Compliance
EXCLUSIVE: Temaswiss On Use, Misuse Of Corporate Structures For Holding Wealth - Part 2

In the second part of a series, Temaswiss, the Singapore-based training, advisory and data sciences think tank examines issues that arise with corporate structures and how they are used to hold private wealth.
The use of the corporate veil to hide wealth is a universal
trend. The criminal mind is highly focused on new techniques, but
the same cannot be said about the authorities. Suvendu Ganguli,
chief operating officer of Temaswiss, Asia’s new domain expertise
training, advisory and data sciences think-tank organisation,
answers our questions. To see the first of these articles, click
here.)
Is there a noticeable trend towards high net worth
individuals using corporate accounts to launder bribe money and
other illicit money and what has prompted it?
In all the jurisdictions I know of, AML regulations do not apply
to company secretary or “corpsec” firms and law-enforcement
intelligence on such service providers is severely lacking.
Today's Asian criminals are fighting shy of using the classic
offshore locations of yesteryear such as Vanuatu and Aruba and
are instead going to company formation and administration
providers, setting up small firms, splitting monies up into
relatively small amounts and spreading the risk among multitudes
of corporate entities. They are walking into the financial system
through the front door and operating under the regulators'
noses.
Do you have a case study?
I once encountered a corpsec principal and company director who
was the front-man for, and the stated beneficial owner, of some
80 companies in Hong Kong and Singapore. It was highly unlikely
that he really had a valid economic interest in such a large
number of corporations - his earnings, for one thing, hardly
justified his position on 80 boards - and he is now, hopefully,
languishing in jail. He was unmasked when a very well-trained
relationship manager alerted me. He had put himself forward as
the beneficial owner of eight different accounts with which he
had no relationship and an investigative case was already going
on under his name.
Is the line between private wealth vehicles and
commercially active companies blurred, to the advantage of
money-launderers?
Yes it is. On the one hand, there are operating companies (i.e.
companies that produce identifiable good and services for more
purposes than just the consumption of their beneficial owners)
and on the other there are personal holding companies. The latter
corporate entities are commonly located in Panama and the Cayman
Islands. These are sometimes known in the US as personal
investment companies or PICs. They own assets and marketable
securities on behalf of HNW individuals. As legal owner of assets
(any type of investment) they receive the income that these
assets produce.
At many retail banks it is very unclear where PIC accounts should
be booked. If, during the customer take-on process, the bank
finds that a personal investment company has been opened for the
holding of personal wealth, one would think that it would open an
account for it in the private banking department. If the company
only holds $250,000 or less, however, no private banking
department would be interested.
By default, then, the bank categorises it as an SME in its
business banking department. This is good for the HNW
money-launderer; in my view, no money-launderer in his right mind
would want to receive private banking services and find himself
in the glaring headlamps of know-your-customer or KYC
procedures.
How does “mis-classification” work for
money-launderers?
Typically, a retail or premium banking account would hold up to
$250,000. Then there is an 'iffy' band between that figure and $1
million which would attract the attention of a relationship
manager in places like Vietnam and Thailand but not in the richer
economic centres. No bank in Hong Kong would offer the customer a
dedicated relationship for less than $1 million. Once a launderer
has an RM, he has to deal with intrusive questions about whether
he wants to invest in structured products or property.
An HNW individual may of course have other, more innocent reasons
for wanting to shy away from questions. Thus does private banking
often go on by other means.
The mis-classification problem, which stems from the quantitative
thresholds set for private banking departments or areas of banks,
or indeed set by stand-alone private banks for themselves, is a
massive one in all regions of the world except the UK, the US and
Western and Central Europe. The practice is common in Russia and
China and is a huge problem in the Middle East. No bank turns
this business away.
In the third instalment we look at how wealthy politically
exposed persons can use escrow accounts to pay bribes without the
knowledge of their banks.