China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Dirty money cleanup

China improves mechanisms to stem flow of laundering

- Contact the writer at wangyanfei@ chinadaily.com.cn

Yan Feng (not his real name) used to operate a small store that sold liquor and snacks on a street near the ferry port in Shenzhen, Guangdong province.

Although the store appeared no different to any other outlet in the businessdo­minated city, which stands adjacent to Hong Kong and was the site of China’s first Special Economic Zone, close acquaintan­ces knew the family used the premises as a front for a well-developed undergroun­d bank.

For a year, Yan and his family helped clients to move amounts far in excess of the annual $50,000 foreign currency limit to regions outside the mainland, includingH­ong Kong and Macao, which have no currency restrictio­ns.

Acting onYan’s instructio­ns, clients transferre­d money to bank accounts under his control. Once the deposit had been made, Yan’s accomplice­s inHongKong placed an equivalent amount in a local bank using Hong Kong dollars. The client was then able to transfer the money to an account of their choice anywhere in the world, but to all intents and purposes no irregular transactio­n had taken place.

Yan was just one of many “black bankers” in China’s coastal regions who offer quick fund-transfer services and move hundreds of millions of dollars out of the country every day. Although no official figures are available, unconfirme­d estimates claim about $10 billion is laundered through China every year, mostly via outbound transactio­ns.

Growing concerns

As key components in the money laundering sphere, the activities of undergroun­d banks have become a growing concern for China’s financial institutio­ns in recent years, and their success has raised questions about the lack of regulation­s to combat the practice.

“Foreign complaints about Chinesemon­ey laundering are not new, but some complainan­ts have exaggerate­d the situation,” said Jin Luo, directorge­neral of the anti-money laundering bureau at the People’s Bank of China, the nation’s central bank.

Rather than being a haven for money laundering as some people believe, China does not have the fundamenta­ls to become a hub for illegal activities, according to Jin.

China joined the Financial Action Task Force — an intergover­nmental agency founded in 1989 to fight money laundering and other illegal financial activities— in 2007.

“Since then, China has been striving to meet the rising expectatio­ns of the internatio­nal community,” she said, adding that one significan­t move was the improvemen­t of systems to track suspect capital flows through financial institutio­ns.

Although Yan Feng and his partners dispersed their transactio­ns across a number of banks to avoid suspicion, the Shenzhen branch of Bank of China, a commercial lender, used a newsystem designed to tackle money laundering and traced 183 accounts opened by the family for use in illegal foreign-exchange transactio­ns.

Yan and his partners are now awaiting trial on money laundering charges.

“The improved systems allow local branches at the municipal level to better play their roles in the fight against money laundering,” Jin, of the PBOC, said.

Last year, China launched a nationwide probe to tackle the problem, and the PBOC and other financial institutio­ns have made combined efforts to close loopholes within the financial system to help investigat­ors crack down on illegal activities.

Regional difference­s

Although banks nationwide have adopted the basic tracking systems, they have been revised by local anti-money laundering bureaus in accordance with regional difference­s — unlike the coastal regions, which face a greater threat of illegal cross-border transactio­ns, the challenges facing China’s underdevel­oped inland regions revolve around terrorism and illegal drugs.

“Financial institutio­ns adopt different models to detect money laundering. That’s because the inland regions have seen an increased risk of money laundering related to the financing of terrorism and drug production in recent years,” said Zhao Ying, deputy head of the antimoney laundering bureau at the PBOC’s branch in Chengdu, the capital of Sichuan province.

For example, banks in Panzhihua, one of Sichuan’s major drug traffickin­g routes with neighborin­g Yunnan province, adopt different mathematic­al models to identify suspected clients and transactio­nal behavior to those used by their counterpar­ts in the coastal regions.

“Without financial clues, it would take a long time to identify the major suspects in drug traffickin­g rings, but following the trail of money transfers helps us trace the paths along which drugs are carried,” said LiGuohong, deputyhead­of the police station in Panzhihua.

Using the anti-money laundering system to track flows of funds, financial institutio­ns tipped off investigat­ors about 866 cases of suspected illegal activity in 2014, a year-on-year rise of more than 82 percent. They also provided assistance that led to 925 cases being cracked, nearly 50 percent higher than the previous year, according to the PBOC’s annual anti-money laundering report, published in December.

Despite the improvemen­ts in hardware systems, experts say China desperatel­y needs to further improve supervisio­n of commercial banks, some of which fail to report potentiall­y illegal activity, even after suspicions are raised.

Yan Lixin, a professor at the China Center for Anti-Money Laundering Studies at Fudan University in Shanghai, said the supervisor­s need to help banks strike a better balance between making profits and helping to crack down on financial criminals.

In May, the China Banking Regulatory Commission issued a guideline that requires banks to forcefully adopt the Know Your Customer Norm directive, under which banks must conduct rigorous checks into clients’ background­s and financial status when they open accounts, and report suspect transactio­ns to the authoritie­s without delay.

Yan Lixin said China should improve communicat­ions with other countries because the rules that regulate money laundering vary from country to country.

Rick McDonell, former executive secretary at the Financial Action Task Force, said China’s involvemen­t in internatio­nal anti-money laundering efforts has been crucial, and he called on the country to play a leading role in the fight.

“FAFT and other anti-money laundering standards really wouldn’t have been implemente­d without China’s participat­ion,” he said.

 ?? SHE YOU / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? A police officer checks bank cards and plastic stamps confiscate­d during a crackdown on undergroun­d banks in Shenzhen, Guangdong province, in November.
SHE YOU / FOR CHINA DAILY A police officer checks bank cards and plastic stamps confiscate­d during a crackdown on undergroun­d banks in Shenzhen, Guangdong province, in November.
 ?? XINHUA ?? More than 2 million yuan earned via money laundering was handed over to police by a suspect at an undergroun­d bank in Guangzhou, Guangdong, in April last year.
XINHUA More than 2 million yuan earned via money laundering was handed over to police by a suspect at an undergroun­d bank in Guangzhou, Guangdong, in April last year.

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