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Asia Compliance Specialist Taps Singapore's Training Hunger

The firm has set up online courses for wealth management professionals working in Singapore to help get a tighter grasp of compliance challenges ranging from AML through to cybersecurity matters. We talk to the people running the business.
Singapore has been tightening the screws on dirty money in its
compliance drive. As part of this drive, The Monetary Authority
of Singapore is requiring asset management personnel in the Asian
jurisdiction to complete at least six hours of compliance and
ethics training a year.
ComplianceAsia,
a consultancy based in the Asian city-state and founded in 2003,
has recently partnered with the
Investment Management Association of Singapore to create
content for iLearn, an online portal that helps train asset
managers. Increased use of digital working channels means that
training wealth managers about the rules has to migrate out of
the conventional classroom
At the moment the biggest concern in Singapore is AML. There has
been a big focus on the topic in the wake of the 1MDB financial
flows out of Malaysia, Alex Duperouzel, one of the co-owners and
the managing director at ComplianceAsia, said. (Philippa Allen is
founder and chief executive of ComplianceAsia.)
The asset management sector has become more complicated over the
past few years, Duperouzel said, whether because of new
requirements for fee disclosure, new investment styles such as
ESG, or new ways of thinking about risk and investment
suitability.
“People need a different learning option to keep up with this,”
he said. The wealth industry was more transactional a few decades
ago, but this is changing.”
Other important areas are the fair treatment of investors and
certain business ethics questions. “The industry wants a
standardised set of courses,” Duperouzel said.
Operating across Asia, ComplianceAsia has offices in Hong Kong,
Shanghai, Singapore and Tokyo.
The rise of such business ventures attests to how "ed-tech", aka
education technology, is accelerating, driven not just by remote
working caused by COVID-19 but by a greater desire to learn "on
the hoof" and in a more flexible way than based in a classroom.
WealthBriefingAsia recently
profiled the online talent management and development firm
MentorMe, based in
Hong Kong.
The courses
The course work, which covers a number of modules that people can
learn in “bite-sized” amounts, examines the different features of
regulation and compliance affecting wealth management
practitioners in Asia. The courses were assembled by assessing a
lot of feedback from the IMAS and wider industry. They have also
been constructed to take into account changing work habits, how
people work from home, how they study and read content while
travelling, or when they are out and about in a town.
Subject matter includes the following areas:
-- Anti-money laundering and countering the financing of
terrorism in Singapore;
-- Corporate governance and the senior management individual
accountability regime in Singapore;
-- Ethics in the financial industry;
-- Intro to MAS regulations for fund managers;
-- Market abuse in Singapore; and
-- Strengthening cyber resilience Singapore.
ComplianceAsia’s programme has been operating for some time. The
Monetary Authority of Singapore required a first round of
training to be achieved by 30 June.