- Mon - Sat: 8.00 - 18.00
- 411 University St, Seattle
- +1-800-456-478-23
AML Policy
Financial Collateral works with the Top 25 banks, Brokers, Family Offices, and other Financial Institutions all over the world and does not tolerate money laundering and supports the fight against money launderers. In particular, we follow the guidelines outlined in the US “Patriot Act” and by US regulators.
Financial Collateral has KYC policies in place to deter people from laundering money. These policies include:
- Ensuring clients have valid proof of identification
- Complete and sign the KYC Template (available for download upon paying compliance/DD Fees)
- Maintaining records of identification information
- Determining that clients are not known or suspected terrorists by checking their names against lists of known or suspected terrorists
- Informing clients that the information they provide may be used to verify their identity
- Closely following clients’ money transactions
- Not accepting cash, money orders, third-party transactions, exchange houses transfers, or Western Union transfers.
According to the National Futures Association: ‘money laundering occurs when funds from an illegal/criminal activity are moved through the financial system in such a way as to make it appear that the funds have come from legitimate sources.
Money Laundering usually follows three stages:
- Firstly, cash or cash equivalents are placed into the financial system
- Secondly, money is transferred or moved to other accounts (e.g., futures accounts) through a series of financial transactions designed to obscure the origin of the money (e.g., executing trades with little or no financial risk or transferring account balances to other accounts)
- And finally, the funds are reintroduced into the economy so that the funds appear to have come from legitimate sources (e.g., closing a futures account and transferring the funds to a bank account).
Trading accounts carried by FCMs are one vehicle that can be used to launder illicit funds or hide the true owner of the funds. In particular, trading accounts can be used to execute financial transactions that help obscure the origins of the funds.
International Anti-Money Laundering requires financial services institutions to be aware of potential money laundering abuses that could occur in a customer account and implement a compliance program to deter, detect, and report potential suspicious activity.
These guidelines have been implemented to protect Financial Collateral, Funders, and Clients.
For questions/comments regarding these guidelines, contact FINANCIAL COLLATERAL Compliance at compliance@financial-collateral.com