Focus On Financial Crime
Kind Consultancy Ltd
Financial Services recruitment firm specialising in Governance, Risk, Compliance, Complaints & Change & Transformation.
Earlier this month the FCA issued a Dear CEO letter arising from a number of recent assessments of how well Annex 1 firms are complying with Financial Crime regulations. “Annex 1” refers to a group of businesses who engage in activities that require them to be supervised by the FCA specifically in relation to the Money Laundering, Terrorist Financing and Transfer of Funds (Information on the Payer) Regulations of 2017 (often referred to as MLRs) – even though they are may not otherwise be regulated by the FCA.
The letter raised concerns that they were seeing similar, repeated failures when they were looking at these firms, with recurrent problems including “discrepancies between firms’ registered and actual activities, financial crime controls which had not kept pace with business growth, a failure to risk assess their own or their customers’ activities properly and inadequate resourcing and oversight of financial crime issues and requirements”. The letter goes on to set out the regulators expectations of what happens next: recipients will need to complete a gap analysis against each of the key problems highlighted within the next six months, and then quickly work to close any identified gaps and share the analysis across the firm.
If your firm is affected, Kind Consultancy can help. We are Governance, Risk and Compliance specialists with a track record of successfully helping Financial Services businesses with their Financial Crime needs. Let’s dig in on some of the specific issues the regulator is looking at and set out how Kind can assist.
The Dear CEO letter cites multiple cases where “Financial Crime policies, controls and procedures have not kept pace with the size and complexity of the business”. This also speaks to a lack of engagement from senior management on Financial Crime issues – these factors aren’t being thought about at every stage of expansion.
2. “Business Wide Risk Assessments (BWRA)”
The FCA notes that in some firms they looked at the BWRA was “completely absent” and in others, a BWRA was completed but “the quality [was] poor”, lacking detail and clarity. In some cases, there was a failure to identify Money Laundering, Terrorist Financing and Proliferation Financing failures. Firms should be revising and updating their BWRAs to ensure compliance with MLROs and to reduce the risk of Financial Crime.
3. “Due Diligence, Ongoing Monitoring and Policies & Procedures”
The firms assessed were found by the regulator to have Customer/Client Due Diligence and Ongoing Monitoring policies and procedures that were vague and lacking in detail, creating ambiguity around the actions that staff should be taking. In some cases, there was insufficient guidance on when customers should be subject to the regular Customer Due Diligence (CDD) process or the Enhanced Due Diligence (EDD) process.
4. “Governance, MI and Training”
The FCA findings cite multiple firms having under-resourced Financial Crime divisions and a lack of proper training on Financial Crime issues for staff. Some organisations were not providing role specific training, some were missing key topics and some staff were found to have generally very low levels of Financial Crime awareness.
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5. “Absence of a clear audit trail for Financial Crime related decision-making”
Finally, the last identified weaknesses were around audit. Some of this concerned changes that existing Senior Management need to make, but it also highlighted that some large firms had failed to “establish an independent audit function” and they expected such a function to “examine and evaluate the adequacy and effectiveness of the [Financial Crime] policies, controls and procedures adopted”.
Financial Crime Case Studies
AML & CTF Training
Recently we were approached by a challenger bank to provide training for their Operations and Senior Management team on Anti Money Laundering and Counter-Terrorism Financing. We connected them to one of the most trusted Financial Crime SMEs on our Agile bench, and together we put together an intensive training programme. The training covered a wide array of Financial Crime topics, building up the client’s understanding and then explaining their specific responsibilities relating to each issue. The client was very pleased with the training, and has retained us to regularly provide training to their organisation, with the content continually enhanced to incorporate new regulations and developments.
Financial Crime SMEs
We have also worked with a Retail Bank who we supplied with a team of Financial Crime SMEs (Subject Matter Experts) to carry out Enhanced Due Diligence on new clients who had been red flagged by the front line team. Our team then assessed the legitimacy of the customer, either giving the go-ahead to onboard the client, escalating internally or in the most extreme cases, raise with external agencies and offboard the client.
S166 - KYCs
We were contacted by a large global retail bank who had been issued a Section 166 notice in their UK operation. We deployed 35 KYC analysts to carry out Enhanced Due Diligence on existing customers to identify gaps within the KYC process. This was then fed back to the organisation, and Financial Crime SMEs were brought in to improve existing controls and frameworks and rewrite policies. Kind then introduced Trainers to the business to upskill permanent members of staff and ensure that BAU operations were of a high quality.
International KYC & AML Project
As a final example of recent Financial Crime work, we worked with clients further afield looking to tap similar UK Compliance expertise. One of our clients, a multinational bank, had suffered a serious Financial Crime failure in one of their European divisions and wanted to bring in trusted KYC and AML resource from the UK for a large scale project identifying and addressing the gaps. With pre-screened, pre-qualified contractors who were part of our Kind Agile Solutions bench, we were able to quickly put forward a large team of seasoned KYC and AML experts and have them at work fast. Many of that team would go on to be permanently retained by the business as they were so pleased with the work, and the client has not faced any subsequent public Compliance issues.
Talk to Kind
Even if your firm is not part of the Annex 1 group, this is a good reminder that the FCA is very focussed on Financial Crime right now, and “inadequate resourcing and oversight of financial crime issues and requirements” is something all Financial Services businesses should be wary of, taking preventative measures as part of a pro-active approach. From 2021 to 2022 the total value of fines issued by the FCA came to over £600,000,000 and over two thirds of those were related to Financial Crime and AML. This is an ongoing focus area for the regulator across all of Financial Services, and no organisation can afford not to take it seriously – for example, the Dear CEO letter of May 2021 similarly highlighted Financial Crime and AML framework failings in retail banks, asking them to undertake comparable gap analysis exercises and mitigate identified weaknesses. The message is clear that regardless of what part of the Financial Services landscape you’re operating in, this needs to be a top regulatory priority.
For a confidential conversation about how Kind Consultancy can help, get in touch on 0121 643 2100 or via [email protected]