The bank flagged potential money laundering breaches to local watchdog AUSTRAC, adding that «regulators and other bodies may make findings that the bank has engaged in misconduct, including breaches of law or conduct that falls below community standards and expectations».

The breaches include small amounts of cross-border transactions involving non-banking financial institutions which HSBC was unable to properly report due to technical reasons.

HSBC is amongst the latest lenders in Australia to proactively disclose internal money-laundering lapses amidst the unraveling of the Westpac scandal that allegedly involved 23 million breaches of anti-money laundering laws that included payment facilitation between known child abusers. In addition to resignations, senior executives such as Brian Hartzer and Peter King, former and interim chief executive of Westpac, respectively, will face trial as defendants in a case filed by U.S. investors.

In December last year, NAB also self-reported anti-money laundering failures with regards to mischarged fees to alleged hundreds of customers and its chairman Philip Chronican assured shareholders of reasonable enforcement.

The message we have had from AUSTRAC is that we are not going to be measured to a perfect standard, Chronican said. We are going to be measured to a standard that we fix things when we find them and that we put the energy and resources into fixing it and we show the right attitude towards resolution of the issues.