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FATF issues guidelines to govern business that involves securities

Chris Hamblin

8 November 2018

A risk-based approach - the term that the FATF borrowed from the UK, which pioneered it in the early 'noughties - obliges financial institutions to identify, assess and understand the money-laundering risks to which they are exposed and take commensurate steps to offset those risks effectively.

The purpose of the guidance is to outline the main principles that any financial firm should apply to its 'risk-based approach' to money-laundering control when it deals with or enters the securities sector, or a bank acting as an intermediary. It does not seek to override national rules but instead complements them and the FATF anticipates that 'external examiners' will find them useful. The FATF writes: "given the commonality of issues between the securities and banking sectors, such as issues raised by pooled account structures, banks offering securities products and services should consider this guidance." 'Securities' cover not only stocks and bonds but also money-market instruments, derivatives and investment funds, including units in collective investment undertakings. The FATF knows that in some countries virtual assets and the associated Initial Coin Offerings are recognised as securities , whereas other countries are undecided on the issue and yet more have banned them. 'Securities providers' range from retail stockbrokers, wealth managers and financial advisors to firms that serve a largely institutional market, such as prime brokers, global custodians, sub-custodians and depository banks.

Country risk

The FATF admits that there is no universally agreed-upon definition or method for spotting 'higher risk' jurisdictions. It merely points to factors to be considered, which include:

The FATF identifies itself as a "credible source," despite the fact that its pronouncements and policy are dominated by the wishes of the American government. Others are the International Monetary Fund, the World Bank and the Egmont Group of Financial Intelligence Units. HM Treasury has itself identified the FATF as credible for these purposes.

Which investors are risky?

Customers' activities may indicate a 'higher risk' in the following cases.

Product risk
 
Products and services that may indicate a higher risk include:

Intermediary risk

An intermediary risk analysis should include the following factors, to the extent that these are relevant to the securities providers’ business model.

The compliance department

Each firm's compliance function and internal controls should do the following.

Virtual assets

The FATF, unlike certain national regulators, stops short of classifying virtual assets as securities. Instead, it uses the term 'virtual asset' to refer to digital representations of value that can be digitally traded or transferred and can be used for payment or investment purposes, including digital representations of value that function as a medium of exchange, a unit of account, and/or a store of value.

The FATF has, albeit slightly, changed its '40 recommendations' and its accompanying glossary with regard to financial activities that involve virtual assets. The glossary now describes 'virtual asset service providers' as exchanges, certain types of wallet providers and providers of financial services for Initial Coin Offerings . The new text states that jurisdictions should ensure that virtual asset service providers are subject to AML regulations that oblige them, for instance, to gather "customer due diligence" or CDD information, i.e. the facts about customers that should help them assess the extent to which those customers expose them to money laundering, while also monitoring customers continually, keeping records and reporting their suspicious transactions to their national financial intelligence units. They should be licensed or registered and subject to monitoring. The FATF is planning to elaborate further on these requirements in future.

The FATF has written: "All jurisdictions should urgently take legal and practical steps to prevent the misuse of virtual assets. This includes assessing and understanding the risks associated with virtual assets in their jurisdictions, applying risk-based AML/CFT regulations to virtual asset service providers and identifying effective systems to conduct risk-based monitoring or supervision of virtual asset service providers."

The standard-setter issued guidelines regarding the risk-based approaches that firms ought to take to virtual currencies in 2015. The operative recommendation is number 15, on the subject of 'new technologies.' Last month it revised R15 and added new definitions of 'virtual asset' and 'virtual asset service provider' in an attempt to clarify its ideas about the application of AML rules to virtual assets.