Resumen de Prensa
21/08/2007
Los "Hedge funds" una preocupación para la prevención
del blanqueo de capitales (Google)
So you thought only stock market regulators were worried by hedge
funds? Wait till you meet a banker trying to grapple with New Age
cash, in which you cannot easily tell the colour, or smell, of money:
Is that from/for a terrorist? Is that a bribe billion getting whitewashed?
Does it smell like cocaine?
International auditing and financial accounting firm KPMG said
in a statement on Thursday that banks are finally acknowledging
that they deal with a labyrinth of “alternative assets”
and financial institutions that make it difficult to track and crack
down on money laundering.
“With international banks bolstering their presence in emerging
market economies, and with a low interest rate environment driving
growth in alternative assets including hedge funds, private equity
and commodity investments, the need for more stringent anti-money
laundering processes has only grown. Banks will need to work extremely
hard from here if they are to maintain any advantage in the war
against money laundering and terrorist financing,” said Deepak
Sanwalka, head of KPMG’s forensic services in India.
KPMG said its study among 224 banks from 55 countries found that
banks’ spending on anti-money laundering (AML) systems and
processes has risen by an average of 58 percent over the last three
years. In North America and in the Middle East and Africa, spending
has increased by 70 percent or more. These increases are far in
excess of banks’ own predictions when KPMG Forensic carried
out its last study in 2004.
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