6 Things You Should Know About AML France Regulations
1. Autorité des Marchés Financiers
The Autorité des Marchés Financiers (AMF) is France’s primary financial regulator with oversight of all financial institutions and a responsibility to prevent financial crime, money laundering, and the financing of terrorism. An independent body, the AMF has a range of powers to identify and prevent money laundering, including setting new rules, conducting investigations, and issuing penalties.
In a wider context, the AMF works with other French national and international authorities to contribute to the global fight against money laundering and to set AML policy. France is a member of the intergovernmental Financial Action Task Force (FATF), so the AMF also works to implement FATF’s 40 Recommendations as part of French AML/CFT policy.
2. AML France Legislation
The French Monetary and Financial Code (Book V, Title VI) and the French Criminal Code (Article 324-1, and Article 421-1-6) set out AML and CFT regulations in France. As an EU member state, France has to implement EU law as part of its domestic legislation. This means that France must abide by the EU anti-money laundering Directives (AMLD), which are issued periodically by the EU Commission.
EU member states are currently operating under the 4th AMLD (4AMLD). 5AMLD will come into full legal effect on January 10, 2020, while 6AMLD will be introduced in June 2021.
3. Data Protection for AML in France
French data protection laws are applied in compliance with the EU’s General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), which was introduced in 2018. GDPR compliance is a significant data protection consideration, especially since penalties for noncompliance can rise to €20 million (or 4% of global revenue). Under the GDPR, firms must:
- Establish a lawful basis for processing personal data — and process that data fairly and transparently
- Only keep and use data for the specific purposes for which it was collected
- Ensure that they only collect data necessary for their business function
- Ensure that the data they collect is kept accurate and up to date
- Remove data that is no longer needed for their business function
- Treat personal data with complete integrity and confidentiality
The GDPR has consequences for the way firms implement money laundering regulations, which necessarily involve a focus on personal information. In particular, the GDPR introduces a “right to be forgotten,” which allows customers to request that firms delete their personal data under certain circumstances. While this rule clashes with AML France record-keeping rules, the GDPR accounts for this by having legal requirements take precedence over the right to be forgotten. Accordingly, firms must only delete data after they’ve met their AML obligations.
4. Transaction Monitoring
Under AMF and FATF regulations, banks and financial institutions must facilitate transaction monitoring as part of their France AML policy. The monitoring process should automatically flag transactions that present a high risk of money laundering or terrorism financing and should factor in:
- The origin and destination of funds (to or from high risk countries)
- The nature or size of the transaction (unusual deposits or customer behavior)
- The legal structures or schemes connected to the transaction
5. AML Onboarding and Monitoring
Under French law and EU and FATF requirements, banks and financial institutions in France must perform customer due diligence (CDD) procedures when onboarding new customers. They must also monitor their customers for potential money laundering activity throughout the relationship. These procedures are central to a risk-based approach to AML client onboarding, helping firms to verify customers’ identities and the business in which they are involved.
6. Upcoming AML France Regulation Changes
5AMLD: The most important upcoming anti-money laundering regulation in France is 5AMLD, which will come into effect on January 10, 2020. 5AMLD places a strong focus on the regulation of cryptocurrency:
- 5AMLD introduces a legal definition of cryptocurrency and extends existing CFT / AML France regulations to cryptocurrency exchanges.
- Under 5AMLD, Financial Intelligence Units are given greater authority to obtain information about cryptocurrency owners.
- Under 5AMLD, cryptocurrency exchanges must be registered with the appropriate authorities. In France, they must register with the AMF.
6AMLD: The EU published the Sixth Anti-Money Laundering Directive on November 12, 2018. 6AMLD must be transposed into law by EU member states by December 3, 2020 and implemented by banks and financial institutions by June 3, 2021. The measures that 6AMLD will introduce include:
- A harmonized definition of money laundering offenses for EU member states’ domestic legislation.
- Clarification of 22 predicate offenses for money laundering, including cybercrime and environmental crime.
- Classification of “aiding and abetting money laundering” and “self-laundering” as criminal acts.
How ComplyAdvantage Can Help with AML in France
French anti-money laundering regulations present a formidable compliance challenge. The sheer amount of data that must be analyzed as part of the AML/CFT process means that employees completing the task manually risk committing errors and surfacing false positives, potentially frustrating customers or incurring compliance penalties.
ComplyAdvantage’s automated smart AML solutions help firms avoid those problems and significantly enhance the efficiency of their compliance process. Our AML France solutions are tailored to your unique business needs and risk tolerance level, helping you to organize and prioritize data analysis and to deliver financial compliance faster and more accurately in France or any global regulatory environment.
Originally published 18 November 2019, updated 26 August 2022
Disclaimer: This is for general information only. The information presented does not constitute legal advice. ComplyAdvantage accepts no responsibility for any information contained herein and disclaims and excludes any liability in respect of the contents or for action taken based on this information.
Copyright © 2023 IVXS UK Limited (trading as ComplyAdvantage).