Amid searing debate over whether or not the city is taking adequate measures to prevent financial crime, the Hong Kong Financial Services and Treasury published its Money Laundering and Terrorist Financing Risk Assessment Report. The report revealed that while the number of individuals convicted for financial crimes over the past six years has decreased, the number of “suspicious financial transactions in has more than quadrupled” over the same amount of time.
Some believe that the rise could have been caused by 2012 legislation that mandated an increased number of financial organizations and entities to report “suspicious activity.”
However, cryptocurrencies don’t seem to be implicated as one of the major factors contributing to the rise in suspicious financial activity. The Hong Kong Police Force stated that although cryptocurrency trading may be involved in Ponzi schemes, they see “no apparent sign of organized crime or ML/TF concerning the trading of cryptocurrencies.”
In fact, of the 167 Bitcoin-related reports of financial crime that the police have received since 2013, only a small number were related to drugs or other illicit activities. The rest had to do with ransomware; even then, most of those were related to the virus.
More ‘Traditional’ Payment Platforms Much More Likely to Be Used for Illicit Activity
The report indicated that other digital payment platforms, like Paypal or Alipay, were much more likely to be used in illicit activities. A Forbes report said that the data supports the theory that “a system of payment only becomes a risk to money laundering and terrorist financing once it becomes relatively commonly used.”
Still, paranoia surrounding financial crime has caused firms in Hong Kong to have . Banks are reportedly denying businesses access to service on a large scale because of fear about money laundering.
The increased paranoia around money laundering has hit blockchain and cryptocurrency startups in Hong Kong particularly hard. “The difficulty of opening a bank account in Hong Kong tarnished the city’s reputation as a business and financial hub, and risked the government’s push to make the city a centre for fintech,” reads a report by the South China Morning Post.
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