December 2020 Regulatory Updates

Jan 4, 2021 | Compliance Updates, iComply Insights

Regulatory Actions and Updates from Around the Globe

Enforcement Highlights – December 2020

 

United States

  • The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) charged jewelry wholesaler Gregory Altieri for defrauding both current and retired police officers and firefighters in a Ponzi-like scheme.
  • SEC filed emergency action by imposing an asset freeze against Virgil Capital LLC in connection with an alleged securities fraud related to Virgil Sigma cryptocurrency fund.
  • SEC charged Ripple and its co-founders with raising over USD $1.3 billion through an unregistered, ongoing digital asset securities offering.
  • SEC charged real estate development company Silicon Sage Builders for USD $119 million securities fraud targeting the Northern California South Asian community.
  • China-based Luckin Coffee agreed to pay USD $180 million in penalties to settle accounting fraud charges for misstating the company’s revenue, expenses, and net operating loss.
  • General Electric paid a USD $200 million penalty to settle charges for repeated disclosure failures across multiple businesses that materially misled investors.

 

United Kingdom:

  • The Financial Conduct Authority fined Charles Schwab GBP 8.96 million for failing to arrange adequate protection for its clients’ assets and carrying out a regulated activity without permission.

 

Hong Kong:

  • The Securities and Futures Commission of Hong Kong fined Fulbright Securities Limited USD $3.6 million for failing to implement internal control procedures to detect and prevent illegal short selling.
  • SFC issued a restriction notice to CNI Securities Group Limited to freeze client accounts linked to suspected market manipulation

 

Regulatory Updates

United Kingdom:

The Financial Conduct Authority has established a Temporary Registration Regime for cryptoasset businesses, which are required to be registered with the FCA by 10 January 2021. 

The regime was established due to FCA’s inability to assess and register all firms that have applied for registration due to the complexity of applications and COVID-19 pandemic restricting FCA’s ability to visit firms. It will allow existing firms that have applied for registration before 16 December 2020, and whose applications are still being assessed, to continue trading.

Businesses that began operating after 10 January 2020 are required to obtain full registration with the FCA before conducting business.

***

Her Majesty’s Treasury and The Home Office issued the third national risk assessment of money laundering and terrorist financing in the UK. The policy paper outlines how the key risks have changed since the UK’s second NRA was published in 2017, and the action taken since 2017 to address these risks.

 

 

Past events: How Compliance Changed in 2020

 

Watch the recording of our most recent webinar reviewing the impact that the Fifth Money Laundering, more commonly known as AMLD5, had on the landscape of compliance in 2020 for businesses and financial services providers around the globe.

 

Biometric Authentication in KYC

How is biometric authentication used in the realm of KYC and compliance? Learn more about how financial services providers are using biometric authentication to keep their customer’s identity secure in our most recent Regtech Glossary post.

 

 

 

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.

How to Guide for Identity Data Validation
How to Guide for Identity Data Validation

Identity data validation is a crucial process for financial institutions, fintech companies, and other regulated entities. It involves verifying the accuracy and authenticity of identity information provided by customers during onboarding and ongoing monitoring....