About a-team Marketing Services
The knowledge platform for the financial technology industry
The knowledge platform for the financial technology industry

A-Team Insight Blogs

Monetary Authority of Singapore Plans Shared Data Platform to Combat Money Laundering

Subscribe to our newsletter

The Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) plans to introduce a digital platform and enabling regulatory framework that will allow financial institutions to share data on customers and transactions with the aim of preventing money laundering, terrorism financing, and proliferation financing – a means of raising, moving or making available financing, funds, assets or other economic resources to individuals or entities to support the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction.

The platform, COSMIC – Collaborative Sharing of ML/TF Information and Cases – will enable FIs to securely share data on customers or transactions where they cross material risk thresholds.  The platform has been co-created by MAS and six banks in Singapore, namely DBS, OCBC, UOB, SCB, Citibank and HSBC. It will have strong security features to prevent unauthorised access to data and will be operated by MAS.

MAS says the COSMIC platform will be the first centralised platform where information is shared in a structured format that allows seamless integration with data analytics tools. This will help FIs collaborate productively and at scale. The platform’s regulatory framework will specify the types of data to be shared, and the circumstances under which data sharing will be permitted or mandated. MAS will use the information from COSMIC in risk surveillance to detect illicit networks operating in the financial system and target these activities for timely supervisory intervention.

Loo Siew Yee, assistant managing director (policy, payments and financial crime) at MAS, says: “COSMIC will significantly enhance our financial institutions’ ability to detect and curb suspicious activity, while minimising the impact on legitimate actors. The information sharing framework is designed to target serious criminal behaviours and allow FIs to more quickly detect bad actors and purge and deter them.”

MAS plans to introduce COSMIC in the first half of 2023. The six banks involved in the platform’s development will participate and be permitted to share data in COSMIC during this initial phase. The authority plans to progressively extend coverage of the platform to more FIs and focus areas, and make some aspects of data sharing mandatory.

Subscribe to our newsletter

Related content

WEBINAR

Recorded Webinar: End-to-End Lineage for Financial Services: The Missing Link for Both Compliance and AI Readiness

The importance of complete robust end-to-end data lineage in financial services and capital markets cannot be overstated. Without the ability to trace and verify data across its lifecycle, many critical workflows – from trade reconciliation to risk management – cannot be executed effectively. At the top of the list is regulatory compliance. Regulators demand a...

BLOG

Financial Crime is a Decision-Speed Problem: Rethinking AI in AML and Compliance Controls

Financial crime compliance is often described as a resourcing challenge. Firms speak of analyst backlogs, alert volumes and the rising cost of surveillance and screening. Kieran Holland, Solutions Engineering Team Leader at Innovative Systems’ FinScan, argues that the underlying constraint has shifted. Financial crime has become a decision-speed problem. “The fight against financial crime is...

EVENT

TEST Event page 1

Now in its 15th year the TradingTech Summit London brings together the European trading technology capital markets industry and examines the latest changes and innovations in trading technology and explores how technology is being deployed to create an edge in sell side and buy side capital markets financial institutions.

GUIDE

Corporate Actions 2009 Edition

Rather than detracting attention away from corporate actions automation projects, the financial crisis appears to have accentuated the importance of the vital nature of this data. Financial institutions are more aware than ever before of the impact that inaccurate corporate actions data has on their bottom lines as a result of the increased focus on...