Financial Services Weekly News - January 2016 #3

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Regulatory Developments

FinCEN Issues Advisory on Update to List of FATF Identified Jurisdictions

FinCEN has issued an advisory to financial institutions summarizing updates made by the FATF to the list of jurisdictions with strategic AML/CFT deficiencies. According to the FinCEN advisory, Algeria has been removed from the list of jurisdictions subject to FATF’s call for countermeasures or subject to enhanced due diligence requirements due to their AML/CFT deficiencies. FATF now includes Algeria in its “Improving Global AML/CFT Compliance: on-going process” list. The advisory also states that Ecuador and Sudan have been removed from the FATF listing and monitoring process. Financial institutions use the FATF listings to evaluate AML/CFT risk in connection with implementing risk-based policies, procedures and practices under the BSA.

FinCEN Requires Disclosure in Manhattan and Miami Real Estate Sales

On Jan. 13, FinCEN issued GTOs that will temporarily require certain U.S. title insurance companies to identify the natural persons behind companies purchasing high-end residential real estate in Manhattan, New York and Miami-Dade County, Florida. Under specific circumstances, the GTOs will require the companies to record and report to FinCEN the beneficial ownership information of legal entities purchasing certain residential real estate without external financing. The information gathered from the GTOs will advance law enforcement’s ability to identify the natural persons involved in transactions vulnerable to abuse for money laundering. The GTOs will be in effect for 180 days beginning on March 1, 2016 and expire on Aug. 27, 2016.

SEC Updates Money Market Fund Reform FAQs

On Jan. 13, the staff of the SEC’s Division of Investment Management updated its 2014 Money Market Fund Reform FAQs. A marked copy of the FAQs that shows the revisions to the previous iteration of the FAQs from Aug. 4, 2015 is available here. The updated FAQs do not revise any of the existing FAQs from August 2015 but provide for six additional responses to frequently asked questions. These additional responses address, among other things, the filing of Form N-CR in the context of reverse stock splits and “private” money market funds, as well as Form N-CR and website posting requirements when a sponsor provides capital support to “top off” a money market fund in anticipation of its liquidation. In addition, the FAQs address the application of Rule 35d-1 (the Names Rule) to money market funds that utilize the terms “government” or “treasury” in their names, including the interplay between the 80% policy under Rule 35d-1 and the 99.5% policy for “government money market funds” under Rule 2a-7.

Client Alert: SEC Adopts Rules Implementing Forward Incorporation in Form S-1 and Streamlined Financial Statement Requirements for Emerging Growth Companies

Goodwin Procter’s Capital Markets practice released a client alert on the SEC’s adoption of rules required by the recently enacted FAST Act that reduce financial statement disclosure requirements for pre-effective IPO registration statements filed by emerging growth companies (EGCs) and permit forward incorporation by reference by smaller reporting companies in Form S-1 registration statements. The rules could be particularly helpful to publicly traded community banks, many of which qualify for EGC status.

Enforcement & Litigation

Individuals Can Be Responsible for Anti-Money Laundering Control Failures, District Court Finds

On Jan. 8, a U.S. District Court in Minnesota ruled that compliance officers and other individuals can be held responsible for anti-money laundering control failures under the BSA. The suit follows the assessment of a $1 million fine and industry bar by FinCEN against a former chief compliance officer of MoneyGram, in which FinCEN found the officer had failed to take actions required of him under the law, including investigating and reporting suspicious activity. The same day FinCEN assessed the penalty, the U.S. Department of the Treasury filed suit against the officer to reduce the fine to a judgment and enjoin him from working in the financial industry. The officer moved to dismiss on various grounds, including that the provisions of the BSA did not warrant an individual penalty. The court denied the motion, writing: “The plain language of the statute provides that a civil penalty may be imposed on corporate officers and employees like [the officer], who was responsible for designing and overseeing MoneyGram’s AML program,” and also rejected the remainder of the officer’s claims, including that he was deprived of due process by bias and press leaks, that the fine was unduly large and that the penalty was time barred. The decision highlights the exposure facing individuals with responsibility to design and oversee AML programs.

Webinar – Antitrust Enforcement Landscape in 2016: Looking Back and Looking Ahead

On Feb. 4 from noon to 1 p.m. EST, Goodwin Procter partners Andrea Agathoklis Murino, Todd Hahn and Kirby Lewis will host a complimentary webinar discussion on key enforcement actions at the Federal Trade Commission and the Antitrust Division of the Department of Justice, as well as the international competition law bodies. Goodwin Procter's Antitrust & Competition Group will evaluate what these actions mean for transactions going forward and discuss deal trends and best practices. To register for the webinar please click here.

 

DISCLAIMER: Because of the generality of this update, the information provided herein may not be applicable in all situations and should not be acted upon without specific legal advice based on particular situations.

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