Compliance
Compliance Corner: DIFC, Societe Generale, Sberbank, Russia

The latest compliance news: regulatory developments, punishments, guidance, permissions and new product and service offerings.
DIFC
Dubai International Financial Centre has upgraded Societe
Generale’s licence, enabling it to book lending locally, local
media reported.
Paris-based Societe Generale now has a Category 2 licence from
the Gulf jurisdiction.
"DIFC continues to successfully deepen its existing relationships
with financial institutions that aspire to expand their business.
These institutions have confidence in DIFC’s offering and benefit
from our leading financial services ecosystem, as well as our
legal and regulatory framework. We would like to congratulate
Societe Generale, a long-standing DIFC client on obtaining their
license upgrade and look forward to their continued success,”
Arif Amiri, CEO of DIFC Authority, said.
Sberbank
Russia-based Sberbank
has been included in the list of information system
operators issuing digital financial assets, it announced last
week.
The move, coming at a time when Russia has been hit by sanctions
and kicked out of the SWIFT banking network following the
country’s invasion of Ukraine, once again puts cryptocurrencies
in the limelight. Ironically, Bank of Russia, the central bank,
has warned of what it says are the risks of such entities. It
said “growth of cryptocurrencies seriously jeopardises Russians’
wellbeing and the stability of the financial system and causes
threats associated with the use of cryptocurrencies for illicit
settlements.” The consultation paper was entitled
Cryptocurrencies: Trends, Risks, and
Regulation.
In its statement last Thursday, Sberbank, the country’s largest
bank, said digital financial assets on its platform “will be
recorded and circulated via an information system based on
distributed ledger technology, which ensures data security and
makes data immutable.”
Companies will be able to issue their own DFAs to prove the
validity of the cash requirements, which will enable them to
attract market investments; acquire DFAs issued through the Sber
information system, and make other DFA transactions in accordance
with Russian laws.
The statement suggests that cryptos may in some ways become
alternative financial channels in Russia as it copes with
attempts by the US, UK, the European Union and others to isolate
it from the global financial system.