Cash Deposits: Key Takeaways

Why Cash Deposits Present Elevated AML Risk?

The anonymous nature of physical cash deposits significantly enhances the AML risks for organisations, as it makes it very difficult to trace the origin of funds. Cash transactions are generally considered vulnerable at the placement stage of money laundering, in which criminals attempt to introduce proceeds of crime into the financial system. Regulators emphasise enhanced scrutiny for such cash-intensive businesses as they are prone to being used for money laundering activities, and records can be easily manipulated through fabricated account books.

Legitimate vs Suspicious Cash Deposit Activity

Legitimate cash deposits involve placing physical currency into the banking system, which is traceable, consistent and considered clean money. Further legitimate cash transactions match the individual’s income and business profile.


However, the volume, frequency and customer profile differentiate legitimate transactions from suspicious activity. For instance, politically exposed persons, frequent deposits below reporting thresholds, and high-value cash transactions are often considered suspicious and require a higher risk rating for enhanced checks.


Following strict AML controls during onboarding helps financial institutions detect anomalies in real-time and ensure regulatory compliance.

Cash Deposits Money Laundering Typologies

Criminals exploit cash-based transactions through various means that financial institutions must be aware of to detect and prevent money laundering. Some of the common typologies are as follows:


• Breaking down a large amount of illicit cash into small cash deposits (Structuring/smurfing) to avoid traceability.
• Frequent unusual withdrawals in cash or rapid transfers made just after cash is deposited to disguise the origin of funds.
• Use of third-party or mule accounts to transfer illicit funds (cash funnelling).
• Inconsistency between cash deposits and the stated occupation or business model of the customer.

Regulatory Expectations for Monitoring Cash Deposits

Regulatory authorities require financial institutions to identify and monitor cash-based activities to detect suspicious activity for regulatory reporting. Financial institutions must comply with threshold-based regulatory reporting requirements, under which, if the transaction amount exceeds a specified limit, it must be reported to the authorities.


Further, the regulators mandate financial institutions to conduct Enhanced Due Diligence for high-risk cash deposits, verifying the source of funds. Financial institutions must maintain records by creating audit trails. This enables compliance teams to have evidence of suspected activity and escalate issues for investigation, and ease reporting.

Monitoring Cash Deposit Risk with Citadel365

Citadel365 supports organisations with effective detection and investigation of cash deposit-related AML risks through its integrated tools. The Customer Onboarding Software helps entities to verify the customer identity, and the Name Screening Software runs checks against the sanctions list, PEP database and adverse media. Citadel365’s Transaction Monitoring tool continuously examines the cash deposit patterns and triggers alerts during any anomalies, such as sudden spikes in deposits or rapid movement of funds. The built-in Case Management feature of Citadel365 assists businesses in record keeping, which makes customer data easily accessible during audit trials, regulatory inspections and for SAR/STR justification.

Integrating Cash Deposit Controls into the AML Framework

Effective Cash Deposit controls require a robust risk-based approach, which should integrate all the essential components. Customer Due Diligence (CDD) is the fundamental component of AML compliance, and businesses should document all the expected volume, frequency and nature of transactions along with risk-rating.

 

Transaction Monitoring-based rules and scenarios should be calibrated to efficiently detect anomalies in transactions on a real-time basis. Periodic review and reassessment to examine if cash-based activities are aligning with the customer profile. Centralised records enhance the overall governance and reporting system of the business and support the regulatory inspections.

Cash Deposits FAQs for AML Professionals