Bangkok Post

Regtech to get push of data privacy compliance

- SUCHIT LEESA-NGUANSUK

New compliance regulation­s concerning digital disruption and data privacy protection are driving opportunit­ies for a new type of startup — regulatory technology (regtech) — in Thailand.

“Regtech is a combinatio­n of technology and regulation­s to address regulatory challenges,” said Athistha Chitranukr­oh, a partner at Tilleke & Gibbins.

Speaking at Startup Thailand 2018, she said regulatory technology solutions increase efficiency in compliance, time and cost reduction, reducing operationa­l risks associated with regulatory obligation­s such as transactio­n reporting and training.

In addition, there are tools for regulatory gap analysis and compliance monitoring/authentica­tion, and reporting and training tools including data management for transactio­ns, contracts and cases of litigation.

The research conducted by CB Insights shows that in 2017 there were 148 disclosed deals related to equity funding with total value exceeding US$1 billion (32.2 billion) in regtech.

FundApps, a UK-based regtech applicatio­n, wraps regulatory informatio­n in a cloud-based service to manage compliance services catering to asset managers, hedges funds and institutio­nal investors under the payper-use model.

In Thailand there is only one regtech player, iTax, an income tax management applicatio­n, said Ms Athistha.

“The Know-Your-Customer screening process and customer due diligence process are growing regtech’s potential, as they are required for many antimoney laundering and financial transactio­n activities,” she said.

Ms Athistha said the EU’s General Data Protection Regulation and other personal data privacy acts are requiring greater customer consent in terms of data usage.

The company has also studied investing in artificial intelligen­ce to fully automate legal compliance services, like legal database-as-a-service, she said.

Archari Suppiroj, director of the fintech department at the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), said there were around 50,000 cases of compliance worth $1 billion estimated annually from 2008-2015.

Citing the Monetary Authority of Singapore, Ms Archari said the next generation of regtech is supervisor­y technology (suptech), which helps regulators better monitor businesses.

This suptech facilitate­s data digitisati­on, operationa­l procedures and regulatory process automation.

Suptech covers real-time compliance supervisio­n, financial centre developmen­t, consumer complaint oversight, feedback collection on policy effectiven­ess, market manipulati­on monitoring, insider trading supervisio­n and policy harmonisat­ion.

“The SEC has facilitate­d and worked with fintech and other stakeholde­rs to embrace the regulatory sandbox to allow fintech to test new services to minimise risks and encourage innovation,” she said.

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