Compliance
Japanese Watchdog Orders One Month's Suspension Of SocGen Private Banking Japan

Japan’s FSA has ordered the suspension of Société Générale's Japanese private banking business, after discovering “serious violations of laws and regulations".
Japan’s
Financial Services Agency has ordered the suspension of Société
Générale's
Japanese private banking business, after discovering “serious
violations of
laws and regulations”, during an inspection.
The FSA
said in a statement published on its website that it had taken
administrative
action against the French lender, after “serious problems that
may impede sound
and appropriate business operations were recognised, regarding
the governance
system, the compliance system, and the customer protection
management system”.
SocGen should suspend most of its private banking division,
which will mean not
accepting new money and soliciting for new money, between 23
October 2012 to 22 November 2012. SocGen must also suspend most
of its trust
business in the corporate division between 23 October 2012 to 22
January 2013, which the bank says is a non-core asset.
The FSA said the bank must also clarify the responsibility of
the
management, review the governance system and strengthen the
functions of the audit
committee and the internal audit division.
The FSA also ordered SocGen to
drastically restructure its compliance system and the customer
protection
management system, including the review of the management systems
regarding the
pension trust business and the private banking business. It must
ensure that all executives
and employees fully understand and comply with laws, regulations
and rules, and
train, retain and appropriately allocate personnel necessary for
the company's
business operations.
SocGen is obliged to formulate a
business improvement plan to implement the measures and to submit
this plan by
16 November 2012, and then immediately implement it, said the
FSA.
A spokesperson for SocGen said: "All Japan private banking clients will be contacted by their relationship manager to explain how the consequences of the FSA ruling will be taken into account. The bank will endeavour to ensure the FSA ruling has no adverse impact on clients."
Société Générale Private Banking had assets under management of €85.6 billion (US$111 billion) as at end of June 2012, but did not break down AuM on a regional basis.
The FSA said the move came about after
SocGen was found to be failing the method of screening the
acceptance of money,
and allocated the responsibility for conducting due diligence
examination
regarding the scope of partnerships' investment targets and GPs'
asset
investment experience and capabilities entirely to sales
personnel, instead of
fund managers, who are responsible for asset investment. In
addition, the
company did not have internal control divisions, such as the
legal affairs
division and the compliance division, conduct verification.