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Luxembourg aims to tighten its AML systems ahead of FATF review

Regulators & Key Institutions Knowledge & Training

Luxembourg, labeled a tax haven following recent investigations, is taking steps toward tightening its AML systems, with new legislation aimed at sanctioning money laundering and tax evasion.

While the details are still being confirmed, a new draft bill from the Ministry of Justice will enable the Luxembourg Business Register (LBR) to impose administrative sanctions and could include steps such as requesting non-Luxembourg residents to provide ID when registering a business. 

The effectiveness of the bill remains to be seen. Requesting ID would initially be voluntary – which may still leave room for exploitation – and until the details are confirmed, it’s unclear exactly how stringent the bill will be. 

Luxembourg’s financial systems have a checkered history. A September 2020 update of its national risk assessment of money laundering and terrorist financing indicated ongoing threats posed by cross-border proceeds of corruption and tax evasion.

And the IMF’s 2021 Luxembourg report stated: “Money laundering risks should continue to be monitored and mitigated and the Anti-Money Laundering/Combating the Financing of Terrorism (AML/CFT) framework should be strengthened further.” 

OpenLuxe fallout 

Then there was the OpenLuxe investigation which revealed that the names of children or deceased people were being listed in the LBR as the Ultimate Business Owner (UBO) of companies.

Since its inception in 2019, the LBR has had a critical flaw that only allows searches by company name or registration number, rather than owner’s name. While this has made it difficult to link a corporate entity to those who profit from it, French newspaper Le Monde (along with ten media partners) spent a year scraping the registry’s website and obtained 3.3 million documents covering over 124,000 companies registered in Luxembourg.

Whether the new draft bill will tackle the many issues revealed by OpenLuxe, including its finding that “almost half of the companies, funds, and foundations registered in Luxembourg have no real identifiable beneficiaries to date,” and make the LBR more open and searchable, remains to be seen.

How does Luxembourg conform with European Union legislation?

The latest version of the European Union’s anti-money laundering directive, 6AMLD, was implemented across Europe in June. It’s unclear if Luxembourg is failing to meet these standards, but it previously struggled to implement elements of 4AMLD in 2018. The Financial Action Task Force (FATF) is due to complete its next mutual evaluation of the country later this year, which will be a key milestone for its AML/CFT practices. 

Meanwhile, Luxembourg has already fallen foul of European laws this year. In June, the European Commission referred Luxembourg to the European Court of Justice for failing to transpose EU rules on seizing criminals’ profits. 

It also remains to be seen how changes to Luxembourg’s new draft bill will sit with the EU Anti-Money Laundering Authority, due to be set up by 2024, and if they will reflect its recent lessons learned.

For compliance teams, Luxembourg’s problems with its LBR are a reminder to be careful. If using this register, or any other business register, teams should be aware that there could be potential problems and seek to verify IDs independently. 

Find out how Austria is strengthening its AML approach and how the EU is overhauling AML/CFT in our recent articles. Fintechs in EMEA can also explore our ‘AML Guide for Fintechs’.

Originally published 09 September 2021, updated 18 November 2021

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