Country for PR: United States
Contributor: PR Newswire New York
Wednesday, June 15 2022 - 10:00
AsiaNet
LexisNexis Risk Solutions Study Estimates Australian Financial Services Firms Will Spend More Than U.S. $2.54 Billion on Financial Crime Compliance in 2022
SYDNEY, June 15, 2022 /PRNewswire-AsiaNet/ --

--Retail and Ecommerce Merchants Projected to Have Highest Money Laundering 
Risks

LexisNexis(R) Risk Solutions today released its first Australia edition of the 
LexisNexis True Cost of Compliance(TM) Study. The study revealed that 
Australian financial services companies are expected to spend more than a 
collective U.S. $2.54 billion (AUD $3.6 billion) on financial crime compliance, 
driven by the increased compliance staff hiring and the complexity of 
preventing financial crime.

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The study, which surveyed 50 decision makers in the Australian market between 
December 2021 and February 2022 and is part of a larger Asia-Pacific regional 
study ( 
https://risk.lexisnexis.com/global/en/insights-resources/research/true-cost-of-financial-crime-compliance-study-apac?utm_campaign=bsapfc22.fcc-apac.apactcoc22&utm_medium=whitepaper&utm_source=prnewswire&utm_content=2022apactruecostofcompliancestudy 
), found that the exposure of Australian financial firms to financial crimes 
has increased in the past 18 to 24 months. Eighty percent (80%) of Australian 
compliance professionals in financial firms ranked money laundering as the 
highest risk within their compliance operations. Respondents also indicated 
that third party professional service providers, such as accountants and 
lawyers, played a role in facilitating money mules to launder proceeds of 
predicate crimes.

Increasing anti-money laundering (AML) regulations, evolving criminal threats 
and ongoing impacts of the pandemic have driven higher financial crime 
compliance costs to an estimated U.S. $19.2 million (AUD $27.6 million) for 
larger Australian financial institutions and has led to increased investments 
in both labor and technology.

Key findings from the 2022 True Cost of Compliance Study -- The Australia 
Edition:

    --  Labor As a Driver of Increased Compliance Costs -- More than two-thirds 
        of financial institutions surveyed indicated they had increased 
        compliance staff since 2019. Labor and training accounted for 54% of 
        average compliance costs while technology, including adding or 
        maintaining networking or systems that support remote working during
        the pandemic, accounted for 41% of costs.
    --  Using Technology to Solve Compliance Challenges -- Large financial 
        institutions that invested in technology solutions to support financial 
        crime compliance efforts experienced less severe impacts on cost and 
        compliance operations 
        (almost U.S. $17.5M or AUD $25 million per annum), greater efficiencies
        and fewer pandemic-related challenges. Those that spent less than the
        industry average on technology spent an average of U.S $18.9M 
        (AUD $28.7 million) on annual financial crime compliance costs.
    --  Increased Exposure to a Range of Financial Crimes -- Money mules and 
        financial crimes involving digital payments are increased and 
        contributed largely to rising financial crime compliance costs. 
        Respondents reported increased exposure to trade-based money laundering 
        (TBML), third-party fraud (supply chain corruption, professional 
        advisors), proceeds of trafficking and the criminal use of new 
        technologies and methods, including cryptocurrency.

"Ecommerce and retail were ranked highest as being of most risk for money 
laundering by Australian financial institutions," said David Haynes, vice 
president at Lexis Nexis Risk Solutions. "Amidst the growing regulatory 
pressures and evolving threats, retailers and ecommerce merchants should be 
prepared for increased costs brought by the digital transformation."

Methodology
The True Cost of Compliance APAC study surveyed 253 banks, investment, asset 
management and insurance firms' decision makers within the financial crime 
function across Australia, China, India, Japan and Malaysia. Organizations 
represented banks and investment, asset management and insurance firms.

Download a copy of the True Cost of Financial Crime Compliance Study -- 
Australia Edition ( 
https://risk.lexisnexis.com/global/en/insights-resources/research/true-cost-of-financial-crime-compliance-study-apac?utm_campaign=bsapfc22.fcc-apac.apactcocau&utm_medium=whitepaper&utm_source=prnewswire&utm_content=2022truecostofcompliancestudy-australiaedition#australia 
).

About LexisNexis Risk Solutions 
LexisNexis(R) Risk Solutions harnesses the power of data and advanced analytics 
to provide insights that help businesses and governmental entities reduce risk 
and improve decisions to benefit people around the globe. We provide data and 
technology solutions for a wide range of industries including insurance, 
financial services, healthcare and government. Headquartered in metro Atlanta, 
Georgia, we have offices throughout the world and are part of RELX, a global 
provider of information-based analytics and decision tools for professional and 
business customers. For more information, please visit www.risk.lexisnexis.com 
and www.relx.com.

Media Contact:
Joy LAU
+852 6091 6839
joy@montiethsprg.com.hk

Joyce LEE
+852 9883 9321  
joyce@montiethsprg.com.hk

SOURCE : LexisNexis Risk Solutions