Technology

#Only 1% of laundered cash in EU is detected — ABN AMRO wants to improve that

#Only 1% of laundered cash in EU is detected — ABN AMRO wants to improve that

Technology has simplified the movement of money so much that people and businesses can send funds anywhere in the world, instantly, but tech’s rapid advance has also brought new ways to launder cash.

In fact, the United Nations warns this rise of “megabyte money” makes curbing the transfer of illicit funds more urgent than ever. 

Globally, estimates suggest between $800 billion and $2 trillion in laundered money flows through the financial system every year, and an overwhelming majority of it goes undetected. The Netherlands alone sees $16 billion in criminal money flowing through its financial system.

Zooming out to Europe as a whole, the European Commission found just 1% of an estimated $190 billion in laundered funds were successfully confiscated between 2010 and 2014.

To help uncover money laundering across the EU, ABN AMRO teamed up with ING, Rabobank, Triodos Bank, and de Volksbank to share all of their customers’ payment transactions in an initiative creatively dubbed Transaction Monitoring Netherlands (TMNL).

Indeed, thanks to a new Dutch law allowing banks to share limited customer data, 12 billion transactions per year are now set to be trawled by algorithms built to detect suspicious financial activity, equating to 33 million per day.

Through TMNL, the five banks will look to jointly monitor their transactions for signals of money laundering and terrorist financing; ‘strength in numbers’ the rallying cry.

ABN AMRO takes a holistic approach to detecting laundered money

Analyzing financial data with AI, advanced analytics, and machine learning technologies plays a major role in that task, sure, but so do manual investigations and other forms of cooperation between banks.

“It’s not only about looking at information (transactions), it’s also about putting the right questions to customers,” said ABN AMRO’s managing director of financial crime detection Robin de Jongh at TNW2020.

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