TD is a critical part of our financial system and economy.… We also have a significant challenge in front of us.”

WATCH | TD Bank says it failed to respond to ‘suspicious activity’ in U.S. branches: 

TD admits failure to stop money laundering at U.S. branches

After a major U.S. investigation, TD admitted it failed to stop criminals from using its branches to launder money. The Canadian-owned bank is one of several under investigation by the U.S. government and financial regulators.

See also  Union leaders depart DNC in latest blow to Democratic Party leadership

Timing of leadership change a surprise to some

Some analysts said both the timing and the naming of Chun, who has mostly Canadian experience, was a surprise.

“We believe some investors were open to the possibility of TD selecting an external CEO candidate, one with deep U.S. banking sector experience (and experience with U.S. regulators) given the bank’s (anti-money laundering) issues,” said National Bank analyst Gabriel Dechaine in a note.

The bank has taken more than $3 billion US in charges related to the investigations, and has said it expects a global resolution of those probes by the end of the year. But Dechaine said there are worries that regulators will impose financial restrictions on the bank that could stretch well beyond then.

“We note that, aside from regulatory fines, these issues could have long-term operational impacts on TD’s U.S. bank,” he said.

WATCH | How drug traffickers funnelled money through TD Bank: 

How a fentanyl crime ring used a Canadian bank to do business | About That

TD Bank is at the centre of a U.S. Department of Justice probe into a massive global money laundering scheme. Andrew Chang breaks down what we know from court documents and inside sources to explain how the scheme unfolded and the red flags analysts say should have been caught.

The conference call with analysts turned into something of a job interview for Chun, with questions about what sort of problems he has had to solve, what experience has prepared him for the top job, and why he was the right pick for the role.

See also  Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez’s tough Bronx persona is under fresh scrutiny with a resurfaced childhood nickname from her suburban upstate New York upbringing casting doubt on that publicly portrayed image. The progressive champion’s latest spat with President Donald Trump over the Iran strikes again called into question her true upbringing when she declared on X she was a “Bronx girl" to make her a point against the president. The 35-year-old congresswoman wrote in part on X: "I’m a Bronx girl. You should know that we can eat Queens boys for breakfast. Respectfully," she said, referring to the president’s upbringing in Queens as she called for his impeachment over his decision to bypass Congress in authorizing U.S. strikes on Iranian nuclear facilities. Ocasio-Cortez was born in the Bronx but moved to Yorktown – which is nearly an hour outside New York City -- when she was 5 years old and went on to attend Yorktown High School where she graduated in 2007. She was considered an accomplished student there and well thought of by teacher Michael Blueglass, according to a 2018 report by local media outlet Halston Media News. “There, known by students and staff as ‘Sandy,’ she was a member of the Science Research Program taught by Michael Blueglass," the report states. “She was amazing," Blueglass said, per the report. “Aside from her winning one of the top spots and going to the [Intel International Science and Engineering Fair], she was just one of the most amazing presenters in all of the years I've been at Yorktown. Her ability to take complex information and explain it to all different levels of people was fantastic." After high school, Ocasio-Cortez attended Boston University, where she majored in economics and international relations, per the report. Ocasio-Cortez’s “Sandy" nickname — which carries a more suburban and preppy tone — appears to undercut her politically crafted image as a tough, inner-city fighter, one she has portrayed since her famous 2018 congressional campaign where she eventually ousted former 10-terms Congressman Joe Crowley. New York GOP Assemblyman Matt Slater, who now represents Yorktown, added to the scrutiny of Ocasio-Cortez’s persona in the wake of her brash with Trump and released images of Ocasio-Cortez from his high school yearbook. He claimed he and the rising Democratic star attended Yorktown High School at the same time when she was a freshman and he was a senior. "I saw the attacks on the president and her [Ocasio-Cortez] claims that she's a big, tough Bronx girl," said Slater. "To sit there and say that she’s a Bronx girl is just patently ridiculous." "Everybody in our community knows this is just a bold-face lie," said Slater on "Fox & Friends First" last week. "She grew up in Yorktown, she was on my track team." "She's lying about her background, she's lying about her upbringing," Slater claimed. Slater’s post sent social media ablaze and prompted Ocasio-Cortez to respond after an image if her family’s home was posted online. “I’m proud of how I grew up and talk about it all the time," Ocasio-Cortez wrote on X Friday responding to the post. “My mom cleaned houses and I helped. We cleaned tutors’ homes in exchange for SAT prep." “Growing up between the Bronx and Yorktown deeply shaped my views of inequality & it’s a big reason I believe the things I do today!"

Masrani said Chun is the right leader at the right time, while Chun himself said he has a range of experience across business lines.

“Running into complexity, and dealing with regulators, and mapping out complex strategies as we move forward has all been sort of in my experience,” Chun said.

Canaccord Genuity analyst Matthew Lee saw Chun’s appointment as a potentially positive sign on the investigations’ progress, as the incoming CEO has also served in leadership roles TD’s direct investing, insurance and wealth management branches, in over three decades at the bank.

A person walks in front of the corner of a TD Bank.
A person walks past a TD Bank sign in Toronto’s Financial District in September 2022. (Alex Lupul/The Canadian Press)

“The firm was unlikely to appoint a new CEO without a clear road map on an (anti-money-laundering) resolution and, as such, the selection of Mr. Chun (who has primarily Canadian experience) may suggest that the firm is comfortable with both its fines and non-monetary penalties,” Lee said in a note.

More shuffling among executives 

TD also announced Thursday that Riaz Ahmed, group head of wholesale banking and president and CEO of TD Securities, will retire at the end of January 2025.

Other changes in the executive ranks taking effect Nov. 1 include the promotion of Sona Mehta, currently executive vice-president of real estate secured lending, everyday banking, saving and investing, to become group head of Canadian personal banking. Tim Wiggan, group head of wealth management and insurance, will become group head of wholesale banking and president and CEO of TD Securities.

Paul Clark, currently executive vice-president of private wealth management and financial planning, will become senior executive vice-president of wealth management.

The executive changes were announced as 2,500 members of TD’s senior management gathered in Toronto for their annual conference.

See also  Purolator, UPS pause shipments from couriers amid backlog from Canada Post strike

Related Articles

Leave a Reply

Back to top button