Regulators and those handling compliance at covered institutions have long accepted the pitiful state of AML program efficacy, including:
Although these deficiencies are well known to AML teams, major fines and reputational damage are associated with only the most egregious, high-profile cases. Improving AML programs to identify more than the estimated 80% of dirty money being laundered through an institution has been unnecessary. Regulators have been satisfied with these efforts and financial institutions are understandably hesitant to modify a program that appeases their regulators. But regulatory expectations are changing.
Recent legislative and regulatory action in the U.S. and the European Union (EU) indicate that mediocre AML outcomes are no longer acceptable.
EU Recognizes Deficiencies and Calls for Improvements
In June 2021, the European Court of Auditors, guardians of EU finances, issued a Special Report finding that EU efforts to fight money laundering in the banking sector are fragmented and implementation is insufficient.
The report calls for the foundation of Anti-Money Laundering Authority (AMLA) to serve as the EU’s central body in charge of coordinating national authorities to ensure the private sector “correctly and consistently” applies EU rules on AML and countering the financing of terrorism (CFT).
The AMLA would serve to establish a single integrated system of monitoring across the European Union “based on common supervisory methods and convergence of high supervisory standards” while directly overseeing some of the EU’s riskiest financial institutions, as well as those that require immediate action to address imminent risks. If approved, the agency will strip the EU’s European Banking Authority (EBA) role coordinating enforcement of AML rules that it has had since 2019.
By late July, the European Commission presented an ambitious package of legislative proposals to strengthen the EU’s AML and CFT rules. These measures greatly enhance the existing EU framework by taking into account new and emerging challenges linked to technological innovation
Rules Being Set for the US AML Act
The January 2021 passage of the AML Act was promising for those who have committed their careers to driving dirty money from the global banking system. Serious expectations for innovation and measurably improved efficacy were ordered including:
In June, eight Priorities were announced by FinCEN including: corruption; cybercrime (including relevant cybersecurity and virtual currency considerations); foreign and domestic terrorist financing; fraud; transnational criminal organization activity; drug trafficking organization activity; human trafficking and human smuggling; and proliferation financing. As part of this announcement, FinCEN stated that “the establishment of these Priorities is intended to assist all covered institutions in their efforts to meet their obligations under laws and regulations designed to combat money laundering and counter terrorist financing,” and promised more rulemaking to come.
Innovation Won’t Wait
It is widely acknowledged by regulatory agencies and AML teams that innovation and automation offer a path to improvement. What’s more, legislative intent and regulatory direction demands more effective efforts driven by modernization of systems and practices.
Yet there is still a belief from institutions that advanced technology built to revolutionize financial crime identification is beyond their means right now. Fortunately, the right AML solutions are designed to seamlessly work with existing systems, and costs are reasonable. The right solutions also enable institutions to do more with the teams they have, even as demands grow.
Financial institutions that have already modernized their AML/CFT efforts provide useful lessons for other institutions that must now put their innovation roadmap in place. Here are recommendations assembled from Chief Compliance Officers who have already implemented innovations and have proven improvement in both program efficacy and efficiency.
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