June 2016
FinCEN’s Customer Due Diligence Final Rule
Highlights of the long-awaited requirements
BETTY SANTANGELO AND MELISSA G.R. GOLDSTEIN, SCHULTE ROTH & ZABEL LLP
O
n May 11, 2016, the US Treasury
Department’s Financial Crimes
Enforcement Network (“FinCEN”)
published its long-awaited Final Rule
regarding the customer due diligence (“CDD”)
requirements under the Bank Secrecy Act
for banks, broker-dealers, mutual funds, and
futures commission merchants and introducing
brokers in commodities (collectively, “covered
financial institutions”).1 The Final Rule requires
these covered financial institutions to identify
and verify the natural persons behind legal
entity customers (beneficial owners), subject to
certain exemptions. The new CDD requirements
present significant compliance challenges for
covered financial institutions. Accordingly,
compliance with the Final Rule is not mandatory
until May 11, 2018 (the “Applicability Date”),
approximately two years after its effective date
of July 11, 2016.
The Final Rule takes into account many, but not
all, of the comments received in response to the
Proposed Rule.2 At a high level, the Final Rule
requires:
• onsistent with the Proposed Rule, covered
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financial institutions must conduct CDD on
certain legal entity customers that open new
accounts going forward from the Applicability
Date.
– FinCEN considers CDD as consisting of the
following four elements: (1) identifying
and verifying the identity of customers;
(2) identifying and verifying the identity of
beneficial owners of legal entity customers;
(3) understanding the nature and purpose of
customer relationships; and (4) conducting
ongoing monitoring for reporting
suspicious transactions, and, on a riskbasis, maintaining and updating customer
information.
Under FinCEN’s existing rules,
the first element of CDD is already satisfied
by the existing customer identification
program (“CIP”) requirements of covered
financial institutions, and the third and
1
fourth elements are described by FinCEN
as “already implicitly required for covered
financial institutions to comply with their
suspicious activity reporting requirements.”
According to the Final Rule, the only new
requirement is the obligation to take explicit
steps to identify and verify the identity of
the natural persons who are the beneficial
owners of legal entity customers.
– he definition of beneficial owner remains
T
unchanged and includes both an individual
who owns more than 25% of the equity
interests in a company and a single
individual who exercises control.
• overed financial institutions must collect
C
information on beneficial owners of legal
entity customers when an account is opened,
either using the model form included with
the Final Rule or taking other steps to
collect the same information, provided the
individual providing the information makes
a representation that, to the best of his or
her knowledge, the information provided
is complete and correct. Covered financial
institutions can rely on the information
provided by the customer (provided that it has
no knowledge of facts that would reasonably
call into question the reliability of the
information).
• overed financial institutions must use CIP
C
procedures to verify the identity of beneficial
owners of legal entity customers, although
the procedures for CDD need not be exactly
the procedures for CIP. Moreover, unlike the
CIP rule, the covered financial institutions
can rely on copies of documents.
As with the
CIP rule, covered financial institutions may
rely on the performance by another financial
institution (including an affiliate) of the
beneficial ownership requirements of the Final
Rule, as long as the same criteria are met.
• overed financial institutions are not required
C
to update beneficial ownership information
on a periodic or ongoing basis, but only on an
event-driven basis, when in the course of their
normal monitoring they detect information
about the customer that may be relevant to
assessing the risk of the customer.
• FinCEN clarified the definition of “legal entity
customer” to mean “a corporation, limited
liability company, or other entity that is
created by the filing of a public document with
a Secretary of State or similar office, a general
partnership, and any similar entity formed
under the laws of a foreign jurisdiction, that
opens an account.” This definition would not
include sole proprietorships, unincorporated
associations or trusts (other than statutory
trusts created by a filing with a Secretary of
State or similar office).
• The Final Rule adopts all of the exclusions from
the definition of “legal entity customer” that
were listed in the Proposed Rule,3 and adds
several others:
– A bank holding company, as defined in
section 2 of the Bank Holding Company Act
of 1956 (12 U.S.C. § 1841), or savings and
loan holding company, as defined in section
10(n) of the Home Owners Loan Act (12
U.S.C. § 1467a(n)).
– A pooled investment vehicle that is
operated or advised by a financial
institution excluded under this paragraph.
– An insurance company that is regulated by
a state.
– A financial market utility designated by
the Financial Stability Oversight Council
under Title VII of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street
Reform and Consumer Protection Act of
2010.
– A foreign financial institution established in
a jurisdiction where the regulator of such
institution maintains beneficial ownership
information regarding such institutions.
– A non-US governmental department,
agency or political subdivision that
engages only in governmental rather than
commercial activities.
.
June 2016
– ny legal entity only to the extent that it
A
opens a private banking account for nonUS persons that are subject to FinCEN’s
private banking account rule (31 C.F.R. §
1010.620).
– on-excluded pooled investment vehicles,
N
such as non-US managed mutual funds,
hedge funds and private equity funds:
Covered financial institutions would be
required to collect beneficial ownership
information under the control prong
only (e.g., an individual with significant
responsibility to control, manage or direct
the operator, adviser, or general partner
of the vehicle).
– harities and nonprofit entities: covered
C
financial institutions would be required to
collect beneficial ownership information
under the control prong only.
• overed financial institutions are exempt
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from the beneficial ownership requirement
with respect to certain new accounts solely
used to finance the purchase of postage,
insurance premiums or leasing of equipment,
and certain private label credit card accounts.
• overed financial institutions must maintain
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records of any identifying information
obtained regarding the beneficial ownership,
including the certification (if obtained),
for five years after the date the account is
closed. Covered financial institutions must
also maintain records of a description of any
document relied on, of any non-documentary
methods and the results of any measures
undertaken, and of the resolution of each
substantive discrepancy, for five years after
the record is made.
• n addition, the Final Rule adopts a new
I
“fifth pillar” of the AML program, which
requires appropriate risk-based procedures
for conducting ongoing customer due
diligence, to include, but not limited to: “(i)
Understanding the nature and purpose of
customer relationships for the purpose of
developing a customer risk profile; and (ii)
Conducting ongoing monitoring to identify
and report suspicious transactions and, on a
2
risk basis, to maintain and update customer
information.”
– he term “customer risk profile” is used to
T
refer to the information gathered about a
customer to develop the baseline against
which customer activity is assessed for
suspicious transaction reporting, and may
include information such as the type of
customer or type of account, service or
product, and may, but need not, include
a system of risk ratings or categories of
customers.
– inancial institutions are required to
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conduct ongoing monitoring to identify and
report suspicious transactions and conduct
a monitoring-triggered update of customer
information. When a financial institution
detects information about the customer in
the course of its monitoring that is relevant
to assessing risk, including a change in
beneficial ownership information, it must
update the customer information, including
the beneficial ownership information.
– inCEN views the fifth pillar as an explicit
F
codification of existing expectations.
Apparently, covered financial institutions
do not have until the Applicability Date to
implement the requirements set forth in
the fifth pillar.
According to the preamble
to the Final Rule, “current industry practice
to comply with existing expectations for
SAR reporting should already satisfy this
proposed requirement.”4
As a companion to the Final Rule, the Treasury
Department also sent a letter to Congress
encouraging the adoption of legislation that
would require US companies to compile
beneficial ownership information at the time
of their creation, disclose beneficial ownership
information to the states at the time the
company is created, and file such information
with the Treasury Department for use by law
enforcement.5 THFJ
FO OTNOTES
1. ee Final Rule, Customer Due Diligence
S
Requirements for Financial Institutions, 81 Fed. Reg.
29398 (May 11, 2016), available at https://www.
gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/FR-2016-05-11/pdf/2016-10567.
pdf (“Final Rule”).
2.
ee Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, Customer Due
S
Diligence Requirements for Financial Institutions, 79
Fed. Reg. 45151 (Aug.
4, 2015), available at https://
www.fincen.gov/statutes_regs/files/CDD-NPRMFinal.pdf (“Proposed Rule”).
3. he Proposed Rule and Final Rule exclude the
T
following entities from the definition of “legal entity
customer”: “(i) A financial institution regulated by
a Federal functional regulator or a bank regulated
by a State bank regulator; (ii) A person described
in § 1020.315(b)(2) through (5) of this chapter; (iii)
An issuer of a class of securities registered under
section 12 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 or
that is required to file reports under section 15(d) of
that Act; (iv) An investment company, as defined in
section 3 of the Investment Company Act of 1940,
that is registered with the Securities and Exchange
Commission under that Act; (v) An investment
adviser, as defined in section 202(a)(11) of the
Investment Advisers Act of 1940, that is registered
with the Securities and Exchange Commission under
that Act; (vi) An exchange or clearing agency, as
defined in section 3 of the Securities Exchange Act of
1934, that is registered under section 6 or 17A of the
Securities Exchange Act of that Act; (vii) Any other
entity registered with the Securities and Exchange
Commission under the Securities Exchange Act of
1934; (viii) A registered entity, commodity pool
operator, commodity trading advisor, retail foreign
exchange dealer, swap dealer, or major swap
participant, each as defined in section 1a of the
Commodity Exchange Act, that is registered with
the Commodity Futures Trading Commission; (ix) A
public accounting firm registered under section 102
of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act.” Proposed Rule, 79 Fed.
Reg. at 45170-4517.
See also Final Rule, 81 Fed. Reg.
at 29452.
4. inal Rule, 81 Fed.
Reg. at 29420.
F
5. ee Letter to The Speaker of US House of
S
Representatives, Honorable Paul D.
Ryan, from
Secretary of the Treasury, Jacob J. Lew (May 5,
2016), available at https://www.treasury.gov/presscenter/press-releases/Documents/Lew%20to%20
Ryan%20on%20CDD.PDF. See also Press Release,
Treasury Announces Key Regulations and Legislation
to Counter Money Laundering and Corruption,
Combat Tax Evasion (May 5, 2016), available at
https://www.treasury.gov/press-center/pressreleases/Pages/jl0451.aspx.
.