The
European Banking Authority (EBA) has extended its guidelines on money
laundering (ML) and terrorist financing (TF) risk factors to crypto-asset
service providers (CASPs). The move aims to help the nascent crypto sector
tackle illicit finance risks and is the next step after the introduction of
cryptocurrency legislation in May last year.
The new
guidelines list risk factors and mitigation measures that CASPs should consider
when developing anti-money laundering (AML ) and countering terrorism financing
(CTF) policies. These include assessing risks from customers, products,
transactions, and jurisdictions.
“CASPs can
be abused for financial crime purposes, including ML and TF,” the authority
commented. “The risks of this happening can be increased, for example because
of the speed of crypto-asset transfers or because some products contain
features that hide the user’s identity.”
The
guidelines explain how CASPs can adjust controls like transaction monitoring,
blockchain analytics, and enhanced due diligence. They also cover managing
risks from self-hosted wallets.
Advice for
banks highlights the dangers of dealing with unregulated crypto firms. This
risk escalates where traditional financial institutions have customers active
in crypto-assets.
Complying With Tighter
Regulation
The move
comes as the EU brings CASPs into its AML/CTF regulatory perimeter….