EU clears rules for ‘beneficial ownership’ registers
The ultimate owners of companies will have to be listed in central registers in EU countries, under new rules agreed by the EU Council and endorsed by the European Parliament yesterday.
Access to the register is restricted but will nonetheless be open both to the authorities and to people with a “legitimate interest”, including investigative journalists.
The new anti-money laundering directive, which was widely anticipated by the financial services industry, aims to step up the fight against tax crimes and terrorist financing. New rules to make it easier to trace transfers of funds were also approved.
The fourth anti-money laundering directive will for the first time oblige EU member states to keep central registers of information on the ultimate “beneficial” owners of corporate and other legal entities, as well as trusts.
These central registers were not envisaged in the European Commission’s initial proposal, but were included by MEPs in negotiations.
The text also sets out specific reporting obligations for banks, auditors, lawyers, real estate agents and casinos, among others, on suspicious transactions made by their clients.
ACCESS
The central registers will be accessible to the authorities and their financial intelligence units without any restriction, to “obliged entities” such as banks doing their “customer due diligence” duties, and also to the public, although public access may be subject to online registration of the person requesting it and to a fee to cover administrative costs.
To access a register, a person or organisation – investigative journalists or NGOs – will in any event have to demonstrate a “legitimate interest” in suspected money laundering, terrorist financing and in “predicate” offences that may help to finance them, such as corruption, tax crimes and fraud. These persons could access information such as the beneficial owner’s name, month and year of birth, nationality, country of residence and details of ownership. Any exemption to the access provided by member states will be possible only “on a case-by-case basis, in exceptional circumstances”.
Central register information on trusts will be accessible only to the authorities and “obliged entities”.
EU countries will have two years to transpose the anti-money laundering directive into their national laws.
The transfers of funds regulation will be directly applicable in all member states 20 days after its publication in the EU Official Journal.