Compliance
Compliance Corner: MAS, Asiaciti Trust

The latest compliance news: regulatory developments, punishments, guidance, permissions and new product and service offerings.
Asiaciti
Trust yesterday said that it has “fully addressed” anti-money
laundering and counter-terrorism control failings after Singapore
regulators fined the firm S$1.0 million earlier this week.
“We have resolved a matter with the Monetary
Authority of Singapore that specifically relates to our
Singapore office failing to meet the MAS’s Anti-Money Laundering
and Countering the Financing of Terrorism controls and procedures
requirements in the period prior to early 2018,” the firm said in
a statement.
MAS punished the business after it had found “serious breaches”
during an inspection, the regulator said. The failings covered a
period of 11 years up to 2018.
“ATSPL [Asiaciti Trust] did not implement adequate AML/CFT
policies and procedures, and did not subject its AML/CFT controls
to independent audits. These failings hindered ATSPL’s ability to
detect and mitigate ML/TF risks associated with its higher-risk
customers,” MAS said.
“Financial institutions must play their part in detecting and
disrupting attempts to abuse our financial system for illicit
purposes. Trust companies are required to implement robust
AML/CFT controls, with policies and processes that effectively
mitigate risks from vehicles or trust structures of customers .
MAS will not hestitate to take action against FIs that fail to
meet the standard required under our AML/CFT regulations,” Loo
Siew Yee, assistant managing director (Policy, Payments &
Financial Crime), MAS, said.
The Singapore regulator has cracked down on such failings in
recent years. Most dramatically, it kicked Falcon Private Bank
and BSI, the private banks, out of the Asian jurisdiction about
five years ago over failings linked to illicit funds funnelled
via Malayisa’s 1MDB.
The saga is another reminder of how AML and related controls are
a major pain point for the world’s wealth management industry,
spawning fintech and related firms such as smartKYC to alert
bankers and others about potential problems. (See
an interview here.)
In its statement, Asiaciti Trust said: “These isolated AML/CFT
control and procedural issues have been fully addressed, and
since 2018, the Singapore office’s new management team has
enhanced internal compliance and governance systems to fully meet
the requirements. We are pleased to have resolved this matter
with the MAS and look forward to continuing to provide the
exceptional client service, responsiveness and independence that
we have always been known for.”
MAS added that its penalty took into account the firm’s response
to MAS’ findings. “ATSPL has taken remedial measures to address
the deficiencies identified by MAS, including conducting a review
of customer accounts and transactions, terminating a number of
higher-risk trust accounts and filing suspicious transaction
reports,” it said.