Legal services:

Comprehensive legal solutions for contracts, disputes, and compliance. Our expert team ensures legal protection and strategic guidance for your business.

AML consulting:

Specialised AML consulting to develop and maintain robust anti-money laundering policies. We assess risks, offer ongoing support and provide tailored AML services.

Obtaining a crypto license:

We offer licensing and ongoing support for your crypto-business. We also offer licences in the most popular jurisdictions.

Registration of legal entities:

Efficient legal entity registration support. We manage documentation and interaction with the authorities, ensuring a seamless process for establishing your business.

Opening bank accounts:

We facilitate the opening of bank accounts through our extensive network of partners (European banks). Hassle-free process, tailored to your business needs.

COREDO TEAM

Nikita Veremeev
Nikita Veremeev
CEO
Pavel Kos
Pavel Kos
Head of the legal department
Grigorii Lutcenko
Grigorii Lutcenko
Head of AML department
Annet Abdurzakova
Annet Abdurzakova
Senior Customer Success Manager
Basang Ungunov
Basang Ungunov
Lawyer at Legal Department
Egor Pykalev
Egor Pykalev
AML consultant
Yulia Zhidikhanova
Yulia Zhidikhanova
Customer Success Associate
Diana Alchaeva
Diana Alchaeva
Customer Success Associate
Johann Schneider
Johann Schneider
Lawyer
Daniil Saprykin
Daniil Saprykin
Head of Customer Success Department

Our clients

COREDO’s clients are manufacturers, traders and financial companies, as well as wealthy clients from European and CIS countries.

Effective communication and fast project realisation guarantee satisfaction of our customers.

Exactly
Unitpay
Grispay
Newreality
Chicrypto
Xchanger
CONVERTIQ
Crypto Engine
Pion

Digital euro (CBDC euro): not an abstraction from presentations, but a real factor transforming the business models of banks, payment service providers (PSP), e‑money institutions and corporate treasuries. In this article I will lay out the impact of the digital euro on payment intermediaries and infrastructure, show practical approaches to integration, and also share COREDO’s cases on licensing, AML/KYC and building operationally resilient solutions.

The European Central Bank is carrying out the ECB digital euro project consistently, with pilots and research reports, and COREDO’s practice confirms: those who prepare in advance win. I rely on concrete deployment scenarios, regulatory requirements and architectural choices that payment companies and banks are already encountering in the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Cyprus, Estonia, the United Kingdom, Singapore and Dubai. The goal: to give you strategic and tactical guidance that will shorten the path from idea to industrial launch.

CBDC Deployment Models and Architecture

Illustration for the section «CBDC deployment models and architecture» in the article «Digital euro CBDC – impact on payment intermediaries»

Before building an ROI, you need to align on the terminology. The retail digital euro (retail CBDC) is aimed at mass payments by individual and corporate users, while the wholesale (wholesale CBDC) targets interbank settlements and clearing of high‑value amounts. The ECB in its documents considers a two‑tier model of the digital euro (two‑tier CBDC model), where the central bank provides issuance and settlement finality (settlement finality), and distribution and customer services are provided through banks and PSPs.
The discussion around direct and intermediated CBDC models boils down to the balance between central bank control and market dynamics. The direct model gives users access to central bank accounts, but creates a risk of bank disintermediation upon CBDC introduction. The intermediated model reduces that risk by preserving the key role of commercial players in onboarding, KYC, and wallet UX. The COREDO team, in assessments for clients, considers hybrid options with differentiated access (tiered access) and limits that mitigate deposit outflows and support financial stability.

The registry architecture remains a matter of choice: permissioned ledgers and centralized registries simplify control and scalability, while a distributed ledger and CBDC expand possibilities for interoperability and programmability. In our techno‑economic assessments we compare TPS throughput and scalability, evaluate the feasibility of layer‑2 solutions and sharding for CBDC, and also model off‑chain settlement and atomic settlement to reduce costs during peak load.

EU regulation PSD2 MiCA GDPR AML/KYC

Illustration for the section «EU regulation PSD2 MiCA GDPR AML/KYC» in the article «Digital euro CBDC – impact on payment intermediaries»

Regulatory requirements for CBDC in the EU are not built in a vacuum but on already familiar pillars. The impact of PSD2 on CBDC integration appears through requirements for open APIs, authentication and access management. At COREDO we prepared roadmaps for several PSPs for modernizing API gateways and wallet integration, taking into account API requirements for CBDC integration and the expected exchange formats compatible with ISO 20022 (impact on CBDC messages and enrichment of payment information).
MiCA and digital asset regulation in the EU do not replace rules for CBDC, but set compliance and market fairness standards that infrastructure providers cannot ignore. The legal status of digital currency in the EU will enshrine the status of the euro CBDC as legal tender, which affects taxation of digital payments and reporting, as well as pricing of transactions in the digital euro. For clients we prepare tax memoranda together with local advisers in Estonia, Cyprus and the Czech Republic so that corporations correctly reflect operations in management and statutory reporting.

GDPR and the digital euro: a separate topic. Privacy by design and data pseudonymization, CBDC transaction confidentiality and privacy modes, as well as possible use of zero‑knowledge proofs for transaction privacy, all of this must be combined with anti‑money‑laundering compliance (AML) for CBDC. I insist on a risk‑based approach: differentiated limits, multi‑level authentication and real‑time sanctions screening allow combining GDPR and AML requirements/KYC for the digital euro without degrading UX.

The travel rule in the context of digital currencies is already familiar to clients from the crypto market, and its logic can be easily scaled to CBDC taking into account wallet identification specifics. The solution developed at COREDO combines sanctions screening, transaction monitoring and beneficiary verification in a single circuit, which simplifies audits and reduces operational risks.

Eurosystem: TARGET2, TIPS, RTGS, SEPA

Illustration for the section «Eurosystem: TARGET2, TIPS, RTGS, SEPA» in the article «Digital euro CBDC – impact on payment intermediaries»
Integration of the digital euro into existing payment systems: a matter of practice, not slogans. TARGET2 and integration with central infrastructure set the standards for real‑time gross settlement (RTGS) and finality, while TIPS and real‑time settlements in the Eurosystem provide a benchmark for latency and availability. Our methodology maps TPS, SLA and RPO/RTO parameters to target business flows to determine where gross vs net settlement implications are appropriate and when it is advantageous to use netting within a PSP before sending to central infrastructure.

Interoperability between the digital euro and SEPA is a critical factor for rapid adoption in corporate processes. We ensure convergence of formats to ISO 20022 and support for enriched remittance data so that accounting and ERP systems receive exactly the data needed for automatic payment matching. For e‑money institutions and banks in Cyprus and Slovakia the COREDO team implemented integration with core systems via API gateways and event queues, preserving compatibility with existing AML monitors.

Cybersecurity for CBDC infrastructure requires special attention to cryptographic keys, HSMs and custody. Custody models and key storage for the digital euro must take into account multisig, hardware security modules and segregation of duties. In projects on sites in Singapore and Dubai we validated the design through independent pentests and stress tests, including failure scenarios and business recovery during CBDC outages, so that BCP and DRP are not just documents but working procedures.

Impact on banks, PSPs and the ecosystem

Illustration for the section «Impact on banks, PSPs and the ecosystem» in the article «Digital euro CBDC – impact on payment intermediaries»
The impact of CBDC on banks and PSPs goes far beyond IT integration. The risk of bank disintermediation when introducing a CBDC is directly linked to deposit outflows and banking stability. Differentiated access and minimum balances, liquidity reservation and liquidity management through LMP instruments: operational mitigation mechanisms. I recommend that banks set wallet limits and incentivize customers to keep deposits by offering bundles with tokenized deposits and overdraft lines.

The effects of the digital euro on payment intermediaries’ margins will be material. Lower settlement costs and pressure on interchange fees increase the threat of card networks being displaced in certain scenarios. Merchant acquiring and the impact on acquiring will lead to a reassessment of MDR and chargeback fees, while the payment fee system may simplify due to direct settlement finality. At COREDO we build cost‑to‑serve analyses for PSPs and a PSP revenue model for CBDC implementation to anticipate margin compression and compensate for it with new products.

Which business models will PSPs retain after the CBDC launch? Onboarding services, KYC/KYB, risk scoring, fraud detection, data tokenization and value‑added services for merchants will retain value. Monetization strategies for CBDC for fintechs lie in programmability (programmable money): escrow orchestration, conditional payments, smart contracts for automated settlements, B2B subscriptions and micro‑payments for IoT. Partnerships between banks and fintechs around CBDC will become the norm: some provide licenses and access to liquidity, others — development speed and UX.

Gateways, settlements, and enterprise liquidity

Illustration for the section «Gateways, settlements and enterprise liquidity» in the article «Digital euro CBDC – impact on payment intermediaries»

How will the digital euro affect payment gateways? CBDC integration will reduce dependence on card networks in the online checkout, while API gateways and wallet integration will allow merchants to accept funds with final settlement in real time. This will change the operating cycle and require updates to reconciliation and payout processes.

The COREDO team is preparing transition checklists for merchants, including UX and adoption of corporate wallets, refund rules and disputes.

The impact of the digital euro on the transformation of corporate settlements will affect the treasury. The digital euro and interbank liquidity will accelerate cash turnover, enable management of liquidity corridors and market making in cross‑currency settlements via cross‑border CBDC corridors and settlements. Cross‑currency settlements and FX settlement will benefit from atomic PvP, and hedging instruments for companies under the digital euro will adapt to shorter clearing windows and new spot profiles.
Tokenization of deposits and the digital euro will coexist. Tokenized deposits and their impact on bank liquidity are already being tested in the EU and the UK, and our analysis shows: for B2B payments the pairing of tokenized deposits + CBDC provides flexibility in limits and SLAs. Custodial vs non‑custodial wallets for businesses will require a balanced choice: the former will simplify compliance and access recovery, the latter will increase control and reduce dependence on the provider.

Offline payments with the digital euro deserve special attention. They are critical for retail and transport, but add requirements for security and subsequent conflict resolution during synchronization. We implement double‑spend mitigation policies and local limits, as well as criteria for choosing a CBDC infrastructure provider, taking into account the frequency of point‑of‑sale scenarios and requirements for hardware wallets.

Pilots, programmability and scenarios

Pilots of the digital euro by the European Central Bank have already provided useful signals about CBDC infrastructure and scalability. Testing and pilot scenarios of the digital euro have shown that programmable money: it is not a “feature for the sake of a feature”, but a tool for automating the lifecycle of a transaction: holding deposits, confirming delivery, automatic calculation of penalties and bonuses. The use of smart contracts with the digital euro fits well in wholesale supply chains and insurance.

Interoperability of payment networks and token standards (token standards) are important for compatibility with corporate ERP and treasury platforms. In the COREDO projects in Singapore and Dubai we tested off-chain orchestration and on-chain confirmations to maintain compatibility with ISO 20022 and simplify auditing. Central bank pilot projects and use cases confirm: the market is ready for micropayments in IoT and automatic payments for resource usage, where CBDC addresses the ‘pain’ of transaction cost and delays.

The impact of the digital euro on the card payments ecosystem will be uneven. For high-risk merchant categories and cross-border scenarios cards will retain their role, but where value is in instant settlement finality and low cost, cards will give way to CBDC payments and SEPA Instant.

Pressure on interchange fees will inevitably increase demand for alternative rails.

AML/KYC compliance, sanctions and privacy

Anti-money laundering compliance (AML) for CBDC is about accuracy and speed. Real-time sanctions screening, fraud detection and transaction analytics in CBDC must operate with low latency so as not to break the UX. At COREDO we implement risk scoring that accounts for device context, behavioral biometrics and geoprofile, integrating the travel rule and beneficiary requirements for corporate wallets.

Compliance, sanctions and the digital euro imply not only filters but also managerial reporting. KPIs and KRIs for the transition to CBDC include the share of flagged transactions, average unblocking time, alert accuracy and escalation speed. Such a dashboard helps risk directors see not only the occurrence of incidents but also operational ‘bottlenecks’.

Privacy and GDPR requirements for the digital euro imply privacy by design and pseudonymization regimes. We use architectural patterns that separate identification and transaction processing, with optional use of zero-knowledge proofs where justified. This reduces regulatory risk and simplifies audits while remaining within lawful interests and the fight against financial crime.

BCP, DRP and cybersecurity

Operational resilience risks for PSPs in the context of CBDC are coming to the forefront. Operational resilience, BCP and DRP require scenario modeling: from performance degradation to the complete unavailability of some nodes. At COREDO we run war‑game sessions with technical and business teams to test failure scenarios and business recovery in case of CBDC outages, and we formalize the procedures in agreements with providers.

Cybersecurity for CBDC infrastructure is based on strict key management: cryptographic keys, HSM and custody, network segmentation, end‑to‑end encryption and hardware isolation of critical components. We insist on regular red‑team exercises, supply‑chain checks and independent audits to reduce the likelihood of compromise of critical secrets.
Liquidity management tools for PSPs are no less important. Liquidity management and LMP tools, minimum balances and liquidity reservation must comply with central bank rules and internal risk limits. For the CFO this means: daily repricing protocols, intra‑day limits, reporting on liquidity corridors and real‑time alerting.

ROI, fees and servicing costs

Planning ROI for payment intermediaries when transitioning to the digital euro begins with a cost-to-serve analysis. Transaction costs and operating expenses under the digital euro depend on the custody model, routing, required SLA and chosen providers. The COREDO team prepares unit economics by segment, models scenarios of declining interchange-dependent revenues and restructures fee structures for value-added services.

Transaction pricing in the digital euro must take into account settlement finality, the client’s risk profile, reporting requirements and additional services (scoring, payment guarantee, reconciliation). The impact of the digital euro on the payment fee system will manifest in greater transparency and a stratification of prices between “basic” processing and intelligent overlays.

Which business models will remain for PSPs? Those that can monetize risk management, programmability and analytics.

Hedging instruments for companies under the digital euro will be closer to day-to-day liquidity: short swaps, dynamic management of DSO/DPO and factoring based on smart contracts. In COREDO projects for holdings in the EU and Asia we tested automatic splitting of payments between suppliers and the treasuries of subsidiaries, reducing operational burden and decreasing accounting errors.

Plan: from architecture to pilot launch

How to prepare a payment intermediary for the digital euro? I use a four‑phase plan that has proven effective across different jurisdictions.

  1. Readiness assessment and architectural sketch: analysis of current APIs, AML/sanctions controls, custody options, performance (TPS throughput) and reliance on card networks. Defining target KPI/KRI and failure scenarios.
  2. Regulatory and licensing framework: checking compliance with PSD2, preparing for MiCA alignment, updating GDPR policy, describing AML/KYC for the digital euro and the travel rule, as well as setting up real‑time sanctions screening.
  3. Integration and security: designing API gateways and wallet integration, selecting a custody provider for digital currencies, HSM and key hierarchy, testing offline payments and privacy modes. Setting up monitoring, fraud analytics and logging in ISO 20022 format.
  4. Testing and pilots: regulatory sandboxes (sandbox) for CBDC solutions, testing and pilot scenarios for the digital euro with merchants and corporate wallets, stress tests BCP/DRP, preparation of reporting and a business case for scaling.
COREDO’s practice confirms: early dialogue with the regulator and participation in pilots reduces uncertainty and gives an edge in UX and compliance. We helped a PSP in Estonia and a bank in the Czech Republic align pilot scenarios with the supervisor and establish risk control checkpoints.

COREDO case studies – licensing and AML

Our experience at COREDO has shown that CBDC readiness accelerates when the basic elements are already in place. For an e‑money institution in Cyprus the team set up full‑stack AML/KYC for the digital euro taking into account the travel rule, implemented real‑time sanctions screening and integrated an API gateway for ISO 20022. This made it possible to move to a merchant pilot in eight months instead of the planned twelve.
In Slovakia we supported a PSP that was worried about margin compression. Together we recalculated the PSP’s revenue model under CBDC implementation, brought two new offers to market: guaranteed settlement for marketplaces and escrow on smart‑contracts for B2B. The effects of the digital euro on payment intermediaries’ margins were offset by increased turnover and reduced chargeback expenses.
In Singapore and Dubai we worked with custody providers for digital currencies, building custody models and key storage for the digital euro, access regulations and recovery procedures. The client received an independent report on operational resilience covering BCP, DRP and KRI, as well as the results of red‑team exercises and pentests. This package simplified communication with corporate merchants and insurers.
Finally, a case in the UK and Estonia: a payment gateway was preparing for reduced interchange and intensified its focus on programmable money. We implemented smart contracts for automated settlements with suppliers, established rules for tax accounting and reporting, and set up an integration with tokenized deposits at a partner bank. This accelerated capital turnover and reduced the cost of processing payments.

Plan 12–24 months for banks, PSPs, corporates.

The strategy looks pragmatic. Banks need to test a two‑tier digital euro model with limits and non‑reducing balances, integrate LMP tools and update client wallets taking into account privacy modes and offline scenarios. At the same time I recommend conducting stress‑tests of deposit outflows and developing an offering for tokenized deposits for corporate clients.

PSPs should rebuild the pricing grid with a focus on value‑added services: fraud analytics, payment guarantees, reconciliation platforms, conditional payouts and programmable B2B scenarios. Partnerships with banks and fintechs around CBDC and participation in regulatory sandboxes will provide quick access to pilots and reduce integration risks.
Corporate treasuries need to prepare a CBDC usage policy: limits, hedging rules, ERP updates for ISO 20022, accelerated collection scenarios and optimization of DSO/DPO. The impact of the digital euro on corporate liquidity can become a source of competitive advantage if treasury processes and reporting are adapted in advance.

Why should you start preparing now?

The CBDC euro is ceasing to be an experiment and is becoming the framework within which banks, PSPs and corporations will do business in the EU.

The digital euro’s impact on payment intermediaries, the card payments ecosystem and corporate settlements affects not only technology but also margin, product strategy and compliance. I see not a threat here, but an opportunity to relaunch high value‑added services, from programmable payouts to intelligent liquidity.

COREDO grew at the intersection of company registration, licensing and AML consulting, and it is precisely this combination that helps clients turn regulatory changes into sustainable business cases. If your team plans to integrate the digital euro, you’ll need a precise architecture, a clear roadmap and partners who take responsibility for the outcome. The COREDO team is ready to walk the path with you from readiness assessment to pilot and scaling, maintaining process transparency and control over risks.

Since 2016 I have been leading COREDO on a trajectory of sustainable and technology-driven consulting. During this time I have helped hundreds of entrepreneurs from Europe, Asia and the CIS countries register companies in the EU, the United Kingdom, Singapore and Dubai, obtain financial licenses and build a reliable AML framework. Today at the forefront is green financing and obtaining green finance status. The market is changing, regulators are tightening the screws, banks are revising risk models, and investors are looking for projects with demonstrable climate impact. I see this not as a trend but as a structural transformation. And my task is to show how to extract the maximum benefit from it.

The COREDO team has implemented projects for the certification of green loans, supported the issuance of green bonds for SMEs and structured sustainability-linked loans (SLLs) tied to decarbonization KPIs. COREDO’s practice confirms: companies that integrate ESG policies and properly prepare documentation under the EU Taxonomy criteria for lending obtain better terms on debt capital and strengthen their negotiating position with banks and funds. In this material I will reveal a step-by-step logic, provide practical checklists and analyze how to form sustainable financing for businesses in key jurisdictions.

Why businesses choose green finance

Illustration for the section «Why businesses choose green finance» in the article «Green Finance status: obtaining and application in lending»

Green finance статус – это не ярлык, а экономическая логика. Банки меняют ценообразование с учетом климатических рисков, применяют green yield‑discounts и корректируют risk weights для зелёных активов. Компании с подтвержденным низкоуглеродным финансированием демонстрируют снижение стоимости капитала и расширенный доступ к долгосрочным деньгам.

Clients and partners increasingly ask about ESG Due Diligence when issuing loans, transition plans and net‑zero targets. Our experience at COREDO has shown: clients who have implemented GHG accounting for Scope 1‑3 and tied KPIs to SBTi accelerate the lending process and obtain flexible covenants. This is already a competitive advantage, not just a section in the sustainability report.

Standards EU Taxonomy, SFDR, TCFD, ISSB

Illustration for the section «Standards EU Taxonomy, SFDR, TCFD, ISSB» in the article «Green Finance — obtaining status and application in lending»

I base my approach on four supporting pillars, without which sustainable finance loses its meaning. The EU Taxonomy establishes the technical screening criteria and sets tests for economic activities. SFDR governs the disclosure of sustainable finance, aligning the expectations of investors and banks. TCFD recommendations focus on disclosing climate risks, scenarios, and governance processes. ISSB standards consolidate corporate sustainability reporting on a single basis.

The solution developed at COREDO brings these frameworks together into a single operational regulation: from double materiality to climate scenario analysis and stress testing. I pay particular attention to the technical screening criteria: practical tests of projects, and the principle do no significant harm. This is the foundation for obtaining green finance status and the basis for compliance with ICMA and GLP standards in lending.

How to obtain green finance status

Illustration for the section 'How to obtain green finance status' in the article 'Green Finance status: obtaining and application in lending'

I suggest treating obtaining green finance status as a project with clear milestones. This approach reduces transaction costs and eliminates back-and-forth between the bank, the verifier and internal teams.

  • Compliance assessment for the EU Taxonomy and GLP: identification of eligible activities, gaps and priorities.
  • Setting ESG targets: integration of SBTi, net-zero and a transition plan into the credit strategy.
  • Instrument structure: green loan, sustainability-linked loan, green bond or green securitization.
  • Dossier preparation: project model, climate scenario analysis, KPIs and monitoring policy.
  • Third-party verification: selection of an accredited verifier and setting up procedures to validate green claims.
  • Credit process: loan terms, ESG-linked covenants, green collateral and a rate adjustment mechanism.
  • Monitoring & reporting: regular reporting, validation of metrics and audit.
COREDO’s practice confirms: disciplined stages save months and directly affect the interest rate.

Document package for a green loan

Illustration for the section «Document package for a green loan» in the article «Green Finance: status, obtaining and application in lending»

How to prepare a document package for a green loan? I guide teams toward a structure that banks and verifiers accept without unnecessary clarifications. This speeds up the green loan certification process and reduces the risk of revisions.

  • Company green finance framework.
  • Project description and compliance with the EU Taxonomy: technical screening criteria, DNSH and minimum social safeguards.
  • GHG accounting (Scope 1‑3), methods of measuring and verifying CO2 reductions.
  • Environmental impact assessment (EIA) and, if necessary, life‑cycle assessment (LCA).
  • Environmental risk assessment in lending: risk map, mitigation measures, climate risk insurance and premiums.
  • Sustainability KPIs and impact measurement, including SROI for green projects.
  • Monitoring policy and independent third‑party verification.
  • Financial model: discounted cash flow taking into account climate risk, payback period, NPV, IRR.
  • Procurement plan and supply chain verification, including scope 3 reporting.
The COREDO team uses a due diligence checklist for green financing, aligned with the LMA Green Loan Principles and the methodologies of the International Capital Market Association. Such a standard “skeleton” facilitates the certification of a green project and obtaining a green loan certificate.

Verification and protection against greenwashing

Illustration for the section 'Verification and protection against greenwashing' in the article 'Green Finance: obtaining status and its application in lending'

Greenwashing: a risk with legal consequences and a reputational tail. European regulators are tightening oversight, and enforcement cases in the EU and Asia are creating precedents and raising the evidentiary bar. I design the process so that validation of green claims happens in the “early stages”, not at the end of the deal.

Interaction with verifiers and auditors requires transparent data and clear methodologies. An independent auditor’s environmental due diligence establishes the baseline, and procedures for revoking status set out the triggers for review. This approach supports the bank’s trust and reduces the likelihood of disputed interpretations, including legal liability for false ESG statements.

ESG Policy: from declarations to KPIs

ESG policy for companies works when it is supported by KPIs and processes. I tie KPIs to manageable drivers: energy efficiency, share of renewable energy, emissions intensity, waste recycling and supply chain engagement. Integrating SBTi and net‑zero targets into lending agreements creates a “nervous system” of resilience in finance.

COREDO implements ESG due diligence practices when issuing loans with bank partners in Europe and Asia. This approach strengthens the rationale for green yield discounts and shapes realistic ESG‑linked covenants. As a result, green loan covenants and loan terms turn from a “formality” into an effective management tool.

Assessment of the loan’s environmental risks

Banks assess the impact of climate risks on PD and LGD, as well as on exposure under environmental stress scenarios. I recommend that borrowers demonstrate their own assessment models, aligned with the TCFD and ISSB frameworks. This helps meet the expectations of the credit risk committee and speeds up limit approvals.

Climate-risk mitigation tools in the loan portfolio include weather-risk insurance, guarantee mechanisms and adjustments to terms based on KPIs. The solution developed at COREDO combines climate scenario analysis, stress testing and a transition risk response plan. This package reduces the bank’s capital charges and improves loan pricing for the borrower.

Pricing and loan terms

The influence of green status on the loan interest rate is reflected through discounts to the margin and grace periods when KPIs are met. I recommend documenting the performance mechanisms in the agreement: measurement frequency, calculation methodologies, independent verification and the procedure for adjusting the rate. ESG-linked covenants and the mechanics of enforcement become contractual “logic”, not a set of general promises.

Loans often rely on green collateral and special covenants on operational risk when transitioning to a low-carbon model. COREDO’s practice shows that a clear KPI architecture increases cash flow predictability and supports the company’s credit rating.

Instruments: green loan, SLL, green bond

I tailor the structure to the business strategy, not the other way around. For CAPEX‑intensive projects, a green loan with a strict taxonomy works very well. For companies undergoing transformation: a sustainability‑linked loan, where KPIs and covenants determine pricing. To attract market debt: a green bond framework and bond issuance, including a structured green bond product for SMEs.

Green securitization and the issuance of asset‑backed securities convert a pool of green assets into liquidity and reduce funding costs. Banks are willing to discuss green securitization of a loan portfolio if there is transparent reporting and independent verification. Here the ICMA and GLP standards serve as a common “grammar” between borrowers, banks, and investors.

Financing of renewable energy: PPA and insurance

The specifics of project financing for renewable energy depend on the revenue structure. A PPA (power purchase agreement) with a quality offtake reduces cash-flow volatility and supports bank covenants. I insist on a thorough assessment of asset life cycles, LCA and performance degradation scenarios.

It is rational to include climate risk insurance and premiums in the model from day one. Banks assess the quality of coverage just as carefully as the credit history. This approach stabilizes DSCR/LLCR metrics and facilitates scaling the project in international lending.

Practice of registration and licensing

Registration of legal entities and Licensing in the “right” jurisdiction speeds up access to green capital. In the EU companies align reporting with the EU Taxonomy and SFDR, and banks expect compliance with LMA and ICMA. In the UK banks focus on TCFD disclosures and the active role of the PRA/FCA in supervision.

Singapore and Dubai offer tax and regulatory incentives for green finance, and verifiers and banks work in close partnership with government programs. The COREDO team built structures in Cyprus and Estonia for fintechs focused on ESG payments and alternative data, and also supported registrations in the Czech Republic and Slovakia for manufacturing groups with green capex. Such a footprint provides flexibility in choosing a bank and shortens credit committee timelines.

Interconnection of AML and green finance

The interconnection of AML and green finance is strengthening. Banks assess the origin of funds, supply chains and the sustainability of suppliers. I implement compliance requirements for green loans together with KYC/AML procedures so that lending and compliance workflows run in sync.
In the list of checks: a regulatory compliance checklist for banks and borrowers, supply chain verification and oversight of carbon credit markets. Such oversight protects against greenwashing and strengthens auditors’ confidence.

Due diligence for banks and borrowers

I use a due diligence checklist for green financing that covers the expectations of the bank and the verifier. It includes:

  • Compliance with the EU Taxonomy and technical screening criteria.
  • ESG policy and an SBTi/net‑zero roadmap.
  • Methods for measuring and verifying CO2 reductions.
  • KPI monitoring plan and third‑party verification.
  • Climate scenario modeling and stress‑tests.
  • Rules for validating green claims and procedures for revoking status.
  • Legal framework: contractual covenants, disclosures under SFDR/ISSB/TCFD.
  • Insurance and guarantees: credit enhancement mechanisms, subsidies, grants.
This structure creates a common “language” for all parties to the transaction and speeds up closing.

Modeling ROI and climate risks

Assessing the ROI of green investments in bank lending requires accounting for climate and externalities. I embed discounted cash flow that accounts for climate risk, SROI to justify social impact, and impact measurement metrics for investors. This affects the company’s credit rating and reduces the bank’s perceived risk.

Methods for measuring and verifying CO2 reductions are becoming part of the “pricing” of capital. The more robust the methodology and the more transparent the data, the more stable the margin and the more favorable the covenants.

Transition finance, SBTi and net‑zero in loans

Transition finance supports companies that are changing their model step by step. I link investment phases to KPIs and the interest rate, setting mechanisms for increasing/decreasing the margin based on ESG achievements. Integrating SBTi and net‑zero commitments into the covenant strengthens discipline and reduces risks for syndicates.

How to scale green projects in an international loan? Rely on LMA/ICMA standards, “replicable” KPIs, transparent reporting and long-standing relationships with the bank. Such a set simplifies structuring syndicated green loans and preparing for green securitization.

How to use tax incentives

Government grants, subsidies and tax incentives for green finance strengthen the deal economics. I analyze local programs in the EU, the UK, Singapore and Dubai, assess the impact on capital structure and coordinate terms with the bank. Credit enhancement mechanisms, including guarantees and rate subsidies, improve covenants and increase the final limit.

The right incentive architecture often accelerates payback and increases NPV. Banks view such elements positively if the program structure allows reliable reporting and oversight.

Verifiers and data providers

Data providers and environmental metrics providers determine the quality of measurement. I recommend platforms that support ISSB/TCFD and integrate Scope 3 reporting. This reduces disputes over methodologies and makes environmental due diligence by independent auditors easier.

I structure interactions with verifiers through a clear calendar: baseline, interim checkpoints, final verification. Such a rhythm disciplines processes and minimizes operational risk.

COREDO cases: securing green finance

Recently the COREDO team implemented a green loan for an EU packaging manufacturer transitioning to recycled raw materials and energy-efficiency upgrades. The project was certified under the EU Taxonomy, the bank applied green yield‑discounts, and the covenants set a KPI to reduce Scope 1‑2 by 28% over three years. The client received a longer term and flexible amortization.

Another case, a structured product — a green bond for an SME in Singapore focused on energy-efficient buildings. The solution developed at COREDO included a green bond framework, third‑party verification and subsequent green securitization of a loan pool. Investor demand exceeded expectations, and borrowers gained access to low-carbon financing on KPI-linked terms.

The third project, an SLL for a technology company in Dubai with the integration of SBTi and net‑zero targets into loan agreements. COREDO’s practice confirms: a clear architecture of ESG‑linked covenants strengthens discipline, reduces operational risk and accelerates the achievement of KPI.

How to organize the process in COREDO

I begin with a rapid diagnostic: eligibility, gaps against the EU Taxonomy and data readiness. Next: instrument strategy: green loan, SLL, green bond or their combination. In parallel I set up the ESG policy and KPIs, align SBTi/net-zero and the monitoring plan.

At the documentation stage COREDO prepares a green finance framework, a DCF model with climate scenarios, a set of KPIs and the contractual covenant architecture. Then I engage third-party verification and agree the procedure for verifying environmental indicators. Final block – loan negotiations: rate, green yield-discounts, covenants and terms, including green loan covenants and the ESG reporting procedure.

Cost, timelines, risks: frequently asked questions

The cost of certifying green financing depends on the scale of the project, the complexity of EU Taxonomy‑mapping and the bank’s verification requirements. I recommend reserving a budget for data, audits and adapting KPIs to the methodologies. This is an investment in the interest rate and access to long‑term funding.

Timelines depend on the maturity of ESG‑processes and the quality of emissions data. A prepared package and proactive work with the verifier noticeably accelerate the credit committee review. Managing reputational risks when securing green financing is built on transparency, regular monitoring and the readiness to provide documentary evidence of results.

Consequences of green status for businesses

The long-term consequences of green status for business go beyond the cost of credit. A company gains access to syndicated and exchange markets, strengthens its employer brand and reduces regulatory risks. Banks and investors value predictable KPIs, sound methodologies and disciplined execution.

COREDO acts as a partner throughout the entire journey: from the registration of legal entities in the target jurisdiction and obtaining financial licenses to the AML framework, certification of green loans and structuring deals according to LMA and ICMA standards. I build relationships on transparency, a methodical approach and respect for regulatory requirements. This approach creates a foundation for sustainable growth and opens doors to capital that supports future market leaders.

I founded COREDO in 2016 with one simple idea: international business should be built not on compromises, but on systematics and predictability. Over the years our focus: company formation in EU countries, the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Cyprus and Estonia, the United Kingdom, Singapore and Dubai: has grown into a full-fledged solutions platform: from licensing financial services to AML consulting and RegTech implementation. COREDO’s practice confirms that entrepreneurs and CFOs expect two things – accuracy and speed. The first is ensured by sound legal design, the second – compliance through software and compliance automation.

A comprehensive approach to compliance

The globalization of processes, PSD2 and Open Banking in the EU, the requirements of AMLD4/AMLD5/AMLD6, as well as the recommendations of FATF have made financial compliance an integral part of the operating model.

Company registration is no longer limited to the charter and an address; it is tied to KYC/KYB, beneficiary checks (UBO), compliance with sanctions lists and readiness for regulatory reporting. Our experience at COREDO has shown: if you start automating processes at the same time as registration, a business gains a tangible advantage in timelines and in the quality of control.

The earlier you lay the RegTech architecture for small business, the easier it is to scale compliance solutions as the client base grows and you enter new markets.

regulatory technologies for startups and SMEs have long ceased to be a luxury; they are a way to ensure resilience to inspections, AML transparency and time savings on manual checks. I see how compliance software for small business addresses the pain of disproportionate costs and helps build processes according to the principles of privacy by design and data minimization.

Map of jurisdictions and practical nuances
Jurisdictions differ not only by tax regime, but also by regulator practice regarding client onboarding using software and the legal infrastructure of eIDAS, eKYC and digital identifiers (eID). Estonia offers a convenient ecosystem for electronic signatures and remote KYC/KYB; in Cyprus: clear roadmaps for payment licenses; in the United Kingdom: a mature regulatory sandbox environment and a high AML reporting standard. In Singapore and Dubai the emphasis is on technological sophistication, but regulators also take a strict approach to document quality, especially regarding UBO and PEP screening.

COREDO’s practice confirms: for cross‑border structures it is worth defining from the outset where client information is stored and where it is processed, taking into account the GDPR and cross-border data transfers. This affects the choice of SaaS compliance solutions and the terms for ensuring data confidentiality when using cloud RegTech. At the design stage it is useful to fix reporting requirements (SAR automation, regulatory reporting and automation) and to define roles in access rights management (RBAC) to avoid chaotic rework.

Licenses for crypto, payments and forex
obtaining licenses: this is not only a set of formalities, but also a check of your operational readiness. Payment institutions, forex brokers and crypto providers must show the regulator a viable AML framework: KYC for SMEs, KYB, KYT (Know Your Transaction), transaction monitoring, adverse media screening and watchlist management. The COREDO team has implemented licensing projects in the EU and Asia, and we see that regulators pay close attention to reducing false positives in AML and to model testing and rule validation.

Crypto analytics and AML for crypto operations require a separate level of maturity: blockchain analytics, analysis of fraud-network graphs and graph analytics of transactions improve the quality of risk detection. Regulators expect companies to demonstrate well-founded risk scoring models, the presence of backtesting for compliance models and management of false negative risk. The solution developed at COREDO together with partners in crypto analytics helps link on‑chain and off‑chain data through entity resolution and data enrichment, which improves the explainability of decisions during inspections.

RegTech for SME compliance
RegTech today is a set of interconnected modules: eKYC, sanctions screening and PEP screening for small business, tools for beneficiary checks (UBO), transaction monitoring for small business, case management and workflow automation. For SMEs it is important to balance functionality and TCO, so regulatory technologies for startups should be modular, with a clear API for integrating compliance and a transparent SLA.

I recommend viewing RegTech as a builder with clear interfaces: API aggregators of sanctions lists, a matching algorithms module with fuzzy name matching, OCR for documents, biometric verification and liveness detection for remote onboarding. This approach allows functionality to be built up step by step, from client onboarding using software to suspicious activity analysis (SAR) and reporting automation.

SaaS vs on‑prem: choice and TCO/ROI calculation
The comparison of SaaS vs on‑prem compliance solutions comes down to three parameters: speed of implementation, control over data and total cost of ownership. SaaS compliance solutions win on time‑to‑value and scalability thanks to multitenancy and CI/CD, while on‑prem gives greater control over data residency and specialized security configuration. How long it takes to implement RegTech in SMEs depends on the architecture: with SaaS a pilot can be launched in 4–8 weeks, on‑prem often requires 3–6 months to prepare infrastructure and VAPT.

The cost of implementing RegTech should be calculated through the full TCO: licenses, integrations, training, support, SLAs, as well as internal maintenance costs.

What ROI to expect from compliance automation depends on the volume of operations and the percentage of false positives, but COREDO cases show a reduction in operating costs by 30–50% and a 2–3x increase in onboarding throughput. The key to an accurate calculation is metrics before and after: average verification time, share of repeat data requests, level of false positives and case closure time.

RegTech in accounting systems and PSD2
Integration of RegTech into accounting systems, CRM and billing should be built through APIs and an event‑driven architecture. This allows checks to run in real time: a client address change – a trigger for repeat CDD/EDD, a large transaction – activation of KYT and behavioral analytics. Connecting to Open Banking under PSD2 opens additional sources for risk scoring, and electronic identificatIdentification (eKYC) and integration of identification services and digital passports reduce friction in onboarding.

Our solution, developed at COREDO for one of the corporate groups, uses microservices and scaling for distributed application processing. This gives flexibility during peak periods and allows connecting new modules, from adverse media to sanctions aggregator APIs, without downtime of the core. Such a design increases resilience and facilitates testing of rule updates through CI/CD and canary releases.Data protection: GDPR, ISO 27001, SOC 2
Foundation: data quality and security. Data lineage and data quality help explain any scoring decisions, and properly built ETL and data pipelines reduce the likelihood of matching errors. For GDPR compliance and data protection, privacy by design, encryption of data at rest and in transit, a clear data storage policy and data retention in RegTech‑systems, as well as access auditing via an audit log and audit trail are important.

ISO 27001 and SOC 2 certifications increase trust in the provider, but I always look at practice: regular penetration testing and VAPT, rights management (RBAC), control of cross‑border transfers and data minimization. In a cloud model, the location of data centers and how the provider implements disaster recovery matter. This directly affects vendor risk management and the terms of SLAs with measurable KPIs.

Onboarding: eKYC, KYC, PEP and sanctions
Onboarding: it’s the time until the first transaction and the first risk filter. Electronic identification (eKYC) in combination with eIDAS and electronic signatures reduces friction, and KYC/KYB with minimal costs is achieved through smart data requests, OCR and pre‑filling forms from public registries. Screening customers against sanctions lists, PEP screening for small businesses and adverse media screening should be done automatically with real‑time updates of sanctions lists.

Tools for cross‑border client onboarding include address and phone number verification, LEI and automation of beneficiary checks when registering legal entities in the EU. Our experience at COREDO has shown that with a clear onboarding workflow design you can reduce the time for initial verification from a day to an hour while preserving the depth Due Diligence. Important not only is the set of sources but also the matching algorithms: from simple name normalization to entity resolution.

beneficiary checks UBO and LEI in the EU
Verification of beneficial owners (UBO) is built around a combination of sources: the EU beneficial owners register, corporate registries, international databases and client documents. verification tools for beneficiaries (UBO) should support multi‑level ownership structures, trusts and nominee schemes, and also be able to collect LEIs and link them to corporate events. It is important to provide for regular updating of UBO status and to record changes in the audit trail.

In COREDO projects we apply workflow automation that initiates repeat CDD/EDD upon trigger events – change of director, increase of a participant’s share, registration in a new country.

Such an approach reduces the risk of outdated information and eases audit preparation. Instead of manual search, documents go through OCR, and data comparison is verified through matching algorithms.

Reducing false positives: matching and XAI
false positives – a typical AML pain point for small businesses. Reducing false positives in AML is achieved by combining matching algorithms, fuzzy name matching, localization of transliterations and adjusting scoring thresholds and tuning for a specific customer portfolio. Explainable AI (XAI) in AML helps analysts understand why the system made a decision, which reduces case processing time and increases regulator confidence.

I see results from using ML and graph algorithms for fraud detection: models take into account behavioral patterns and relationships between entities, not only static rules. It is important to implement model testing and backtesting of compliance models to demonstrate metric stability and absence of drift. This is a key argument in meetings with the regulator and in independent audits.

Transaction monitoring and KYT
Classic rule‑based transaction monitoring quickly becomes overwhelmed by alerts. Moving to behavioral analytics and KYT allows taking into account volumes, frequencies and channels, building individual risk profiles. The COREDO team implemented projects where a hybrid of rules and models reduced alerts by 40% while maintaining detection levels.

Legal AML requirements and KYC in EU and Asian countries expect the presence of escalation mechanisms and clear risk segmentation.

For SMEs it’s important that transaction monitoring for small businesses does not require an army of analysts, but is integrated with case management and has SLAs for incident handling. Such a design simplifies regulatory reporting and strengthens financial compliance.

Real time vs batch processing
The choice between real time and batch processing depends on the risk profile and business model. For payment providers and crypto services an event‑driven architecture with microservices is appropriate, providing blocking of suspicious operations before funds are credited. Correspondent banks and brokers often find batch processing with daily risk re‑evaluation sufficient if minute‑level responses are not required.

In both scenarios transparent event queues, an audit log and reprocessing are valuable. Microservices and scaling allow handling load peaks and separating responsibilities: one service tracks sanctions, another behavioral anomalies, a third KYT. This facilitates releasing rule updates via CI/CD and locally testing impact on metrics.

Blockchain and AML for crypto operations
Crypto operations require real‑time KYT and integration with external blockchain analytics providers. Cluster analysis, address risk scoring, mixer and darknet market detection are standard modules of mature systems. It is important to ensure explainability: why an address is flagged as high risk, which transactions led to that conclusion, and how this affects the decision to accept or reject a payment.

The solution developed at COREDO for a crypto project in the EU combined on‑chain signals with the client’s behavioral profile and sanctions sources. We reduced false positives by 35% without worsening detection thanks to graph analytics and precise threshold tuning. Such a result is achieved only with clear data lineage, regular rule updates and competent case management.

Reporting, audit and risk management
Regulatory reporting is not a final step but an embedded control mechanism. SAR automation should rely on a single case repository where each hypothesis is linked to the source dataand and the analyst’s decisions. The audit log and audit trail provide traceability, and workflow automation prevents forgotten tasks and delays in meeting submission deadlines.

Managing risks of third parties, suppliers and partners is a critical element. Vendor risk management implies regular review of SLAs, KPIs and verification of compliance with ISO 27001/SOC 2. The more transparent yourrisk matrix and the escalation process, the easier it is to pass inspections and independent audits.

SAR: automation, audit trail

Good case management makes statuses, owners, and deadlines for each incident type transparent.

It helps prepare for peak periods and allocates resources according to priorities. Our clients note that after implementing centralized case management the time to close complex cases is reduced by 1.5–2 times, and the quality of SAR improves thanks to the standardization of wording and references to sources.

Workflow automation is useful not only in compliance but also in legal operations: license renewals, policy updates, and staff training tests. Such processes create a culture of predictability and noticeably reduce operational risk.

Managing false-negative risk
Compliance models require regular backtesting: we check how they performed on historical data and how quality changes when the market shifts. Managing false-negative risk is a balance between the speed and depth of checks, control samples, and independent rule reviews. I recommend recording target metrics – precision/recall, share of escalations, average investigation time, and linking them to the team’s KPIs.

Practices of implementing AML software in international business show that without model governance any system quickly loses effectiveness. A solution: a single rules library, version control, and a clear process for approving changes. This is especially important for companies operating in multiple jurisdictions.

audit preparation and sandboxes

How to prepare for an audit after implementing RegTech?

Gather a data map (data lineage), reconcile policies with practice, check access rights (RBAC), run stress tests for information risk, and ensure up-to-date instructions and training records. Regulatory sandboxes allow testing innovations on a limited sample, receiving feedback and reducing risks when scaling.

The COREDO team supports pilots and helps prepare documentation: process descriptions, testing reports, VAPT reports and remediation plans. This approach increases the chances of passing an audit without additional charges and speeds up time-to-market.

RegTech implementation in SMEs
How long does it take to implement RegTech in SMEs? Typical timeline: provider assessment and selection – 2–4 weeks, integrations and configuration – 4–8 weeks, pilot and tuning: 4 weeks, coverage growth, 2–6 weeks. The overall horizon is 3–5 months with a noticeable effect in the first 6–8 weeks. Scaling compliance solutions is incremental: by products, geographies and risk segments.

Change management is an essential part of the project. Staff training and change management when implementing compliance include case-based training, role management, a rules update protocol and regular metric reviews. Without this any technology becomes a “black box” and team trust declines.

Metrics and SLAs, vendor risk management

What metrics should be used to assess RegTech effectiveness?

I look at four blocks: speed (onboarding and investigation time), quality (false positives/false negatives, share of escalations), coverage (percentage of customers and transactions under control) and resilience (uptime, latency, security incidents). SLAs and key KPIs for vendors are fixed in the contract, and their monthly review is included in the operational routine.

Vendor risk management implies assessing the provider on security, financial stability, roadmap and transparency. I recommend conducting tabletop exercises once a year: what to do in case of a failure, a security incident, or a change in the sanctions regime. This builds a culture of readiness and increases reliability.

AI ethics and staff training
Training is not a formality but an investment in risk reduction. Regular updates on AMLD6, new FATF recommendations, GDPR requirements and PSD2 practices keep the team sharp. We pay attention to ethical issues of using AI in compliance: preventing discrimination, explainability, model drift control and human-in-the-loop procedures at critical stages.

A realistic training plan includes basic modules for the front office, advanced modules for analysts and administrators, and specialized modules for models and data. At COREDO we tie training to performance assessment: after knowledge upgrades we monitor changes in time and quality metrics of decisions.

COREDO case studies: how we solve things in practice
Stories best show how theory turns into results. I selected three cases where a comprehensive approach: from registration to RegTech – provided clients with predictability and speed without compromising on risk. These projects cover the EU, Singapore and the UK and demonstrate how COREDO builds long-term partnerships.

Each case illustrates key questions of the target audience: registration and licensing, AML consulting, architecture selection, reduction of false positives and audit preparation. And most importantly, how to calculate the ROI of compliance projects and lock in the effect within the operating model.

Fintech startup registration in the EU
A fintech startup approached us with the task of registering a company in the EU and obtaining a license for payment services. We designed the legal structure, prepared the AML/KYC package, implemented eKYC, sanctions screening and tools for checking beneficiaries (UBO) with automated beneficiary checks during legal entity registration in the EU. RegTech integration into accounting systems was done via APIs and an event-driven architecture.

Result: client onboarding via software reduced the TTV of a new user to 20 minutes, false positives decreased by 42% after tuning matching algorithms, and the regulator accepted the licensing package without additional rounds of questions. On the launch day AML reporting and SAR automation were already included in the workflow, which sped up approval with partner banks.

Scaling compliance in Singapore
A payments company in Singapore was growing at 15% per month and hit the limit of its operations team. We compared SaaS vs on-prem architecture and chose SaaS compliance solutions taking into account data confidentiality requirements when using cloud RegTech. We implemented microservices and scaling, RBAC, data encryption at rest and in transit, and backtesting of compliance models.

In 12 weeks the company moved to behavioral customer analytics, added KYT and integrated Open Banking flows. ROI and time-to-value were higher than expected: payback in 7 months fora 55% reduction in manual review and doubling the speed of investigations. The regulatory inspection passed without findings, aided by ISO 27001 processes and up-to-date VAPT reports.AML for a broker in the United Kingdom
A brokerage company in the United Kingdom faced an increase in false positive alerts and pressure on reporting deadlines. The COREDO team deployed workflow automation, configured scoring thresholds, implemented XAI to explain decisions and integrated adverse media screening. As part of vendor risk management we updated SLAs with data providers and added real-time monitoring of sanctions list updates.

Results after a quarter: a 38% reduction in false positives, manageable metrics for false negatives, and a predictable reporting schedule thanks to SAR automation. The client successfully passed the scheduled audit, and its board of directors approved a strategy to scale to the EU while preserving a unified RegTech‑architecture.

How to choose RegTech for small businesses

  • Compliance and security: ISO 27001, SOC 2, data storage policy and data retention, results of penetration testing and VAPT.
  • Architecture and integrations: API for compliance integration, support for event‑driven architecture, presence of microservices, multitenancy in SaaS.
  • Functionality: eKYC, KYC/KYB, UBO, PEP, sanctions lists, transaction monitoring and KYT, case management and reporting.
  • Quality and explainability: reduction of false positives, XAI, graph analytics of transactions, entity resolution, matching algorithms and tuning.
  • Data: watchlist management, adverse media screening, data enrichment, real-time updates, sources for LEI and registries.
  • Risk management: vendor risk management, SLAs and KPIs, information risk stress tests, business continuity plan.
  • Economics: cost of implementing RegTech, transparent TCO, expected ROI and time‑to‑value, scaling and licensing terms.
  • Operational maturity: CI/CD for rule updates, workflow automation, audit log, GDPR support and cross-border data transfer.
  • Flexibility: KYC‑as‑a‑Service, white‑label compliance solutions, possibility of sandbox pilots, support for local requirements in the EU and Asia.
  • Training and support: staff training program, documentation, support response time, transparent roadmap.

Conclusions and next steps
company registration and obtaining licenses in international jurisdictions are today inseparable from RegTech. The technical foundation — eKYC, KYC/KYB/UBO, transaction monitoring, KYT, reporting and audit trail — becomes as fundamental as the charter and the corporate agreement. When these elements connect through a well-thought-out architecture, you get transparent financial compliance, accelerated onboarding and confidence in inspections.

I believe in a pragmatic approach: risk assessment, choosing the appropriate architecture (SaaS or on‑prem), a fast pilot with measurable metrics and sequential scaling. The COREDO team has implemented dozens of projects following exactly this scenario — from the EU to Singapore and Dubai — and this experience helps us offer solutions that work in practice. If you need a partner who speaks the language of regulators and engineers, and turns compliance through software into a competitive advantage, I am ready to discuss your task and outline a results‑oriented roadmap.

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