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Download ReportIn a constantly changing regulatory landscape, firms must ensure they know who they are doing business with by establishing the identities of their customers. With that in mind, financial regulators require firms to establish an ultimate beneficial owner (UBO) in transactions with customer-entities.
The Ultimate Beneficial Owner refers to the person (or persons) who ultimately benefits from a given financial transaction. While it may be straightforward to identify individual customers as the beneficiaries of transactions, UBOs may not be immediately identifiable because they are concealing their identities, or hidden by corporate infrastructure.
The Financial Action Task Force (FATF) defines UBO as “the natural person(s) who ultimately owns or controls a customer and/or the natural person on whose behalf a transaction is being conducted. It also includes those persons who exercise ultimate effective control over a legal person or arrangement.” FATF sets out guidance for establishing beneficial owners, which may be identified as:
When criminals launder illegal funds, they may seek to avoid AML measures by concealing their identities. In some cases, criminals conduct transactions using proxies or corporate entities such as shell companies.
While shell companies may be formed for legitimate reasons, they are frequently misused by criminals to hide illegal funds and facilitate access to legitimate financial systems. In the United States, around $70 billion per year is lost through shell company-related money laundering and, in 2020, the US senate passed the Anti-Money Laundering Act which banned anonymous shell companies, and introduced requirements for firms to report their beneficial owners to the government.
By investigating ultimate beneficial ownership, firms can address the risks posed by shell companies and other money laundering methodologies, ensuring that they are not dealing with criminals that are misusing corporate infrastructure to conceal their identities.
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Download ReportThe EU’s recent anti-money laundering directives (AMLD) include ultimate beneficial ownership regulations.
Implemented on June 26th 2017, the EU’s Fourth Anti-Money Laundering Directive (4AMLD) substantially addressed ultimate beneficial ownership with the following regulatory measures:
Under 4AMLD, firms should may the following data points, processes, and resources to establish an ultimate beneficial owner:
The Fifth Anti-Money Laundering Directive (5AMLD) was implemented on January 10th, 2020, and built on 4AMLD with the following UBO regulations:
Firms should establish an ultimate beneficial owner by deploying suitable Know Your Customer (KYC) measures as part of their AML/CFT solutions. In practice this should involve:
Originally published 04 April 2015, updated 27 February 2023
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