SOLUTION BRIEF
Using Big Data Analytics
to Streamline Compliance
with Anti-Money Laundering
Regulations
             Financial services institutions are required to invest heavily in
             Anti-Money Laundering (AML) compliance today. Monetary
             settlements for noncompliance with AML regulations
             surpassed $13.4 billion in 2014. In addition, no institution
             wants the bad publicity for supporting money laundering or
             financing to terrorist or criminal organizations. AML solutions
             powered by big data analytics offer banks a clear path to
             fast, effective, and cost-efficient compliance that can scale
             and adapt as requirements change.
Datameer   S T R E A M L I N E C O M P L I A N C E W I T H A N T I - M O N E Y L A U N D E R I N G R E G U L AT I O N S   SOLUTION BRIEF
           Business Challenges
           Anti-money laundering regulations have evolved and become more complex, costly,
           and difficult to comply with. Financial institutions are experiencing the burden of AML
           compliance requirements and reporting. For example:
           	 AML processes and systems must support Know Your Customer (KYC) activities,
              including deeper Customer Due Diligence (CDD) and transaction monitoring at a
              minimum.
           	 In many cases, the detection of bribery, corruption and tax evasion is also required as
              part of AML actions.
           	 Suspicious activity reports (SARs) must now be filed within 60 days rather than 90 days
               a big shift for already overtaxed staff.
           No longer content with check-the-box compliance, regulators now expect banks to
           proactively seek out and catch perpetrators. Heavy fines are imposed when banks fail to
           meet expected outcomes.
           The move to outcomes-based compliance has been driven in part by the fact that bad
           actors are avoiding detection by strategically following the rules. For example, with
           currency transaction reporting required for all transactions above $10,000, perpetrators
           try to stay under the radar by limiting their transactions to just below this threshold. This
           tactic, known as smurfing, illustrates why banks need to go beyond traditional rules-based
           detection to proactively identify patterns indicating when customers circumvent the rules.
           Effectively meeting all of these new compliance requirements is just part of the challenge
           facing financial institutions. Its also difficult to manage the conflicting pressures of
           managing compliance breaches while controlling regulatory compliance costs. The
           tendency within banks is to throw more bodies at the problem. But this just drives up
           costs and leaves too much room for error.
           Given the ever-growing scope of AML compliance and the massive volumes of data
           that must be analyzed to detect bad actors, its simply not feasible to use brute force
           solutions. For example, it would take an army of analysts to manually cross-reference
           large customer lists against sanctioned party lists, or cull through large volumes of data to
           identify suspicious activity and report it.
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Datameer   S T R E A M L I N E C O M P L I A N C E W I T H A N T I - M O N E Y L A U N D E R I N G R E G U L AT I O N S   SOLUTION BRIEF
           The Analytic Challenges
           To meet new AML requirements and expectations, most banks face a series of analytic
           challenges. AML teams typically have outdated analytic infrastructure, as financial
           institutions have been unwilling to invest in this area. But with the increasing risk of large
           fines, this is changing. According to Ovums annual ICT Enterprise Insights survey, 55
           percent of retail banking respondents expected AML-related IT budgets to grow in 2016.
           Investment in big data analytic platforms dramatically increases the efficiency and
           effectiveness of existing AML staff. And as a result, they eliminate the need to throw more
           people at the problem, even as staff work with larger and more complex data sets. New
           AML requirements demand analysis of a wide variety of sources and types of data that
           encompass both public and private data sets in a variety of formats  structured, semi-
           structured, or unstructured. Examples include:
           	 Publicly available sanctions lists  Data sets include the OFAC (Office of Foreign
              Assets Control) sanctions lists of Specially Designated Nationals (SDNs), Politically
              Exposed Persons (PEPs), sanctions programs and countries, and others.
           	 Client and legal entity data  Banks have historically managed their own client
              databases within the walls of their institutions or relied on other commercially available
              data on individuals and entities. Recently, they have started to consolidate efforts
              with the creation of client and legal entity data utilities to be leveraged across multiple
              institutions. These greatly improve a banks customer identification and due diligence
              capabilities and provide a common identification method. These utilities were designed
              by  and are supported and utilized by  the worlds largest institutions, including the
              Clarient Entity Hub and KYC.com.
           	 Financial transaction data  Transactional structured and semi-structured data is
              typically held within the exchanges or institutions in which transactions have taken place.
           	 Personal communications  Communications with counterparties can take many forms
              and manifest themselves in many systems.
           	 Web and application logs  Including semi-structured log files in analyses helps
              financial institutions understand the activity of customers on websites and banking
              applications.
           Conventional data warehouse and business intelligence tools simply cant deliver the
           flexibility, speed, and processing of big data and unstructured data needed to prepare and
           analyze big data or meet new regulatory demands. AML analysts are already spending
           more than 80% of their time preparing and analyzing data, leaving no time for higher-order
           investigative work.
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Datameer              S T R E A M L I N E C O M P L I A N C E W I T H A N T I - M O N E Y L A U N D E R I N G R E G U L AT I O N S   SOLUTION BRIEF
    AML analysts are already spending more than 80%
    of their time preparing and analyzing data, leaving no
    time for higher-order investigative work.
                      For example, in order to track transactions and determine if they were completed by
                      known, high-risk individuals or non-cooperative jurisdictions, banks need to enrich
                      transaction data by joining it with client/legal entity data (including names, addresses, and
                      other identifiers) and publicly available OFAC lists in order. To cast a wider net, they need
                      to enrich this data even further with verbal and written communications information and
                      additional systems information. Joining these large, complex data sets manually would be
                      both error-prone and extremely laborious.
                      The good news is banks can actively apply big data analytic platforms based on Hadoop
                      to solve their AML problems. These platforms enable the efficient ingestion, enrichment,
                      analysis, and visualization of diverse, large, and constantly changing data sets so they can
                      be harnessed strategically in the fight against AML.
                      The Solution
                      By investing in the right big data platforms and analytical tools, banks can drastically
                      lower AML compliance costs and satisfy the escalating levels of due diligence required
                      by regulatory agencies. Modern, big data analytic platforms can manage and analyze
                      extreme data volumes far more effectively and at a fraction of the cost of traditional
                      approaches. They can easily integrate multiple, diverse data sources and analyze large
                      volumes of data in minutes rather than months, dramatically reducing compliance analytic
                      cycle times. Equally important, big data analytics can also perform types of analysis that
                      were previously impossible due to the sheer volume and diversity of the data and the
                      complexity of the analysis involved.
                      Armed with a big data analytic platform, banks can:
                      	 Reduce analytic cycles with an end-to-end self-service platform that allows AML
                         compliance and business analysts to iteratively run the complete analytic process
                      	 Lower the cost of AML compliance with a platform that fully leverages the power of
                         Hadoop to speed processing time
                      	 Find new ways to manage suspicious activity with new insights that are discovered in
                         the data
                      	 Have a flexible platform and analytic approach that can rapidly adjust to meet ever-
                         changing requirements
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Datameer   S T R E A M L I N E C O M P L I A N C E W I T H A N T I - M O N E Y L A U N D E R I N G R E G U L AT I O N S   SOLUTION BRIEF
           Datameer: Built to Handle the
           Complexities of Big Data
           Datameer delivers a state-of-the-art big data analytic platform
           that can handle the analytic and architecture challenges of
           AML, KYC and CTF requirements. It leverages the full power
           of Hadoop to analyze the large-scale data sets required,
           cutting processing times from days down to minutes.
           The end-to-end, self-service platform allows compliance or auditing analysts to perform the
           entire analytic process  from integration to visualization  thereby reducing analytic cycles
           from months to days. It does all this while providing the enterprise-level governance
           needed to maintain the security, privacy and access control that banks require.
           Integration
           As described previously, the data required to effectively combat money laundering and
           terrorist financing is complex and stored in many different systems. Datameer provides
           AML professionals with more than 70 native data connectors that make it easy for them
           to access all of their data for analytics; these connectors work with a multitude of data
           sources and formats for structured and unstructured data. At the same time, Datameers
           data management services enable banks to apply specific date/time partitioning,
           scheduling, and retention policies. For example, if the analysis only requires a review of
           sanctions list changes over the last 6 months and needs to be run weekly, Datameers
           policies can set up to support that scenario.
           Preparation and Analysis
           The analysis of data across these varied data sources requires analysts to prepare the
           data to ensure data quality, consistency, accuracy and completeness. For example,
           source transaction or sanctions list data will vary by data schema, file format, geography,
           currency and other characteristics. With Datameers instant visual profiling, its easy to
           identify and correct these issues to enable clean and accurate analytics.
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Datameer   S T R E A M L I N E C O M P L I A N C E W I T H A N T I - M O N E Y L A U N D E R I N G R E G U L AT I O N S   SOLUTION BRIEF
           Datameers data transformation architecture uses a familiar, Excel-like spreadsheet
           interface with over 270 prebuilt formulas and support for multi-source, multi-view and
           multi-step data pipelines. Analyses can easily be completed by one group and then
           passed on to other groups that rely on the data as a component of downstream analysis 
           all while maintaining a single, trusted source of data.
           With Datameer, AML analysts can prepare and analyze various sanctions lists to create
           a single, definitive list to be used by downstream transaction monitoring teams. Once
           defined, this entire data analysis pipeline can be automated via job scheduling and
           workload management that can be tailored to each specific data set. Complete data
           lineage can also be viewed within the tool or extracted via the REST API for easy reporting
           and auditing of the full pipeline of data ingestions, transformations and calculations.
           Visualization
           Once data is analyzed, compliance officers, business analysts, and technology analysts
           can visualize the results using infographics. Datameer offers 30 visualization widgets
           for creating multi-page infographics that can be viewed within Datameer or embedded
           in any application or web page. For example, its easy to visualize analytics showing the
           graphical and tabular results of transaction monitoring and share them with regulators
           around the world.
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Datameer                    S T R E A M L I N E C O M P L I A N C E W I T H A N T I - M O N E Y L A U N D E R I N G R E G U L AT I O N S   SOLUTION BRIEF
                            Datameer in Action
                            AML investigators, including government agencies, are using
                            Datameers end-to-end self-service big data analytics platform
                            to efficiently identify and mitigate money laundering activity.
                            For example, one group used Datameer to provide a cost effective, efficient way to
                            achieve compliance and minimize the risk of fines. They easily merged customer and
                            transaction data with watch lists, denied party lists and commercially available data in
                            seconds and made it easy for AML staff to identify suspicious activity. In the past, AML
                            staff would have needed to work with their IT department to ETL all of this data and do a
                            series of ad hoc, custom SQL joins related to identified activities  a six-month process
                            that in the end, resulted in canned, outdated report.
    By far, the best solution to fulfill rapidly growing
    compliance requirements is provided by big data
    analytical tools which drastically lower compliance
    costs and satisfy the due diligence required by
    regulatory agencies.
     A NU Borders consultant
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Datameer                        S T R E A M L I N E C O M P L I A N C E W I T H A N T I - M O N E Y L A U N D E R I N G R E G U L AT I O N S               SOLUTION BRIEF
                                Datameers big data analytic platform provides the right
                                combination of power, speed and flexibility required to
                                successfully navigate the unpredictable waves of financial
                                services compliance requirements. Learn more about our
                                work in financial services or sign up to attend a live demo
                                today.
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