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

FinCen Proposes New Electronic Format and Data Field Amendments for Unified Currency Transaction Reports in the US

Subscribe to our newsletter

In keeping with its work to move from paper-based to electronic reporting formats, the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCen) has published a list of proposed new data fields to be added to firms’ currency transaction reports, as required under the US Bank Secrecy Act (BSA). Industry participants have until 28 March to provide feedback on the list of proposed data fields to be added to the reports, which are aimed at allowing the regulator to more easily monitor customer data for anti-money laundering (AML) purposes.

The proposals do not constitute a change in regulatory requirements, merely a change in the submission formats for currency transaction reporting. FinCen is therefore seeking input from the 82,255 market participants that will be impacted by the changes on the technical details of report submission, as it transitions from a system originally designed for collecting paper forms to a modernised IT environment for electronic reporting. Those affected include depository institutions, broker-dealers, future commission merchants, introducing brokers in commodities, money services businesses and mutual funds.

The impact on these financial institutions of moving to an electronic reporting format is twofold: there is the immediate cost of putting in place systems to be able to produce these reports electronically; and there is the longer term impact of facing greater scrutiny of individual data items, as the regulator uses the BSA database to improve its oversight capabilities. The initial investment in an electronic reporting system, or the alteration of a current system to meet these requirements, must also take into account possible future data related requirements and therefore must be fairly flexible to adapt to these requirements.

In terms of technical requirements as proposed by FinCen: “The database will accept XML-based dynamic, state of the art, reports. Batch and computer to computer filing processes will remain unchanged although the file format will change to match the database. Discrete filings will be based on Adobe LiveCycle Designer ES dynamic forms.”

FinCen estimates that the reporting burden will be an average of 20 minutes per report and 20 minutes recordkeeping per filing. In an average year, the regulator estimates that 14,111,600 responses will be filed and this will work out as 9,407,733 hours of form filling per year.

To illustrate the regulator’s current process of oversight, FinCen, along with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), fined Pinnacle Capital Markets back in September last year for failing to comply with the Bank Secrecy Act. The investigation found that, from October 2003 to August 2006, Pinnacle failed to verify the identities of 34 out of a sample of 55 of its corporate accounts and from October 2003 through November 2009 it did not collect or verify identifying information for “the vast majority” of its sub-accounts.

The move to an electronic reporting format should help the regulator to more closely monitor this data; therefore one can expect an increase in the number actions taken against financial institutions found to be non-compliant.

Subscribe to our newsletter

Related content

WEBINAR

Recorded Webinar: GenAI and LLM case studies for Surveillance, Screening and Scanning

As Generative AI (GenAI) and Large Language Models (LLMs) move from pilot to production, compliance, surveillance, and screening functions are seeing tangible results – and new risks. From trade surveillance to adverse media screening to policy and regulatory scanning, GenAI and LLMs promise to tackle complexity and volume at a scale never seen before. But...

BLOG

World Federation of Exchanges Urges Regulators to Balance Quantum Risk with Near-Term Cyber and AI Threats

The World Federation of Exchanges (WFE) has called on regulators to balance long-term quantum computing risks against more immediate operational challenges in the financial sector. The association’s press release highlights a substantial gap between regulatory expectations for early preparation and the industry’s current prioritisation of nearer-term threats such as generative artificial intelligence (GenAI) and cyber...

EVENT

Data Management Summit London

Now in its 16th year, the Data Management Summit (DMS) in London brings together the European capital markets enterprise data management community, to explore how data strategy is evolving to drive business outcomes and speed to market in changing times.

GUIDE

Trading Regulations Handbook 2021

In these unprecedented times, a carefully crafted trading infrastructure is crucial for capital markets participants. Yet, the impact of trading regulations on infrastructure can be difficult to manage. The Trading Regulations Handbook 2021 can help. It provides all the essentials you need to know about regulations impacting trading operations, data and technology. A-Team Group’s Trading...