U.S. Bancorp reported solid financial results for its fourth quarter, although it once again described how revenue gains had been at least partly offset by the additional costs of people hired "to support business growth and compliance programs."
It has offered the same explanation in filings going back into 2016 and 2015, too. U.S. Bank seems to routinely hire more compliance staff.
And that's just one reason it's baffling that U.S. Bank also just booked a $608 million expense to settle with regulators over compliance failures, a pending deal that seems to also include a formal deferred prosecution agreement.
Paperwork errors or late reports don't lead to that kind of settlement. Some broken compliance process must have gone unfixed for a very long time.
Shareholders of Minneapolis-based U.S. Bank already knew regulators were digging into this, as the bank first disclosed 1½ years ago that it was being investigated over what it called "certain deposit accounts" controlled by Kansan Scott Tucker. He's a colorful entrepreneur in the payday lending business who just got sent to jail.
The problems occurred in the bank's efforts to monitor and prevent money laundering, a catchall term for activities meant to hide where money really came from or where it's going. Bad guys do that to make the money in their pockets appear like the result of real business successes rather than crimes. Congress and regulators have put in place a series of rules since 1970 meant to stop it.
Law enforcement had plenty of tools already, but through these laws they have basically deputized banks and other financial firms in the fight against drug trafficking, terrorism and other bad acts. They have given bankers the responsibility to look over the shoulders of their customers.
The bankers didn't appear to ask for this job, and complying has only gotten more difficult as the financial system has gotten more complex and the expectations of regulators kept rising. The main federal bank regulator just listed, once again, anti-money laundering compliance as one of the biggest risks facing banks.