Standard Chartered's CEO warned staff about a 'cancer' in the bank
Winters also condemned the culture of "inappropriate financial dealings with colleagues" and "excessive expenses."
"We had employees lending money to other employees at very high-interest rates," he told the paper, "more than on your Standard Chartered credit card. That is not OK."
"Frankly they are childish things and individually they don't add up to material financial exposure for the bank, but culturally they are a cancer," he added.
Standard Chartered mostly operates in the Middle East, Asia, and Africa, which helped it weather the 2008 financial crisis, the Financial Times says. But recent fines from US regulators and losses on loans from a downturn in the Asian economy and commodity markets has hit the bank hard.
"We had incidents of relatively senior people using bad judgment or taking actions that with the benefit of any sort of rigorous review would be unacceptable," Winters said.
"Some parts of the control environment, not just relating to conduct, but also relating to risk-management and expense control, wasn't as rigorous as it needs to be for this environment."
Winters used the hashtag #knowtherules to accompany the memos, according to Bloomberg, with one saying "some senior managers wilfully disregarded our policies - sometimes for personal gain . . . I am deeply disappointed and angry."
Standard Chartered reported a profits drop of 65% last April, with pre-tax profits hitting $539 million ($762 million) in Q1, compared to $1.5 billion ($2.1 billion) over the same period a year ago.
Here's a look at Standard Chartered's share price over the last two years:
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