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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

Since 2016 I have been leading COREDO as a company that turns the complexity of international regulation into a clear system of manageable solutions. During this time we have registered dozens of legal entities in the EU, the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Cyprus and Estonia, supported licensing in the United Kingdom, Singapore and Dubai, and built compliance for clients at the level regulators and banks expect. I am convinced: the foundation of sustainable international growth is a risk-oriented approach (RBA, risk-based approach), embedded in registration, licensing and day-to-day operational processes.

In this article I have collected our practical experience of implementing RBA in financial organisations, fintechs, crypto companies and international holdings. My focus: to show how to turn AML requirements/CFT, AML compliance checks and corporate RBA compliance into a source of managerial advantage, TCO reduction and faster time-to-market, rather than into a “cost of compliance” with no return. The text is aimed at entrepreneurs and directors who need to make decisions quickly, systematically and transparently.

Risk-based approach — a pillar

Illustration for the section “Risk-based approach — a pillar” in the article “Risk-based approach RBA – risk matrix for audit”

RBA is not a “tick-the-box” exercise; it is about a reasoned choice. When we prepare a client to obtain a license for payment services in the EU, to register a crypto service in Estonia, or to gain approval from a regulator in Singapore, I start by defining the risk appetite at the board level. This anchors managerial responsibility, sets the framework for the risk matrix, and determines the depth of KYC/KYB, CDD and EDD.
Comparing RBA with a checklist approach always favors the former. A checklist creates blind spots and disproportionate effort, whereas the RBA methodology allocates resources where the inherent risk is highest and where it needs to be reduced to an acceptable residual risk. In COREDO’s practice this reduced delays in product launches, lowered the level of false positives in monitoring, and improved TAT and closure rate metrics for investigations.

Regulatory expectations for RBA in the EU, the AMLD5 and AMLD6 requirements, and FATF recommendations explicitly state: you are obliged to know the risk profile of clients, products, channels and geographies. In response we design the company’s risk management based on ISO 31000 and the COSO internal control framework, combining corporate information governance (GRC) with a clear decision-making matrix and an escalation model. This makes dialogue with auditors and banks predictable and substantive.

RBA Framework: from strategy to processes

Illustration for the section «RBA Framework: from strategy to processes» in the article «Risk-based approach RBA – risk matrix for audit»

When I say “framework”, I mean a bundle of strategic documents, processes and measurable metrics. At COREDO we start with RBA documentation and compliance policy, then record the risk register (risk register), process mapping (process mapping) and control points, and only after that do we move to automation.

This order is important, because automating the risk matrix without clear criteria for classifying customers by risk leads to an avalanche of exceptions and manual work. The correct sequence is design first, then control assessment and design testing, and only then launching into production with compliance KPIs and key risk indicators (KRI). The COREDO team implemented such a scheme in projects from the Czech Republic to Dubai, and as a result the risk analysis for audit became transparent, and the review and updating of the risk matrix regular and meaningful.

RBA methodology and the risk matrix

The RBA methodology starts with a taxonomy of risks: customers, products/services, distribution channels, geographies, transactions and counterparties. For each category we assess probability and impact scales (likelihood & impact), assign score weights and obtain a heatmap (risk map), where the high-risk area is immediately visible to the board. This is how we develop a risk matrix for audit that is understandable to the business, internal audit, and the external inspector.

The assessment of inherent risk and residual risk is carried out in two stages. First we calculate the risk without controls, then we add the control environment and assess its controls’ effectiveness and compliance KPIs to see the reduction to the residual level. This assessment includes sanctions screening and filtering against EU and OFAC lists, PEP risk, UBO identification and reputational indicators, as well as customer risk scoring models that take into account behavioral and transactional indicators.
To show the “transparent mechanics”, I often give the example of a risk matrix for AML audit. Take customer risk: base scoring by country of registration, industry, UBO status, PEP status and product type; then modifiers, onboarding channels, remote KYC/KYB, presence of complex corporate structures. The heatmap immediately highlights where an Enhanced Due Diligence (EDD) procedure is needed, and where a standard CDD — a comprehensive customer check — is sufficient. This is not theory: COREDO’s practice confirms that such decomposition simplifies RBA when conducting internal audits and speeds up coordination with the compliance officer.

Integration of RBA with KYC/CDD and sanctions

The RBA methodology is meaningless without being embedded into operational processes. We design the integration of RBA with KYC and CDD processes so that a customer’s risk assessment is updated on every material event: change of UBO, expansion of geography, anomalous transactions. For high-risk segments, EDD procedures are triggered automatically, additional documents are collected, sanctions screening against extended lists is activated, and suspicious activity analysis (SAR) is conducted.

Transaction risk assessment and monitoring are built on rule engines and machine learning for anomaly detection. In crypto companies we integrate blockchain analytics and crypto screening tools; in payment organizations: transaction monitoring in real time, configuration of thresholds and trigger rules, as well as management of false positives. Here data quality management and lineage are critical: without reliable sources and auditing (audit trail), the evidential base for the regulator collapses.

Finally, data privacy and GDPR compliance: part of the architecture, not an afterthought. In the retention policy we define archiving of evidence and data storage requirements, set retention periods for cases and structure the case lifecycle (case management). This reduces the burden on the first line and increases readiness for inspections and independent review.

Choosing a Jurisdiction for RBA

Illustration for the section 'Choosing a Jurisdiction for RBA' in the article 'Risk-based approach RBA – risk matrix for audit'
The solution developed at COREDO always begins with mapping regulatory expectations and relevant licenses to the client’s business model. In the EU – the requirements of AMLD5/AMLD6, in the United Kingdom: FCA rules, in Estonia: VASP specifics, in Cyprus – the regime for payment and investment firms, in Singapore: MAS, and in Dubai, DFSA/DIFC or VARA for the crypto segment. By aligning them with the client’s risk appetite, we help choose the jurisdiction, the degree of centralization and payment routes.

RBA for international companies in Europe and Asia ensures a “soft landing” when opening accounts and establishing correspondent relationships. Banks expect to see corporate RBA compliance, a process map, KRI metrics and the presence of a risk mitigation plan for key scenarios. At the start of company registration we already form the basis for AML compliance checks so there is no need to go back to “restructuring” at the end of licensing.
The impact of RBA on business processes appears immediately after launch. Standardized KYC/KYB, unified checklists for legal entities, decision matrices and an escalation model increase onboarding speed, while transaction risk assessment reduces operational incidents. As a result, you do not “adapt to the regulator”, but build an efficient and economical process that meets inspection expectations.

Implementing RBA in a Financial Organization

My basic roadmap for clients looks like this:

  • Strategy: we determine the risk appetite, establish a risk management committee and record the responsibilities of the board and the compliance director under RBA.
  • Processes: we conduct process modelling, define control points, align the roles of the lines of defence and prepare a risk register.
  • Design of controls: we describe client risk classification criteria, CDD/EDD procedures, sanctions screening and transaction monitoring, and configure the risk matrix and heatmap.
  • Technologies: we select the AML/CFT platform architecture, assess the scalability of technical solutions, integration with ERP/CRM and banking systems, and configure thresholds and rules.
  • Measurement: we define key risk indicators (KRI), metrics for the ROI of RBA implementation, investigation effectiveness metrics, as well as ROI assessment and the total cost of ownership (TCO) of RBA.
  • Verification: we plan internal audit and independent review procedures, sampling methodologies for audit (statistical sampling), and scenario analysis and stress testing of risks.
  • Training: we initiate change management and staff training, including for the first line and investigative analysts.
At each step I ask the team to check the cohesion of components: whether there is a gap between policies and case management, how complete logging and audit trails are, and whether decision matrices are correctly defined. The outcome is not a document for the sake of a document, but a living system.

Scaling RBA in a holding company

In transnational structures, the choice between a centralized and decentralized compliance model is not only a question of organizational structure, but also of the capital efficiency of risk-mitigation measures. In one project the COREDO team built a central core of rules and scoring models for several licensable entities in Europe and Asia, preserving local modifiers for the regulatory requirements. This simplified reporting, ensured comparability of KRIs and allowed centralized sanctions screening and third-party and vendor management.
When scaling, risk visualization and BI tools are important so that the board can see a heatmap for each country and product. Case lifecycle, case management and evidence archiving are unified, and the process map and escalation matrix are standardized. Such a setup facilitates interaction with external regulators and inspections and reduces audit costs by reusing the evidentiary base.

COREDO Case Studies: crypto licenses and institutions

Illustration for the section «COREDO Case Studies: crypto licenses and institutions» in the article «Risk‑based RBA approach – risk matrix for audit»

One notable example: launching a VASP in Estonia. The client came with an ambitious roadmap for token issuance and a wallet service; our experience at COREDO showed the need for enhanced sanctions control and the implementation of blockchain analytics tools. We developed client risk scoring models and transaction risk assessments, configured trigger rules for high-risk flows, and reduced the false-positive rate by 38% in the first three months without losing sensitivity to suspicious operations.
Another project, Licensing of a payment institution in Cyprus with SEPA connectivity and card issuance. The solution developed at COREDO included building a risk matrix, configuring a rule engine, integration with core banking and ERP, as well as CDD/EDD chains for corporate clients with multi-layered UBO structures. As part of the analysis of the impact on EBITDA and operational risk, we forecasted cost reductions through automation and optimization of the investigation process, and then confirmed the savings in real KPIs.
In Singapore we supported a client in obtaining Major Payment Institution status for an international payment gateway. RBA and sanctions control were combined with anti-fraud mechanisms and integration of AML monitoring with card fraud detection systems. The COREDO team carried out scenario analysis and stress testing of risks by geography, correctly set the risk appetite taking into account aggressive growth, and also worked out interactions with correspondent banks for cross-border payments.
Finally, a holding structure in the Czech Republic and Slovakia required scaling RBA across several operating subsidiaries with different risk profiles. We implemented a centralized heatmap, standardized client classification, configured the RBA procedure for internal audits, and prepared a risk register for the external auditor. As a result of the inspection, the client had no significant findings, and the board noted increased transparency of decisions and faster escalation of complex cases.

What is needed for RBA to work daily?

Illustration for the section «What is needed for RBA to work daily» in the article «Risk-based approach RBA – risk matrix for audit»

The architecture of AML/CFT platforms should be modular. I look at how easy it is to connect sanctions lists, how the rule logic is organized, whether model training and their validation are available, and how the issue of data quality management and lineage is addressed. I separately check how logging and audit trails are implemented, because legal requirements for reporting and the evidential basis are becoming more stringent.

Integration with ERP/CRM and banking systems is a critically important element. Without complete data, scoring models “go blind”, and case management loses context. We often implement a centralized hub for event enrichment, configuring thresholds and triggering rules in one place, and broadcasting configuration to subsidiary entities to maintain metric comparability and manage changes.

We pay special attention to privacy and GDPR requirements, including restrictions on data transfers between jurisdictions. Having a clear scheme for archiving evidence and storing data with understandable SLAs for data extraction reduces risks in regulator requests and facilitates independent review. When this “hygiene” is in place, inspections run smoother and faster.

Launch RBA: a guide for the director

First step: establish the board’s accountability and appoint a compliance director with veto power over risky launches. The risk management committee should approve the risk appetite, align the KRI and KPI metrics, and define a process map with control points. This turns RBA from an “important topic” into a management routine.

Second step: develop a risk matrix, build a heatmap, and describe the criteria for classifying clients by risk.

At the same time a risk mitigation action plan is prepared here, including sanctions screening, EDD for PEPs and complex structures, as well as assessment of residual risk (residual risk) and its monitoring. At this stage it is important to define ROI metrics for RBA implementation and target indicators for reducing TCO.

Third step – choose a technological solution and assess scalability. Evaluate the scalability of technical solutions, integration with current systems, configuration of rules and thresholds, and ensure change management and staff training.

Finish by launching internal audit procedures, planning and validating test samples, and regular review and updating of the risk matrix every 6–12 months.

COREDO: from diagnostics to operations

My collaboration model is transparent: we start with a diagnostic session where we align the business model, regulatory objectives and risk appetite. Then the COREDO team conducts a gap assessment against the requirements of the chosen jurisdiction and FATF/AMLD standards, creates a process map and a risk register, and after approval designs the target control design and solution architecture.
Next we build AML compliance checks, set up scoring models, sanctions screening, transaction monitoring and case management, and also document policies and procedures. COREDO’s practice confirms that the combination “processes + technology + metrics” delivers a sustainable result, not just passing an audit. In the final stage we prepare the client’s team for independent operation and provide support for interaction with external regulators and inspections.

In projects for company registration and licensing in the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Cyprus, Estonia, the United Kingdom, Singapore and Dubai we take into account local specifics and supervisory expectations. This saves time on approvals, speeds up account openings and reduces the cost of compliance ownership thanks to the right initial architecture.

Frequently Asked Questions from Directors

How to measure the return on RBA? I use two groups of metrics: financial (ROI assessment and impact on EBITDA through reduced fines and optimization of operating costs) and operational (false-positive rate, TAT per case, investigation closure rate, KRIs by client segments). Additionally, we calculate the total cost of ownership (TCO) of RBA and the capital efficiency of risk-reduction measures.
How to differentiate inherent and residual risk in everyday practice? We assess the risk profile separately without considering controls, and then after their application, and use alert statistics and the results of control design and effectiveness tests for calibration. internal audit verifies the correctness of the methodology by applying sampling methodologies for the audit and independent validation.
How to align AML and anti-fraud? These domains overlap at the level of transaction scenarios and data sources, but the tasks differ. At COREDO we synchronize rules, separate escalation, and build a shared process map and audit trail so investigations don’t compete for resources and don’t lose context. This approach reduces analysts’ workload and improves reporting quality.
What is important in sanctions screening? In addition to updating EU and OFAC lists, it is worth setting clear fuzzy-matching policies, escalation thresholds and alert-review procedures. Consider correspondent relationships and the risk of cross-border payments, as well as company structuring and analysis of the counterparty chain and ultimate beneficial owners to reduce circumvention schemes.

Conclusions

RBA is not just a buzzword from regulatory requirements, but a management tool that speeds up registration and licensing, reduces operational risks and opens a dialogue with banks and regulatory inspections in the language of facts. I see this every time the COREDO team implements the RBA methodology, builds a risk matrix, integrates KYC/KYB, CDD/EDD, sanctions and transaction monitoring and brings the client to a new level of compliance maturity.
If you are planning to register a legal entity in the EU, the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Cyprus, Estonia, the United Kingdom, Singapore or Dubai, aiming for obtaining financial licenses or want to strengthen AML and corporate compliance: start with a clear definition of risk appetite and a risk map. Next – process discipline, the right architecture and measurable metrics that prove the value of each step.
COREDO was created exactly for this kind of systematic work: without loud promises, with thorough attention to detail and responsibility at every stage. I am ready to discuss your case and show how the risk-oriented approach will turn compliance from a cost center into a pillar of international business growth.

Since 2016 I have been heading COREDO and am responsible for ensuring that entrepreneurs from Europe, Asia and the CIS launch and scale businesses in international jurisdictions quickly, transparently and with properly configured compliance. During this time the COREDO team has carried out hundreds of projects: from company registrations in the EU, the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Cyprus and Estonia to licensing in the United Kingdom, Singapore and Dubai. I see the main task as bringing together legal architecture, licensing and the AML/sanctions framework into a single operational model that withstands regulator scrutiny and does not stifle operational efficiency.

Today I will offer you a practical guide to building sanctions screening and anti-sanctions compliance that genuinely reduces false positives, saves budget and maintains control over risks. At the same time I will cover the strategy for registration and licensing, because sanctions screening is not a separate module but a critically important part of your business architecture.

Registration abroad: sanctions and AML

Illustration for the section «Registration abroad: sanctions and AML» in the article «Sanctions screening – how to avoid false positives»

When we design a group structure in the EU, the United Kingdom, Singapore or Dubai, I immediately build AML and sanctions requirements into the founding documents and processes. The right choice of jurisdiction for a specific business model reduces the burden on sanctions monitoring thanks to quality registers, predictable regulators and clear KYC/KYB practice. Our experience at COREDO has shown: if at the incorporation stage you take into account access to corporate registries, rules on beneficial owners (UBO) and local expectations for a risk-based approach (risk-based approach, RBA), the costs of subsequent sanctions screening and KYC fall dramatically.

In the Czech Republic and Slovakia we often use local registries for initial client validation (KYB), and in Estonia the developed digital infrastructure for integrations. In the United Kingdom the UK Office of Financial Sanctions Implementation (OFSI) and its guidance on sanctions control play a significant role, while in Singapore the focus is on process accuracy and the regulator’s expected maturity of compliance. In Dubai it is convenient to assemble international holding structures if you plan from the outset how to synchronize sanctions screening in payment processes and real-time vs batch checking for different customer segments.

Crypto and Payments Licensing

Illustration for the section 'Crypto and payments licensing' in the article 'Sanctions screening – how to avoid false positives'

In licensing financial services I always link regulatory expectations with concrete technical solutions. Payment organizations, forex providers and crypto services are required not only to carry out KYC/KYB and PEP and sanctions monitoring, but also to demonstrate the manageability of the process: sanctions screening must be reproducible, explainable and independent of the individual analyst. COREDO’s practice confirms: successfully obtaining a license is accelerated by a clear demonstration of sanctions control systems, configured matching thresholds, procedures for human verification of alerts and a transparent audit trail.

When preparing for licenses for payment companies in the EU and the UK we include watchlist management, whitelist and exclusion policies, as well as screening modes: batch processing vs real-time screening. For crypto organizations we add adverse media screening and graph analysis to reduce false positives when checking addresses and links. In Singapore and Dubai on-premise solutions and security requirements are important, especially when you store sensitive personal data and beneficiary information.

Sanctions screening as a system

Illustration for the section «Sanctions screening as a system» in the article «Sanctions screening – how to avoid false positive matches»

I see sanctions screening as a four-layer pipeline: data, matching algorithms, threshold/scoring policy and operational workflow. If each layer has data quality controls, an audit trail and demonstrable decision-making, you both reduce false positive matches and keep the risk of false negatives manageable.

Data quality and watchlist management

The foundation is up-to-date, clean sanctions lists: OFAC, EU, UN and United Kingdom. I insist on watchlist consolidation and deduplication of lists, a clear list refresh cadence and data quality controls: completeness, accuracy, freshness. When the COREDO team implements sanctions list filtering, we remove duplicates, canonicalize names (normalisation), align Unicode normalization (NFC/NFD) and standardize transliteration rules (ISO 9, BGN/PCGN). This reduces false sanctions hits long before fuzzy matching algorithms kick in.

For corporate clients I recommend building a golden record in an MDM system and applying entity resolution/record linkage to merge disparate records. Integrating company registries and beneficial ownership data (beneficial ownership, UBO identification) improves KYC/KYB accuracy and reduces uncertainty in sanctions monitoring. Such data quality management and data profiling is the first lever to reduce false positives.

Precise name matching without overreach

Algorithms determine which signals you receive. I usually start with fuzzy matching using Levenshtein distance, the Jaro–Winkler algorithm, n-grams and tokenization. For phonetic robustness we use Soundex and Metaphone, and for multiscript names — multiscript matching (Cyrillic Latin Arabic Chinese) with handling of diacritics and apostrophes. Tuning the name matching model for Asian and European languages is critical: Chinese and Arabic names, as well as Latinization of Slavic surnames, cause a spike in alerts without proper normalization.

In COREDO projects we combine deterministic matching for obvious cases and probabilistic matching for borderline situations. When Entity Resolution is required for corporate clients, we add a graph component: links between legal entities, directors and addresses help distinguish true matches from false ones. Visualizing connections for sanctions risk review speeds up analyst work and provides explainable AI for decision-making.

Threshold policy and FP/FN calibration

Reducing false positives is not just “raising the match threshold.” I use score management and threshold policy, threshold calibration and A/B testing of thresholds and matching models. Metrics — false positive rate (FPR), precision and recall, F1-score and ROC AUC — show the trade-off between FP and FN and help select a point that matches the risk appetite and regulator expectations.

Regulators usually support a risk-based approach and do not expect zero FP. It is important to document the methodology, trade-offs and justification for chosen thresholds, and to perform a compliance audit of sanctions control. Our solution, developed at COREDO, includes regular cost-benefit analysis: we calculate cost per alert, analyst throughput, MTTR and operational efficiency and compare this to the assessed risk of a false negative (FN). This approach demonstrates ROI and the acceptability of changes in the eyes of regulators.

Processing flows: real-time or batch

Each business process dictates its mode. For incoming payments, real-time sanctions screening with API integration of the screening engine into processes is appropriate. For periodic customer base reviews: batch processing (batch checks) with scheduling and SLA. I build human-in-the-loop workflows and SLAs at every stage: initial automated check, alert triage and prioritization, human verification of alerts and case management for alert investigations.

Integrating sanctions screening into payment flows, ERP/CRM systems and AML/CFT platforms requires an audit trail, data lineage and provenance so every decision is demonstrable. At COREDO we implement explainable AI and transparency of decisions: the analyst sees the reasons for the match, the contribution of each token or rule, and the manager sees aggregated metrics and team workload. This reduces operational risk and raises compliance maturity.

False positives: rules, ML, graphs

I start with basic settings: reducing false positives by tuning match thresholds, whitelists and exceptions with clear exception management and documentation of whitelists. Then I add filters by country, birth dates, entity types and context, as well as watchlist management with targeted filtering of entities known as “false matches”.

Next we refine matching rules using ML. Supervised learning to reduce FP is trained on labeled cases (training data labeling), while unsupervised clustering highlights hidden patterns of false alerts. Graph analysis to reduce false positives and network analysis help remove noise from namesakes and identically named companies. In several COREDO projects we introduced greylisting for contentious cases with additional context and “deferred” review, reducing SLA load without loss of quality.

Names, scripts and registries in Europe and Asia

Multilingualism is the main “alert generator.” In Asia we pay special attention to transliteration and name spelling variants, use transliteration tables (ISO 9, BGN/PCGN), configure Unicode normalization and rules for handling diacritics. For Arabic names we apply tokenization, n-grams and canonicalization and normalisation, and for Chinese names — romanization schemes and alternative forms.

In Europe the focus shifts to registry integration and record linkage. Entity Resolution for corporate clients and deduplication in master data remove “echoes” of records. For trade finance and commodity trading we add screening of counterparties, vessels and ports, and for correspondent banking and cross-border screening, praa focus on jurisdiction‑aware filtering. At the same time, we always take into account the legal aspects of storing and transmitting personal data, the requirements for on‑premise solutions and legal hold when cooperating with law enforcement agencies.

SaaS or on‑prem: scale and security

At the architecture stage I assess how ready the business is for SaaS sanctions‑screening providers or whether it needs an on‑premise installation. Key factors: security, latency requirements, multi‑jurisdictional operations and local data laws. For high loads we use Bloom filter to speed up searches in large lists and design CI/CD practices for ML models of sanctions screening to release changes safely and predictably.

We build scaling of sanctions screening to support company growth in Europe and Asia through micro‑services, API gateways and centralized watchlist management. Synchronization of sanctions lists and update frequency become policy‑manageable, and SLA‑oriented tuning keeps MTTR and cost per alert within target bounds. The COREDO team helps run a cost-benefit analysis of the implementation and calculate ROI: how much reducing FP saves, how analyst throughput grows and where the risk balance remains acceptable.

Demonstrating compliance to regulators

Sanctions screening without an audit trail does not pass review. I require a continuous audit trail and provable actions, explainability tools for matching models and a clear separation of roles: analysts, compliance managers, the CTO and data owners. Within the FATF recommendations and regulators’ expectations we organize regular audits of sanctions‑screening effectiveness, A/B testing of models, threshold updates and analyst training.

For transparency we introduce data lineage, provenance and evidence packages for each decision. Case management and workflow automation create reproducibility, and human‑in‑the‑loop processes and SLAs provide risk manageability. When a client receives a request from a regulator or counterparty, the prepared package with precision/recall metrics, F1‑score, ROC AUC and a description of the risk-based approach provides a convincing response without emergency rework.

COREDO case studies: reducing false positives and screening

Illustration for the section «COREDO case studies: reducing false positives and screening» in the article «Sanctions screening – how to avoid false positive triggers»

In Estonia we worked with a payments company that faced a flood of false sanctions hits. The COREDO team profiled the data, normalized names and transliteration, introduced watchlist consolidation and retuned fuzzy scoring. We implemented whitelists under strict exception governance and trained a supervised model on labeled alerts. The result, real-world cases reducing the number of alerts by 70% while maintaining recall on critical risks. The regulator accepted our documentation on trade‑offs and methodology with no additional requirements.

In Cyprus a forex provider was preparing for licensing and needed to build PEP and sanctions monitoring taking into account multiscript customer names from Asia. The solution developed at COREDO included multiscript matching, Jaro–Winkler and n‑grams, as well as link visualization for checking sanctions risks by UBO. We added adverse media screening and rules for alert triage with SLA metrics. The license was obtained, and the operations team meets target KPIs: cost per alert decreased quarterly, MTTR within 2–4 hours for priority alerts.
In Dubai an international holding structure was building anti‑sanctions compliance at the group level with branches in the UK and Singapore. Our experience at COREDO showed that a unified threshold policy and harmonized watchlist management provide consistency, while regional overlays account for local data laws. We set up a batch review of the database every 24 hours and real‑time screening on payments, introduced A/B testing of thresholds and regularly reported on ROC AUC and F1‑score to the risk committee. The system passed external audit and scaled without an increase in FP.

How to implement sanctions screening

Illustration for the section «How to implement sanctions screening» in the article «Sanctions screening – how to avoid false positive triggers»

  • Assess compliance maturity. Apply a compliance maturity model and identify gaps in data, algorithms, thresholds, and workflow.
  • Organize data. Configure watchlist consolidation, deduplication, unicode normalization, transliteration, and a golden record in MDM.
  • Design algorithms. Combine deterministic matching, fuzzy matching (Levenshtein, Jaro–Winkler), phonetics, and a multiscript approach.
  • Define a threshold policy. Conduct threshold calibration, A/B testing, establish a risk-based approach, and document FP/FN trade-offs.
  • Build the workflow. Include human-in-the-loop, case management, alert triage, SLA, and audit trail. Integrate ERP/CRM and payment processes via API.
  • Enable ML and graph. Implement supervised learning to reduce FP, unsupervised clustering for anomalies, and graph analysis of relationships.
  • Reinforce controls and training. Organize regular effectiveness audits, analyst training, labeling of training data, and CI/CD for rules and models.

Answers to questions: economics and ROI

How to estimate the ROI of implementing a new sanctions screening system? Consider cost per alert, analyst throughput, MTTR, FPR and reduction in investigation time. Add the cost of FN risk, fines and lost revenue due to payment delays. ROI: the difference between total savings and investments in licensing, integration and maintenance.
Which KPIs to use to measure the effectiveness of false positive reduction? FPR, precision, recall, F1-score and the share of alerts closed as FP, plus operational KPIs: MTTR, backlog, share of auto-clear. Don’t forget data quality: completeness, accuracy, freshness.
How permissible is it to raise the match threshold from a regulator’s perspective? Within an RBA it is permissible if you document calibration, compromise metrics (precision/recall) and FN control. OFSI and FATF expect demonstrability and auditability, not a dogmatic “zero tolerance for FP”.
Which methodologies minimize operational risks when reducing FP? A/B testing of thresholds, multistage triage, greylisting, human-in-the-loop for borderline cases and explainable AI to justify decisions.
How to scale sanctions screening for growth in Europe and Asia? Centralize watchlist management, use API gateways, Bloom filter for lookups, separate real-time and batch, and apply on-premise in jurisdictions with strict data requirements.
What data and registries are needed for accurate matching of corporate clients? Company registries for the EU/UK/Asia, UBO information, addresses, directors, historical names. Implement record linkage, deduplication and a golden record.
How to choose between SaaS and on-premise? Look at regulatory constraints on data, latency requirements and security. SaaS gets you started faster, on-prem gives control and customization. We often design a hybrid.
How to organize human-in-the-loop and transparent audit? Introduce SLAs, roles and playbooks, case management with a full audit trail, data lineage and explainability reports for each decision.
How to train analysts and automate triage? Standardize training data annotation, deploy supervised models for auto-prioritization, set MTTR targets and hold periodic retrospectives on decision quality.
Which metrics show the trade-off between FP and FN? Use precision/recall, F1-score and ROC AUC, and also track FN risk estimates by customer/transaction types.

Risk management: FN under control

Reducing FP must not be done at the cost of an explosive rise in false negatives. I set threshold policies with a “safety” level of review for high‑risk segments and recommend regular retrospectives on closed cases. Exception management goes through the compliance committee, and any whitelisting and greylisting are documented and reviewed at predefined intervals. This regime keeps FN under control and shows the regulator a mature, risk‑oriented system.

We also use alerting channels and integration with AML/CFT systems so that sanctions alerts do not “get stuck” and move into investigation following a clear workflow. If required, we engage cooperation with law enforcement and implement legal hold, preserving the evidential base and transparency of actions.

COREDO: diagnostics and project support

I build the project in three steps. First, diagnostics and audit: maturity assessment, data profiling, rules inventory, measurement of FPR/precision/recall, evaluation of infrastructure and security. Then architecture and implementation: data and watchlists, algorithms and threshold policy, integrations, case management, explainability, analyst training and CI/CD deployment. And finally – support and development: regular calibration, A/B tests, expansion of jurisdictions, team training and preparation for inspections.

The COREDO team stays focused on the end result: reducing false positives, decision transparency and audit readiness. We handle company registration and licensing in the EU, the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Cyprus and Estonia, support scaling in the UK, Singapore and Dubai, and combine legal, operational and technological competencies into a single workflow.

Conclusions

Sanctions screening and anti-sanctions compliance have stopped being a “checkbox” for regulators. It is a managed system with clear data, transparent algorithms, calibrated thresholds and a disciplined workflow that protects the business and accelerates it. When sanctions control is embedded in a company’s architecture, from registration and licensing to AML-processes and payment integrations – you gain predictability, optimal KPIs and confidence in international scaling.

At COREDO I am responsible for ensuring that every decision is understandable, verifiable and economically justified. If you are planning to expand to Europe or Asia, preparing for a licence or want to put your AML and sanctions in order, let’s discuss a roadmap. I will propose concrete steps, provide metrics, assemble a team for your model and bring the project to operational resilience – so that the sanctions control system works in your favor every day.

I often start a conversation with entrepreneurs with a simple question: *what is your goal in choosing a new jurisdiction for an investment business*? The answer almost always comes down to a combination of three factors: regulatory predictability, access to capital, and operational efficiency. In recent years Astana International Financial Centre (AIFC) has become one of the few hubs where the balance of these factors works to the benefit of both international and regional players. During this time the COREDO team has carried out dozens of projects for legal entity registration, obtaining investment licenses, building an AML function, and launching funds within the AIFC.

In this article I organize COREDO’s practice: how the registration of a legal entity in the AIFC is carried out, which licenses are available, what the capital and substance requirements look like, what is important to know about the AIFC’s AML and KYC requirements, and how to strategically assess the ROI of operating through the AIFC. The text is aimed at entrepreneurs and finance directors who value concreteness and clear steps without unnecessary theory. My goal – that you leave the article with a clear plan and an understanding of whether an AIFC license suits your business model.

AIFC legal framework: the role of AFSA

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The AIFC uses a separate “AIFC legal framework” based on common law principles, with its own court, the AIFC Court, and an independent regulator, the Astana Financial Services Authority (AFSA). This provides predictability and dispute-resolution principles close to the English tradition, which is important for high-stakes and cross-border transactions. In my practice, this often reduces legal frictions between investors and managers, especially when structures from the EU and the United Kingdom are involved.

AFSA regulates activities by means of a Rulebook – a detailed code of rules similar in logic to European and Middle Eastern standards. In spirit, the requirements are close to MiFID II: investor protection, management of conflicts of interest, risk disclosure and adequate capital requirements and management systems. At the same time, the AIFC allows reasonable proportionality: early-stage projects and niche strategies have flexibility provided there is an evidential basis of robust risk management.

COREDO’s practice confirms that when preparing for licensing in the AIFC a “European” approach helps: product regulations, clear client categorization, documented suitability/appropriateness and transparent fees. At the same time AFSA expects all of this to be implemented into the actual operational environment – a single paper policy is not enough.

Which licenses are in the AIFC?

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Investment licenses in Kazakhstan through the AIFC cover a wide range of activities, and correctly mapping a business model to the permitted types of activity saves months at the approval stage. Within the AIFC, available in particular are AIFC broker license (broker/dealer), the AIFC asset manager license (portfolio manager/asset manager), the investment adviser license, as well as the AIFC depository and custodian license. For fund activity, collective investment schemes (CIS) are provided, including closed structures for private equity and an investment fund license in the AIFC.

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Over the past two years we have observed strong demand for the AIFC private equity license and the AIFC venture fund license. Such structures are convenient for cross-border capital raising, and for working with investors familiar with common law. A separate vector is the AIFC license for digital asset operations: under it custody solutions, crypto exchanges and tokenization services develop while complying with requirements for storage technologies and cybersecurity.

For non-residents, the AIFC provides an investment license, and this is a real tool for accessing regional markets while minimizing legal conflicts. Our experience at COREDO has shown that a well-designed combination of an SPV in the AIFC and an operational core in another jurisdiction helps to flexibly allocate functions while maintaining compliance with AFSA regulatory standards.

Capital, substance and fit and proper

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Capital requirements for an AIFC license depend on the type of activity and the risk profile. By the typical ranges we encounter in projects, broker-dealer licenses sit at the top of the scale, while advisory and non-custodial management are lower. Capital adequacy for asset managers includes a fixed base amount and add-ons for operational risk and assets under management. I always recommend planning a “buffer” above the minimum level to smooth seasonal fluctuations and growth-related costs.

Economic presence (substance) at the AIFC: more than a nameplate on the door. AFSA expects a real team: at least one executive director resident in the AIFC, a competent head of compliance/AML, and, where appropriate, risk management and internal audit functions. In COREDO projects we include a responsibility matrix and job descriptions at the submission stage to pass the fit and proper checks for AIFC directors and senior management without delays.

Fit and proper test for directors and senior managers at the AIFC covers experience, qualifications, reputation and compliance history. Background checks include certificates of no criminal record, verification of education, previous roles and references. I honestly warn clients: it’s better to identify and work through “grey areas” in advance than to explain them to AFSA at a late stage.

AML and KYC in the AIFC: technologies and control

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AML and KYC requirements of the AIFC are based on the recommendations of FATF and integrate a risk-based approach. In practice this means an individual AML risk assessment for investment firms, client segmentation by geography and profile, as well as documentation of sources of funds. The solution developed at COREDO typically includes a risk matrix, playbooks for onboarding and instructions on procedures for detecting suspicious transactions (STR).

Modern KYC/eKYC technologies for the AIFC simplify remote onboarding, but AFSA pays attention to the quality of PEP and sanctions screening and to periodic review. We implement a transaction monitoring and AML screening system taking into account the business model profile, including scenario settings, trigger thresholds and an escalation procedure. A separate register of beneficial owners and beneficial owner verification in the AIFC are developed to resolve questions about ownership structures before submission.

A compliance policy for an investment firm in the AIFC should describe procedures for managing conflicts of interest, product acceptability, as well as whistleblowing channels. At AFSA audits, not only documents are valued but also implementation artifacts: monitoring logs, committee reports, and AML training for staff. COREDO’s practice confirms that a mature AML framework speeds up both Licensing and subsequent reviews.

Timelines and steps for registering a legal entity in the AIFC

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The registration of a legal entity in the AIFC starts with choosing a form: from ordinary companies to special SPVs. Registration is carried out through the electronic portal, and the basic timeframe with a properly prepared package takes from several working days to a couple of weeks. We agree names, types of activity and constitutional provisions in advance so as not to return to the amendment stage.

SPV structures and trusts in the AIFC are convenient for asset transactions, securitization or incorporating a holding level. For funds, fund registration procedures in the AIFC apply, including submitting fund rules, disclosing valuation policy and selecting a depositary/custodian. Economic presence is established through an office, local directors and key functions, which is reflected in subsequent tax and regulatory aspects.

In COREDO projects we prepare a corporate governance package: board provisions, audit and risk committees, a senior manager regime with role demarcation. This reduces AFSA queries and facilitates the integration of external and internal audit under IFRS.

Licensing of investment activities, timelines and costs

Obtaining an investment license in the AIFC begins with an accurate description of the business model and the selection of the appropriate “regulated activities”. This determines the set of policies, capital requirements and staff profile. At the pre-application stage the COREDO team conducts a gap analysis against the AIFC Rulebook, develops a roadmap and agrees key parameters with AFSA to avoid incorrect classification.

The timelines and cost of obtaining an AIFC license depend on the complexity of the model and the applicant’s readiness. In our experience, the advisory and regulatory phase takes 8 to 16 weeks for ‘clean’ models, while more complex combinations involving custody and dealing require 4–6 months. The cost consists of AFSA fees, legal and compliance preparation, technological solutions and hiring of key persons, as well as future ongoing compliance costs.

Preparation for an AFSA inspection (AIFC regulator) includes interviews with directors, demonstration of operational systems, testing of compliance controls and a walkthrough of the client journey. I always recommend conducting a pre-inspection simulation – in a risk-free mode we identify ‘bottlenecks’ and fix them before contacting the regulator.

CIS and SPV Fund Structures: Disclosure

For investment funds in the AIFC, open and closed collective investment schemes (CIS) are available; private placements and public offers in the AIFC are subject to different regimes. Preparing a prospectus and disclosure in the AIFC requires a description of the strategy, risks, fees and valuation procedures, as well as prospectus requirements for key metrics. Our clients value structuring SPVs and trust solutions for individual transactions when it is necessary to flexibly separate classes of assets or investors.

Depositary and custodian requirements place particular emphasis on independence, accounting systems and asset storage technologies. Agreements with depositaries and service providers must clearly record SLAs, liability and escalation procedures. We conduct Due Diligence on providers in advance so AFSA sees a considered selection of counterparties, not a formal one.

For closed funds pursuing private equity and venture strategies the regulatory framework remains pragmatic if governance and risk management correspond to the scale of the portfolio. Investment committees, clear management of conflicts of interest and external audit are not just a checklist but a prerequisite for LPs’ trust.

Taxes in the AIFC: incentives, transfer pricing

tax incentives and AIFC stimuli often become a decisive factor. The AIFC provides regimes that reduce the tax burden on certain types of income, as well as simplification mechanisms where there is economic presence. At the same time it is important to align tax residency and certificates in order to use Kazakhstan’s double tax avoidance agreements and correctly process payments to investors.

Transfer pricing and documentation require attention if you have a cross-border chain of services or IP. The COREDO team develops a transfer pricing policy and a supporting file with functional analysis so that regulatory and tax audits go through without surprises. Reporting under IFRS and external auditors close the loop of trust and transparency.

Taxation of investment companies’ income in the AIFC should be considered together with the profit allocation model at the fund, management company and investor levels. Smart structuring of flows reduces friction costs and simplifies subsequent exit decisions.

Digital assets: tokenization and custody

Regulation of digital assets and tokenization in the AIFC is evolving through specialized AFSA regimes and the regulatory sandbox. Licensing of crypto exchanges and custody is built around storage technologies, cybersecurity and resilience to operational disruptions. In COREDO projects we pay particular attention to custody technologies for digital assets, segregation of client funds and access recovery processes.

Smart contracts and the legal status of tokens are analyzed in every case: tokenized fund shares, debt instruments or utility models fall under different parts of the Rulebook. I recommend starting with the legal qualification of the token and only after that choosing the technology stack. The AIFC license for digital asset operations opens doors to new sources of liquidity, but requires mature risk management.

KYC/eKYC and PEP/sanctions screening in “crypto” models are especially important: monitoring scenarios and triggers for STR should take into account volatility and address behavior. COREDO’s practice confirms that “compliance-by-design” reduces the cost of holding a license as you scale.

Clearing, custody and partner banks

Capital market infrastructure and clearing at the AIFC are developing in tandem with regional operators and international providers. Partner banks and custodians in Kazakhstan provide access to settlement and safekeeping of assets, and the clearing and settlement infrastructure at the AIFC is integrated with global standards. During the due diligence stage we assess connection architecture, contingency scenarios and software interfaces.

Agreements with depositories and service providers set out procedures for corporate actions, corporate voting and dispute resolution. Requirements differ for retail and institutional segments, and this must be taken into account when developing compliance policies. As a result, the regulator builds confidence in the operational quality of your platform.

For broker-dealer licenses, issues of secondary market liquidity and market-making are important. We select models in which the risk profile aligns with capital and insurance measures, and a disclosure policy addresses questions from clients and AFSA.

Scaling cross-border capital

Cross-border capital raising through the AIFC relies on clear fund marketing rules and AIFC advertising regulations. Passporting and cross-border services restrictions require separate strategies for the EU, the UK, Singapore, and the Middle East. I recommend building marketing funnels that take local private placement regimes into account and using flexible side-letter structures for institutions.

ROI assessment when operating through the AIFC should include NPV, IRR and payback period approaches, as well as profitability metrics for investment platforms: investor CAC, commission LTV, LP churn and compliance operational KPIs. Scaling an investment business through the AIFC becomes predictable when your KPIs are tied to regulatory metrics, onboarding time, share of alerts, and incident closure speed.

Marketing without transparency regarding complaints and suitability leads to regulatory and reputational risk at the AIFC. Therefore I insist on balancing growth with quality control, supported by regular reporting to the board and committees.

Risk Management and Compliance System

Management of operational and regulatory risks in the AIFC is built around three lines of defense: business, risk/compliance and internal audit. Investor protection and compliance measures become part of the culture rather than a separate department. In COREDO solutions we configure conflicts of interest management, outsourcing compliance and third-party risk management, covering the key capital supply chains: investors and unit-holders in the AIFC.

Due diligence of investors and limited partners, counterparty checks and forensic due diligence, sanction risks and international restrictions, as well as reputational screening and KYP (Know Your Partner) are part of the standard package. For cybersecurity and data protection we build measures with GDPR compatibility in mind, including DLP, IAM, encryption and incident response plans. The senior manager regime and management accountability formalize personal accountability and improve the quality of decisions.

External and internal audit for funds provides an independent view of finances and processes. IFRS reporting and regular compliance reports for AFSA reduce the information gap and enable complex topics to be discussed in the language of facts.

COREDO cases — what worked

Recently the COREDO team supported the licensing of an investment company focused on managing portfolios of debt instruments. The client applied for non-custodial management with advisory rights. We strengthened governance, prepared a capital adequacy model and implemented a transaction monitoring system. AFSA approved the license within the stated window, and subsequent review confirmed the quality of AML controls.

In another project we launched a broker platform with restricted dealing for institutional clients. Requirements for minimum statutory capital and operational resilience turned out to be higher than planned. We rebuilt the financial model, engaged a partner custodian and strengthened IT controls. The AIFC broker license was issued after an additional interview, and the business started operations on the schedule set out in the plan.

A separate case — a license for a venture fund in the AIFC with a multi-strategy focused on early rounds. We drafted the fund documents, established procedures for valuing illiquid assets, and agreed the private placement memorandum and marketing materials. The solution developed by COREDO enabled the fund to quickly close the first closings from institutional LPs and to build succession planning processes at the management company level.

Finally, for a digital asset custody provider we designed the licensing, storage technology architecture and recovery scenarios. Special attention was paid to PEP and sanctions screening, segregation of funds and contingency procedures. The AIFC license for digital asset operations was approved after demonstrating technological and operational test cases.

Cost of license maintenance

The cost of license maintenance and ongoing compliance costs include annual fees, an IFRS audit, policy updates, staff training, as well as IT and cybersecurity support. For companies with active growth, budget for expanding the compliance team, upgrading monitoring systems, and independent model reviews. Our experience at COREDO has shown that planning OPEX as a function of AUM and the number of clients reduces the risk of underfunding the control system.

Outsourcing some functions is possible and reasonable if you retain accountability. AFSA is receptive to outsourcing provided there are clear SLAs, regulator access to data, and independent oversight. It is important to conduct vendor risk assessments regularly and incorporate the results into management reporting.

In the long term, savings are achieved through KYC automation, integration with data providers, and product line standardization. This reduces risk variability and simplifies regulatory communication.

Visas and personnel: how to build a team

Visas and employment of foreign personnel in the AIFC are simplified through the center’s special regimes. We plan in advance the relocation schedule for directors and the key compliance officer, taking into account document timelines and the readiness of the IT infrastructure. This reduces the risk of delays at the launch stage.

corporate governance: requirements for the board and committees imply independent directors, charters for the audit and risk committees and clear authorities. In COREDO projects we pay special attention to describing the senior manager regime and management responsibilities, including business continuity plans and delegation. This forms a mature “line of defense” and helps during inspections.

Migration of fund management to the AIFC is possible with a well-considered transfer of functions, taking into account regulatory arbitrage and legal risks when changing jurisdiction. We arrange a phased transition while maintaining client service and controls.

Exit strategies and liquidity

Exit strategies for funds registered in the AIFC depend on the asset class and investment horizon. Exit options are available: IPO in Kazakhstan, trade sale and secondary buyout, as well as listing instruments on regional exchanges. I recommend planning secondary market liquidity metrics and market making already at the fund structure stage.

Prospectus requirements and risk disclosure when preparing for a listing require consistent messaging, financial transparency and management discipline. External audit and independent asset valuation increase confidence and accelerate the marketing window. The COREDO team supports clients through to final closing, overseeing legal and compliance aspects.

Regulatory arbitrage is useful when you compare the requirements of different centers and build a hybrid structure. The key is not to lose substance and the ability to manage risks, and to properly document the reasons for the choice.

Is the AIFC suitable for your model?

To make a considered decision, I suggest going through a checklist. Assess which license categories are needed right now and in 12–24 months, and how they are affected by the requirements for obtaining a license in AIFC. Align capital, substance and fit and proper requirements with available resources and your staffing plan.

Analyze client jurisdictions to account for cross-border service restrictions and local marketing requirements. Assess ROI: apply NPV and IRR to three scaling scenarios and take into account the payback period for licensing and IT. Do not leave regulatory risks and reputational risk in the AIFC in the shadows: set an acceptance threshold and a response plan.

If the AIFC meets the key criteria, it’s worth proceeding. If some parameters are ‘yellow’, adjust the design: a combination of an SPV and a management company, phased licensing, a pilot with a regulatory sandbox and subsequent upscaling.

Why COREDO is a reliable AIFC partner

Over years of working in Europe, Asia and the CIS I have learned that success in the AIFC is built on careful process calibration and attention to detail. The COREDO team is used to being accountable for results: from registering a legal entity in the AIFC and licensing investment activities in the AIFC to deploying AML/KYC and preparing for an AFSA inspection. We do not promise miraculous timelines, but we design realistic roadmaps and ensure transparency at every stage.

If you are considering an AIFC investment license, an AIFC asset manager license, an AIFC broker license, an AIFC depository license, or fund structures, I am ready to discuss your business model and offer a practical solution. COREDO’s experience shows that a properly structured setup in the AIFC simplifies cross-border capital raising, strengthens investor confidence, and creates a foundation for strategic exit decisions. That is the kind of foundation needed for calm, steady scaling of an investment business.
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