Financial Crime Goes Global: How Europe Is Fighting Back

In the latest episode of “State of the Art,” Reseo’s podcast on innovation, regulation and trust in investment management, host Pierre-Yves Rahari sat down with Giles Swan, Public Policy and Regulatory Consultant, to explore how financial crime is evolving and how Europe is responding.

In this article, we look at how financial crime has become a truly global and technology-driven phenomenon, how the EU’s new Anti-Money Laundering Authority (AMLA) and AMLD6 directive aim to tackle it, and how technology is reshaping compliance and supervision across the investment industry.

The Globalisation of Financial Crime

Financial crime has long been part of the financial landscape, but its scale and sophistication have changed dramatically. According to the UN Office on Drugs and Crime, money laundering alone accounts for an estimated 2–5% of global GDP — between USD 2 trillion and 4.5 trillion annually.

“Those are huge numbers,” said Giles Swan. “They represent a significant issue not only for governments and regulators, but also commercially for firms that want to remain viable in a fast-evolving landscape.”

What’s new is the globalisation of financial crime. Enabled by technology, perpetrators now operate across jurisdictions, using digital networks to obscure ownership and move funds instantaneously. “We are not just dealing with local actors anymore,” Swan explained. “Technology has turned financial crime into an inherently cross-border challenge — involving both state and private actors with far greater sophistication than before.”

Europe’s Coordinated Response: AMLA and AMLD6

In response to this expanding threat, Europe is reshaping its anti-money-laundering (AML) and counter-terrorist-financing (CTF) framework. The creation of AMLA — the new European Anti-Money Laundering Authority, headquartered in Frankfurt — marks a major shift toward a coordinated, supranational model.

Historically, EU member states managed financial crime at the national level, resulting in divergent rules and supervision. AMLA’s mandate is to harmonise oversight and directly supervise certain high-risk, cross-border entities. “This is about joining up the dots,” said Swan. “The idea is to ensure that regulation keeps pace with the cross-border nature of financial crime, rather than being fragmented by national boundaries.”

Alongside AMLA, the sixth Anti-Money Laundering Directive (AMLD6) and accompanying AML Regulation aim to strengthen consistency across the EU. A key feature is the Ultimate Beneficial Ownership register, designed to improve transparency by requiring firms to identify and verify the individuals behind corporate structures — a move that will have deep implications for investment managers, fund administrators, and service providers.

“These rules demand greater use of technology,” Swan noted. “Manual processes that were once sufficient under earlier directives won’t be enough. Firms will need systems that can handle complex ownership structures efficiently.”

Collaboration, Technology, and Compliance in Practice

As regulations tighten, investment firms are re-evaluating their compliance frameworks. The focus is shifting from reactive reporting to proactive data analysis and technology-driven detection.

“The landscape is inherently technological now,” Swan said. “In the crypto-asset sector, for example, blockchain analytics tools like chain analysis are being used directly to track and prevent financial crime. That’s a model from which the traditional asset management industry can learn.”

He points to a convergence between RegTech (for firms) and SupTech (for regulators). Both sides are exploring how AI, distributed ledger technology, and real-time data can improve risk identification and reduce false positives. “There’s an exciting partnership potential here,” Swan added. “Regulators don’t need to reinvent the wheel — they can build on what the industry has already developed.” 

The Road Ahead: A Smarter Regulatory Future

As enforcement becomes more coordinated, firms can expect more cross-border actions and deeper scrutiny of control frameworks. Yet the shift also presents an opportunity: greater regulatory convergence across the EU could reduce friction for compliant firms and enhance trust with clients and counterparties.

Swan emphasised that boards have a central role to play. “Every board should ask two questions,” he advised. “First, how are our financial crime policies being implemented in practice? Second, what is our weakest link? That’s where the greatest exposure lies — whether in a management company, fund structure, or service provider.”

Ultimately, fighting financial crime requires a balance of vigilance, collaboration, and technological innovation. “The good news,” Swan concluded, “is that regulators and industry are finally moving in the same direction.”

Click here to listen to the full podcast based on this article.

New episode: Regulation Ramp-Up — The Coming AMLA Regulation and Its Impact on the EU and UK

Welcome back to a new season of Reseo’s State of Art podcast — where we speak with industry experts about the ideas and forces shaping the future of investment management.

In this episode, Pierre-Yves Rahari, Co-Founder and Director at Reseo, is joined by Giles Swan, a Public Policy and Regulatory Consultant.

Together, they discuss how the upcoming Anti-Money Laundering Authority (AMLA) regulation — set to take effect in July 2027 — will reshape the regulatory landscape, and what it means for firms, clients, and compliance practices. They also reflect on the evolving relationship between regulation, technology, and financial crime prevention, and how the industry can act now to prepare for what’s ahead.

  • Guest:Giles Swan — Public Policy Consultant, Swan FS
  • Host:Pierre-Yves Rahari— Co-Founder and Director, Reseo
  • Produced by: Melanie Lopes — Sales & Marketing Associate, Reseo

Thanks for listening to the Reseo State of the Art podcast – you can find us here and on Spotify.

Digitalisation is the new era: Are industries keeping up to transform corporate client onboarding?

In a world where digital touchpoints define the client journey, onboarding remains the first true test of innovation.

Opening a personal account with a neo bank has been revolutionised with the smartphone and all we need is our passport, proof of address and the camera on our phone. Based on this input, various checks are carried out in the background and 10 minutes later you can start using your account and a digital bank card.

How different this is for corporate onboarding; papers are sent via email, post and sometimes still even fax, endless requests for clarification leading it to take on average 4-5 weeks before the ok is given. It is a far cry from the retail sector account opening.

Equally, technologies like AI are undermining the traditional ways of manual checking documentation and fake data such as a complete set of fake company structures and documentation can be created in no time undermining the trust in documents[1].

Change is nevertheless on its way due to technological advancements e.g. AI, cloud computing, API’s, detection and zero trust document technology, OCR (Optical Character Recognition and LLM (Large Language Models).

Regulators also pinch in and are pushing for change and moving towards perpetual compliance. The enhanced EU AMLR regulation – aiming to harmonize compliance obligations for banks, crypto-asset service providers, real estate agents, legal professionals, and other obliged entities, Regulation 2024/1624[2] – is just around the corner with implementation by July 2027. Whereas the EU Anti-Money Laundering Authority (AMLA, the first centralised EU authority for direct EU wide supervision of AML/CFT compliance) has just set up a shop in Frankfurt.

Market expectations are shifting, and the need for speed to benefit from market opportunities in investment management, industry trading and corporate banking, to name a few, should not be upheld by paper based processes.

Last but not least, the consistent increase in the cost of AML/CFT compliance can only be mitigated if we address the current outdated way of working.

To move away from the manual checks of documents, we need to shift to a technology driven verification of corporate data and information (not stale documents), to create real-time insights in corporate structures, activities, decision makers and (ultimate) beneficiaries.

The road to change is mired with obstacles of legacy infrastructure, risk averse organisations, current over engineered processes (to be replaced instead of replicated), interoperability of systems and platforms while remaining within the boundaries of legislation like GDPR.

At Reseo, we understand these challenges and we believe that digital onboarding is not just a process but a client experience differentiator whereby the Reseo modular, technology driven, secure and client centric e-ID is a digital wallet that can be shared with any counterparty on the platform. To transform corporate client onboarding, we blend technology and investor-centric services, ensuring continued financial trust while future-proofing the industries for the digital generation. AML/KYC is just our starting point.

 

[1] Xavier Hamori, KYC in 2025: The Collapse of Document Trust, June 1, 2025

[2] Europa.eu. (2024). Regulation – EU – 2024/1624 – EN – EUR-Lex. [online] Available at: https://eur-lex.europa.eu/eli/reg/2024/1624/oj/eng.

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