Massive Banking Regulations in the Philippines 🇵🇭

2 months ago
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🛑 HEAVY REGULATIONS TO COMBAT MONEY LAUNDERING

The Philippines has taken serious steps, especially after being gray-listed in 2000 and again in 2021 by the FATF (Financial Action Task Force).

📜 KEY LAWS & BODIES:

1. Anti-Money Laundering Act (AMLA) of 2001

Establishes the Anti-Money Laundering Council (AMLC) as the main watchdog.

Defines money laundering crimes and lists “covered persons” like banks, insurance companies, and real estate brokers.

Offenses include:

Conversion or movement of criminal proceeds

Concealment of the origin of illicit funds

Aiding in laundering

2. Terrorism Financing Prevention and Suppression Act (2012)

Targets money tied to terrorist organizations and their financing chains.

3. Recent Amendments (2021)

Expanded coverage to include:

Real estate agents

Lawyers and accountants (under certain transactions)

Jewelry dealers, casinos, POGOs

Increased penalties and jail terms for violations (up to 14 years in prison and millions in fines).

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💼 REGULATED TRANSACTIONS:

Financial institutions and certain professionals must report:

Transactions above ₱500,000 (approx. $9,000 USD)

Suspicious transactions even below that amount

Multiple or structured deposits to avoid thresholds (a red flag)

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🚫 DANGERS IF CAUGHT LAUNDERING MONEY:

1. Criminal Charges

Convictions lead to asset seizures, long prison terms (7–14 years), and lifetime bans from financial industries.

2. Freezing of Bank Accounts

AMLC can freeze accounts without notice based on suspicion.

Business operations can be paralyzed overnight.

3. International Blacklisting

Being non-compliant with FATF can lead to blacklisting, restricting foreign investment and remittance flows.

4. Reputational Damage

Banks or firms tied to laundering scandals (e.g. RCBC in 2016) suffer international scrutiny and sanctions.

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🇵🇭 CURRENT STATUS:

As of 2024, the Philippines remains on the FATF’s “gray list”, under scrutiny for gaps in enforcement.

The government is rushing reforms, but enforcement remains inconsistent, especially in rural areas and non-bank sectors.

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