The 8th Compliance & Anti Money Laundering (AML) Seminar
in Saudi Arabia, hosted by Thomas Reuters, was held Monday in collaboration with the Saudi Arabia Institute of Finance.
While addressing attendees at the opening session, Saudi Arabian
Monetary Agency (SAMA) Vice Governor Abdulaziz
Al Furaih highlighted that SAMA anticipates obtaining a full membership at the
Financial Action Task Force (FATF) in June 2018.
“Regional regulates have taken tremendous steps against
money laundering,”
Al Furaih said. “Several new assessments have emerged including the set of
recommendations by FATF and the Middle East and North Africa Financial Action
Task Force (MENA FATF). The deployment of capable resources
in the financial sector will drive effective AML national agendas and also help
governments meet the international requirements.”
Nadim Najjar, managing
director, MENA Thomson Reuters MENA managing director, said the findings of a Thomson Reuters Global Cost of Compliance report
confirm that more than 84 percent
of the Middle Eastern respondents expect the overall compliance budgets to hike
throughout 2016.
“Industry research reveals increased cybersecurity threats
in the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) region, which we have seen manifest in
the widespread banking malware in the UAE, phishing attacks in Saudi Arabia and most recently the cyberattacks of financial institutions in Qatar,” Najjar said.
The compliance programs will continue to call for the
balance of human intelligence collaborating with technological advances to
address the risks of operating in the regions, Najjar said.
“In 2016, compliance officers will have to think about how
to do more for less,” Najjar said. “There is a growing need for compliance
officers to anticipate regulatory change, think smarter about managing the
associated risks and maintain the visibility of regulatory efforts at a high
managerial level.”
Hesham Tashkandi, adviser to the governor and director of the SAMA Consumer
Protection Department, said
Saudi Arabia has a young population that is technology savvy.
“As technology evolves,
our objective is to increase the visibility of financial transactions and
protect the economy,”
Tashkandi said. “We firmly believe in enhancing the integrity of the system
through inclusion, integrity, as well as data and consumer protection.”
Large banks have halted business with many financial
entities, noted Gulf International Bank CEO Abdulaziz Al Helaissi as he spoke
on the effects of eliminating risks. The lack of business has encouraged many
banks to invest more in building needed skills and easy-to-use, innovative
technology.
“Among our key focus areas are conduct risk, crowd-funding regulation as well as fintech (financial technology),
which is a growing theme that regulators should seriously look at,” Ali Baalawi, senior manager of supervision at Dubai Financial Services Authority, said. “As we see more transition to cloud storing, cybersecurity becomes a real challenge for regional regulators.”



