A Guide to AML/CFT for Singaporean FinTechs
Study core compliance responsibilities in Singapore, from licensing to governance and AML.
Get your report hereThe Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) has recorded more than $20 million in penalties in its 4th Enforcement Report, along with its enforcement priorities for 2023-2024. Among other measures, the report details high-profile enforcement actions against four financial institutions for insufficient anti-money laundering and counter-terrorist financing (AML/CFT) measures. The total in penalties is a record amount for MAS within an 18-month period – in contrast, the 2020-2021 report recorded just over $2.7 million.
“In this reporting period (January 2022 to June 2023), we took robust action … to uphold the integrity and reputation of Singapore as a trusted financial centre,” wrote Ms. Peggy Pao, Executive Director of Enforcement for MAS. “We will continually refine and enhance our processes to ensure that we remain well equipped to deliver effective enforcement outcomes.”
The report comes on the heels of recent actions by Singapore authorities to combat financial crime in the nation-state. In August 2023, police made ten arrests, seizing illegal assets worth over $900 million in simultaneous raids nationwide. The raids were the culmination of a forgery and money laundering (ML) investigation facilitated by MAS and the Commercial Affairs Department (CAD). Since the raids, total assets have more than doubled, now valued at over $2.4 billion.
Following this case are reports that Chinese criminal networks are expanding to southeast Asia and moving beyond gambling ventures to include scams.
The Financial Times reported in September that Singaporean banks have responded to this case by upping their financial crime game. In particular, they are now subjecting clients to additional scrutiny, particularly if they are from China or several other jurisdictions deemed high-risk. This has resulted in extended waiting periods for customers in onboarding – as long as three to four months.
The recent MAS report focuses on the importance of strong AML practices within financial institutions.
According to MAS, enforcement actions during the reporting period included:
Firms’ AML breaches included customer due diligence (CDD) failures, such as:
The report highlighted two new enforcement priorities alongside the regulator’s evergreen priorities. Firms should study the whole report but take special notice of the following areas of focus:
Study core compliance responsibilities in Singapore, from licensing to governance and AML.
Get your report hereOriginally published 28 September 2023, updated 08 February 2024
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