Business World

SEC to rate entities on risks vs laundering, terror finance

- By Denise A. Valdez

THE Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) wants to be more proactive in tracking money laundering and terrorist financing by rating the effectiven­ess of firms in preventing such activities.

On Sept. 24, the regulator issued Memorandum Circular No. 26, which calls for the implementa­tion of an anti-money laundering risk rating system.

The SEC will be rating persons and firms using four tiers (weak, needs improvemen­t, satisfacto­ry and strong) to gauge their risk management system in combating money laundering.

It will be based on the efficient oversight of a firm’s board of directors and senior management, its anti-money laundering policies and internal control and audit, and the effective implementa­tion of these policies.

The SEC is also looking at the risk profiles of firms to find any residual risks. The profile is based on the size of a firm’s assets or transactio­ns, the complexity and diversity of its products, the profile of its customers, how often it engages in internatio­nal transactio­ns, its distributi­on channels, and its compliance record with relevant rules by the SEC.

“[T]o be able to focus supervisor­y resources where the risks are higher, there is a need to identify, assess, and understand the money laundering/ terrorist financing risks to which the sectors of covered persons supervised by the commission are exposed,” the SEC said.

The covered persons are banks, non- banks, quasi- banks, trusts, insurance companies, securities dealers, mutual funds, foreign exchanges and similar entities.

These institutio­ns are required to do a money laundering risk assessment by the Anti- Money Laundering Act, which was legislated in 2001 and implemente­d by the Anti- Money Laundering Council.

What the SEC will do is evaluate their risk management system using the four tiers, and depending on the rating, enforce actions to mitigate the risks.

A firm rated as satisfacto­ry or strong will not need interventi­on. A firm rated as weak or needs improvemen­t will be ordered to submit a written action plan to the SEC and be continuous­ly monitored and audited.

If after the process the SEC finds that a firm has failed in its risk management, it may penalize the firm with a P5,000- P2 million fine per day of violation, a permanent cease-and-desist order, revocation of its certificat­e of incorporat­ion, and/or dissolutio­n of the corporatio­n and forfeiture of its assets.

The memorandum circular will take effect 15 days after its publicatio­n on the SEC website and in two national newspapers.

In May, the Anti- Money Laundering Council warned that remittance­s may drop 2- 4% if money laundering and terrorist financing controls are not strengthen­ed in the country, as this would push internatio­nal banks to be more cautious in transactio­ns with Filipinos.

Both the Senate and the House of Representa­tives have measures to amend and fortify the Anti- Money Laundering Act— Senate Bill 1412 and House Bill 6174—but both remain pending on the committee level.

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