The Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) has concluded a sweeping series of supervisory examinations by imposing penalties totalling S$27.45 million (approximately $21.46 million) on nine financial institutions.
The fines were issued for significant breaches of anti-money laundering (AML) and counter-terrorist financing (CFT) requirements.
The regulatory action follows an exhaustive inquiry that began in early 2023 and concluded in early 2025. The examinations focused on financial institutions found to have a nexus to individuals implicated in a major, high-profile money laundering case.
The list of penalized firms includes several major international banks: Credit Suisse Singapore Branch, United Overseas Bank Limited, UBS AG Singapore Branch, and Citibank N.A. Singapore. Also fined were Bank Julius Baer & Co. Ltd. Singapore Branch, LGT Bank, UOB Kay Hian Private Limited, Blue Ocean Invest Pte. Ltd., and Trident Trust Company.
In its detailed statement, the MAS observed that while most of the institutions had established AML/CFT policies and controls on paper, the violations arose from “poor or inconsistent implementation of these policies and controls.”
The regulator noted that the firms have already embarked on remediation plans to address the identified deficiencies and that their progress will be monitored closely.
A spokesperson for the MAS clarified that this “suite of actions marks the conclusion of MAS’ enforcement actions against financial institutions with material nexus to the major money laundering case.”
The significant penalties underscore the authority’s strict stance on compliance and serve as a stark reminder to the financial industry of the importance of robust operational execution of AML protocols.