Compliance
Compliance Corner: Hong Kong, Aberdeen Standard Investments, Others

A regular round-up of compliance news, such as fines, permissions, new technology solutions to make tracking risks easier, and other developments.
Securities And Futures Commission Of Hong
Kong
The
Securities and Futures Commission of Hong Kong has banned
former Goldman Sachs employee Tim Leissner from re-entering the
industry for life in connection with his crimes relating to
1Malaysia Development Berhad, the troubled Malaysian sovereign
wealth fund.
Leissner was licensed - but is no longer - under the Securities
and Futures Ordinance to carry on Type 4 (advising people about
securities), Type 6 (advising people about corporate finance) and
Type 9 (asset management) regulated activities and was accredited
to Goldman Sachs (Asia) LLC between 1 April 1998 and 24 February
2016.
In August 2018, Leissner pleaded guilty to criminal charges
pressed against him by the United States Department of Justice
for conspiring to launder money and to break the Foreign Corrupt
Practices Act 1977.
Leissner admitted, among other things, that between 2009 and 2014
he conspired with others to:
-- obtain and retain business from 1MDB for Goldman Sachs
through the promise and payment of bribes and kickbacks to
government officials in Malaysia and Abu Dhabi;
-- embezzle funds from 1MDB for himself and
others;
-- launder the bribes and kickbacks as well as other
embezzled funds from 1MDB; and
-- knowingly and wilfully circumvent the controls of Goldman
Sachs.
The court in the United States decided that Leissner was guilty of these offences (bundled up into two charges) and ordered him to forfeit $43.7 million (HK$335.43 million) as a result of his crimes.
Leissner was responsible for Goldman Sach’s relationship with 1MDB, including the negotiation and execution of three bond transactions which Goldman Sachs arranged for 1MDB in 2012 and 2013.
Aberdeen Standard Investments
Aberdeen
Standard Investments, the UK asset management group,
announced that its wholly foreign-owned enterprise in China,
Aberdeen Standard Asset Management (Shanghai) Co, has won
approval from the Asset Management Association of China to
provide onshore investment advisory services in the country.
The WFOE can now offer investment advisory services to eligible
onshore Chinese investors on products offered by domestic wealth
management subsidiaries of commercial banks, securities and
futures companies, fund management companies, as well as other
types of asset management firms in China, ASI said in a statement
yesterday.
BlackRock, the world’s biggest asset manager, and a subsidiary of
Fullerton Fund Management, is among organisations that have
received such regulatory clearance to operate as a WFOE.
“China is a strategic long-term focus for our firm. We are
delighted to expand our onshore business to offer investment
advisory services to the domestic investors. This is a testament
to Aberdeen Standard Investments’ diverse investment expertise
and track record, as well as our strong commitment to China. As
we continue to invest and strengthen our presence in China, we
look forward to bringing a broader range of investment
opportunities and international best practices to address the
needs of Chinese investors,” Hugh Young, head of Asia-Pacific at
Aberdeen Standard Investments, said.
The business is proud to point out that it was one off the first
foreign asset managers to establish an investment management WFOE
in Shanghai. It expanded its business in the country after
completing its Private Fund Management Company registration in
November 2017.
Malaysia, LexisNexis
It costs market participants $890 million to comply with
anti-money laundering rules in Malaysia, a country that has been
wracked by corruption and the high-profile 1MDB dirty money saga.
The cost of AML compliance in the Southeast Asian country was
given by LexisNexis
Risk Solutions, and drawn from its True Cost of AML
Compliance study, Malay Mail reported.
(WealthBriefingAsia has asked LexisNexis for a copy of
the report to confirm the details, and may update in due
course.)
Much of the spending is done by larger firms in terms of assets,
but the cost weighs proportionately more heavily on the shoulders
of smaller businesses, the study reportedly said.
The cost of AML compliance is higher among smaller firms at an
average of 0.14 per cent than larger firms at 0.07 per cent.
Malaysia has been at the epicentre of a major dirty money scandal
that has spread around the world. The state-created 1MDB fund has
been used, it is claimed, by former senior politicians and others
as a slush fund. Banks that transacted Malaysia-linked money in
Singapore have been kicked out for senior AML control failings,
for example. Authorities in Switzerland and the US, among others,
have launched probes.
The study said average compliance costs are spread similarly
across labour-consuming activities, with over a quarter involving
KYC, which consumes labour hours through information collection,
list screening, and risk assessment, the report said.