Bayer became the executive chairman of European Bank in 1986. The bank began expanding its business in the mid-1990s. This was part of a larger wave of concern about financial institutions in the South Pacific, which several U.S. banks, including the
Bank of New York and
JP Morgan Chase, to suspend dollar transactions not just with Vanuatu but
Nauru and
Palau and eventually
Niue as well. Bayer was critical of this response, noting that Vanuatu had criminalised money laundering as early as 1989, and voiced his suspicions that both the U.S. government and U.S. banks were insincere in their desire to crack down on
money laundering but rather had turned their attention to Vanuatu because it was a small and distant target, and one of the few
offshore financial centres which was not a dependency of major foreign powers. Vanuatu pursued a diplomatic approach to resolving the situation, in which Bayer played a large role: a Vanuatu delegation headed by Bayer went to the U.S. and met with
International Monetary Fund,
U.S. State Department, and
Federal Reserve System officials in January 2000 to discuss details of Vanuatu's anti-money laundering laws and practices, and arranged for reciprocal visits by State Department and
Financial Action Task Force officials to
Port Vila in the following months. This successfully persuaded some banks to resume transactions with Vanuatu, but other correspondent banks in the U.S. continued to apply sanctions. In March 2012, after nearly a decade of litigation, European Bank successfully unfroze its accounts and had its funds returned, with interest. ==Reserve Bank of Vanuatu==