Friday, December 19, 2025
ADVT 
National

TD Bank Reviewing Concerns About Sales Practices, CEO Bharat Masrani Says

Darpan News Desk, 30 Mar, 2017 12:51 PM
    TORONTO — TD Bank says it is reviewing concerns about its sales practices in light of reports that some employees allegedly broke the law in order to meet sales targets and keep their jobs.
     
    "As we have done in the past with matters of such importance, we will be relying on our board as well as the objective advice from a leading professional services firm to make sure we really test ourselves," CEO Bharat Masrani said during the bank's annual shareholder meeting Thursday.
     
    Masrani said he has been speaking with TD employees across the country since the CBC reported that unnamed bank employees alleged they used aggressive, and in some cases illegal, sales practices.
     
    "While we have sales goals to help manage our business, people behaving unethically in order to achieve these goals would be inconsistent with who we are as an institution, and I don't believe we have a widespread problem of that type of behaviour," Masrani said.
     
    Masrani said the bank received "a few hundred complaints" last year regarding its sales practices that were escalated.
     
    Less than 100 of those complaints affecting customers had compliance concerns, and all of them were investigated and addressed, Masrani said.
     
    The Financial Consumer Agency of Canada has launched an investigation into business practices among federally regulated financial sector following the reports.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. Spends $91 Million To Hire Paramedics, Buy Ambulances, Targets Rural Care

    B.C. Spends $91 Million To Hire Paramedics, Buy Ambulances, Targets Rural Care
    VICTORIA — British Columbia is getting more paramedics, dispatchers and ambulances in an effort by the government to improve emergency services.

    B.C. Spends $91 Million To Hire Paramedics, Buy Ambulances, Targets Rural Care

    Water Restrictions In Kamloops, B.C., As Water Treatment Plant Shuts Down

    Water Restrictions In Kamloops, B.C., As Water Treatment Plant Shuts Down
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — A power outage has knocked out the water treatment plant in Kamloops, B.C.

    Water Restrictions In Kamloops, B.C., As Water Treatment Plant Shuts Down

    B.C. Man Given One-year Probation For Having Sex In Stranger's Hot Tub

    B.C. Man Given One-year Probation For Having Sex In Stranger's Hot Tub
      Noah McDonald, who is 18, pleaded guilty in court in Kelowna, B.C., to mischief and trespassing.

    B.C. Man Given One-year Probation For Having Sex In Stranger's Hot Tub

    Vancouver School Board Releases Redacted Report On Bullying, Toxic Workplace

    Vancouver School Board Releases Redacted Report On Bullying, Toxic Workplace
    A redacted report released by the Vancouver School Board singles out members of the left-leaning Vision Vancouver party in an external investigation that blames trustees for creating a toxic work environment in which staff were bullied and harassed.

    Vancouver School Board Releases Redacted Report On Bullying, Toxic Workplace

    Norovirus Outbreak Linked To B.C. Oysters Continues To Spread In Three Provinces

    The Public Health Agency of Canada says 289 cases of gastrointestinal illnesses were under investigation as of Monday.

    Norovirus Outbreak Linked To B.C. Oysters Continues To Spread In Three Provinces

    Woman Fined $75k For Illegally Importing Items Made From Endangered Species

    Woman Fined $75k For Illegally Importing Items Made From Endangered Species
    RICHMOND, B.C. — A British Columbia woman has been fined $75,000 for illegally importing jewelry and other items made from endangered animals into Canada.

    Woman Fined $75k For Illegally Importing Items Made From Endangered Species