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

Talking Reference Data with Andrew Delaney: Just How Fat is Fatca?

Subscribe to our newsletter

With the final regulations for the Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act (Fatca) now published by the US Treasury Department and Internal Revenue Service (IRS), financial institutions have no more excuses for failing to get their houses in order to be compliant with the act. They certainly aren’t happy with the additional regulatory burden of Fatca, but there is no escape, and data for tasks such as client on-boarding, know your customer (KYC) and client reporting must be managed to achieve compliance in what could be a tight timescale for banks that have only just begun Fatca projects.

Draft regulations covering foreign financial institutions – or FFIs – that must report information directly to the IRS about financial accounts held by US taxpayers, or foreign entities in which US taxpayers hold a substantial ownership interest, were first set down by the IRS in February 2012.

Financial sector reaction was far from positive, with FFIs questioning why they should do the tax collection work of the IRS, how the US could impose such draconian regulation outside its own jurisdiction and how were they going to manage the registration and data delivery requirements of the regulations, let alone avoid penalties for non-compliance and, ultimately, Fatca withholding on payments to non-participating FFIs and recalcitrant payees?

There was little good to say about Fatca – there still isn’t – but the regulation rolled forward, some concessions were made in intergovernmental agreements sealed between foreign governments and the US Treasury, and FFIs must now enter into disclosure compliance agreements with the IRS identifying US citizens’ accounts and get ready to report required information on an annual basis.

The agreements will come into effect on January 1, 2014 – a deadline that was pushed back last year when final regulations were still not ready – and reporting will follow, along with withholding regulations that will roll out until all are in place and effective in 2018.

While financial institutions got to grips with the sheer scale of the task at hand, product vendors rallied round and numerous software solutions and services came to market, ready to be tweaked when the US Treasury nailed the final regulations. Indeed, the market is pretty full, with the likes of Thomson Reuters, Dion Global, Navigant, Swissrisk, Nice Actimize, Markit, Trillium Software and Compliance Technologies International just some of those hoping for a slice of the action. Then there are the large consultancies keen to guide financial institutions from initial shock to the completion of Fatca compliance.

No doubt, such solutions and guidance will help some financial institutions comply with the legislation, but the real deal is in data management within financial firms. They will need to invest in understanding their customer bases, onboarding clients with the Fatca regulations in mind, building functionality for withholding against recalcitrant account holders and developing an annual reporting system that will make sure they don’t get on the wrong side of the IRS.

It could be that a single institution has as many as 100,000 accounts that need to be investigated before those that are subject to Fatca can be verified, and it is likely that most financial institutions will be touched by the legislation.

Fatca is – as it says on the tin – a big, fat burden. It’s hard to identify much other recent legislation that has achieved such a poor popularity score in the industry, but there could be some benefit in the outcome of compliance as company’s clean up their data, improve its management and gain a clear understanding of their customers that could, in turn, be used as the basis for new product development and marketing.

If there is one small satisfaction in Fatca that is not about data at all, it is the fact that governments beyond the US may seek revenge, although I am sure they won’t call it that, by writing their own Fatca-style regulations for overseas tax collection.

Subscribe to our newsletter

Related content

WEBINAR

Recorded Webinar: Hearing from the Experts: AI Governance Best Practices

The rapid spread of artificial intelligence in the financial industry presents data teams with novel challenges. AI’s ability to harvest and utilize vast amounts of data has raised concerns about the privacy and security of sensitive proprietary data and the ethical and legal use of external information. Robust data governance frameworks provide the guardrails needed...

BLOG

A-Team Group Data Management Awards USA Winners Announced at DMS NYC 2025

A-Team Group has announced the winners of its 4th annual Data Management Insight Awards USA 2025, and we extend our congratulations to the individuals and companies recognised with awards this year. The event shines a light on the top providers of data management solutions, services, and consultancy for the capital markets across the United States....

EVENT

RegTech Summit London

Now in its 9th year, the RegTech Summit in London will bring together the RegTech ecosystem to explore how the European capital markets financial industry can leverage technology to drive innovation, cut costs and support regulatory change.

GUIDE

The DORA Implementation Playbook: A Practitioner’s Guide to Demonstrating Resilience Beyond the Deadline

The Digital Operational Resilience Act (DORA) has fundamentally reshaped the European Union’s financial regulatory landscape, with its full application beginning on January 17, 2025. This regulation goes beyond traditional risk management, explicitly acknowledging that digital incidents can threaten the stability of the entire financial system. As the deadline has passed, the focus is now shifting...