Canada: Real-Estate Firms Violate Anti-Money Laundering Rules

What Happened?
March 6, 2020: Canada’s financial watchdog FinTRAC audited 500 real estate companies, and found 172 were guilty of violating anti-money laundering rules by neither checking the identities of their clients nor reporting large cash deals to the government.
At half of the companies audited, the sales agents had no formal training on how to properly detect money laundering or verify the identity of their clients.
In response, FinTRAC is implementing an ownership registry beginning May 2020, and making it mandatory for real estate agents to take an anti-money laundering course–a first for Canada.
Source: https://www.occrp.org/en/daily/11760-canada-real-estate-firms-violate-anti-money-laundering-rules
Who Is Impacted?
Real-Estate Developers, Brokers, and Sales Representatives.
Why This Matters?
In 2019, an expert panel estimated that $5.3 billion dollars (US$ 4 billion) were laundered through real-estate transactions in Canada in 2018.
With their 2019 budget increase from the Canadian government, FinTRAC has launched an aggressive front to combat this activity in our economy.
“This offensive is sending a strong message to the sector and to people who might seek to exploit it that we all are determined to protect the Canadian people and the economy.” – FinTRAC spokesperson, Erica Constant
What’s Next?
The provinces hope these actions from the Regulator will prevent the use of trusts, corporations, or partnerships to hide transactions from public view.
learn more
Is your AML compliance too expensive, time-consuming, or ineffective?
iComply enables financial services providers to reduce costs, risk, and complexity and improve staff capacity, effectiveness, and customer experience.
Request a demo today.
QuadrigaCX: A Review by Staff of the Ontario Securities Commission
Our latest expert insight with Ross McKee of McKee Law shares insights into the Ontario Securities Commission staff review of the QuadrigaCX investigation
Telegram to Pay US$18.5 Million Penalty Over Unregistered TON Offering
Messaging app company Telegram has agreed to pay a civil penalty and return US$1.2 billion to investors in order to settle charges from the SEC
SFC Fines Guotai Junan Securities in Hong Kong for AML breaches
HK brokerage company Guotai Junan fined US$25.2 million for failing to comply with anti-money laundering and terrorist financing regulations












