Jersey Grants AML Exemptions to Local Lenders While Reinforcing Responsibility

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Jersey has introduced a significant regulatory adjustment that eases compliance obligations for certain local lending businesses. Through the Proceeds of Crime (Low Risk Financial Services Business) (Jersey) Order 2024, the government has recognized that some types of lending activity pose minimal risk when it comes to money laundering, terrorist financing, and proliferation financing.

The change specifically applies to lenders who meet a set of strict criteria. To qualify for exemption, lenders must operate solely from Jersey and restrict their services to local residents or Jersey-registered companies. They cannot publicly advertise their services, must lend only their own funds, and must route all transactions through Jersey-registered banks. Only those who fit this narrow profile will be able to operate without the requirement of appointing a Money Laundering Reporting Officer (MLRO) or conducting a formal Business Risk Assessment.

The Jersey Financial Services Commission (JFSC) has stated that it will proactively reach out to lenders currently registered under the lending business framework to identify whether they fall within this exemption. This direct engagement is intended to create clarity and avoid uncertainty for businesses navigating the regulatory change.

The exemption reflects a broader strategy by Jersey’s regulators to apply a risk-based approach to financial oversight. Instead of imposing uniform requirements across all financial service providers, the government is tailoring rules in recognition of the different levels of exposure and risk presented by various business models. For smaller local lenders, particularly those engaging only in private, low-volume transactions, the full suite of AML and CFT obligations was considered unnecessarily burdensome compared to the risk they actually pose.

Nevertheless, authorities are keen to emphasize that the exemption does not represent a weakening of Jersey’s financial crime safeguards. Lenders who fall under the new order remain responsible for upholding a wide range of compliance duties. These include performing customer due diligence and enhanced due diligence when necessary, monitoring for sanctions compliance, maintaining adequate records, ensuring suspicious activity is reported, and providing ongoing staff training on AML and CFT obligations.

Industry experts note that while the exemption will ease administrative costs for small lenders, it does not remove accountability. On the contrary, businesses are expected to demonstrate that they continue to operate with integrity and in alignment with the island’s high standards for financial conduct. Regulators have made it clear that exemptions will be monitored closely, and misuse of the framework will not be tolerated.

This regulatory shift underscores Jersey’s ongoing commitment to balancing efficiency with robust oversight. By removing unnecessary red tape for low-risk businesses while reinforcing expectations of good governance, the island is positioning itself as both a competitive and trustworthy financial center.

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