Compliance
UBS, Singapore-Based WMI Aim To Help Asia's Wealth Sector Beat Money Launderers

The Wealth Management Institute and UBS have developed a programme designed to improve how the wealth management sector combats dirty money.
UBS and The Wealth
Management Institute, the Singapore-based organisation, have
launched a programme designed to improve how the industry combats
criminal money.
The Zurich-listed lender and the group have created the WMI
Anti-Money Laundering (AML) Risk Management Program. UBS is
sponsoring the programme for three year, it said in a joint
statement with the institute yesterday.
WMI will create a series of teaching modules on AMl and
counter-terrorism financing topics. To be accredited by the
Institute of Banking & Finance (under the IBF Standards, the
training takes account of specific AML/CFT issues faced by the
wealth management industry as well as Singapore’s role as an
international financial centre that operates in Asia.
The move comes at a time when Singapore's authorities have
cracked down on private banks, such as BSI and Falcon Private
Bank, and others, for failing to uphold sufficiently tight
controls to deal with money laundering. BSI's Singaporean
business, and Falcon Private Bank, have been ordered by the
Monetary Authority of Singapore to leave the Asian city state in
connection with transactions involving 1MDB, the Malaysian
state-run fund. (The fund is accused of being used by Malaysian
politicians and others for personal financial gain. 1MDB is
currently the subject of money laundering probes in at least six
countries including the US, Singapore, Switzerland and, most
recently, Australia.)
The TEL modules will be made available to all industry
participants such as private bankers and compliance and audit
professionals in the wealth management sector. When a person
completes the training course, it counts towards the Client
Advisory Competency Standards Continuing Professional Development
hours.
The programme will also commission papers relat=vant to tackling
illicit money risks that wealth managers face, and build up a
library of case studies. The work will be featured in a
"knowledge centre" microsite, as well as be run alongside guides
to best practice in these fields, thought leadership articles,
interviews, videos and recommended books.
Another feature will be forums for senior compliance decision
makers, featuring international AML thought leaders.
WMI has formed an expert panel of international specialists with
deep AML expertise in relation to the financial sectors of
Singapore, Switzerland, US, UK and Australia. The panel is
chaired by Jonathan Shih, head of compliance and operational risk
control, UBS Wealth Management, and global head of financial
crime. The other expert panellists include:
David James, HMRC Fiscal Crime Liaison Officer, British High
Commission, Singapore; Ian Wong, deputy director for financial
investigation, CAD; Jon Page, head of business consulting, BAE
Systems Applied Intelligence; Larry Lam, managing director,
McGuire Asia; and Lem Chin Kok, Head of
Forensic, KPMG Singapore
The programme is supported by The Association of Banks in
Singapore and IBF, and is designed to fit with drives by the
Monetary Authority of Singapore to improve standards across the
industry.
In April the Monetary Authority of Singapore and the Commercial Affairs Department signed the Anti-Money Laundering and Countering the Financing of Terrorism Industry Partnership (ACIP).