Annual Financial Crime Compliance Costs Rise to $49.9B for Financial Institutions

September 28, 2021

Financial crime compliance costs for the U.S. and Canada are at nearly $50 billion in 2021, a rise of almost 20% from the year before, according to a new LexisNexis study.

Labor costs, more regulations and evolving crime threats are to blame, concluded LexisNexis Risk Solutions’ annual True Cost of Financial Crime Compliance Study for both regions. The $49.9 billion estimate for 2021 is 19% higher than in 2020 and 58% more than in 2019.

“The study shows clear linkages between the pandemic, digital crime and increasing regulations,” Leslie Bailey, vice president of financial crime compliance strategy for LexisNexis Risk Solutions, said in prepared remarks. “As a result, financial institutions need to prepare for expanded compliance obligations and risks from emerging financial crime.”

Bailey explained that digital transformation has been a game-changer for financial crime compliance operations, making it important to take risk-mitigation action on multiple fronts.

This “will require a sophisticated approach that incorporates insight into digital behaviors and richer data to effectively mitigate risk and ensure compliance amidst growing regulatory pressures and evolving threats,” Bailey added.

The study projects the average annual cost of financial crime compliance for U.S. financial institutions with $10 billion or more in assets to be $27.8 million for 2021, up 36% from last year and 95% since 2019, nearly doubling since the last study examining pre-pandemic times. Financial institutions of this size in Canada see a spend of $22.9 million, up 17% from last year and 64% since 2019.

The pandemic continues to negatively impact compliance operations and the impact has significantly increased since the early stages of the pandemic. According to the study, 68% U.S. respondents report longer times required to complete due diligence for new account onboarding due to the pandemic compared to 37% in 2020. Approximately 55% of U.S. respondents report reduced productivity compared to 22% in 2020, the study found.

Key Risk Sectors

More U.S. financial institutions now rank real estate and hospitality as top money laundering risk segments along with ecommerce. Real estate is favored by criminals who use shell companies to launder money through these types of transactions. Additionally, crime involving digital payments, trade-based money laundering and money mule schemes are on the rise with 83% of large U.S. financial institutions reporting an increase in exposure to crime involving digital payments.

Digital currency is a growing problem for Canadian firms with 75% reporting an increase in crime involving cryptocurrency. Crimes involving digital payments have the greatest impact on compliance costs for U.S. financial institutions whereas crimes involving cryptocurrency have the greatest impact on compliance costs for Canadian firms.

Operational Issues

The survey results demonstrate that financial institutions are battling a broader set of issues, with challenges reported across multiple areas including resource efficiencies and customer risk profiling. Higher labor costs were fueled by increased workload from growing compliance requirements, with 74% of U.S. firms and 88% of Canadian firms listing expanding regulations as a primary driver for adding compliance staff. Survey respondents indicate that a lack of current and extensive data tops the list of Know Your Customer (KYC) due diligence challenges facing financial institutions, with lack of data about a business, complexity and broadness of business data and lack of up-to-date business information being cited most often by survey respondents, LexisNexis found.

The study surveyed 145 decision-makers in the U.S. and Canada who oversee financial crime compliance processes at their companies, including but not limited to sanctions monitoring, Know Your Customer (KYC) remediation, financial crime transaction monitoring and/or compliance operations.

Responses were collected in June 2019, August 2020 and June 2021. Organizations included banks, investment firms, asset management firms and insurance firms. The total annual cost of compliance across firms was calculated using survey data on financial crime costs, as a percent of total assets The and secondary data that provides the total assets for all financial institutions in the U.S. and Canada. spend amount was generated by multiplying the average percent allocated to financial crime costs by the reported total asset amount.

Source: LexisNexis Risk Solutions

Topics Trends Fraud

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