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

I have been leading COREDO since 2016 and see every day how quickly the digital assets market is changing. Over the years the COREDO team has carried out dozens of projects for company registration and licensing in the EU, the United Kingdom, Singapore, Cyprus, Estonia, the Czech Republic, Slovakia and Dubai. Clients come with a variety of tasks: from creating an SPV for the tokenization of artworks to building institutional custodial infrastructure for NFTs. In this article I have compiled practical experience and strategic ideas: how to use NFTs as a financial instrument, how to manage risks, comply with MiCA, MiFID II, FATF and GDPR, and how to structure IFRS reporting so that the auditor has no questions left.

When NFTs are in a corporate portfolio

Illustration for the section «When NFTs are in a corporate portfolio» in the article «NFT as a financial instrument: the boundary between art and a security in the EU»

NFTs are no longer just about collectible art. In corporate practice they are an investment asset, an element of brand strategy and a tool for managing intellectual capital. In COREDO projects, NFTs are used for access to closed services, monetization of IP via NFT royalties, issuance of corporate privileges and loyalty programs, and also as collateral in financing deals.

From an investment-logic perspective, NFTs and securities in the EU are different things. Security token vs non-fungible token: this is above all a difference in legal nature: a security token, as a rule, falls under MiFID II and national securities regimes, whereas an NFT is a unique digital token that may be an investment asset depending on its economic function, but does not automatically become a security. Classifying an NFT as an investment asset requires analysis of utility, rights, returns, market-making and liquidity availability.

Brands gain a new channel for audience engagement and licensing economics from NFTs. Our experience at COREDO has shown that strategic use of NFTs for brands pays off when the links between token ownership and utility are formalized in smart contracts, and IP-licensing and exclusivity issues are secured in clear agreements. Then an NFT logically becomes part of the corporate portfolio alongside tokenized lease rights, service vouchers and shares in an SPV.

NFT: a security under MiFID II?

Illustration for the section «NFT: a security and MiFID II?» in the article «NFT as a financial instrument: the boundary between art and securities in the EU»

The question «are NFTs securities?» does not have a universal «yes/no». The EU legal framework assesses the economic substance of the instrument. If an NFT grants a right to a share of profits, a stream of royalties, asset management by a third party or other signs of an investment contract, a dialogue with MiFID II and prospectus requirements (prospectus requirements) begins, including possible exemptions for a limited circle of investors, small issuances or private placements.

We often use frameworks for assessing the legal nature of a token, where we apply the criteria of an investment contract (Howey test and analogies) specifically as an analytical lens: capital contribution, expectation of profit, efforts of a third party. In the EU this test is not law, but it helps structure arguments for regulators and platform compliance. COREDO’s practice confirms: when an NFT provides passive income or a promise of portfolio management, regulators may qualify such a token as a financial instrument, which brings MiFID II implications for brokers and platforms.

Tokenized securities vs NFTs: the key dividing line. If a token directly embodies a claim against an issuer, an equity share or a debt obligation, it becomes a security token subject to the full body of rules, up to prospectus requirements, provider licensing and reporting. If an NFT records access, a unique digital object or certifies a right of use without an investment component, we remain in a different regulatory zone.

Regulation of NFTs in the EU and secondary markets

Illustration for the section "Regulation of NFTs in the EU and secondary markets" in the article "NFT as a financial instrument: the border between art and a security in the EU"

Regulation of NFTs in the EU (MiCA) is built around crypto-asset issuers and service providers (CASP). The basic logic of MiCA: unique NFTs that do not belong to a large series and are not fractionalized are generally outside the direct scope, but the nuances are important.

Fractionalized NFTs (fractional tokens) and serial issuances with economically interchangeable properties may fall within the scope of MiCA, and in extreme cases: within MiFID II. The solution developed at COREDO: early token qualification and a compliance roadmap before launching smart contracts.

ESMA’s recommendations on digital assets complement MiCA with details on the delineation of services and investor protection. Regulation of NFT secondary markets requires transparency of fees, prevention of manipulation and manageability of listings. Monitoring for manipulation in the NFT market and combating wash trading become part of platforms’ internal controls, especially if they perform the functions of a broker or market operator.

How to issue NFTs in accordance with MiCA? We implement the following blocks: a white paper disclosing risks, a conflicts of interest policy, marketing rules, storage and custody rules, complaint procedures, incident management.

If necessary, we launch the project through regulatory sandboxes for crypto startups in the EU to agree in advance on the approach to token functions and circulation mechanics. Interaction with regulators and supervisory authorities is critical here: it reduces the risk of the instrument being reclassified after launch.

AML/KYC: how to build compliance for NFTs

Illustration for the section «AML/KYC: how to build compliance for NFTs» in the article «NFT as a financial instrument: the boundary between art and a security in the EU»

FATF guidance on virtual assets and service providers sets a risk‑based approach. AML KYC for NFT platforms includes customer identification, a procedure for proof of source of funds (SoF), transaction monitoring and pattern identification, application of the travel rule and data transfer requirements when funds move between providers.

The COREDO team implemented risk‑scoring of buyers and sellers for marketplaces, sanctions filters and on‑chain analytics to detect links with “tainted” addresses.

Money laundering risks through NFTs are typical: rapid resales with inflated prices, wash trading, transactions through mixers, a high rate of order cancellations.

Compliance procedures for NFT projects should include escalation rules, trading blocks on suspicion, SAR/STR reports and documentation of decisions.

GDPR when processing NFT clients’ data requires minimization, justified retention periods and transparent information for the data subject.

Cross-border NFT sales and currency regulations add another layer. Our lawyers at COREDO set up cross-border compliance for buyers from Asia and the EU, aligning KYC procedures, withholding taxes and interaction with payment systems and PSPs. Banking oversight is also important: interaction with the banking system and banking supervision requires source of funds policies, invoicing standards and clear contractual documentation between the platform, the issuer and the buyer.

Royalties and licensing

Illustration for the “Royalties and licensing” section of the article “NFT as a financial instrument: the boundary between art and a security in the EU”

The legal status of copyrights when selling NFTs is not an automatic transfer of IP. Usually either Licensing of digital content takes place when selling an NFT, or the transfer of a limited set of usage rights.

Separation of rights: ownership vs right of use must be explicitly recorded in the terms of sale and/or in an on-chain link to the license. In COREDO projects we arrange IP licensing and NFT exclusivity through separate agreements, taking into account moral rights and assignment in EU jurisdictions.

NFT royalties and intellectual property rights — an area where business often loses value due to uncertainty. It is important to determine how royalties on secondary sales are collected and distributed, who administers them, what restrictions are imposed on resale and where the boundaries of content use lie.

NFT marketplaces and platform liability require clear rules in offers: transparency of fees, refund conditions, secondary NFT sales and fee regulation — all of this becomes a subject of attention for regulators and antitrust authorities if practices appear to restrict competition.

How to prove provenance and authenticity of an NFT? Proofs of origin, on-chain provenance, storing NFT metadata on IPFS and Arweave, the resilience of links to digital files and a correct URI — these are the technical foundation of legal protection.

We insist on two-sided duplication of metadata, versioning and recording of hashes in the smart contract to prevent tampering. When IP is wrapped into an SPV and licensed via an NFT, the contractual framework links the rights holder, the custodian and the token holder.

Tokenization of art and real assets

Tokenization of works of art and the tokenization of real property and lease rights require careful legal structuring.

SPV legal structures for tokenized art are a proven scheme: the assets are held by a rights‑holding company, and NFTs sell access to benefits, viewing rights, priority participation in exhibitions, or fractional rights through fractionalized NFT. Fractional ownership legal structures carry particular risks for investors: when ownership is fractionalized, characteristics of a security can sometimes emerge, which may trigger MiFID II.

SPVs and legal wrappers for art tokens are useful for managing taxes, rights, insurance and custody.

Buyback agreements and options on NFTs help regulate investor exit, protect against liquidity shortfalls and address collection buyout scenarios.

investment funds NFTs in the EU can be structured in the form of AIFs with corresponding regulation of the management company, custodian, valuer and auditor – the COREDO team has structured such funds taking ESMA and local supervision into account.

The distinctions between ICO/STO/ITO and the comparison with NFT issuance are needed to understand regulator expectations: STOs are securities; ICOs/ITOs can fall under MiCA; NFT issuance more often does not require a prospectus, but does require disclosure and compliance if investment characteristics are present. COREDO’s experience confirms that early consultation with the regulator reduces costs and speeds up market entry.

Taxes and accounting for NFTs under IFRS

The tax consequences of NFT sales in Europe depend on what is being sold: digital content, access to a service, or usage rights.

Tax accounting: VAT and transactional taxes on NFTs are often treated as the supply of digital services subject to VAT at the place of consumption, and in B2B chains reverse charge mechanisms may apply.

Royalty income may be subject to withholding tax in certain jurisdictions: this is taken into account when structuring SPVs and licensing agreements.

Accounting for NFTs on a company’s balance sheet (IFRS) is closer to accounting for crypto assets: they are more often intangible assets under IAS 38, except when held for trading as inventories under IAS 2.

Accounting entries for acquisition and impairment of NFTs rely on fair value measurement and impairment tests; revaluation is possible when an active market exists, which is uncommon for unique NFTs.

Reporting and disclosure about NFT assets include accounting policies, valuation methodologies, liquidity and concentration risks.

Valuing NFTs for investors is built on three pillars.

First, valuation models: comparable sales (comps) for NFTs from comparable collections. Second, liquidity metrics: floor price, spread, trading volume, and the resilience of demand on the secondary market. Third, a discounted cash flow model for NFT royalty income, if the smart contract and legal agreements ensure a stable stream.

The COREDO team sometimes supplements the valuation with option models for rare cases involving buyback rights.

Smart contracts: standards and insurance

The ERC-721 and ERC-1155 standards and their differences define the ownership and transfer model. ERC‑721: unique “one-to-one” tokens; ERC‑1155: multi-asset model that allows combining unique and semi-fungible tokens.

Smart contracts (ERC-721, ERC-1155) and security are a central part of legal protection: bugs in code can wipe out rights, reduce royalties to zero, or open the door to an exploit.

Smart contract audits for legal protection should combine static analysis, formal verification, and testing of business scenarios: edge cases for listing, token burns, upgrades, royalties, and pauses. Blockchain code audits and formal verification reduce the risk of smart contract vulnerabilities and exploits, while digital asset insurance and loss coverage close out tail risks. Within companies we insist on corporate access control for wallets, role separation, and multi-factor policies.

Institutional custodial infrastructure for NFTs requires custodian solutions for institutional NFTs, SLAs, key recovery procedures, and controls over corporate transactions. Custody APIs and interaction standards enable integrating NFTs with ERP and accounting systems, automating transfers and tags for accounting. The COREDO team helped clients build cold‑hot‑warm storage architectures and asset movement policies aligned with auditors.

Markets and liquidity: risk control

NFT liquidity risk and exit strategies: this is the main area for the CFO. Exit strategies: listings on exchanges, OTC processes with KYC, buyback agreements and NFT options, as well as framework agreements with marketplaces for prioritized listing. Stress-testing the liquidity of an NFT portfolio models a drop in floor price, widening spreads, departure of market‑makers and regulatory shocks.

Controlling manipulation in the NFT market requires on-chain analytics and market activity indicators: monitoring wash trading, address clustering, analysis of holding times, price deviations from the median.

counterparty assessment and marketplaces by reputation reduces the risk of failures in settlements and delistings. The commercial model: fees, royalties, listing fees must be transparent and compatible with antitrust and competition-related risks of marketplaces — especially regarding exclusivity and restrictions on parallel sales.

Institutional players look at blockchain resilience: PoS vs PoW and energy consumption. Carbon footprint and offsetting NFT emissions are becoming part of ESG policy: we build in compensation mechanisms or choose energy-efficient networks. For collateralized deals, using NFTs as collateral (collateral) requires independent valuation, agreements with custodians and tripartite agreements with lenders.

COREDO: case studies and launch roadmap

One example is a European brand that tokenized its photo and video archive. COREDO’s practice confirmed that an SPV in the EU with a licensing model, a white paper and a transparent royalty policy passed an audit without adjustments, and integration of custody APIs with ERP enabled automated accounting under IFRS. The initial risk model included a floor-price stress test and limits on collection concentration.
Another case is a fractionalized NFT platform for rights to lease commercial premises. The COREDO team pre-assessed the MiFID II impact, agreed on prospectus requirements and exemptions, implemented AML/KYC for NFT platforms, the travel rule and SoF, and also deployed transaction monitoring and wash-trading detection. Smart-contract audits, formal verification and digital-asset insurance mitigated operational risks, and SPVs and legal wrappers for art tokens were adapted for real estate.
Below: a concise compliance roadmap for launching an NFT product that we use in projects:
  • Legal qualification: framework ‘security token vs non-fungible token’, MiCA/MiFID II/ESMA assessment, ICO/STO/ITO comparison.
  • corporate structure: SPV, IP agreements, licenses, royalty agreements, option and buyback.
  • Technical architecture: ERC-721/1155 standard, IPFS/Arweave, URI strategy, on-chain provenance.
  • Compliance: AML/KYC, SoF, travel rule, sanctions and export controls, GDPR, cross-border compliance.
  • Infrastructure: custody, insurance, corporate access control to wallets, custody APIs.
  • Taxes and accounting: VAT, transactional taxes, IFRS (IAS 38/IAS 2), disclosures and valuation models.
  • Market and liquidity: listing rules, fees and royalties, OTC processes, stress testing and exit.
  • Interaction with regulators: sandbox, notifications, responses to inquiries, internal reporting and best practices for internal control and reporting on NFTs.

Legal risks in EU practice

Legal disputes and case law on NFTs in the EU are still taking shape, but precedents are already setting the direction. Court precedents regarding the sale of NFTs (European cases) emphasize the importance of clear license terms, fair commercial practice and truthful marketing. Legal enforcement mechanisms in NFT fraud include asset freezes, platform notifications, interaction with custodians and cooperation with law enforcement.

Regulation of secondary NFT markets and marketplace liability require attention to the impact of MiFID II on brokers and platforms, especially when they begin to perform the functions of an organized trading venue.

Export control and sanctions risks of transactions: another reality: when working with clients from different regions, the COREDO team builds filters and blocking processes so that transactions do not violate EU regimes and those of partner jurisdictions.

DAOs as a tool for managing collections and funds have also become relevant in Europe. The role of DAOs in managing collections and funds requires aligning governance tokens and voting rights with off-chain corporate law. We increasingly use a hybrid: DAO voting logic on top of a legal entity (SPV or fund), where mandatory corporate actions are executed by a delegated director.

Payments and banking between on-chain and off-chain

We organize interactions with payment systems and PSPs through acquiring agreements, anti-fraud rules and transparent refund mechanics. Banks expect clear KYC/KYB, SoF logic and a predictable cash flow model.

Для корпоративных клиентов COREDO выстраивает мосты: кастоди для хранения, PSP для мерчанта и банковские счета для расчетов, чтобы снимать вопросы у финансового контроля и аудита.

Cross-border flows require consideration of currency and tax rules. Cross-border compliance for buyers from Asia and the EU includes separation of places of supply for VAT, economic substance tests and agreements with local payment processors.

При крупных продажах due diligence чек-лист перед покупкой крупного NFT включает KYC контрагента, проверку provenance, юридический статус IP, анализ маркетплейса, репутационные риски и страхование доставки цифрового актива.

ESG for NFT sustainability and reputation

Clients in the institutional segment increasingly include ESG criteria. Blockchain sustainability: PoS vs PoW and energy consumption affects network choice. Carbon footprint and offsetting of NFT emissions are configured through compensation programs, green certificates, and sustainability reporting. For public companies this becomes part of non-financial disclosure alongside liquidity and compliance risks.

Assessing counterparties and marketplaces by reputation reduces legal and market risks. We use a combined model: on-chain analytics to detect anomalies and off-chain checks: licenses, beneficiaries, litigation, sanction lists.

This approach protects the portfolio and accelerates deal approvals at the level of boards of directors and risk committees.

Conclusions

NFTs have moved from an experimental status to a managed asset class where legal qualification, compliance and infrastructure are as important as creativity and community. My position is simple: if NFTs are treated as a financial instrument from the start, a business gains transparent processes, clear economics and access to institutional capital. COREDO’s experience in the EU, the UK, Singapore, Cyprus, Estonia, the Czech Republic, Slovakia and Dubai shows: a well-designed SPV structure, clear IP licenses, proper IFRS accounting and AML/KYC discipline turn NFT initiatives from a risky bet into a sustainable product.

If you plan to launch, start with legal qualification and architecture: choose a standard (ERC-721/1155), describe ownership and usage rights, resolve custody and insurance issues, define the tax model and disclose risks in the white paper. The COREDO team will help build a compliance roadmap, align the approach with regulators, audit smart contracts and integrate accounting. This will preserve your speed and provide the reliability on which long-term value is built.

Regulators are tightening requirements, customers expect instant payments, and the compliance team is overloaded with alerts. Over recent years, the COREDO team has implemented dozens of KYT (Know Your Transaction) projects for fintech companies in the EU, the United Kingdom, the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Cyprus and Estonia, as well as in Singapore and Dubai. In this article I systematize the approach that has proven effective at COREDO: from architecture and risk-scoring models to legal liability and the AML team’s KPIs.

What is KYT and how does it integrate into AML processes?

Illustration for the section «What is KYT and how it integrates into AML processes» in the article «Know Your Transaction - Tools for monitoring blockchain transactions for fintech companies.»

KYT (Know Your Transaction) for fintech is the continuous analysis of blockchain transactions in real time with risk scoring at the level of each operation. Unlike KYC, which answers the question «who is the client», KYT answers the question «what is happening with their transaction right now». For payment and crypto services this is the foundation of blockchain payments compliance and the key to managing operational risk.

Our experience at COREDO has shown that integrating KYT with KYC and AML reduces regulatory and operational losses at the same time. Proper orchestration of KYC/KYT enables automating blocking, escalation and reporting scenarios, as well as reducing the costs of manual checks. As a result, fintechs gain transaction monitoring tools capable of detecting fraud networks, sanctions-related links and the use of mixers before funds are credited.

Regulatory frameworks: AMLD5/AMLD6, FATF and the Travel Rule

Illustration for the section «Regulatory frameworks: AMLD5/AMLD6, FATF and Travel Rule» in the article «Know Your Transaction - Tools for monitoring blockchain transactions for fintech companies.»

European AMLD5 and AMLD6 have shaped expectations for transaction monitoring policies, sanctions screening obligations and suspicious activity reporting. Recommendations of FATF, including the Travel Rule, require matching on‑chain and off‑chain data and transmitting payer/beneficiary attributes between providers. In practice this means the need for on‑chain sanctions screening, compliance with watchlists (OFAC, EU, UN) and automation of SAR/STR reporting.

At COREDO we build processes with GDPR in mind: storage of personal data, minimization and the legal subtleties of data transfer between jurisdictions, all of this affects the KYT architecture. It is important to ensure auditability of logs and an immutable trail to demonstrate to the regulator the quality of controls and the chain of decisions. Legal liability of payment providers for anomalies is expanding, so the risk management model and the rules for data exchange between branches must be formalized.

Architecture: from streaming to investigations

Illustration for the section «Architecture: from streaming to investigations» in the article «Know Your Transaction - Blockchain transaction monitoring tools for fintech companies.»

The solution developed at COREDO is typically built as a streaming pipeline. Block indexing and mempool parsing provide minimal latency, and data streaming (Kafka, Kinesis) delivers events to the risk-scoring core. We enrich transactions with additional data: address attribution, exchanges, OTC entities, cascades of transit wallets. This increases accuracy and reduces false positives when monitoring on-chain.

For graph analytics of transactions we often use Neo4j or TigerGraph, and for full-text search and event analytics: ElasticSearch. Such a stack delivers performance benchmarks for latency/throughput at millions of transactions per day and the ability to scale monitoring for cross-chain payments. SLAs are important for transaction monitoring: alert latency, API availability, incident handling time, and the speed of sanctions updates.

Blockchain fraud detection systems integrate via API and webhooks for alerts with subsequent processing in case management and analyst workflows. Audit trail, multi-level access control, encryption and key management form a secure perimeter. For global providers, SaaS KYT multi-tenancy and a clear policy on TCO, CAPEX and OPEX are useful when implementing KYT.

Analytics and models: a hybrid of rule-based and ML

Illustration for the section «Analytics and models: a hybrid of rule-based and ML» in the article «Know Your Transaction - Blockchain transaction monitoring tools for fintech companies.»

COREDO’s practice confirms: the best effectiveness is achieved by a hybrid of rule-based detectors and machine learning models for KYT. Heuristic rules quickly catch known patterns, while unsupervised training detects anomalies in new flows. Supervised models for risk scoring increase the prioritization of investigations and reduce the conversion of alerts into SARs where justified.

We apply graph analytics: address identification and wallet tagging, address attribution and clustering (heuristics clustering), PageRank and node centrality in the blockchain graph. This combination improves explainable AI for fintech compliance: an analyst can see the reasons for scoring, and the transaction monitoring chain becomes transparent. For model quality we use metrics such as precision, recall, F1, regular testing for false negative risk, and drift detection with model monitoring.

Feature engineering for transaction scoring takes into account the degree of connectivity to sanctions tags, the depth and breadth of paths, temporal patterns, amounts, and repeatability. Backtesting of the transaction risk-scoring model is necessary before go-live: we check metrics on historical data and stress scenarios (for example, spikes after a token listing). As a result, the client gets a reduction in alert fatigue and an increase in the operational efficiency of the AML team.

On-chain risks: DeFi, mixers and privacy coins

Illustration for the section «On‑chain risks: DeFi, mixers and privacy coins» in the article «Know Your Transaction - Blockchain transaction monitoring tools for fintech companies.»

On‑chain analytics of transactions must take DeFi specifics into account. Monitoring DeFi transactions focuses on DEX and AMM transaction patterns, bridges and token transit flows, wrapped tokens and multichain tracking. The impact of L2 and rollup on transaction monitoring is expressed in increased speed and the need to index smart contract events.

Analysis of mixers and CoinJoin requires behavioral indicators: amount splitting, short cycles and mixing of skewed time series. Mixers and Tornado Cash behavioral indicators are combined with sanctions tagging for precise assessment. Privacy coins (Monero, Zcash) are analyzed through contextual signals: on-chain bridges, entry/exit points and counterparty behavior.

We track leaked wallets and key leaks, and also build an incident response plan upon detection of money laundering. For legal investigations, chain‑of‑custody for on-chain evidence is important: immutable logs, hash fixations and procedural integrity. This simplifies interaction with lawyers and regulators and reduces the risk of disputes over the evidentiary base.

Integrating KYT into processes: from onboarding to SAR

Integration with wallets and payment gateways provides pre-credit holds and real-time operation of the KYT API. AML/KYC orchestration platforms help tie KYT to KYC and sanctions screening, and also implement automated decisioning for low-risk scenarios. Proper implementation of a transaction monitoring policy formalizes thresholds, roles, and escalations.

At COREDO we set up SAR automation and regulator reporting, which reduces manual delays and improves submission quality. SOC/AML team organization and processes include triage levels, playbooks, and SLAs for incident closure. Key metrics — alerts-to-SAR ratio, analyst efficiency, average investigation time, and repeat-alert rate.

Managing analyst workload: a separate layer. We apply deduplication rules, cluster grouping, and prioritization by risk scoring to reduce analyst burden during mass alerts. As a result, time to resolution is shortened, and compliance retains control without expanding headcount as transactions grow.

How to choose a KYT platform and assess ROI

How to choose a KYT‑platform for fintech — the question is a balance between the depth of on‑chain coverage, SLAs, security and total cost of ownership. Pilot KYT deployment: steps and success metrics include the accuracy of risk scoring, reduction of false positives, Time to Value (TTV) and integration stability. It is important to evaluate SaaS KYT pricing versus on‑prem, taking into account multi‑tenancy, data requirements and CAPEX/OPEX.

We perform Due Diligence on blockchain analytics providers, including open sources and commercial solutions, as well as open source tools for blockchain analytics as a supporting layer. It is critical to check which SLAs matter for monitoring transactions in fintech: RPO/RTO, alert latency, tag update frequency, support for new networks and the quality of customer support. Vendor comparison: this is not a feature race, but a check of alignment with your risk scenarios and jurisdictions.

What ROI metrics should you expect from KYT implementation? We assess the reduction in the cost of investigating a single incident, decreases in chargeback/fraud losses, reduction of regulatory fines and faster onboarding. The ROI of KYT implementation in a payments company appears within 3–6 months if correct KPIs are set and integration with operations is ensured. The pilot’s Time to Value depends on data maturity and the availability of an internal team, but our experience shows a rapid efficiency gain with good preparation.

Implementation plan: from pilot to production

The pilot begins with defining target risks and selecting networks/tokens. Next: configuring sanctions lists and watchlists, integrating with enrichment sources and setting up API integrations and webhooks for alerts. After that, backtesting on historical data, determining thresholds, training staff and running in parallel mode with manual oversight.

Implementing a real-time KYT API requires performance testing, latency/throughput benchmarks and fault-tolerance plans. We build in model risk governance (model governance), regular testing and rule validation, as well as drift detection and model monitoring. DevOps and MLOps for production KYT systems simplify releases, disaster resilience and traceability of changes.

After going into production, a long-term KYT roadmap and development roadmap are established: expanding networks, working with DeFi bridges and cross-chain risks, improving explainable AI and integrating with Travel Rule providers. An important block is practices for preparing for regulator inspections (audit readiness) and strategies for minimizing regulatory fines through transparent controls.

COREDO case studies: what worked in practice

  • European payments provider with expansion into the United Kingdom and Singapore. The COREDO team implemented KYT integration with internal KYC and sanctions screening, deployed on‑chain sanctions screening and SAR automation. We combined graph algorithms for on‑chain investigations with rule‑based detectors, achieving a double‑digit reduction in false positives and shortening investigation time. As a result the company accelerated PI/EMI licensing and preserved SLAs for client‑facing payments.
  • An OTC desk in Dubai with multichain flows. The solution developed at COREDO emphasized on‑chain transaction analytics to detect bridges, wrapped tokens and AMM anomalies. We set up address and wallet tracking, address attribution and clustering, as well as an incident response plan for detected money laundering. This enabled proper handling of cross‑chain flows and meeting the local regulator’s AML requirements for fintech companies.
  • Fintech in the Czech Republic/Slovakia expanding into the EU. COREDO’s practice confirmed that integrating KYT into the onboarding process speeds up KYC through dynamic risk scoring of initial transactions. We ensured compliance with AMLD5/AMLD6, correlation of on‑chain and off‑chain data and automated reporting. The company gained transparency of chains and reduced incident costs.
  • Licensing of a crypto service in Estonia and launch in the United Kingdom. The COREDO team prepared an AML policy, implemented address identification and wallet tagging, and deployed case management and workflow for analysts. A key element was explainable AI for fintech compliance: the regulator valued the transparency of scoring and the completeness of logs, which simplified the audit process.

Legal aspects: liability and cross-border data

The boundaries of liability between the payment provider and the client in cases of fraud depend on contract terms and the regulatory framework. We document them in the SLA and escalation policy to avoid gray areas. In EU countries and the United Kingdom special attention is paid to the Travel Rule and the quality of sender/receiver data matching for cross‑border transfers.
Personal data storage and GDPR risks require a clear retention, minimization and encryption policy. Multi‑jurisdictional groups face legal nuances in transferring data between jurisdictions; COREDO establishes the legal basis taking local restrictions into account. For on‑chain investigations we ensure attorney and legal requirements during investigations and chain‑of‑custody for on‑chain evidence.

Processes and team: how to avoid overload and burnout

Alert fatigue and alert optimization: an ongoing challenge. We introduce risk stratification by geography and industry, regular testing and validation of rules, as well as methodologies for testing false negative risk. KPIs for the AML analyst team should be implemented pragmatically: share of automatic closures, escalation speed, share of correctly filed SARs and quality of documentation.

Case management and workflow for analysts with investigation templates and playbooks reduce cognitive load. SOC/AML team organization and processes increase predictability and manageability of SLAs. COREDO’s experience shows that clearly defined roles, task rotation and quality control reduce turnover and increase the resilience of the AML function.

Data, vendors and security

Purchasing data and subscribing to exchange and OTC data enhance enrichment and increase the accuracy of risk scoring. Comparing analytics vendors is sensible by criteria such as network coverage, tag freshness, SLAs and the depth of forensics tools, without marketing comparisons. Estimating the costs of storing and indexing on‑chain data is important for early TCO calculation.

Multi‑tenancy of SaaS KYT and data security require segmentation, encryption, access management and monitoring. DevOps and MLOps for production KYT systems help maintain release quality and rollbacks. Log auditability and an immutable trail simplify audits and build trust with the regulator and partners.

Cross-chain and the future: L2, rollups and new risks

The impact of L2s and rollups on transaction monitoring is growing: the volume of smart contract events increases, speed rises and attribution becomes more complex. Best practices for building a blockchain monitoring pipeline include deterministic indexing, retry queues, schema versioning and consistency checks. Scaling to millions of transactions per day requires horizontally scalable shards and backup strategies.

Total on‑chain traceability versus privacy‑enhancing tech is a balance between compliance and privacy. At COREDO we follow the principle of ‘minimum necessary’ storage of personal data and maximally preserve technical signals for risk detection. Past cases of address sanctioning and lessons learned help adjust rules and models in advance for new patterns.

Practical checklist: where to start and what to measure

  • Determine target risk scenarios: sanctions, mixers, DeFi bridges, privacy coins, leaked keys.
  • Choose the architecture: SaaS KYT vs on‑prem considering CAPEX/OPEX, GDPR and multi‑jurisdictional constraints.
  • Build the pipeline: mempool parsing, streaming (Kafka/Kinesis), graph database (Neo4j/TigerGraph), search (ElasticSearch).
  • Configure sanctions lists: OFAC, EU, UN, local watchlists, and the policy for updating them.
  • Enable hybrid analytics: rule‑based detectors + ML (supervised/unsupervised), explainable AI.
  • Run a backtest: precision/recall/F1 metrics, false negative tests, drift detection.
  • Launch a pilot: TTV, SLA, reduction of false positives, alerts‑to‑SAR ratio, analyst efficiency.
  • Formalize processes: case management, playbooks, incident plan, SAR automation.
  • Prepare for audit: immutable logs, chain‑of‑custody, data‑sharing regulations between branches.
  • Plan for growth: L2/rollups, DeFi risks, new networks, regular validation of rules and models.

How COREDO supports a project from licensing to production

COREDO covers the entire cycle: from registering legal entities in the EU, the UK, the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Cyprus and Estonia, to structuring in Singapore and Dubai. We assist with obtaining licenses (crypto, payments, forex and banking), develop AML policy, design KYT architecture and implement blockchain payments compliance. This approach eliminates gaps between the legal framework, processes and technology.

For each client we define regulatory obligations, SLA requirements and AML team KPIs. Then we engage data partners, configure integrations and train analysts. Throughout the project we maintain risk model management and audit readiness so the business can scale without interruptions.

Conclusion

KYT is not just real-time analysis of blockchain transactions. It is the foundation of your license, payment speed, and market trust. When transaction monitoring is linked with KYC, sanctions screening, and clear investigation processes, fintech gains control over risk and predictable economics. COREDO’s experience in the EU, Asia, and the CIS shows: a well-designed KYT reduces operational costs, speeds time-to-market, and stands up to audits.

If you are building a payment service, a crypto platform, or expanding presence across multiple jurisdictions, start with a clear architecture, transparent metrics, and a pilot on real-world scenarios. The COREDO team has walked this path dozens of times and knows how to reconcile the requirements of AMLD5/AMLD6, the FATF Travel Rule, GDPR, and the specifics of DeFi. That way you’ll gain not just compliance but a competitive advantage—a resilient, scalable risk control built into the product.

When I launched COREDO in 2016, entrepreneurs had an obvious request: to enter new markets quickly, safely and transparently. Over the past few years the puzzle has become more complex: requirements for company registration, licensing and AML compliance have tightened. Today it is impossible to build an international business without a well-designed compliance function, and the EU AML Package 6.0, the launch of AMLA and 6AMLD are turning “due diligence” from a formality into a strategic discipline. In this article I systematize our experience and explain how to build a working AML and KYC/KYB system without losing scaling momentum.

COREDO’s practice confirms: companies that design compliance in advance get faster access to banking services, close deals more confidently and are less likely to face de-risking. The COREDO team has implemented dozens of projects in the EU, the UK, Singapore and Dubai, helping clients register legal entities, obtain financial licenses and build an effective AML framework. Below is a concentrated action plan, case studies and tools that work in 2026.

EU regulatory map: AMLA and 6AMLD

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The EU AML Package 6.0 formalizes the shift toward more unified regulation: it creates AMLA (the European Anti‑Money Laundering Agency), the provisions of 6AMLD come into force, and the main body of requirements is consolidated into pan‑European AML regulation. For businesses this means uniform technological and procedural standards across the EU and fewer gray areas in the interpretation of rules. At the same time, the role of national regulators remains: they will interact with AMLA by sharing data, coordinating inspections and harmonizing local procedures.

AMLA will receive supervisory powers over selected high‑risk credit and financial institutions, as well as a mandate for risk methodology, STR/SAR standards and information exchange with FIUs. Regulatory cooperation between the EBA, the ECB and AMLA will improve the consistency of requirements for banks and non‑bank PSPs, and will also affect cross‑border banking operations through a uniform approach to KYC/KYB, sanctions screening and transaction monitoring. Our experience at COREDO has shown that fintech companies and payment providers benefit from this predictability, especially when expanding into multiple EU countries.
A separate topic is international mutual cooperation on AML between Europe and Asia. FIU data‑exchange agreements, FATF standards and enforcement practices in the Singapore and Dubai markets form a clear roadmap for companies building cross‑border operations. The solution developed at COREDO for clients with Asian structures includes unified policies and checkpoints that take into account the requirements of the EU, the UK and key Asian regulators, which reduces fragmentation and compliance risk.

Company registration with AML considerations

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Registration of legal entities in the EU with AML requirements in mind is not just articles of association and an address. Competent preparation of a UBO dossier, analysis of source of funds, assessment of the business model from the AML-risk perspective, and the mandatory elements of the starter package. I recommend starting with a jurisdiction map: the Czech Republic, Slovakia and Cyprus are convenient for trading and holding structures; Estonia and United Kingdom — for tech and service companies; Singapore and Dubai — for regional headquarters and structures with active payment activity.

The register of beneficial owners (UBO register in the EU) and beneficiary disclosure requirements vary in depth and access regime. In some countries the register is partially public, in others special requests from “obligated persons” are required. At the registration stage we establish the corporate policy for preventing money laundering and compliance for cross-border corporate registration: we determine the documentation for banks’ and PSPs’ KYC/KYB, and design the ownership chain taking into account transparency and requirements for trusts and anonymous companies. This approach helps to expedite bank onboarding and reduces the risk of refusals.

Registration and support of companies in the EU from an AML perspective includes alignment with future licenses and banking needs. If the goal is: payment services, it is worth building in advance a functional compliance structure, the allocation of responsibilities of “obligated persons” for AML, and an initial set of CDD/EDD controls. When these elements are embedded before applying for an account or a license, the process proceeds noticeably faster.

AML Program Architecture

Illustration for the section 'AML Program Architecture' in the article 'AML Package 6.0 – analysis of the EU Directive and AMLA'
Compliance program AML for companies is a managed system of policy, procedures, a technology platform and metrics. I recommend starting with a risk-based approach: conduct an AML risk assessment, identify client and country risk profiles, determine high-risk scenarios, and then embed them in the corporate policy. It is important to describe roles and the chain of responsibility, including the director’s and corporate structure’s responsibility for AML, and an internal control plan.

Data privacy and GDPR in AML processes are a critical part of the design. We configure data retention rules and a retention policy: clear retention periods for KYC files, access logging, legal bases for processing and cross-border transfer. Integration of AML requirements into ERP and accounting systems via connectors provides a unified view of transactions, and reporting standards and compliance dashboards create managerial transparency. Such dashboards show compliance KPIs and ROI, onboarding time, the share of false positives and the conversion of CDD into successful account openings.

From a cost perspective, a cost-benefit analysis of implementing AML platforms is needed already at the RegTech selection stage. AML effectiveness metrics (KPIs and ROI) are not only about reducing fines and administrative measures for AML non-compliance, but also accelerating M&A, access to correspondent banking and reducing operating costs. Scaling AML processes as the business grows becomes a routine task when the architecture already supports new jurisdictions, languages and data sources.

How to implement KYC, KYB, CDD and EDD?

Illustration for the section «How to implement KYC, KYB, CDD and EDD?» in the article «AML Package 6.0 – analysis of the EU Directive and AMLA»
KYC and KYB requirements in the EU are based on 6AMLD and national laws, but expect the same logic: verification of identity, address, tax residency status, source of funds and UBO/BO status. For corporate clients, KYB includes checking registers, the charter, ownership structure, as well as assessing the business reputation of executives. We use automation of KYC processes and tools for VASP/PSP to reduce document collection time and minimize human errors.

CDD (Customer Due Diligence) is structured in levels: simplified, basic and enhanced. EDD (Enhanced Due Diligence) is triggered under increased risk: complex structures, PEP (politically exposed persons), transactions with high-risk jurisdictions. Sanctions and screening in the context of AML Package 6.0 include a regular reconciliation cycle against EU, OFAC and UK lists, as well as monitoring of connections. Practical implementation of UBO identification involves collecting confirmations along the chain up to individuals with a controlling interest, using cross-border counterparty screening tools and configuring repeat checks when the structure changes.
“Know-your-partner” procedures in the supply chain are useful not only for manufacturers. Payment services and fintechs often underestimate the risk of third parties: processors, outsourcers and referrers. The solution developed by COREDO includes a supplier risk matrix and standardized questions for the KYB questionnaire, which speeds up assessment and improves data quality.

Transaction monitoring and risk assessment

Illustration for the section «Transaction monitoring and risk assessment» in the article «AML Package 6.0 – analysis of the EU Directives and AMLA»
risk assessment for AML is a living document that is tied to transactional behavior models. We apply customer profiling and risk scoring, using historical and behavioral parameters: geography, average transaction amounts, types of counterparties, temporal patterns. Technologies for AML, transaction monitoring, screening, analytics: form an observation framework that operates in real time while also supporting off-chain monitoring for non-standard scenarios.

Transaction monitoring technologies require precise tuning of rules (rules tuning). Without this, a company faces an avalanche of false positives, loses operational efficiency and degrades the customer experience. Approaches to managing false positives include segmentation, adaptive thresholds, feedback from analysts and, where appropriate, the implementation of machine learning and regtech solutions for AML. We also create risk scenarios and conduct AML stress testing, simulating a surge in suspicious transactions or the loss of a data source to test the resilience of processes.

Monitoring the risks of counterparties and supply chains complements transactional rules. For cross-border companies we implement off-chain indicators: reputation in industry databases, court cases, changes in ownership structure. This layer improves the accuracy of EDD and helps promptly identify triggers for revising the risk profile.

Strategies for crypto and VASP

Regulation of virtual assets and VASP under the AMLA aligns the framework for crypto services with traditional financial institutions. Virtual asset service providers (VASP) and KYC requirements should cover customer identification, source-of-funds verification, sanctions screening, and monitoring of on-chain and off-chain transactions. Blockchain chain analysis and blockchain analytics help build a link-based risk model for addresses, wallets, and exchanges, and identify mixers, obfuscation, and connections to the darknet.

risk management when working with crypto assets requires correlating on-chain signals with off-chain customer profiles. For tokens and stablecoins, an additional layer evaluates the issuer, reserve model, and counterparties involved in redemptions. Regulatory tests and pilot projects (sandboxes) are a useful option if the market allows testing new compliance models under controlled risk. In several projects the COREDO team supported KYC pilots for VASP in the EU and Dubai, which enabled clients to obtain licenses faster and establish a dialogue with the regulator.

STR/SAR: interaction with the FIU

The obligations of obliged persons (obliged entities) under AML include detection and reporting of STR/STRs (or SAR), record keeping and cooperation with the FIU. Preparing and submitting STR/SAR requires a clear checklist: indicators of suspiciousness, escalation logic, the level of detail in the description of the pattern and attachments. We configure signal handling routes from first line to the MLRO to eliminate delays and improve the quality of reports.

Investigation of financial crimes and cooperation with the FIU is built on legal mechanisms of compelled data exchange and procedural deadlines. It is important to consider the legal risks of data transfer in AML investigations: legal bases under the GDPR, assessment of the recipient’s status and protection mechanisms, use of standard contractual clauses for cross-border exchange. financial intelligence (FIU) and information exchange in the EU and Asia are becoming increasingly structured, which reduces uncertainty and increases the predictability of regulatory interaction.

Licensing: payments, forex, crypto

obtaining financial licenses – is an assessment of the maturity of your AML system. For payment providers and PSPs, regulators assess governance, the independence of the compliance function, the quality of KYC/KYB, EDD and transaction monitoring. For forex and investment licenses, particular attention is paid to sources of liquidity, policies on high-risk jurisdictions and stress testing. Crypto licensing in the EU and Dubai integrates requirements for VASPs, blockchain analytics and counterparty risk management.

The impact of AML obligations on corporate transactions and due diligence has noticeably increased. The integration of AML requirements into M&A and corporate transformation includes audits of the client base, retrospective analysis of STRs, assessment of regulatory history and vendor due diligence. The participation of banks and non-bank institutions in AML is now assessed in the context of the single EU AML Package, and the alignment of national legislation with the AMLA reduces divergences in requirements for cross-border licensing.

Outsourcing third-party compliance

Outsourcing compliance functions and its risks are often underestimated. Outsourcing vs in-house – it’s not about “cheaper”, but about control, competencies and resilience. We usually set up a hybrid: key roles and decision-making in-house, while part of monitoring and screening is with external providers under clear SLAs and with audit rights. This approach simplifies scaling the AML infrastructure when entering new markets, while maintaining manageability.

Audit and internal control of AML programs are a mandatory practice that strengthens the chain of accountability in corporate AML governance. Staff training and certification of compliance officers improve the quality of CDD/EDD and reduce operational errors. If the system fails, fines and administrative measures for non-compliance with AML in the EU are substantial, and enforcement practice and fine cases in the EU show a trend of increasing sanctions for ineffective monitoring and weak sanctions screening.

COREDO: access to banks and de-risking

One of the recent projects was a fintech from Central Europe with a payment model for cross-border e-commerce. The client faced difficulties accessing banking services due to de-risking. The COREDO team rebuilt the compliance package: detailed suppliers’ KYB, strengthened sanctions screening, and implemented transaction profiling with adaptive thresholds. The bank reconsidered its decision, opening correspondent accounts after a pilot period with KPIs on false positives and alert handling time.

Another case: a VASP expanding into the EU and Dubai. We aligned policies with AMLA requirements and the local regulator, implemented blockchain analytics and off-chain monitoring, and ran a regulatory pilot within a sandbox. The result – accelerated licensing, a predictable dialogue with supervisors, and a ready infrastructure for scaling into new countries.
Third example: a corporate restructuring of a holding with assets in the EU and Asia. COREDO’s analysis identified bottlenecks in UBO identification and the retention policy for AML documents. We updated compliance dashboards, coordinated procedures with corporate security, and integrated AML into the ERP. This reduced the KYC re-evaluation time for counterparties from weeks to days and improved the quality of M&A due diligence.

AML Package 6.0 Compliance Plan

Every compliance officer benefits from a pragmatic roadmap. Below is the checklist we use during implementation.

  1. Conduct an AML risk assessment and record the risk appetite. Ensure that client, country, product and sales channel profiles reflect the current strategy and growth plans. Update the risk map at least once a year and after major business changes.
  2. Update the AML compliance program, roles and accountability. Define MLRO authorities, describe escalation and independence of control. Document the corporate policy on anti-money laundering and sanctions screening.
  3. Review KYC/KYB, CDD/EDD and PEP procedures. Include automation of KYC processes, regular sanctions screening and relationship checks. Clarify the practical implementation of UBO identification and the frequency of data updates.
  4. Reconfigure transaction monitoring and rules tuning. Introduce metrics for false positives, average alert handling time and the share of escalations to STR/SAR. Conduct transaction analysis in real time and off-chain monitoring for atypical scenarios.
  5. Approve the STR/SAR playbook and interaction with the FIU. Describe suspicion criteria, the quality of the evidentiary base and filing deadlines. Check legal data-exchange mechanisms and GDPR compliance.
  6. Check AML integration into ERP/accounting and dashboards. Ensure data integrity, access log audits and consistency of reporting standards. Set compliance KPIs and ROI to demonstrate business impact.
  7. Organize training and testing for staff. Run targeted modules for the front office, analysts and management every six months. External certification and participation in industry programs are useful for compliance officers.
  8. Agree the outsourcing process and third-party controls. Document SLAs, audit rights, security requirements and continuity plans. Verify vendor approaches’ compatibility with 6AMLD and local regulations.
  9. Prepare a high-risk and sanctions policy. Develop a policy for working with high-risk jurisdictions and client profiles. Clarify the approach to tokens, stablecoins and VASPs, if relevant.
  10. Plan regulatory engagement and pilots. If the product is innovative, consider participation in sandboxes and supervised pilots. This will speed up feedback and reduce regulatory uncertainty.
COREDO supports such projects “turnkey”: from diagnostics and a roadmap to RegTech selection and implementation. Our experience at COREDO has shown that phased implementation and transparent metrics reduce internal resistance and strengthen the trust of banks and regulators.

What to consider when entering new countries

AML analysis when entering the markets of Asia and the CIS must take into account local standards and the FATF’s international recommendations. Differences in access to UBO registries, document retention periods and STR formats can affect process design. The impact of AMLA on fintech and payment services in the EU makes the European part of the infrastructure more predictable, which simplifies integration with Singapore and Dubai.

Interaction with law enforcement during investigations requires a clear role for the legal function. Corporate policies on receipt and storage of documents, legal bases for data sharing and documented criteria for suspicion reduce legal risks. When all of this is described and embedded into tools, compliance stops slowing the product down and helps the business grow.

Why I support systemic compliance

Compliance is not an “insurance against fines”, but an operational discipline that increases a company’s capitalization. AML Package 6.0, the EU Directive on anti-money laundering and the launch of AMLA are creating a common playing field with clear rules, and those who adapt their processes earlier will gain an advantage. I see COREDO clients opening accounts faster, obtaining licenses with confidence, and shortening deal cycles when compliance is integrated into the business architecture.

The COREDO team has implemented projects in the EU, the UK, Singapore and Dubai, from registration and licensing to setting up monitoring and providing full AML support for companies. I continue to personally oversee complex cases and am convinced: transparency, technological sophistication and discipline deliver the best results. If you plan to scale, pursue M&A, or expand into new markets, build compliance into your growth strategy: it will save time and strengthen the trust of partners, banks and regulators.

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