LONDON: The decline in correspondent banking, a crucial channel for moving cash from one country to another, shows no sign of slowing despite measures agreed in 2015 to stem the slide, global regulators said on Tuesday.

Banks have been pulling out of the business for a variety of reasons from not making enough money to industry consolidation to the fear of falling foul of tougher new rules designed to prevent money laundering and terrorist financing.

The Financial Stability Board (FSB), which coordinates financial regulations for the Group of 20 countries (G20), said the places most affected tended to be small economies or those finding it difficult to apply the new rules.

The decline has raised concerns that some payments will pass through unregulated cash couriers instead, harming international trade and driving some people out of the world’s financial system, the FSB said in a report.

The FSB unveiled a four-point action plan in November 2015 to curb the decline and has since made clear that correspondent banks don’t have to know their local customer’s customer but the fall has shown no signs of abating.

“The decline in the number of correspondent banking relationships is continuing,” the FSB report said.

It said all regions had been hit to a varying degree, with the Caribbean and small states in the Pacific suffering the worst and Eastern Europe hit hard as well. The FSB said transactions in U.S. dollars and euros were the most affected.

In correspondent banking, a global bank typically channels payments in country to a local bank with no international network in another country.

Payment volumes stable

Heidi Toribio, global head of banks and broker dealers at Standard Chartered, a correspondent bank, said there was no simple solution to the decline.

But advances in technology were starting to automate payments processes, making it harder to manipulate invoices.

“Regulators globally and locally are coming together with the industry and were having the right conversations,” Toribio said.

The FSB said its latest update for G20 leaders meeting this week in Hamburg, Germany, draws on better data after sampling 300 banks in 50 countries, and payment messages from SWIFT, a global network that links lenders.

“It is too early to tell what the effects of measures taken so far will be, and to what extent they will stem the decline,” the FSB said.

Published in Dawn, July 5th, 2017

Follow Dawn Business on Twitter, LinkedIn, Instagram and Facebook for insights on business, finance and tech from Pakistan and across the world.

Opinion

Editorial

China security ties
14 Nov, 2024

China security ties

AFTER a slightly turbulent patch, during which officials publicly used uncharacteristically direct language,...
Steep price
14 Nov, 2024

Steep price

THE Hindu Kush-Himalayan region is in big trouble. A new study unveiled at the ongoing COP29 reveals that if high...
A high-cost plan
14 Nov, 2024

A high-cost plan

THE government has approved an expensive plan for FBR in the hope of tackling its deep-seated inefficiencies. The...
United stance
Updated 13 Nov, 2024

United stance

It would've been better if the OIC-Arab League summit had announced practical measures to punish Israel.
Unscheduled visit
13 Nov, 2024

Unscheduled visit

Unusual IMF visit shows the lender will closely watch implementation of programme goals to prevent it from derailing.
Bara’s businesswomen
13 Nov, 2024

Bara’s businesswomen

Bara’s brave women have proven that with the right support, societal barriers can be overcome.