Compliance
Compliance Corner: Fenergo, Monetary Authority Of Singapore
The latest compliance news: regulatory developments, punishments, guidance, permissions, new product and service offerings.
Fenergo
Fenergo, the
Ireland-headquartered firm operating in multiple locations, has
launched AI Powered CLM, a new set of artificial intelligence
capabilities for know-your-client and anti-money laundering
compliance.
The new offering will enable firms to spot and mitigate the risks
posed by financial crime more accurately, as well as meet their
KYC, AML and sanctions obligations.
Fenergo said that recent data shows that penalties for
breaching rules totalled $6.6 billion in 2023, from $4.2 billion
in 2022, highlighting what’s at stake in getting compliance
wrong.
The new offering covers three separate areas scheduled for
release between now and the fourth quarter of this year:
Intelligent Document Processing (IDP), Advanced Reporting, and AI
Assistant.
AI – a hot area in technology – can give rise to new compliance
headaches, but the Fenergo rollout is an example of how they
can be potentially mitigated.
“Regulators across the globe are tightening their grip on
financial crime prevention, enforcing tougher penalties for
compliance failures and launching new initiatives like the EU’s
Anti-Money Laundering Authority,” Stella Clarke, chief strategy
officer at Fenergo, said.
“Against this backdrop, it is crucial banks look to bolster their
capabilities with regards to client onboarding, due diligence and
regulatory reporting – especially considering the growing
shortage of compliance professionals globally,” she
said.
Besides its Ireland base, the firm also has offices in North
America, the UK, Poland, Spain, South Africa, Asia-Pacific, and
the United Arab Emirates.
The Monetary Authority of Singapore
The Monetary
Authority of Singapore has issued an updated set of
“Guidelines on Fair Dealing,” which widen the scope to cover
all financial institutions and all products and services they
offer.
The guidelines raise standards of fair dealing and improve the
experience of customers dealing with FIs, the Singaporean
regulator said in a statement late last week.
Institutions will be expected to incorporate key principles of
fair dealing at various stages of a product’s life cycle, or
services rendered.
Clients can expect:
-- Products suited to the needs of the target market
segment;
-- Advice with suitable product recommendations, accurate
representation of information and extra consideration for those
who are more vulnerable;
-- Clear explanations of a product and its terms and
conditions; and
-- Independent and responsive handling of feedback.
The guidelines were first introduced in 2009 under the Financial Advisers Act.