Latest News
- Derivatives Operations +
-
Securities Operations
+
- Affirmation, Allocation & Confirmation
- Back Office
- Buy-Side
- Case Studies
- Clearing
- Corporate Actions
- Data Management
- FX Operations
- Hedge Fund Operations
- Industry News
- Mergers & Acquisitions
- Middle-Office
- Operational Risk
- Ops Automation
- Outsourcing
- Private Markets
- Reconciliation & Exceptions
- Risk Management
- Sell-Side
- Settlement
- T+1 Settlement
- Diversity & Human Interest +
- FinTech Trends +
- Opinion +
- Performance Measurement +
- Regulation & Compliance +
- Industry News +
- FTF Media & Content Channels +
- FTF Bull Run Blog
Key provisions of a major piece of federal legislation are likely to cause banks to revamp AML policies and governance to meet the greater demands for data.
U.S. banks may need to update their anti-money-laundering (AML) policies as a result of key provisions of the National Defense Authorization Act of 2021 (NDAA), which primarily covers appropriations for the U.S. Department of Defense programs, activities, and military personnel. However, the NDAA also covers many “matters relating to foreign nations,” according to the overview...
Already a subscriber? Login here