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Priority review Enforcement Amended Final

MAS Enforcement Actions Against Market Abuse and Financial Misconduct

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Filed November 4th, 2020
Detected March 14th, 2026
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Summary

The Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) has announced significant enforcement actions, including $11.7 million in civil penalties and nine criminal convictions for market abuse and financial misconduct. The MAS Enforcement Report covers January 2019 to June 2020, detailing efforts to combat financial crime and enhance regulatory oversight.

What changed

The Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) has published its Enforcement Report for January 2019 to June 2020, detailing a robust stance against financial misconduct. Key outcomes include the imposition of $11.7 million in civil penalties, securing nine criminal convictions for market misconduct, and issuing 25 prohibition orders against unfit representatives. The report also highlights a decrease in the average time taken for investigations, from 33 to 24 months for criminal cases and 30 to 26 months for civil penalty cases, indicating increased efficiency.

These actions underscore MAS's commitment to maintaining Singapore's reputation as a trusted financial center. Regulated entities should note the increased focus on early detection of market misconduct, collaboration with other regulatory bodies, and the ongoing refinement of enforcement powers. Future priorities include pursuing complex disclosure breaches, proactively detecting mis-selling, strengthening anti-money laundering controls, and enhancing senior management accountability. While no specific compliance deadline is mentioned for general entities, the report serves as a strong signal for enhanced vigilance and adherence to regulations.

What to do next

  1. Review MAS Enforcement Report for insights into recent enforcement trends and priorities.
  2. Assess internal controls related to market abuse, financial misconduct, and anti-money laundering.
  3. Ensure senior management accountability frameworks are robust and clearly defined.

Penalties

$11.7 million in civil penalties, $3.3 million in composition penalties for money laundering-related control breaches, and 25 prohibition orders against unfit representatives.

Source document (simplified)

Decrease font size Increase font size Print this page Media Releases Published Date: 04 November 2020

MAS steps up enforcement actions against market abuse and financial misconduct

Singapore, 4 November 2020… The Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) has taken several strong actions against financial institutions (FIs) and individuals for market abuse, financial misconduct, and control breaches related to money laundering.  In its Enforcement Report (933.8 KB) published today, covering the period January 2019 to June 2020, MAS detailed various enforcement actions taken for breaches of MAS regulations and requirements.

2   MAS imposed $11.7 million in civil penalties and, together with the Attorney-General’s Chambers, successfully secured the criminal convictions of nine individuals for market misconduct or related offences. MAS imposed $3.3 million in composition penalties for money laundering-related control breaches, and issued 25 prohibition orders against unfit representatives.

3   The average time taken by MAS for completing its reviews and investigations has decreased.  It has come down from 33 months to 24 months in criminal cases, and from 30 months to 26 months in civil penalty cases, compared against the previous reporting period.

4   MAS has stepped up its focus on early detection of market misconduct, working closely with various stakeholders. MAS and the Accounting and Corporate Regulatory Authority established a joint forum to facilitate the review and enforcement of accounting-related and disclosure issues. MAS and the Singapore Exchange jointly published a trade surveillance practice guide to help brokers implement good practices in their trade surveillance operations.

5   MAS will continue to strengthen its enforcement regime, as the nature of financial misconduct grows in sophistication and complexity.  MAS will continually refine its processes and increasingly leverage technology to heighten effectiveness and efficiency in investigation.

6   MAS’ enforcement priorities looking ahead include the following:

  • pursue serious and complex cases of disclosure breaches;
  • deepen capability to proactively detect potential mis-selling of financial products;
  • continue to focus on FIs which lack rigorous systems and processes for combatting money laundering and countering terrorism financing ;
  • update enforcement-related powers to better detect, investigate, and take action against misconduct; and
  • enhance focus on senior management accountability for breaches by their FIs or subordinates. 7   Ms Peggy Pao, Executive Director (Enforcement), MAS said “Rigorous investigation and tough enforcement are necessary to deter financial misconduct, protect consumers, and maintain investor confidence. In the four years since we established a centralised Enforcement Department, MAS has deepened our enforcement capability and expertise.  As our financial sector grows in scale and sophistication, a robust enforcement regime will be critical in sustaining Singapore’s reputation as a trusted financial centre.”

Additional Information:

The MAS Enforcement Report provides updates on enforcement matters in the financial markets, highlights key outcomes and outlines priorities for the future. It is published once every 18 months. Please refer to the MAS website for more information.


  • Infographic Enforcement Report 2019/2020 (256.2 KB)

  • MAS today issued a 9-year prohibition order against a former representative of OCBC Bank, Mr Hoi Wei Kit, following his conviction for offences under the Penal Code and the Corruption, Drug Trafficking and Other Serious Crimes (Confiscation of Benefits) Act.

  • MAS has reprimanded China Capital Impetus Asset Management Pte. Ltd. (CCIAM), a registered fund management company, for breaches of the Securities and Futures (Licensing and Conduct of Business) Regulations (SFR). MAS has also issued a Prohibition Order against CCIAM’s Executive Director and former CEO, Mr Sun Quan, for failing to take reasonable steps to secure compliance by CCIAM with the SFR. In addition, MAS has declined CCIAM’s application to upgrade to a licensed fund management company.

  • MAS has reprimanded RVP One Pte. Ltd. and its CEO and director, Mr Viktor Panisch, for breaches of the Securities and Futures (Licensing and Conduct of Business) Regulations.
    View all news

Source

Analysis generated by AI. Source diff and links are from the original.

Classification

Agency
Various
Filed
November 4th, 2020
Instrument
Enforcement
Legal weight
Binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Substantive

Who this affects

Applies to
Financial advisers Fund managers Financial institutions
Geographic scope
Singapore

Taxonomy

Primary area
Financial Services
Operational domain
Compliance
Topics
Market Abuse Anti-Money Laundering Financial Misconduct

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