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  • 3 Mitigating Risks

    Although LFIs should judge their own risk tolerance and risk management capabilities, the CBUAE does not expect or encourage LFIs to broadly prohibit or exit customer relationships with the real estate and precious metals and stones sectors. These sectors are important parts of the UAE economy, and they need access to financial services to conduct their legitimate business. The CBUAE does expect, however, that LFIs understand their risk and take effective, risk-based steps to protect themselves from abuse and from illicit actors and transactions. Effective risk mitigation is therefore critical to protecting the LFI, complying with its legal obligations, and meeting supervisory expectations.

    The sections below discuss how LFIs can apply specific preventive measures to identify, manage, and mitigate the risks associated with the real estate and precious metals and stones sectors. It is not a comprehensive discussion of all AML/CFT requirements imposed on LFIs. LFIs should consult the UAE legal and regulatory framework currently in force. The controls discussed below should be integrated into the LFI's larger AML/CFT compliance program, and supported with appropriate governance and training.

    • 3.1 Risk-Based Approach

      • 3.1.1 Overarching common requirements

        LFIs must take a risk-based approach to the preventive measures they put in place for all customers, including customers in the real estate and precious metals and stones sectors. A risk-based approach means that LFIs should dedicate compliance resources and effort to customers, business lines, branches, and products and services in keeping with the risk presented by those customers, business lines, branches, and products and services, as assessed in accordance with Article 4 of AML-CFT Decision.

        The risk-based approach has three principal components:

        • 3.1.1.1 Conducting an enterprise risk assessment, as required by Article 4.1 of AML-CFT Decision.

          The enterprise risk assessment should reflect the presence of higher-risk customers, including DPMS and real estate sector participants in an LFI's customer base. This assessment should include higher-risk customers from outside the UAE whose risks will also need to be assessed. These assessments should in turn be reflected in the LFI's inherent risk rating. In addition, the controls risk element of the LFI's enterprise risk assessment, as required by section 4.2.1 of the Anti-Money Laundering and Combating the Financing of Terrorism and Illegal Organisations Guidelines for Financial Institutions, should take into consideration the strength of the controls that the LFI has in place to mitigate the risks posed by its higher-risk customers, including the preventive measures discussed below.

        • 3.1.1.2 Identifying and assessing the risks associated with specific customers.

          The LFI should assess the risk of each customer to identify those that require enhanced due diligence (EDD) and to support its entity risk assessment. In assessing the risks of a DPMS or real estate sector participant, LFIs should consider:

           i.Geographic Risk: The risks associated with the jurisdictions in which the customer lives (for individuals) or is registered/headquartered (for legal persons) and where it operates, including the jurisdictions where it has subsidiaries, where it sources its products (where relevant), and where its main counterparties are based. These may include the overall risk of money laundering, terrorist financing, and financing of proliferation, as well as what is known regarding the prevalence of abuse of entities in these sectors.
           
            There are a number of sources that LFIs can use to develop a list of high-risk countries, jurisdictions, or regions. LFIs should consult any publications issued by the National Anti-Money Laundering and Combating the Financing of Terrorism and financing of Illegal Organizations Committee (NAMLCFTC)5, UAE FIU and by the FATF, including the FATF's list of jurisdictions subject to countermeasures and to increased monitoring. LFIs may also use public free databases such as, for example, the Basel AML Index6 or the Transparency International Corruption Perceptions Index.7 LFIs should not rely solely on public lists, however, and should consider their own experiences and the nature of their exposure to each jurisdiction when assessing the risk of that jurisdiction.
           
           ii.Customer Risks: For real estate agents and brokers and DPMS, customer risk can be assessed as the proportion of higher-risk customer types (e.g. PEPs, legal persons, and customers from high- risk jurisdictions) within a customer's customer base.
           
           iii.Product, Service, and Delivery Channel Risk: LFIs should assess risk in this category on two dimensions:
           
            a.The products and services that the customer offers to its customers, and the delivery channels through which it offers these products and services. Products, services, and delivery channels that promote the rapid, anonymous transfer of high values are particularly attractive to illicit actors. These may include, but are not limited to:
           
             i.Online/non-contact sales: Non-face to face transactions make it easier for criminals to hide their identifies.
           
             ii.Accepting cash for high-value purchases. Cash is very difficult to trace and can be exchanged without involving the formal banking system, and thus is particularly attractive to criminals.
           
             iii.Accepting virtual assets: Virtual assets, like cash, are anonymous and difficult to trace to their users. Unlike cash, virtual assets allow parties to carry out transactions even when they are at a distance from one another. These qualities, combined with the lack of consistent regulation of entities that deal in virtual assets, make virtual assets high risk for abuse by illicit actors.
           
             Specific high-risk products and services offered by each customer type are discussed below in sections 3.1.2 and 3.1.3.
           
            b.The LFI products and services that the customer intends to use, and the delivery channels through which the LFI will provide these services. LFIs should draw on their entity risk assessment to assess the risk of the products and services each customer uses or intends to use. (This subject is also discussed in section 3.2.1.3.2 below in relation to understanding the nature and purpose of the business relationship.)
           
           iv.Controls Risk: LFIs should seek to understand the regulatory requirements in place for the customer, as well as how well they are enforced. This assessment is particularly important for those DPMS and real estate brokers that qualify as DNFBPs and therefore are also subject to such requirements. Other participants in the real estate sector, such as developers, are not required to comply with AML/CFT preventive measures. In addition, participants in the precious metals and stones sector may also be required to comply with UAE requirements or global standards related to sourcing precious metals and stones and transparency of supply chains. Where relevant to a customer's business, LFIs should consider whether its customer conducts appropriate supply chain due diligence.
           

          Questions that an LFI may ask to determine customer risk profile include, but are not limited to:

           Where is the customer incorporated? Where does it operate? Are these high-risk jurisdictions?
           What products and services does the customer provide?
           What is the trading volume of the business?
           What customer base does the customer serve?
           What is the regulatory environment in the jurisdiction(s) where the customer is incorporated/has operations?
           Is there an authority that actively enforces the requirements?
           Is the customer required to perform CDD on cash customers above a certain threshold in all jurisdictions where it operates? In such scenarios, is it required to identify the beneficial owners of legal person customers?
           Is the customer required (as are DNFBPs in the UAE) to conduct a regular independent audit? Did the most recent audit have any material findings?
           Does the customer perform sanctions screening?
           What is the main channel (in-person vs. online) and methods (cash, wire transfers, checks, etc.) of conducting transactions and in which currency (or multiple currencies)?
           

          In addition to risk rating customers, LFIs should also consider the risks of specific transactions, especially high-value transactions, those involving high-risk jurisdictions, and those that represent departures from a customer's standard or expected behavior. LFIs should be aware of sectoral risks when reviewing large transactions associated with the DPMS or real estate sectors, or transactions of any size that do not have a clear licit economic purpose.


          5 Available at: https://www.namlcftc.gov.ae/en/high-risk-countries.php
          6 Available at: https://baselgovernance.org/basel-aml-index
          7 Available at: https://www.transparency.org/en/cpi/2020/index/nzl

        • 3.1.1.3 Applying EDD and other preventive measures

          LFIs must apply EDD and other preventive measures to customers determined to be higher-risk, as required by Article 4.2(b) of AML-CFT Decision, or to specified higher-risk customer types, no matter their risk rating, as required by AML-CFT Decision. EDD measures should be designed to mitigate the specific risks identified with particular customers. Examples of EDD measures are offered below in section 3.2.

      • 3.1.2 Key Considerations for DPMS

        Beyond the general considerations discussed above, in assessing the risk of a DPMS customer LFIs should consider:

         Geographic Risk: Whether the jurisdiction(s) in which the customer is based or operates are known centres for illegal or unregulated mining of precious metals and stones.
         
         Product, Service, and Delivery Channel Risk: The following products and services are particularly high risk:
         
          oTrade in gold bullion and diamonds: The high inherent value of these substances, their ability to retain value for a long period of time, the size and stability of the market, relative ease of exchange, high value by weight, and the difficulty of tracing them makes gold and diamonds particularly attractive to criminals.
         
          oMetal accounts: Metal accounts are accounts held by a custodian institution and denominated in precious metals (such as gold, silver, or platinum) rather than in fiat currencies. They allow the account holder to quickly buy and sell precious metals without needing to have a face-to-face interaction with a DPMS.
         
      • 3.1.3 Key Considerations for the Real Estate Sector

        Beyond the general considerations discussed above, in assessing the risk of a customer who is a participant in the real estate sector, LFIs should consider:

         Controls Risk: In the case of transactions or customers related to the real estate sector, an assessment of controls risk should also include the regulations governing the real estate sector as a whole, and not just regulations governing the sector participants (real estate agents and brokers). LFIs should assess whether regulations governing property transactions are likely to make the sector more or less attractive to illicit actors. As discussed above in section 2.2.2, these may include the openness to foreigners, the widespread use of cash and shell companies, and the intensity of scrutiny of real estate transactions.
         

        In many cases neither party to a real-estate related-transaction will be a business or individual whose primary activity is related to the real estate sector (e.g., the sale of a private home). In such cases, in addition to the risk of the specific customer involved, LFIs should consider aspects of the transaction itself, including:

         The jurisdiction in which the real property that is the subject of the transaction is located;
         The jurisdiction in which the customer's counterparty is located;
         If the LFI's customer is the purchaser, whether the purchase price is consistent with the purchaser's known means and income;
         Whether the purchase price is generally consistent with the market price for roughly similar properties;
         Whether all parties to the transaction are resident in jurisdictions other than the jurisdiction in which the property is located;
         Whether the seller of the property has owned it only for a short period of time;
         Whether shell companies or other legal structures are involved in the purchase in such a way as to obscure the true owner of the property; and
         Whether the parties to the transaction appear to be related (e.g. are represented by the same law firm or real estate broker, share corporate directors, or share an address), but the relationship between them is unclear.
         
    • 3.2 Customer Due Diligence and Enhanced Due Diligence

      CDD, and where necessary EDD, are the core preventive measures that help LFIs manage the risks of all customers, particularly higher-risk customers. As discussed below, each stage of the CDD process gives LFIs an opportunity to collect the information they need to identify and manage the specific risks of higher- risk customers.

      The goal of the CDD process is to ensure that LFIs understand who their customer is and the purpose for which the customer will use the LFI’s services. Where an LFI cannot satisfy itself that it understands a customer, then it should not accept that legal person or legal arrangement as a customer. If there is an existing business relationship, the LFI should not continue it. LFIs should also consider filing a Suspicious Transaction Report (STR), as discussed in section 3.3 below.

      Under Article (5) of AML-CFT Decision, LFIs must conduct CDD before or during the establishment of the business relationship or account, or before executing a transaction for a Customer with whom there is no business relationship. Although Article 5 permits CDD to be delayed in circumstances of lower risk, the higher risk of the DPMS and real estate sectors makes it very unlikely that delayed CDD will be appropriate in the context of onboarding such customers.

      LFIs should consult the UAE legal and regulatory framework currently in force for a full discussion of their CDD obligations and of the CBUAE's expectations for CDD procedures.

      • 3.2.1 Overarching common requirements

        The following elements of CDD should be carried out for all customers, no matter the customer type.

        • 3.2.1.1 Customer Identification and verification

          Under Article 8 of AML-CFT Decision, LFIs are required to identify and verify the identity of all customers.

          In most countries, including the UAE, anyone operating a business, whether as an individual or a legal person, must have a business license. Such persons may also need to be registered with their country's ministry of commerce or economy. Among other documents required for customer identification and verification, LFIs should ensure that they collect proof of an active license and/or registration from all business customers. Where a license is required, lack of one may indicate that a customer is attempting to avoid regulation and supervision by the authorities in the UAE or in its home jurisdiction.

        • 3.2.1.2 Beneficial Owner Identification

          The majority of DPMS and real estate sector customers will be legal persons. The UAE requires all financial institutions to identify the beneficial owners of a legal person customer by obtaining and verifying the identity of all individuals who, individually or jointly, have a controlling ownership interest in the legal person of 25% or more. Where no such individual meets this description, the LFI must identify and verify the identity of the individual(s) holding the senior management position in the entity.

          Legal arrangements may be involved in transactions related to real estate. For legal arrangement customers, LFIs must verify the identity of the settlor, the trustee(s), or anyone holding a similar position, the identity of the beneficiaries or class of beneficiaries, the identity of any other natural person exercising ultimate effective control over the legal arrangement and obtain sufficient information regarding the beneficial owner to enable verification of his/her identity at the time of payment, or at the time he/she intends to exercise his/her legally acquired rights.

          The beneficial owner of a legal person or arrangement must be an individual. Another legal person or arrangement cannot be the beneficial owner of a customer, no matter what percentage it owns. LFIs must continue tracing ownership all the way up the ownership chain until they discover all individuals who own or control at least 25% of the LFI's customer.

          When the LFI has identified qualifying beneficial owners, it should perform CDD on each individual beneficial owner, in accordance with the requirements of Article 8.1(a) of AML-CFT Decision.

          Please see the CBUAE's Guidance for Licensed Financial Institutions providing services to Legal Persons and Arrangements8 for more information on identification of beneficial owners.


          8 Available at https://www.centralbank.ae/en/cbuae-amlcft

          • 3.2.1.2.1 EDD: Beneficial Ownership

            If the LFI is not confident that it has identified the individuals who truly own or control the customer, or when other high-risk factors are present, the LFI should consider intensifying its efforts to identify the beneficial owners. The most common method of doing so is to identify additional beneficial owners below the 25% ownership threshold mandated by UAE law. This may involve identifying and verifying the identity of beneficial owners at the 10% or even the 5% level. It may also involve requiring the customer to provide the names of all persons who own or control any share in the customer—without requiring them to undergo CDD—in order to conduct sanctions screening or negative news checks.

        • 3.2.1.3 Nature of the Customer’s Business and Nature and Purpose of the Business Relationship

          For all customer types, LFIs are required to understand the purpose for which the account or other financial services will be used, and the nature of the customer's business. This step requires the LFI to collect information that allows it to create a profile of the customer and of the expected uses to which the customer will put the LFI's services. This element of CDD will have important implications for the customer risk rating. This is particularly true of the nature of the customer's business, which will likely be the critical determinant of risk for customers of the types addressed in this Guidance.

          • 3.2.1.3.1 Nature of the Customer’s Business

            Understanding the nature of the customer's business involves first i) identifying that the customer is a participant in a higher-risk sector; and ii) collecting all the information necessary to assess the risk factors for that specific customer type, as described in section 3.1 above. Customers may not identify themselves explicitly as DPMS or real estate sector participants. In some cases, the nature of the customer's business will be clear based on the customer's own statements; in others, the LFI may need to ask additional questions to ascertain whether or not the customer carries out any of the qualifying activities. For example, an importer/exporter may qualify as a DPMS if it trades in precious metals and stones among other products, or a department store may qualify if it sells fine jewelry.

            Following the determination of the customer's sector, the LFI should collect the information necessary to understand the products and services the customer offers, where it operates, and who its customers are. The exact information collected will depend on both the nature of initial findings and on the risk level of the entity. For example:

             Company A is a large commercial real estate broker licensed in Sharjah and supervised as a DNFBP by the Ministry of Economy. Company A applies for a general purpose business account with Bank C, an LFI. Bank C interviews Company A regarding its business activities and customer base, and asks Company A to supply a copy of its institutional risk assessment and its CDD and STR policies.
             
             Company B, a small business based in Dubai, seeks to establish a checking account with Bank C, an LFI. Company B represents that it primarily sells furniture and curios, but in response to questions from Bank C during the CDD process discloses that it sells gold and silver coins and also that it accepts cash payments. Company B is not licensed as a DPMS and is not registered by the Ministry of Economy. Bank C decides to make an unannounced site visit to Company Band discovers that gold objects make a up a large part of its inventory. Bank C declines to consider opening the account until Company B is licensed and registered as a DPMS.
             
          • 3.2.1.3.2 Nature and Purpose of the Business Relationship

            The risk to which the LFI may be exposed can vary based on the purpose of the account and the types of financial products and services the customer wishes to use. Nevertheless, if other risk factors are present a customer may still qualify as high risk even if they use only low-risk products and services.

             Certain aspects of a customer's business may be higher risk than others. For example, an account used for payroll may be lower risk than an account used to pay suppliers or that receives payments directly from customers.
             
             Certain LFI products and services may expose the LFI to higher risk. These include cash management services or large-scale cash deposits, and international wires, especially wires to or from high-risk or secrecy jurisdictions. These services are higher risk because they facilitate rapid movements of value across borders, or (in the case of cash) because they are conducive to anonymity. The LFI's entity risk assessment should identify its higher-risk products and services, and a customer that intends to use such services should be risk-rated accordingly.
             

            For example:

             Company X is a small DPMS operating in the Dubai Gold Souk that applies for a general purpose checking account with Bank C, an LFI. Company X tells Bank C that it sells gold jewelry. It claims that it does not accept cash and has not registered as a DNFBP, but tells Bank C to expect weekly cash deposits. The relationship manager visits the store and observes a sign by the cash register saying “Payment by Cheque or Credit Only.” Bank C decides to prohibit cash deposits into the account with prior authorization, and to restrict such deposits to a low monthly total.
             
          • 3.2.1.3.3 Developing a Customer Profile

            Businesses, including those in the DPMS and real estate sectors engage in an extremely wide variety of financial activity, potentially a wider variety than individual customers are likely to display. The activity profile of a cash-intensive business such as a small DPMS is likely to be completely different from that of a large- scale commercial developer. At the same time, specific businesses are also likely to engage in patterns of activity that remain constant from month to month and year to year. Understanding the purpose of the account allows LFIs to develop expected patterns and compare them to actual behaviour.

          • 3.2.1.3.4 EDD: Customer’s Business and the Business Relationship

            As LFIs advance efforts to understand their customer's business and financial activities, they should consider whether aspects of the customer profile require EDD. The following are some situations in which EDD may be appropriate:

             The customer has business or other ties to high-risk jurisdictions (if the customer or its beneficial owners are based in a high-risk jurisdiction, EDD is mandatory).
             The customer intends to use high-risk financial products and services, such as bulk cash services or purchase and exchange of virtual assets.
             The LFI does not fully understand the customer's business model, or the customer has no clear business activities that would justify its expected to use of the account.
             

            EDD on the business activities and account use of business like DPMS and real estate sector participants can involve the following:

             Requiring the customer to provide invoices documenting incoming and outgoing transfers;
             Inspecting payroll documents and other business records;
             Visiting the customer's business premises and interviewing its personnel;
             Requesting a reference from a current customer or other well-known firm with which the new customer claims to do business, or which operates in the same sector as the new customer.
             
        • 3.2.1.4 Ongoing Monitoring

          All customers must be subject to ongoing monitoring throughout the business relationship. Ongoing monitoring ensures that the account or other financial service is being used in accordance with the customer profile developed through CDD during onboarding, and that transactions are normal, reasonable, and legitimate.

          • 3.2.1.4.1 CDD Updating

            LFIs are required to ensure that the CDD information they hold on all customers is accurate, complete, and up-to-date. This is particularly crucial in the context of customers that are companies, which, by their very nature, can change their fundamental identity overnight. With the stroke of a pen, a company engaged in a low-risk business and owned by reputable UAE residents can move its activities to a high-risk sector and can transfer ownership to nationals of a high-risk foreign jurisdiction. For example:

             Mr. Y and Sons is a highly-reputable dealer in uncut diamonds that has been banking with Bank C for more than 40 years. Bank C's account manager reads in the newspaper that Mr. Y has recently passed away and calls on Mr. Y's sons to express his condolences. During the course of the conversation, the account manager asks which son will be in charge of the business going forward. They inform him that they have just sold the business to a consortium of investors who wished to remain anonymous but who were represented by a global law firm with offices in the Free Zone. Once it has become aware of this fact, Bank C should rapidly identify the new beneficial owners of the customer. If it cannot do so promptly, it should suspend activity on the account.
             

            LFIs should update CDD for all customers on a risk-based schedule, with CDD on higher-risk customers being updated more frequently. EDD on all customers should involve more frequent CDD updates.

            CDD updates should include a refresh of all elements of initial CDD, and in particular should ascertain that:

             The customer's beneficial owners remain the same;
             The customer continues to have an active status with a company registrar;
             The customer has the same legal form and is domiciled in the same jurisdiction;
             The customer is engaged in the same type of business, and in the same geographies;
             

            In addition to a review of the customer's CDD file, the LFI should also review the customer's transactions to determine whether they continue to fit the customer's profile and business, and are consistent with the business the customer expected to engage in when the business relationship was established. This type of transaction review is distinct from the ongoing transaction monitoring discussed in section 3.2.1.4.2 below. The purpose of the review is to complement transaction monitoring by identifying behaviours, trends, or patterns that are not necessarily subject to transaction monitoring rules. For example:

             Bank C is conducting its scheduled CDD review for Company A, a commercial real estate brokerage firm. When reviewing the customer's transactions over the past year, Bank C notices that Company A has begun making fairly regular payments to a counterparty in Country 1. Previously, Company A had engaged in extremely limited cross-border activity. The payments do not exhibit any red flags and therefore were not flagged by Bank C's automated transaction monitoring system. Bank C contacts Company A and learns that it is has recently entered into a referral agreement with a private bank in Country 1. The bank refers customers looking to invest in the real estate sector, in Country 2, to Company A and in return receives a percentage of any commission Company A makes on a resulting sale. Bank C decides to conduct additional due diligence to learn more about the customer base referred to Company A by the bank in Country 1.
             

            The techniques used for transaction review will vary depending on the client. For lower-risk clients, a review of alerts, if any, is likely to be sufficient. For higher risk clients, a more intensive review may be necessary. For clients with a large volume of transactions, LFIs may use data analysis techniques to identify unusual behaviour.

            If the review finds that the customer's behaviour or information has materially changed, the LFI should risk- rate the customer again. New information gained during this process may cause the LFI to believe that EDD is necessary, or may bring the customer into the category of customers for which EDD is mandatory (i.e. customers that are PEPs, or owned or controlled by PEPs, or their family members or associates; and customers that are based in high-risk jurisdictions).

            LFIs may consider requiring that the customer update them as to any changes in its beneficial ownership or business activities. Even if this requirement is in place, however, LFIs should not rely on the customer to notify it of a change, but should still update CDD on a schedule appropriate to the customer's risk rating.

          • 3.2.1.4.2 Transaction Monitoring

            LFIs must monitor activity by all customers to identify behaviour that is potentially suspicious and that may need to be the subject of an STR (see section 3.3 below). As with all customer types, LFIs that use automated monitoring systems should apply rules with appropriate thresholds and parameters that are designed to detect common typologies for illicit behaviour. When monitoring and evaluating transactions, the LFI should take into account all information that it has collected as part of CDD, including the identities of beneficial owners. For example, a series of transactions between two unconnected companies may not be cause for an alert. But if the companies are all owned or controlled by the same individual(s), the LFI should investigate to make sure that the transactions have a legitimate economic purpose.

            Where possible, monitoring systems should also flag unusual behaviour that may indicate that a customer's business has changed—for example, a first transfer to or from a high-risk jurisdiction, or a large transaction involving a new counterparty. LFIs should follow up on such transactions with the customer to discover whether the customer has changed its business activities in such a way as to require a higher risk rating.

            Sample red flags for illicit behaviour involving DPMS and the real estate sector are provided in the Annex to this Guidance.

          • 3.2.1.4.3 EDD: Ongoing Monitoring

            When customers are higher risk, monitoring should be more frequent, intensive, and intrusive. LFIs should review the CDD files of higher risk customers on a frequent basis, , such as every six or nine months for very high-risk customers. The methods LFIs use to review the account should also be more intense and should not rely solely on information supplied for the customer. For example, LFIs should consider:

             Manually reviewing all transactions on the account on a quarterly basis, rather than a sample of transactions (as discussed above, such manual review should be in addition to automated transaction monitoring). Manual review can take the form of reviewing individual transactions, or of using data analysis to determine information about the customer's activity (e.g., overall percentage of counterparties in high-risk jurisdictions; new jurisdictions of activity compared to last quarter; overall percentage of transactions that are round numbers, etc.) that would not be apparent to automated transaction monitoring systems;
             
             Conducting site visits at the customer's premises and requesting a meeting with the customer's managing director or Chief Financial Officer;
             
             Conducting searches of public databases, including news and government databases, to independently identify material changes in a customer's ownership or business activities or to identify adverse media reports. Searches for adverse media should include relevant key words, including, but not limited to, allegation, fraud, corruption, and laundering.
             

            In addition, higher-risk customers should be subject to more stringent transaction monitoring, such as lower thresholds for alerts and more intensive investigation.

      • 3.2.2 Key Considerations for DPMS

        All of the requirements above apply fully to DPMS customers. This section describes specific or additional considerations that LFIs should have in mind when carrying out CDD on such customers.

         Nature of the Customer’s Business: Understanding the nature of the customer's business is particularly important in the context of DPMS, as risk is largely driven by the nature of the entity's business activities. LFIs should consider factors such as:
         
          oWhether the customer qualifies as a DNFBP, and, if so, whether it is registered as such with the appropriate authority in its home jurisdiction (in the UAE, this is the Ministry of Economy, see section 2.2.4);
         
          oThe DPMS-specific risks of the countries where the customer does business (see section 3.1.1.2 (i)). Certain countries that may not be considered extremely high risk in other contexts may be very high risk in the DPMS sector, such as countries where illegal mining takes place on a significant scale, or countries were smuggling of gold and precious stones is particularly common;
         
          oThe products and services the customer provides, and their attractiveness to illicit actors.
         
          oExample: Customer, a large Abu Dhabi luxury goods store, seeks to establish a general purpose business account with Bank B, an LFI. Customer sells fine jewelry to a clientele that includes a number of PEPs. Bank B collects additional information about sales and policies from Customer, and determines that all purchases of fine jewelry must be made using a credit card, and that fine jewelry accounts for less than 10% of Customer's annual turnover. Bank B decides that EDD is not necessary at this point, but decides to review activity on the account after six months to determine whether it presents any red flags.
         
         Ongoing Monitoring: Because DPMS risk varies with their business activities, it is particularly important that LFIs monitor DPMS accounts for any unexpected changes in activity. A change in activity is not necessarily a sign of illicit behaviour, but it may indicate that a DPMS has changed its activity profile in ways that affect its risk rating.
         
          oExample: When conducting its scheduled review of activity on the account of Customer, a large Abu Dhabi luxury goods store, Bank B notices that Customer has recently begun to receive large transfers from Iraq. When Bank B contacts Customer, the store explains that they've just begun conducting ‘trunk shows' of fashion and fine jewelry for customers in Iraq and as a result have substantially increased the business they do with customers there. Based on this information, Bank B increases Customer's risk rating and considers placing other controls on the relationship.
         
      • 3.2.3 Key Considerations for the Real Estate Sector

        Customers that are overall low-risk, and whose business is unrelated to the real estate sector, can nonetheless engage in high-risk transactions related to the sector. For example, a retired businesswoman who has been a customer of an LFI for twenty years may sell her luxury villa to a foreign PEP. In such cases, the CDD that has been performed on the customer may not be sufficient to manage the risk of this particular transaction, and LFIs may need to perform additional transactional due diligence. Transactional due diligence may also be necessary to comply with the requirements of Article 7.1 of AML-CFT Decision, which requires LFIs to audit transactions carried out throughout the business relationship to ensure that the transactions are consistent with the customer's risk profile.

        Transactional due diligence should at least involve collecting additional information about the underlying activity and the customer's counterparty. Information that an LFI may request in the context of transactional due diligence on real estate transactions includes:

         Sufficient information about the property to support an assessment that the purchase/sale price is reasonable and generally consistent with values for similar properties. This may include its official valuation for property tax purposes (where one exists); cadastral maps for the area where the property is located; floor plans; photographs; and recent sales information for similar properties. Where the LFI is financing a purchase, or has previously financed the purchase of the same property, it likely has this information on hand already.
         
         Information about the customer's counterparty. Where the counterparty is an individual, this should include sufficient information to perform adverse media, sanctions and PEP screening. Adverse media searches should include searches of public records and databases using relevant key words, including but not limited to, allegation, fraud, corruption, laundering.
         
         Where the counterparty is a legal person, it should include the jurisdiction in which the counterparty is registered/headquartered; identifying information on the counterparty's beneficial owners and line of business.
         
         Information on source of funds and source of wealth. LFIs should be able to identify the source of funds for every large transaction related to the real estate sector. Where a transaction is financed, the source of funds will often be a bank loan, but for unfinanced transactions the determination may be more difficult. For high-risk customers or counterparties, such as PEPs, LFIs should also understand the source of overall wealth, in addition to the source of the specific funds used to purchase the property.
         
    • 3.3 STR Reporting

      As required by Article 15 of AML-CFT Law and Article 17 of AML-CFT Decision, LFIs must file a STR with the UAE Financial Intelligence Unit (UAE FIU) when they have reasonable grounds to suspect that a transaction, attempted transaction, or certain funds constitute, in whole or in part, the proceeds of crime, is related to a crime, or is intended to be used in a crime. STR filing is a legal obligation and a critical element of the UAE’s effort to combat financial crime and protect the integrity of its financial system. By filing STRs with the UAE FIU, LFIs help to alert law enforcement about suspicious behaviour and allow investigators to piece together transactions occurring across multiple LFIs.

      In addition to the requirement to file an STR when an LFI suspects that a transaction or funds are linked to a crime, LFIs should consider filing an STR in the following situations:

       A potential customer decides against opening an account or purchasing other financial services after learning about the LFI's CDD requirements;
       A current customer cannot provide required information about its business or its beneficial owners;
       A customer cannot adequately explain transactions, provide supporting documents such as invoices, or provide satisfactory information about its counterparty; or
       The LFI is not confident, after completing CDD procedures, that it has in fact identified the individuals owning or controlling the customer. In such cases, the LFI should not establish the business relationship, or continue an existing business relationship.
       

      Please consult the CBUAE's Guidance for Licensed Financial Institutions on Suspicious Transaction Reporting9 for further information.


      9 Available at https://www.centralbank.ae/en/cbuae-amlcft

    • 3.4 Governance and Training

      The specific preventive measures discussed above should take place within, and be supported by, a comprehensive institutional AML/CFT program that is appropriate to the risks the LFI faces. The core of an effective risk-based program is an appropriately experienced AML/CFT compliance officer who understands the LFI’s risks and obligations and who has the resources and autonomy necessary to ensure that the LFI’s program is effective.

      As with all risks to which the LFI is exposed, the AML/CFT training program should ensure that employees are aware of the risks of DPMS and real estate sector customers, are familiar with the obligations of the LFI, and are equipped to apply appropriate risk-based controls. Training should be tailored and customized to the LFI's risk and the nature of its operations. For example, an LFI that has a large number of DPMS customers should offer training that includes an in-depth discussion of risk factors and red flags related to such customers.