Compliance
Regulators Continue AML Breach Punishments; Fines Fell In 2021

The culmination of big fines for dirty money flows and AML lapses in 2020 meant that figures for 2021 looked far lower in comparison, but problems with compliance violations remain, new data shows.
National regulators around the world continue to slap fines on
businesses for anti-money laundering lapses and other failings.
However, on the face of it, the scale and number of punishments
slumped in 2021 from a year before, figures from financial
technology firm Fenergo show.
2020 wasn’t just a period that will live in memory as the year of
the pandemic, it was the year when Malaysia’s state-created fund,
1MDB, led to a raft of probes over bribery and money laundering,
with subsequent punishments topping $10.6 billion globally. In
2021, by contrast, the total was $5.4 billion. That is still a
large sum though.
The fallout from the 1MDB
scandal continued to influence enforcement activity in Malaysia
in 2021 with AmBank Group agreeing to pay a $698.3 million
settlement to the Ministry of Finance for its role in the
violations. The 1MDB affair had a wide footprint, snagging banks
such as Goldman
Sachs. Financial centers including the US, Switzerland and
Singapore were affected.
Notable enforcement actions in 2021 included a $2.03 billion
penalty issued to UBS by the French Court for historic tax fraud
(it should be noted that UBS is appealing this case,
as reported here at sister news service
WealthBriefing). In the US, regulators issued $673.2
million in enforcement actions to foreign banks, including a $100
million fine to the UAE’s private bank, Mashreqbank PSC, for
illegally processing more than $4 billion of payments linked to
Sudan, Fenergo said.
“The decrease in fines in 2021 is largely attributed to a
reduction in the number of multi-billion-dollar fines compared to
previous years. The pandemic has also impacted regulatory
investigations; regulators weren’t able to initiate as many
on-premise investigations in the last two years which has likely
had a knock-on effect on enforcement actions,” Rachel Woolley,
global director of financial crime at Fenergo, said.
“Trends identified in our research, as well as recent financial
crime scandals, suggest that financial institutions aren’t
adequately equipped to manage the financial crime risks to which
they are exposed. Without effective AML/KYC systems and controls
that allow firms to not only know their customer and the
associated risks, but also understand their behavior throughout
their lifecycle – the door will be left open for criminals.”
The total volume of fines levied on firms for compliance breaches
shrank to 176 from 760 in the same period the year before. The
average fine value for AML-related compliance breaches issued to
financial institutions in 2021 was $34.4 million, Fenergo said.
Europe, the Middle East and Africa saw the single biggest
regional increase in the value of financial penalties from just
over $1 billion in 2020 to $3.4 billion in 2021.
The global research comes just weeks after two major UK-based
banks were fined $85 million and $350.3 million for AML failures
(HSBC and NatWest, respectively).
2021 also saw the rise of non-banking financial firms being
targeted by regulators, such as virtual asset service providers.
Crypto-trading platform, BitMEX and crypto payments provider
Bitpay, were fined a combined amount of $100,507,375 for failing
to comply with money laundering obligations.
The Fenergo report also noted that financial institution
employees continued to face regulatory scrutiny in 2021 with 16
individuals being fined $16.5 million for their role in
AML-related compliance breaches. In Bahrain, the High Criminal
Court went as far as sentencing six Future Bank employees to
prison with a fine of $2.7 million each for their role in
Bahrain’s largest money laundering case in the history of the
state.
Data privacy fine values fell 82 per cent at $17.4 million, the
majority ($11.5 million) of which were for GDPR breaches in
Europe. (The US does not yet have an equivalent privacy law at
the federal level.)