The Portuguese bank EuroBic has announced it will end its business relationship with Africa's richest woman, Isabel dos Santos.
The move follows a BBC investigation which uncovered a number of questionable deals by the billionaire.
Ms Dos Santos says the claims against her are entirely false.
Her business deals ranged from Angola's state oil company Sonangol to the country's biggest mobile phone provider.
The bank said the board of directors had decided in a meeting on Monday to "terminate the commercial relationship with entities controlled by the universe of the shareholder Isabel dos Santos and people closely related to it", adding it would investigate transfers worth tens of millions of dollars made by Ms Dos Santos.
The billionaire daughter of Angola's former President, Jose Eduardo dos Santos, holds a 42.5% stake in EuroBic indirectly via two entities, making her the bank's main shareholder, reports say.
When her father retired as president in 2017, she was sacked as chairwoman of Angola's state oil company two months later.
The leaked documents that came out earlier this week suggest that as she left Sonangol, Ms Dos Santos approved $58m ($44m) worth of payments.
Some of the transfers drained Sonangol's account at EuroBic, the New York Times reports.
On Sunday, leaked documents seen by the BBC and other journalists appeared to reveal how she was given access to lucrative deals involving land, diamonds, oil and telecoms while her father was in power.
The documents seem to show how Africa's richest woman made her fortune, estimated to be about $2bn, allegedly through exploiting her own country, and corruption.
Angola's prosecutor general said on Monday he wanted Ms Dos Santos to return to Angola to answer the allegations, and promised to use "all possible" means to bring her back.
Ms Dos Santos says the allegations against her are entirely false and that there is a politically motivated witch-hunt by the Angolan government.
She is already under criminal investigation by the authorities in Angola for corruption and her assets in the country have been frozen.
She had previously said she did not want to go back to Angola because she feared for her safety there.