The Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) has imposed S$27.45 million in penalties on nine financial institutions for serious breaches in anti-money laundering (AML) and counter-terrorism financing (CFT) regulations. This follows a major investigation linked to one of the largest money laundering cases in Singapore’s history, where more than S$3 billion in criminal proceeds were uncovered.
In August 2023, Singapore authorities arrested 10 foreign nationals allegedly involved in laundering illicit funds from online gambling operations and scams. The case drew global attention due to the staggering size of the assets seized—luxury properties, vehicles, cash, gold bars, jewelry, and even rare collectibles—amounting to over S$3 billion.
Following the arrests, MAS launched an extensive two-year probe into financial institutions that had handled the suspects’ funds. The investigation uncovered significant lapses in AML/CFT practices, including failure to adequately assess customer risk profiles, weak monitoring of high-risk transactions, and insufficient verification of the sources of wealth.
The penalties are as follows:
- Credit Suisse (Singapore branch): S$5.8 million
- United Overseas Bank: S$5.6 million
- UBS Singapore: S$3 million
- Citibank N.A.: S$2.6 million
- Julius Baer (Singapore branch): S$2.4 million
- UOB Kay Hian (brokerage): S$2.85 million
- Blue Ocean Invest (asset management): S$2.4 million
- Trident Trust Company (Singapore): S$1.8 million
- LGT Bank (Singapore): S$1 million
MAS highlighted that these institutions had formal AML/CFT frameworks in place but failed in proper implementation. The deficiencies ranged from neglecting to verify customer backgrounds to ignoring red flags during ongoing monitoring.
In addition to monetary fines, MAS issued prohibition orders and reprimands against individuals responsible for compliance failures. Notably, four executives from Blue Ocean Invest, including the CEO and COO, received bans ranging from three to six years from working in financial services. Two former relationship managers—one each from Citibank and Julius Baer—are also facing criminal charges related to document forgery and facilitating fraudulent transactions.
The regulator stated that all penalised institutions are cooperating and taking corrective actions to strengthen their internal controls. MAS has promised continued supervision and warned that the bar for AML compliance will remain high.
This enforcement action underscores Singapore’s commitment to maintaining its reputation as a clean and trusted financial centre. It also signals to global financial players that regulatory enforcement in Singapore is not only robust but uncompromising.