The Pandora Papers have brought further scrutiny to the crypto sphere.
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The publication of the Pandora Papers has not only set political and diplomatic realms ablaze, but it has, once again, highlighted a specific industry that is receiving far fetched scrutinized attention- fintech, and primarily the crypto sphere on centre stage.
The timing of the publication comes across the implementation of 6 AMLD (the Sixth Anti Money Laundering Directive) and the publication of the AMLA Regulatory Framework of the EU.
It seems that there is no direct correlation between the three main AML events of the year, be that as it may, as Ian Fleming once mentioned, once is considered a happenstance, twice coincidence and third time- enemy action.
Though the publication of the Pandora Papers is not enemy action, and cannot be deemed as such, the spiralling effect of the indication is what the Papers bring about.
This ambitious, yet achievable, agenda of the EU not only affects the EU market as one market but the global fintech economy as a whole. Bearing that in mind, the Pandora Papers raise many questions about AML and CTF offences in the EU and the Caribbean. The companies that popped up in indication, have a significant issue with their banking solutions and payment methods.
Once a company is flagged under the publication of the Papers, the access that those companies have to their typical banking solution is hindered, due to the fact that the risk analysis of the financial institutions, which is conducted by the risk committee, compliance and regulatory departments, is now under extreme scrutiny to an extent that the bank would not like to extend the strain of their banking license, issued by the central bank in the same operating state.
When assessing their risk assessment of the financial institution, the issue of the risk appetite of the bank is at stake. Whether the bank would like to continue operating with the indicated financial institution is a matter of how avant-garde the risk appetite is, and how it is possible to manage the exact same risk.
The stake of the Pandora Papers is too early to be determined, be that as it may, the banks are now at the most critical point of the past year- the implementation of 6 AMLD into each Member State of the EU, the announcement of AMLA, and now the latest regulatory and risk drama. This leaves the banks at the pinnacle of risk assessment and management, meaning that their AML, risk and due diligence policies will have to be reassessed.
The publication of the Pandora Papers has not only set political and diplomatic realms ablaze, but it has, once again, highlighted a specific industry that is receiving far fetched scrutinized attention- fintech, and primarily the crypto sphere on centre stage.
The timing of the publication comes across the implementation of 6 AMLD (the Sixth Anti Money Laundering Directive) and the publication of the AMLA Regulatory Framework of the EU.
It seems that there is no direct correlation between the three main AML events of the year, be that as it may, as Ian Fleming once mentioned, once is considered a happenstance, twice coincidence and third time- enemy action.
Though the publication of the Pandora Papers is not enemy action, and cannot be deemed as such, the spiralling effect of the indication is what the Papers bring about.
This ambitious, yet achievable, agenda of the EU not only affects the EU market as one market but the global fintech economy as a whole. Bearing that in mind, the Pandora Papers raise many questions about AML and CTF offences in the EU and the Caribbean. The companies that popped up in indication, have a significant issue with their banking solutions and payment methods.
Once a company is flagged under the publication of the Papers, the access that those companies have to their typical banking solution is hindered, due to the fact that the risk analysis of the financial institutions, which is conducted by the risk committee, compliance and regulatory departments, is now under extreme scrutiny to an extent that the bank would not like to extend the strain of their banking license, issued by the central bank in the same operating state.
When assessing their risk assessment of the financial institution, the issue of the risk appetite of the bank is at stake. Whether the bank would like to continue operating with the indicated financial institution is a matter of how avant-garde the risk appetite is, and how it is possible to manage the exact same risk.
The stake of the Pandora Papers is too early to be determined, be that as it may, the banks are now at the most critical point of the past year- the implementation of 6 AMLD into each Member State of the EU, the announcement of AMLA, and now the latest regulatory and risk drama. This leaves the banks at the pinnacle of risk assessment and management, meaning that their AML, risk and due diligence policies will have to be reassessed.
Ms. Rosenberg focuses on EU Law and regulation within the financial, defence, art, and maritime sectors. She has broad experience in digital banking and crypto licensing, implementation of AML/CTF regulatory frameworks for defence companies and art galleries, anti human trafficking, regtech software, tokenization of maritime logistics, formation of compliance teams, AML and Privacy for publicly listed companies. She serves as the leading of contact of EU Law in the Middle East, and has published at defence and financial magazines, consulted governmental entities on CTF and AML and has worked directly with FIUs in the EU and the GCC. Holds an LLB in EU Law from the European Law School, Maastricht University and an LLM in Company and Commercial Law from Erasmus School of Law, Erasmus University Rotterdam; is the head of the Eramus University Alumni Network in Israel, and is a board member of the Israel Security Business Union.
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