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From Batch to Real-Time: LSEG Reinvents AML Screening with World-Check On Demand

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As financial institutions accelerate toward real-time payments and digital onboarding, compliance teams face mounting pressure to keep customer screening instant, accurate and demonstrable. In response, the London Stock Exchange Group (LSEG) has introduced World-Check On Demand – a new cloud-based service designed to deliver “real-time risk intelligence” through API integration, allowing institutions to embed sanctions and adverse-media checks directly into customer journeys.

World-Check has long been a cornerstone of anti-money-laundering (AML) and know-your-customer (KYC) programmes. Created in the early 2000s to centralise politically exposed persons (PEP) and sanctions data, it’s evolved into one of the industry’s most widely used risk-screening utilities.

The new On Demand iteration marks a transformational shift – from periodic batch processing to instant, event-driven checks  enabling institutions to query LSEG’s continuously updated global database in real time, supporting a move toward frictionless compliance in digital banking, payments and digital finance including crypto-asset platforms.

LSEG described the launch as “a new era of real-time risk intelligence,” signalling its intention to transform World-Check from a static reference file into a continuously accessible compliance fabric.

Cloud partnerships and open architectures

The collaboration with AWS is central to the redesign. By leveraging cloud scalability, World-Check On Demand can handle spikes in screening volumes while maintaining response-time commitments crucial for high-velocity transactions. The API-first model also aligns with firm’s growing preference for modular compliance architectures, where screening, onboarding, and transaction monitoring tools interoperate across hybrid infrastructures.

The release follows similar moves by other large data providers to deliver compliance-as-a-service models. However, LSEG’s approach – coupling its proprietary data asset with a secure open-standard interface positions it closer to a utility than a point solution, echoing broader market trends toward regulated data hubs and supervisory APIs.

Early adoption is being driven through established RegTech partnerships. FinScan, a specialist in AML software solutions, announced integration with World-Check On Demand during Sibos 2025. The collaboration allows FinScan clients to access LSEG’s sanctions, PEP and enforcement lists directly within their own screening workflows, enhancing detection accuracy and reducing manual case review.

According to the joint press statement, FinScan’s cloud platform now connects “real-time risk intelligence” from LSEG’s data feed to transaction-level monitoring, effectively bridging the gap between static list screening and dynamic risk assessment. For compliance teams, this means the ability to identify potential red flags the moment a payment is initiated, or a new client is onboarded.

Regulatory and market context

The launch arrives as supervisors intensify scrutiny of how firms evidence AML controls in real time. The UK’s Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) and the EU’s forthcoming Anti-Money-Laundering Authority (AMLA) have both highlighted the importance of continuous monitoring and explainability in automated screening.

For financial institutions, the ability to screen customers and transactions on demand addresses several long-standing challenges:

  • Speed and accuracy: Real-time access to sanctions and PEP data allows alerts to be captured directly within the business process – effectively moving detection to the first line of defence. Instead of relying on retrospective or overnight screening that identifies issues after a transaction or onboarding event has occurred, firms can now intercept potential risks before execution. This evolution from after-the-fact mitigation to genuine incident prevention marks a significant shift in AML operations. For customer onboarding, instant screening accelerates client verification, enabling faster approval cycles without compromising control quality. In transaction execution, embedded, low-latency checks prevent sanctioned entities or high-risk individuals from entering the payment flow in the first place. The outcome is a measurable improvement in both compliance assurance and customer experience, as decisions are based on live, authoritative data rather than delayed batch updates.
  • Data consistency: Fragmented data remains one of the most persistent challenges in global AML operations. Institutions often maintain separate sanctions and PEP lists across regions, business lines, or technology stacks, leading to duplication, gaps, and inconsistent screening outcomes. World-Check On Demand consolidates these sources into a single, continuously updated feed, giving firms a uniform data reference across all jurisdictions. This consistency not only improves match quality but also strengthens auditability, allowing compliance officers to demonstrate to regulators that screening decisions are based on verified and time-stamped data.
  • Operational efficiency: Traditional batch-based screening produces large volumes of repetitive alerts that require manual triage, particularly when names are re-screened daily against unchanged data. An event-driven model reduces this noise by triggering checks only when new information enters the system – such as a change in customer status, a payment initiation, or an updated sanctions entry. By integrating directly with live data feeds, World-Check On Demand allows compliance teams to prioritise genuine risk signals and minimise false positives. The result is a leaner workflow where human review focuses on anomalies that matter, reducing operational overhead while preserving the quality and defensibility of AML decisions.

Yet, as firms deploy real-time APIs, new governance obligations arise – particularly around data lineage, auditability and secure integration. Regulators are likely to expect the same documentation and testing standards that apply to core transaction systems.

A step toward continuous compliance

The combination of World-Check On Demand and FinScan’s embedded integration illustrates how the compliance function is being recast as a live service rather than a retrospective control. LSEG’s strategy – expanding its flagship dataset into a real-time utility – underlines a broader industry trajectory: compliance moving from periodic reviews into the application layer, where risk intelligence is consumed as data rather than end of day workflow.

As AML frameworks converge under AMLA and the UK’s Economic Crime Plan 3.0, real-time screening will likely become a regulatory expectation rather than an innovation. For now, World-Check On Demand positions LSEG firmly within that evolution – not simply as a data vendor, but as part of the infrastructure that makes compliance possible at market speed.

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