In this episode of "Financial Crime Matters," Kieran Beer talks live from "The ACAMS Assembly Las Vegas" with Ned Conway, executive secretary at the Wolfsberg Group, an association of 12 of the world's largest banks that focuses on managing financial crime and money laundering risks.
Conway discusses Wolfsberg's recommendations for banking stablecoin producers, pointing to the group's recent guidance "Provision of Banking Services to Fiat-backed Stablecoin Issuers." The guidance adapts some of Wolfberg's seminal recommendations for correspondent banking relationships and can be "flipped" to serve banks considering dealing in stablecoin in various capacities.
Commenting on remarks earlier in the day by undersecretary of the Treasury for Terrorism and Financial Intelligence John Hurley, Conway welcomes promises of simplified suspicious activity reporting, greater information sharing by the public and private sectors and regulatory oversight primarily focused on getting law enforcement what it needs to effectively fight crime.
All Access: What to Know Before the Assembly Kicks Off
The hidden laundering channel: Credit card payments in Latin America
Stablecoins at scale: Compliance priorities in a world of concentrated illicit risk
AFC In Practice: Rethinking Training for Relevance, Retention, and Results
Future-proofing leadership: Building a sustainable bench strength strategy
AFC in Practice: How to Be a Better Financial Crime Investigator
Stablecoins at scale: Compliance priorities in a world of concentrated illicit risk
Evolving AML compliance for emerging threats
AFC in Practice: Insights from the ACAMS Global AFC Threats Report
Fraud and money laundering: Two sides of the same crime
Navigating the human perimeter in regulatory cyber resilience
AFC in Practice: Insights from the ACAMS Global AFC Threats Report
Stablecoins at scale: Compliance priorities in a world of concentrated illicit risk
Threat finance: Cryptocurrencies, covert funds and advanced detection