The Oklahoman

US proposes anti-money laundering rules for advisers

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Two U.S. financial regulators jointly proposed new rules on Monday that would fight money laundering by requiring fund advisers to document customer identities, part of a wider effort to keep dirty money out of the investment industry.

The new rules were proposed by the Securities and Exchange Commission and the U.S. Treasury’s Financial Crimes Enforcemen­t Network. In February, FinCEN proposed requiring investment advisers to adopt anti-money laundering programs and calling on real estate profession­als to flag suspicious transactio­ns.

The new rule applies to SEC-registered investment advisers and fund advisers that are exempt from registrati­on due to the nature and amount of their customers’ funds. The rule does not apply to advisers registered at the state level as they present a lesser risk of illicit finance, a Treasury official told reporters on Monday.

Mark Uyeda, a Republican SEC member, dissented, saying regulators should first have determined the scope of investment adviser services covered by the Bank Secrecy Act, an antimoney laundering statute.

In a statement, Uyeda called the proposal’s goals “laudable” but said there were “legitimate questions as to whether imposing additional burdens on investment advisers will meaningful­ly contribute to those efforts.”

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