PEP [FATF] RED FLAGS DETECTING MISUSE OF YOUR PRODUCTS AND/OR SERVICES
21/06/2022
Red Flags PEPs Politically Exposed Persons and introduction
- Classifying a client as a PEP is not an aim in itself; rather, it forms part of the process that enables financial institutions and DNFBPs (Designated Non-Financial Businesses and Professions) to assess the higher risks related to PEPs.
- Being a PEP in itself does not equate to being a criminal or suggest a link to abuse of the financial system.
- However, PEPs are higher-risk customers because they have more opportunities than ordinary citizens to acquire assets through unlawful means like embezzlement and bribe-taking.
- Therefore financial institutions and DNFBPs must be familiar with the PEP red flags and indicators that can be used to detect such abuse. After determining that a customer is a PEP, financial institutions and DNFBPs are responsible for conducting ongoing customer due diligence tailored explicitly to the client’s PEP status.
What Are PEP Red Flags?
- The FATF has developed a list of PEP red flags/indicators that can assist in the detection of misuse of the financial system by PEPs during a customer relationship.
- This list of indicators is useful in detecting those PEPs that abuse the financial system and does not intend to stigmatise all PEPs.
- How to interpret these indicators depends heavily on context. Often, matching one or two of these indicators simply indicates a statistically-raised risk of doing business with a particular customer, and several indicators may need to be met before serious suspicion is warranted.
- However, in some cases—again, depending on specific circumstances—matching just one or more of these indicators could lead directly to suspicion of illegal activity, such as money laundering.
SOME RED FLAGS:- PEPs Attempting to Shield Their Identity
PEPs know that their status as a PEP may facilitate the detection of any illicit behaviour; This means that PEPs may attempt to shield their identity to prevent detection. Examples of ways in which this is done are:
- Use of corporate vehicles (legal entities and legal arrangements) to obscure the beneficial owner
- Use of corporate vehicles without a valid business reason
- Use of intermediaries when this does not match with standard business practices or when this seems to be used to shield identity of a PEP
- Use of PEP relatives and close associates as the legal owner
Behaviours that are PEP Red Flags:
Some PEP red flags include specific behaviours and characteristics that may raise risk levels or cause suspicion:
- Use of corporate vehicles (legal entities and legal arrangements) to obscure (i) ownership, (ii) involved industries, or (iii) countries
- The PEP makes inquiries about the institution’s AML policy or PEP policy
- The PEP generally seems uncomfortable providing information about the source of wealth or source of funds
- The information that is provided by the PEP is inconsistent with other (publicly available) information, such as asset declarations and published official salaries
- The PEP is unable or reluctant to explain the reason for doing business in the country of the financial institution or DNFBP (Designated Non-Financial Businesses and Professions).
- The PEP provides inaccurate or incomplete information
- The PEP seeks to make use of the services of a financial institution or DNFBP that would normally not cater to foreign or high value clients
- Funds are repeatedly moved to and from countries to which the PEP does not seem to have ties with.
- The PEP is or has been denied entry to the country (visa denial)
- The PEP is from a country that prohibits or restricts its/certain citizens to hold accounts or own certain property in a foreign country
The PEP’s Position or Involvement in Business
The position that a PEP holds and the manner in which the PEP presents his or her position are important factors to be taken into account.
Possible PEP red flags are:
- The PEP has substantial authority over or access to state assets and funds, policies and operations
- The PEP has control over regulatory approvals, including awarding licences and concessions
- The PEP has the formal or informal ability to control mechanisms established to prevent and detect ML/TF
- The PEP (actively) downplays importance of his/her public function, or the public function s/he is associated with
- The PEP does not reveal all positions (including those that are ex officio)
- The PEP has access to or control or influence over government or corporate accounts
- The PEP (partially) owns or controls financial institutions or DNFBPs, either privately or ex officio
- The PEP (partially) owns or controls the financial institution or DNFBP (either privately or ex officio) that is a counterpart or a correspondent in a transaction
- The PEP is a director or beneficial owner of a legal entity that is a client of a financial institution or a DNFBP
Industries & Sectors that are PEP Red Flags:
A connection with a high-risk industry may raise the risk of doing business with a PEP. Under the FATF’s Recommendation 1, competent authorities, financial institutions and DNFBPs are required to determine which types of clients may be at higher risk.
For this, financial institutions and DNFBPs will also be guided by national guidance or risk assessments. Which industries are considered at risk depends on the risk assessments and other industry safeguards in place and varies from country to country. Examples of higher-risk industries that are PEP red flags include:
- Arms trade and defence industry
- Banking and finance
- Businesses active in government procurement (i.e., those whose business is selling to government or state agencies)
- Construction and (large) infrastructure
- Development and other types of assistance
- Human health activities
- Mining and extraction
- Privatisation
- Provision of public goods and utilities
Product, Service, Transaction or Delivery Channels
FATF recommendations also contain examples of product, industry, service, and transaction or delivery channel factors that suggest higher risk, irrespective of the type of customer. These examples are:
- Private banking
- Anonymous transactions (including cash)
- Non-face-to-face business relationships or transactions
- Payments received from unknown or un-associated third parties
- If PEPs use these industries, products, services, or transactions or delivery channels, this adds another risk factor (depending on the nature of the PEP).
In addition to the examples already listed in the FATF recommendations, there are other products, industries, services, and transaction or delivery channels that can become particularly vulnerable when used by PEPs.
Examples of these PEP red flags are:
- Businesses that cater mainly to (high value) foreign clients
- Trust and company service providers
- Wire transfers to and from a PEP account that cannot be economically explained or that lack relevant originator or beneficiary information
- Correspondent and concentration accounts
- Dealers in precious metals, precious stones, and other luxurious goods.
- Dealers in luxurious transport vehicles (such as cars, sports cars, ships, helicopters, and planes).
- High-end real estate dealers
Country-Specific PEP Red Flags and Indicators
The FATF recommendations contain examples of higher-risk countries and other geographic risk factors that are irrespective of the type of customer.
Additionally, the following red flags and indicators relating to countries can be taken into account when doing business with a PEP:
- The foreign or domestic PEP is from a higher risk country
- Additional risks occur if a foreign or domestic PEP from a higher risk country would in his/her position have control or influence over decisions that would effectively address identified shortcomings in the AML/CFT system
- Foreign or domestic PEPs from countries identified by credible sources as having a high risk of corruption
- Foreign or domestic PEPs from countries that have not signed or ratified relevant anti-corruption conventions (or otherwise have not or have only insufficiently implemented these conventions), such as the UNCAC and the OECD Anti-Bribery Convention.
- Foreign or domestic PEPs from countries with mono-economies (economic dependency on one or a few export products), especially if export control or licensing measures have been put in place
Source: FATF Guidance on Politically Exposed Persons (2013)
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