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What Singapore’s Financial Action Task Force assessment signals for financial institutions

 

Singapore’s latest Financial Action Task Force (FATF) evaluation affirms the strength and maturity of its anti-money laundering and counter-terrorist financing (AML/CFT) framework, positioning it as a global benchmark. At the same time, it signals a clear shift in regulatory expectations for financial institutions operating in and through the market.

The focus is no longer on whether frameworks exist, but on whether they deliver measurable, defensible outcomes in practice.

What has changed?

Regulators are placing increasing emphasis on effectiveness, how well risks are identified, managed and escalated rather than on technical compliance alone.

In this article, we uncover how organisations can:

  • Demonstrate that AML/CFT controls are effective in practice, beyond technical compliance
  • Strengthen transparency across ownership structures and source of wealth
  • Improve the quality and defensibility of outcomes, including escalation and reporting
  • Address growing cross border and interconnected risks using more data led approaches

Positioning for what comes next

Capabilities once viewed as enhancements such as advanced analytics, control effectiveness testing and stronger data foundations are increasingly becoming baseline expectations. Institutions that act decisively now will be better positioned to meet evolving supervisory scrutiny and strengthen the resilience of their AML/CFT frameworks.

Contact us


Graham Dawes
Forensic & Financial Crime Partner
Deloitte Southeast Asia
gdawes@deloitte.com

Kalyani Vasan
Forensic & Financial Crime Partner
Deloitte Southeast Asia
mvasan@deloitte.com

Jamie King
Forensic & Financial Crime Director
Deloitte Singapore
tking@deloitte.com

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