The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency Wednesday issued a consent order against Los Angeles-based City National Bank, fining the bank $65 million over risk management issues related to third-party vendors, operational risk and other concerns.

Bloomberg News

WASHINGTON — The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency Wednesday fined the Los Angeles-based City National Bank $65 million after it found that the firm had systemic deficiencies in its risk management practices and engaged in unsafe or unsound practices.

The OCC — the primary supervisor for nationally chartered banks — issued a consent order Wednesday against the $93 billion-of-assets bank over concerns about its management of third-party risks, lack of robust internal controls, deficiencies in operational risk event reporting, and shortcomings in fraud risk management. While the bank did not confirm or deny the allegations, CNB agreed to take remedial actions to avoid further enforcement actions from its regulator. 

“The OCC expressly reserves its right to assess civil money penalties or take other enforcement actions if the OCC determines that the Bank has continued, or failed to correct, the practices and/or violations,” the consent order states. “These actions could include additional requirements and restrictions, such as: (a) requirements that the Bank make or increase investments, acquire or hold additional capital or liquidity, or simplify or reduce its operations; or (b) restrictions on the Bank’s growth, business activities, or payment of dividends.”

The OCC notice announcing the penalty notes CNB’s Board of Directors consented to the issuance of the consent order and has undertaken corrective actions and committed to addressing the identified deficiencies “in the interest of cooperation and to avoid additional costs associated with administrative and judicial proceedings.”

Diana Rodriguez, Chief Communications Officer at City National Bank reiterated in an email the firm’s ongoing work to strengthen the bank’s financial and regulatory standing. 

“City National, and our new executive management team, are committed to resolving the matters identified in the OCC’s order as quickly as possible,” she wrote. “Our focus will continue to be on both strengthening our infrastructure and systems to reflect a bank of our size and business model, while at the same time providing our clients with consistently outstanding banking products and services.”

City National, renowned for its focus on wealth management and boasting high profile clientele in the city of angels, is a subsidiary of the Royal Bank of Canada since RBC bought it in 2015 for $5.4 Billion.

The order also comes on the heels of a challenging 2023 for CNB. In January 2023, City National entered into a consent order with the Justice Department that included a fine of $31 million over allegations that it failed to offer home loans to Black and Hispanic borrowers in Los Angeles County from 2017 to 2020. The order marked the largest redlining settlement in DOJ history. 

CNB also reported a $38 million loss — driven by rising deposit costs — in the second quarter, a steep decline compared to its profitable $102 million net income in the same period in 2022. The turmoil resulted in RBC replacing CNB’s top leadership, installing Greg Carmichael as the banks’ executive chair. 

The bank also reportedly had one of the highest levels of average unrealized securities losses among U.S. banks of comparable size. RBC later took steps to address unrealized losses at CNB and injected capital into City National to fortify its financial position and repay higher-cost borrowings. Despite the efforts to right the ship, CNB recorded a whopping $247 million loss during the fourth quarter 2023 that ultimately led to more turnover in senior leadership. Industry veteran Howard Hammond replaced Kelly Coffey as CEO in November.


Ebrima Santos Sanneh

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