Fitch: Greylisting won’t hit SA rating
• Protection against terror financing and money laundering in question
Thuletho Zwane zwanet@businesslive.co.za
Even though SA faces the risk of being greylisted by the global money laundering and terrorist financing watchdog, the Financial Action Task Force, in February next year, credit agency Fitch Ratings says such a move is unlikely to change the country’s rating or ratings outlook.
Even though SA faces the risk of being greylisted by the global money laundering and terrorist financing watchdog, the Financial Action Task Force (FATF), in February next year — joining the ranks of nations thought to have inadequate protection — credit agency Fitch Ratings says that such a move is unlikely to change the country’s rating or ratings outlook.
“Judging by the fact of greylisting in other sovereigns [...] from our perspective, [it] will be quite unlikely that such a greylisting will have an impact that is sufficient to change the rating, or even the outlook on SA’s rating,” Jan Friederich, who is head of the Fitch Middle East and Africa sovereign ratings team, said last week at the Nedgroup investment treasurers’ conference.
“In any case, the government has taken measures to avoid greylisting, and so we would assume that greylisting, even if it were to occur, would be of a limited duration,” said Friederich.
Speaking at the conference, Nedbank’s head of antimoney laundering, counter financing of terrorism and sanctions, Ofentse Theledi, said if greylisting were to materialise, SA would be classified high risk by its trading partners, face potential disinvestment and see increased monitoring by the FATF.
“What this means for us from a banking perspective as a whole is that the relationships we have with some of the corresponding banks would have increased monitoring. Similar to what we saw when Mauritius was greylisted. “We will see possible restrictions on banks in the US, UK and EU … transacting with SA banks. Access to trade, finance and investment would face adverse consequences and the ease of business will suffer,” Theledi said. The Reserve Bank said it was confident it and the Prudential Authority could demonstrate significant progress and compliance by the end of the year ahead of the FATF’s decision on whether to greylist SA.
However, the Bank said its workings do not cover deficiencies in law enforcement and prosecutions identified by the FATF.
“Changes need to be made across the government if SA is to avoid being greylisted,” said the Bank.
Theledi said that to avoid possible greylisting, a number of the country’s laws to counter money laundering will need to undergo extensive review.
He said that the National Treasury had spearheaded an omnibus bill intended to address deficiencies and making amendments to the Financial Intelligence Centre Act, the Financial Transactions Reporting Act and others.
Theledi said there was quite a bit of work to be done to ensure the country could demonstrate that it pursues money laundering and terrorist financing cases from a law-enforcement perspective beyond banks submitting information as required by the Financial Transactions Reporting Act.
WE WILL SEE POSSIBLE RESTRICTIONS ON BANKS IN THE US, UK AND EU … TRANSACTING WITH SA BANKS
FRONT PAGE
en-za
2022-08-29T07:00:00.0000000Z
2022-08-29T07:00:00.0000000Z
https://bd.pressreader.com/article/281578064473499
Arena Holdings PTY