Cash Intensive Business - Overview

What Is a Cash-Intensive Business in an AML/CFT Context

A cash-intensive business is one that deals in cash transactions and experiences a large volume of cash flows. These businesses offer products or services payable in cash, or customers generally pay in cash, which exposes them to money laundering risks.

 

Common examples of cash-intensive businesses across various sectors include:

 

  • Retail: Corner shops, laundromats, parking garages, and used car dealerships.
  • Hospitality: Restaurants, cafes, nightclubs, hotels, travel agencies.
  • Gaming: Casinos, gaming lounges, slot machine venues, amusement arcades.
  • Informal sector: Car washes, hair salons, beauty spas, home repair services, transportation services, street vendors, market stalls.

 

Criminals misuse these cash-driven business models to commingle, layer, blend, and integrate illegal funds with cash earned or generated from these businesses, leading to money laundering risks. Therefore, these businesses are considered high-risk under AML risk-based frameworks, requiring effective controls.

Why Cash-Intensive Businesses Pose AML Risks

Physical currency transactions are mostly anonymous with a limited digital footprint, lacking transaction traceability, enabling criminals to engage in ML/TF activities.

 

Criminals use these cash-intensive businesses to mix illicit funds with legitimate revenues in order to disguise the illicit origin of funds. These businesses offer a front for money launderers to introduce illicit funds into the financial system, especially for businesses with high turnover and weak controls.

Red Flags and Suspicious Indicators in Cash-Intensive Businesses

Key red flags that indicate suspicious activity in cash-intensive businesses are as follows:

 

  • Volume or frequency of cash deposits does not match the business size or related businesses in the same sector.
  • Multiple deposits in small amounts just below the reporting thresholds.
  • Unexplained increase in frequency or volume of cash withdrawals or deposits without any clear business rationale.

 

Involvement of third parties or multiple accounts without clear justification indicates an attempt to hide the origin or destination of funds.

Regulatory Expectations for Monitoring Cash-Intensive Businesses

Regulatory authorities require financial institutions, DNFBPs and VASPs to comply with AML/CFT standards, which include designing an AML program and implementing effective controls. These regulated entities should implement due diligence to identify and verify customers, conducting enhanced due diligence on high-cash enterprise customers to verify their source of wealth and source of funds.

 

With these, entities must monitor transaction patterns to detect unusual patterns such as unusual volume or frequency, rapid fund movement, or structuring patterns to combat financial crime. Further, regulated entities must escalate suspicious activity for investigation and report STR/SAR timely.

 

Regulated entities must document customer information and transaction logs through comprehensive audit trails. In addition, regulators expect entities to perform ongoing risk assessment to update the customer profile and stay compliant with regulatory obligations.

Managing Cash Intensive Business Risk with Citadel365

Citadel365 provides an integrated platform that supports the identification and monitoring of physical cash business risks. Its customer onboarding software automates the capture of customer information to verify high-risk customers, including beneficial owners.

 

Further, Citadel365’s customer risk assessment software evaluates factors such as business models and expected cash activity to develop risk profiles. Moreover, its transaction monitoring software helps detect unusual deposit patterns, structuring typologies and hidden anomalies that pose cash-intensive business risks.

 

Its case management software streamlines investigation workflows, and secure audit trails support regulatory inspections and SAR/STR filing.

Strengthening Controls for Cash-Heavy Business Models

Regulated entities must strengthen their AML controls to identify typologies and red flags associated with cash-heavy businesses to mitigate ML/TF risks. This includes:

 

Customer Due Diligence: Determine expected cash volumes and assess the source of funds before establishing business relationships.

Risk Assessment: Incorporate cash intensity as a factor to calculate risk scores and treat cash-intensive businesses as high-risk due to difficulty in traceability.

Ongoing Monitoring: Continuously track cash activity to detect deviations from the customer’s expected behaviour.

Governance & Reporting: Maintain records in a structured format at a single location to ease inspections and enforcement by regulators.

Cash Intensive Business FAQs for AML Professionals