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Ian Young

Judges: CIBC bank supports clients who break China’s cash-export laws, to buy Vancouver homes

Court rulings describe a Canadian bank's practice of supporting wealthy Chinese immigrants' efforts to dodge the mainland's US$50,000 cash-export limit

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Wealthy Chinese immigrants represent a lucrative part of CIBC's personal banking business in Vancouver. Photo: Bloomberg
Ian Young is the Post's Vancouver correspondent.

Canadian banks are not obliged to follow China’s rules, and nor are they obliged to report clients whom they know to have broken them – so long as they are not breaking any Canadian rules in the process.

How far, then, will a financial institution go to satisfy the flood of Chinese millionaires looking to find new Canadian homes for their family and their funds?

For CIBC, the answer is: Far enough to get its clients’ money out of China, regardless of Beijing’s US$50,000 annual export limit - but within the bank’s own ethical limits (and Canadian law, of course).

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Court rulings in a wrongful dismissal case involving the bank and Guiyun Han Ogden, a former Vancouver financial advisor, make both points clear.

With more than 50,000 rich immigrants having arrived in Vancouver in the past decade, these newcomers have become a lucrative business. From 2004 to 2011, satisfying them was Ogden’s job at CIBC, and she was apparently very good at it, overseeing a C$233 million portfolio of clients made up primarily of wealthy Chinese immigrants.

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Guiyun Han Ogden. Photo: LinkedIn
Guiyun Han Ogden. Photo: LinkedIn
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