IBM announced its planned acquisition of Promontory in September 2016[5] and completed the transaction in November 2016.[6] Ludwig retired as CEO on February 28, 2021, passing the reins to an operating committee co-chaired by Julie L. Williams, Promontory's global head of strategy, and Leslie Peeler, chief operating officer.[7]
Promontory Financial is affiliated with several similarly named companies:[8]
Promontory Forensics Solutions, LLC
Promontory Growth and Innovation
Promontory Human Capital Solutions
Promontory Risk Review, LLC
Employees
Approximately 170 of the consultants working for Promontory were former employees of authorities in financial supervision. The news media has sometimes referred to Promontory as a "shadow regulator" for Wall Street.[1] The American Banker newspaper described Promontory under Ludwig's leadership as "a go-to for banks seeking insight on regulatory matters from a stable of former officials from the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., Federal Reserve, Securities and Exchange Commission and other agencies."[3]
Former government officials currently associated with Promontory include:
After uncovering foreign exchange losses in its U.S. banking subsidiary, Allfirst Financial Inc., Allied Irish Bank in 2002 engaged Promontory to conduct an internal investigation. Promontory issued the "Ludwig Report", on March 14, 2002. The report detailed how the trader John Rusnak hid losses of $691 million over five years.[19] The report concluded that Rusnak, who was fired for his role in the trading losses, received no active help from within or outside the bank. Promontory found that the internal control mechanisms and audits had been insufficient.[20]
Promontory advised further the government of the United States and from other countries like Cameroon and Iceland.[21]
Promontory was hired to carry out by order of the Holy See a comprehensive investigation of all customer contacts of the Institute for the Works of Religion (Italian: Istituto per le Opere di Religione – IOR), often also called the Vatican bank, on money laundering guided by former Promontory Europe executives Elizabeth McCaul and Raffaele Cosimo.[22][23]
In the aftermath of the subprime mortgage crisis, Promontory was one of several consulting firms selected by federal banking regulators to conduct reviews of loan foreclosures initiated by 16 mortgage servicing companies. Promontory reviewed the foreclosure activities of Bank of America, PNC Financial Services and Wells Fargo, encompassing more than 250,000 loan contracts. Promontory was paid $927 million, which led to strong criticism and doubt about the independence of the examination.[24] A hearing was arranged by the U.S. Senate Banking Committee to assess whether regulators had handed off too much oversight authority to private consulting firms such as Promontory.[25]
Promontory was also engaged by Commonwealth Bank to oversee their Open Advice Review[26][27] in 2014 and by Westpac to undertake an independent review into their breach of anti money laundering laws[28] in 2019.
New York State enforcement action
In August 2015, Promontory entered into an agreement with the New York Department of Financial Services to resolve the state's allegations that it had watered down compliance reports for a UK banking client, Standard Chartered Bank. Promontory agreed to pay a $15 million penalty and voluntarily abstained for six months from accepting new consulting engagements in New York.[29]
^ abHorwitz, Jeff; Aspan, Maria (15 March 2013). "How Promontory Financial Became Banking's Shadow Regulator". American Banker Magazine. Retrieved 15 July 2013. With close to 400 employees and some 1,400 consulting engagements under its belt, Promontory Financial Group has built a shadow network between banks and regulators. The firm is a sort of ex-regulator omnibus, capable of forecasting, mimicking and occasionally even substituting for the financial industry's supervisors.
^ abc“Eugene Ludwig to step down as Promontory CEO,” American Banker, February 17, 2021
^Douglas, Danielle (2 August 2013). "The rise of Promontory". The Washington Post. Business. No. Financial Services. Washington, D.C.: With Bloomberg. p. 2 of 4. Archived from the original(JavaScript) on 22 October 2013. Retrieved 9 September 2013. With 383 employees from Toronto to Tokyo, Promontory has worked on almost 1,600 projects.
^"Promontory Group Signs Up with IBM," Wall Street Journal, September 29, 2016
^"IBM Closes Acquisition of Promontory Financial Group," IBM Press Release, November 22, 2016
^"Bank Boards Discuss a Report on Losses by Currency Trader," Jonathan Fuerbringer, New York Times, March 13, 2002.
^Promontory Financial Group (12 March 2002). "The Ludwig report: implications for corporate governance" [Report to the Boards of Allied Irish Banks, p.l.c., Allfirst Financial Inc. and Allfirst Bank Concerning Currency Trading Losses] (PDF). MCB UP Ltd. Archived from the original(PDF) on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 25 July 2013.
^Pierre-Yves Thoraval (15 April 2011). "Report on Iceland Supervision" [Prepared for the Icelandic Authorities, the FME and the IMF] (pdf; 9,2 MB). Banking Supervision. Promontory Financial Group. Retrieved 15 July 2013.
^Carol Matlack (2 July 2013). "A Money-Smuggling Scandal Threatens to Sink the Vatican Bank" [Promontory Financial Group will conduct a forensic review and screen the Vatican Bank's client relationships—which some say might be "irreformable"]. Businessweek. Archived from the original on July 4, 2013. Retrieved 27 July 2013.
^Protess, Ben; Silver-Greenberg, Jessica; Senator Brown, Sherrod (20 June 2013). "Senator Criticizes Lack of Supervision for Banks' Consultants - NYTimes.com". The New York Times. DealBook. Retrieved 15 July 2013. New documents suggest that the Promontory Financial Group, which examined loans for Wells Fargo, Bank of America and PNC, was the highest paid of the consultants. The firm, run by a former comptroller of the currency, Eugene Ludwig, received $927 million for reviewing more than 250,000 loan files, according to documents provided to the Senate Banking Committee and reviewed by The Times.