Compliance
Financial Regulators Turn Up Heat On Miscreants
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The reports looked at a range of different types of financial misconduct, failure and outright offences, pointing to a continued need for standards to improve.
Overall, financial regulators wielded their power more intensely
last year, with the US seeing fines on miscreants push above $25
billion.
In Singapore, the city state turned up the enforcement heat
on money launderers, with more to come in 2025, reports
said.
Global regulatory fines in 2024 fell by almost a third (30 per
cent) from a year earlier to $4.6 billion, according to Fenergo,
a fintech, although other figures suggest that the direction of
fines held steady and, in the case of the US, hit a record
high.
A report, from
Fenergo, said that after a money laundering scandal hit
Singapore in 2023 – continuing into 2024 – the city-state is
likely to go after more potential offenders this year. The firm
provides KYC, client lifecycle and transaction monitoring
solutions.
North America retained its standing as the most punishing region
when it comes to slapping fines on miscreant financial
institutions, Fenergo said.
The SteelEye report also highlighted some eye-catching
cases:
-- The US Securities and Exchange Commission and Commodity
Futures Trading Commission reported a record $25.3 billion in
combined enforcement actions in 2024, including both fines and
monetary relief;
-- The UK’s Financial Conduct Authority imposed £176 million
($214.9 million) of fines in 2024, surging from 230 per cent
in 2023;
-- Germany’s regulators, BaFin and FOJ, imposed €24.6 million
($25.4 million) of fines in 2024, rising from €8.1 million in
2023. This is despite the number of penalties issued falling by
more than 12 per cent to 35;
-- France’s AMF issued €13.9 million worth of financial penalties
in 2024, slumping by 89 per cent from €127.9 million in the
previous year;
-- The value of fines issued by the Netherlands also fell in 2024
to €3.3 million from €17.4 million a year before;
-- Singapore’s MAS issued five fines worth a total S$7.7 million
($5.6 million) in 2024, equal to the value doled out in 2023, the
report said; and
-- Australia’s ASIC issued 20 financial penalties in the first
half of 2024, worth a total A$32.2 million ($20 million), with H2
statistics yet to be released.
The Singapore case
In 2023, a major money laundering case in Singapore led to
widespread media coverage and law enforcement/regulatory action.
Rory Doyle, head of financial crime policy at Fenergo, said
Singapore could be expected to take more action this
year.
“Learning from the financial scandals in late 2023, and with the
formation of private-public partnerships such as COSMIC
Singapore, regulators and Finance Intelligence Units (FIUs) now
have access to more data. This allows them to identify issues
more efficiently, and act more quickly in cracking down or
mitigating breaches from occurring,” Doyle said.
Fenergo said that Singapore’s tightened compliance measures and
enforcement actions have brought steady increases in fines, even
as the overall amount of fines across Asia-Pacific has fallen.
The city-state mostly fined firms for anti-money laundering,
know-your-client and transaction monitoring breaches last
year.
The most punitive fine issued for AML breaches in APAC, Fenergo
said, was issued by the People’s Bank of China (PBOC) – $3.9
million to Zhejiang Aerospace Electronic Information Industry. In
Australia, the Australian Securities & Investments Commission
(ASIC) led the charge globally with landmark fines for ESG
breaches to Vanguard ($8.8 million) and Mercer ($7.4 million)
America
The largest enforcement action of the year, $3.18 billion, was
levied against TD Bank by US regulators for deficiencies in its
transaction monitoring systems, Fenergo said.
North America imposed $4.33 billion in penalties issued in 2024,
easing by 15 per cent compared with 2023. However. while the
total value of fines declined globally, there were variances in
each region, Fenergo said. In Europe, the Middle East and
North Africa, fines rose by 170 per cent rising from $75.96
million to $204.8 million, while in the UK, fines rose sharply by
156 per cent, from $25.26 million to $64.74 million.
Segments
Fenergo said it was getting harder to hit banks with fines than
firms in the digital space. Banks were fined $3.65
billion; in the digital assets space, fines stood at $762.9
million in 2024.
Returning to the Asia and Singapore experiences in particular,
Doyle said that as China tightens control over nefarious
financial activity, particularly with its new regulatory
framework for crypto, there will be a potential outflow of funds
to other economies such as Singapore.
“This emphasis on regulation or investigation on crypto also
means that traditional fund transfers may become the more popular
means of fund outflow into Singapore,” Doyle continued.
“We anticipate that MAS [Monetary Authority of Singapore] will be
more vigilant, not just with scrutiny and enforcement action on
violators, but to ensure that all companies stay ahead of the
curve and comply. MAS has historically been very cautious and
fair with their penalties, but as the year-on-year increase in
fines indicates, they will be sounding a clarion call to the
market by issuing more punitive fines in 2025.
“With the shift in focus globally on the banking sector and in
response to recent scandals, we foresee a surge [of] enforcement
action in Singapore across all financial services sectors. It is
in the best interest of financial institutions to deploy robust
infrastructures for AML thus streamlining processes for KYC,
suspicious activity reporting and transaction monitoring,” Doyle
added.
SteelEye figures
SteelEye said that the SEC filed 583 penalties worth a total of
$2.1 billion, the second-highest amount on record, while the CFTC
imposed $2.6 billion. The remaining sum relates to monetary
relief obtained via disgorgement and restitution, with
settlements for landmark cases such as the FTX scandal finalised
last year.
The SEC brought more than $600 million in civil penalties against
more than 70 firms, with 26 firms fined a total $390 million in
August alone for widespread record-keeping failures. The
initiative has seen the regulator fine 100 firms a combined
total of more than $2 billion since December 2021, SteelEye
said.