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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
Head of the Customer Success Department
Basang Ungunov
Basang Ungunov
Lawyer at Legal Department
Egor Pykalev
Egor Pykalev
AML consultant
Yulia Zhidikhanova
Yulia Zhidikhanova
Customer Success Associate
Pavel Batsulin
Pavel Batsulin
AML consultant
Diana Alchaeva
Diana Alchaeva
Customer Success Associate
Johann Schneider
Johann Schneider
Lawyer
Daniil Saprykin
Daniil Saprykin
Customer Success Associate

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

When an entrepreneur asks me which is faster: to set up a new entity or to buy a ready-made financial company in the EU, I always answer the same: the speed of the deal means nothing without quality Due Diligence. This is where those who treat the review not as a formality but as an investment in their future business win.

Over years of COREDO‘s work in Europe, Asia and the CIS I have seen dozens of examples where buying an ‘ideal’ ready-made company in the European Union turned into a source of regulatory, tax and reputational problems – simply because the due diligence was carried out superficially or too late.

And conversely: where the COREDO team conducted a comprehensive company review, the client entered the deal knowingly, with a clear understanding of the risks, a fair price and workable guarantees from the seller.

In this article I will lay out step by step how I view the due diligence of a financial company in the EU, which areas I consider critical, and how to practically use the results of the review not only to protect against risks but also as a tool for negotiations and deal structuring.

Due Diligence when purchasing a financial company in the EU

Illustration for the section «Due Diligence when purchasing a financial company in the EU» in the article «Ready financial companies in the EU: due diligence before purchase»

Ready-made financial companies in Europe are not just a “shell with a license”. They are:

  • existing obligations to regulators and tax authorities;
  • transaction history, clients and counterparties;
  • executed contracts and legal risks;
  • internal control systems and AML procedures;
  • reputation in the market and with supervisory authorities.

When acquiring a company in Europe you buy all of this at once, along with the potential problems of the previous owner.

Why due diligence before purchase is mandatory:

  • EU regulators and local supervisory authorities react strongly to changes in controlling persons in financial companies;
  • the financial sector (banks, payment institutions, CASP/VASP, forex, EMI/PI) is subject to increased AML scrutiny;
  • tax authorities actively use automatic data exchange and can easily reconcile transactions from past periods;
  • any defect discovered after the fact (hidden liabilities, unrecorded reserves, litigation risks) will already be your problem.

That is why I view financial due diligence, legal due diligence and tax due diligence not as three separate services, but as a single comprehensive review of the company in which the components are closely connected.

Express analysis or full due diligence: how to choose?

Illustration for the section «Express analysis or full due diligence: how to choose?» in the article «Ready financial companies in the EU: due diligence before purchase»

At COREDO we conventionally divide checks into two levels:

Express due diligence analysis

I use the express format when:

  • the client needs to quickly assess the feasibility of the transaction;
  • there are several targets for purchasing a ready company in the EU and a preliminary ranking is required;
  • the budget at the first stage is limited, but it is necessary to weed out clearly problematic options.

As a rule, express due diligence analysis includes:

  • basic review of corporate documents;
  • initial check for ongoing litigation and public sanctions;
  • review of licenses and permits;
  • overview of key financial statements and indicators;
  • initial assessment of the company’s legal cleanliness and obvious tax risks when buying the company.
The express analysis does not replace a full procedure, but it allows you at an early stage to reject clearly risky options and focus on the best targets.

When due diligence is unavoidable

I consider full due diligence mandatory if:

  • the target is a licensed financial company (payment institution, electronic money institution, investment firm, crypto company CASP/VASP, etc.);
  • the buyer intends to use the company as a strategic asset — developing it, scaling it, attracting investors;
  • the deal size is significant, and an error would be critical for the business.

In a full due diligence we include:

  • detailed financial due diligence;
  • in-depth legal due diligence;
  • a separate tax analysis block;
  • review of the internal control system, AML/KYC procedures, governance;
  • assessment of market position and business model.

Structure of due diligence for a financial company

Illustration for the section «Structure of due diligence for a financial company» in the article «Ready financial companies in the EU due diligence before purchase»

When the COREDO team gets involved in a project to review a ready-made company in the EU, I look at it across several key areas.

Legal due diligence: verifying the transaction’s integrity

Objective: to confirm that the company structure is legally sound, that the assets belong to it, and that transactions, liabilities and corporate decisions are correct and can only be contested within predictable limits.

What’s included:

  • Review of corporate documents
    • charter, articles of association, resolutions and minutes of governing bodies;
    • ownership and control structure, beneficiaries;
    • existence of restrictions or encumbrances on shares/stakes;
    • history of changes in members/shareholders and directors.
  • Analysis of the company’s contracts and liabilities
    • agreements with key clients and counterparties;
    • agreements with IT infrastructure providers, PSPs, banks;
    • leases, outsourcing, white label, agency agreements;
    • pledges, guarantees, sureties.
  • Review of the company’s history and litigation
    • current and past legal disputes;
    • administrative cases, regulatory fines;
    • investigations in AML/sanctions, claims by supervisory authorities.
  • Intellectual property and IT assets
    • rights to software, domains, trademarks;
    • license agreements;
    • confidentiality and trade secret regime.

The result of this section: an understanding of to what extent the company’s legal soundness meets the buyer’s expectations and what set of warranties and representations from the seller will be required in the SPA.

Financial due diligence: numbers and debts

Financial scrutiny of a company in deals with ready-made EU structures: this is a stage I never cut short in time or depth.

Main elements:

  • Review of the company’s financial condition
    • analysis of financial statements for 2–3 years;
    • revenue, gross and operating profit;
    • expense structure and margins.
  • Assessment of working capital
    • level and composition of accounts receivable and payable;
    • policy for provisioning doubtful debts;
    • presence of problematic or “stalled” positions.
  • Net debt and debt burden
    • loans, borrowings, financial leasing;
    • intragroup obligations;
    • structure and cost of debt capital.
  • Adequacy of reserves when acquiring a company
    • reserves for legal disputes;
    • reserves for disputed taxes;
    • assessment of potential “off‑balance” risks.
  • Analysis of the actual operational activity
    • consistency of turnover with the business model;
    • relationship between actual cash flows and those reported in the financial statements;
    • check for “inflated” turnover or artificial profit before sale.

The task of this stage is to give the buyer an honest answer: how sustainable the current financial picture is and whether there are any “time bombs” in the form of concealed liabilities.

Tax due diligence: main risks

Tax risks when acquiring a company in the EU are often underestimated, especially when it comes to cross-border structures involving multiple jurisdictions.

In the tax section we include:

  • analysis of tax returns and calculations for main taxes over several years;
  • reconciliation of the tax base and financial statements;
  • checks of correct application of exemptions and special regimes;
  • assessment of cross-border transfer pricing schemes and intra-group services;
  • identification of potential unrecognized tax liabilities.
The client asks: “How to minimize tax risks in M&A?”

In practice, three instruments are used:

  • adjustment of the deal financing structure (debt/equity, earn‑out, deferred payments);
  • tax-optimized structuring of ownership (holdings, jurisdictions in the EU and third countries);
  • inclusion in the SPA of specific tax warranties and representations by the seller and compensation mechanisms.

AML and internal control in financial companies

When working with financial companies, especially those licensed in the EU (payment organizations, electronic money, investment and crypto companies), the internal control system of the acquired company is as important as its financial metrics.

The COREDO team regularly provides AML consulting and support to financial institutions, so in such transactions we always check:

  • existing AML policies/CFT, KYC, sanctions control;
  • risk‑based approach procedures, client categorization;
  • work of the compliance officer and the internal audit function;
  • quality of client files and completeness of KYC documentation;
  • existence and content of reporting to regulators;
  • cases of blocks, refusals to provide services, regulator inquiries.

This section allows us to assess:

  • how compliant the company is with regulatory requirements;
  • whether there is a risk of sanctions or license revocation;
  • how easily the company can be integrated into your existing compliance system.

personnel management in the organization

Many focus on the numbers and paperwork, forgetting that a ready-made company is also a team.

I always pay attention to:

  • management structure and allocation of functions;
  • key employees: directors, MLRO/AML officer, heads of departments;
  • motivation system and the risk of critical personnel leaving after the deal;
  • presence of internal regulations and KPIs.
In one of the EU deals, the solution developed by COREDO involved not only the legal formalization of the acquisition, but also the parallel signing of long-term contracts with key employees and the implementation of a new reporting system. This allowed the buyer to launch integration immediately after closing without losing control.

Market position and business model

For financial companies in Europe, especially with EMI/PI or CASP/VASP licenses, I always look at:

  • assessment of the target company’s market position;
  • structure of the client base;
  • dependence on individual providers or partners;
  • sustainability of the business model and its scalability.
Here due diligence approaches an independent evaluation of the investment object: it’s important not only to understand the risks, but also to confirm that the business has growth potential and does not exist solely due to a single “anchor” client or an affiliated structure.

Two-stage process: data collection and negotiations

Illustration for the section «Two-stage process: data collection and negotiations» in the article «Ready financial companies in the EU: due diligence before purchase»

In COREDO practice, the full due diligence procedure is usually built on a two-stage model.

Stage 1. Initial collection and rapid analysis

At this stage I:

  • compile the list of documents to be analyzed;
  • organize access to the data room (electronic document archive);
  • conduct an initial screening for red flags: litigation, sanctions, regulatory risks, major tax inconsistencies.
If critical risks already surface at this stage, the buyer may:
  • either walk away from the deal;
  • or radically revise its structure and price.

In-depth analysis and conclusions

After the initial filter, the COREDO team proceeds to detailed examination:

  • all material contracts;
  • financial metrics and calculations;
  • internal procedures and control systems.

The result is a due diligence report:

  • a detailed opinion for each section;
  • a list of identified risks and their likelihoods;
  • an assessment of investment risks and possible consequences;
  • recommendations for minimizing the impact of risks and mitigating them.

How to use due diligence to your advantage

Illustration for the section 'How to use due diligence to your advantage' in the article 'Ready financial companies in the EU: due diligence before purchase'

I always tell clients: due diligence is not only protection, but also a deal-management tool.

Revising the price and terms of the deal

The report’s findings allow:
  • adjust the transaction price and guarantees;
  • request additional guarantees and seller’s representations;
  • require withholding part of the payment in escrow until certain risks are remedied;
  • initiate a review of payment terms based on the DD findings (deferment, earn‑out, partial buy‑out).

Structure of deal financing

Based on the review:

  • the financing structure of the deal changes (balance of equity and debt);
  • covenant terms for banks and investors are determined;
  • a tax‑efficient ownership structure is formed.

Enter the deal or walk away

Sometimes due diligence reveals critical risks that are not offset by either a price reduction or guarantees. In such cases, the honest answer is not to buy.
COREDO’s practice confirms: abandoning deals based on quality due diligence saves clients money, time and reputation. In the long term, this is a better ROI than a ‘deal at any cost’.

Due diligence for financial companies in the EU

Unlike classic M&A in the real sector, due diligence of financial companies in the EU has its own specifics:

  • mandatory verification of licenses and compliance with regulator requirements;
  • analysis of interactions with correspondent banks and payment providers;
  • review of the history of regulatory inspections and any enforcement orders;
  • assessment of reputation in the market and in the professional community.

The COREDO team regularly supports clients in obtaining financial licenses in EU countries, the United Kingdom, Singapore, and also supports transactions for the sale of companies. This experience helps us see which requirements are particularly sensitive for specific jurisdictions and segments (EMI/PI, investment firms, crypto companies).

How to prepare for due diligence

Based on my experience, I will outline a few recommendations that help entrepreneurs and chief financial officers navigate the acquisition of an established company in the EU in an informed manner:

  1. Engage experts early. The ideal time is before signing the LOI or at its stage, with clear provisions preserving the right to withdraw from the deal based on the results of the due diligence.
  2. Decide on the format: express or full. For initial target screening an express analysis is sufficient; for the final selection and price negotiations, only a full due diligence.
  3. Discuss access to data with the seller right away. A transparent, well-structured data room is a good indicator of the seller’s good faith.
  4. Focus on critical risk areas. For financial companies these include: licenses, AML/KYC, taxes, litigation, debt burden, client structure.
  5. Use the findings of due diligence in negotiations. A quality report is an argument, not just a box-ticking exercise.
  6. Plan integration in advance. Based on the review results, you should immediately develop a plan: changes to governance, updating policies, revising contracts, strengthening compliance.

How COREDO helps you navigate the process

Since 2016 COREDO has supported international business in company formation, licensing and legal Due Diligence in Europe, Asia and the CIS.

Our experience has shown that entrepreneurs find it more convenient to work with a partner who:
  • understands the specifics of financial licenses and regulatory requirements;
  • combines legal, financial and tax due diligence within a single team;
  • is able to integrate the review with the subsequent deal structure and post-sale support.

In a typical due diligence project for a financial company in the EU the COREDO team:

  • analyzes the legal status and corporate structure;
  • conducts a financial review of the company and its financial statements;
  • assesses the tax risks of the transaction target and options for their mitigation;
  • checks the internal control system of the target company and its AML procedures;
  • prepares a clear report for owners and investors, prioritizing risks;
  • helps use the findings in negotiations and in the contract structure.
My task as the founder is to ensure that, for the client, due diligence ceases to be a “complex technical procedure” and becomes a strategic decision-making tool.

When a manager sees not only a list of risks, but also a clear plan for how to mitigate them, how to structure financing and which seller guarantees to request: the deal stops being a lottery and becomes a manageable process.

If you are considering acquiring an existing financial company in the EU, my main advice is: allocate in your budget and timeline a full due diligence and do not skimp on it. buying a business is always about the future. And the quality of that future is largely determined by how thoroughly you have checked the present and past of the company you are acquiring.
When an entrepreneur encounters a bank refusal without explanation for the first time, it is perceived as the personal decision of a particular manager or the bank’s “whim”. In practice this is almost always the result of a formalized risk-based approach, internal risk policies and the outcomes of automated bank compliance for businesses.

Over the years of COREDO‘s work with international banks in Europe and Asia I have seen that the key mistake businesses make is to treat a refusal as the final point. In fact, it is a signal: your profile in the bank’s eyes and your internal compliance system do not match its risk appetite. That means this can and should be managed.

In this article I will explain how to:

  • interpret a bank’s refusal to open a company’s current account and a subsequent refusal by the bank to service the business;
  • prepare for initial and repeat onboarding at the bank;
  • reduce the risks of a company’s account being blocked in the long term;
  • build systematic AML support for companies and an internal compliance that banks perceive as an asset rather than a problem.

Reasons a bank might refuse a loan

Illustration for the section “Why a bank refuses a loan: reasons” in the article “Bank refusal without explanation – how to structure a repeat onboarding”

The phrase “refusal without explanation” protects the bank from disputes and from revealing risk-management methodologies. But there are almost always reasons. In COREDO’s practice, five blocks are most common.

Jurisdictional and industry risks

The bank assesses:

  • the country of company registration;
  • the country of tax residency of the beneficiaries;
  • the countries of counterparties and the geography of payments;
  • the industry (fintech, crypto, gambling, forex, PSP, cross-border e-commerce, etc.).
If the jurisdictional risk during onboarding at EU and Asian banks and the industry are both considered high-risk, the probability that a bank will refuse to service an active company increases sharply.

In one COREDO case we structured a group where the holding was located in a neutral European jurisdiction, the operating companies were in Asia, and the clients were worldwide. Without explaining the logic of the structure and documenting the economic rationale of the operations for the bank, it looked like a set of “shell” companies. After preparing a detailed diagram of business processes, substance and tax logic, the bank not only approved the account but also expanded the limits after several months of operation.

Ownership and beneficiary structure

The bank considers important:

  • whether there is a clear ultimate beneficial owner (UBO);
  • whether there is an excessive number of ownership layers;
  • whether trusts, foundations, or nominee structures are present;
  • whether there are PEP / sanction risks, negative news.
If a transparent beneficiary structure is not established for the bank, the bank will assess the company’s reputational risk as unacceptable.

In such cases the COREDO team often adjusts the ownership structure for bank onboarding: we simplify levels, bring the UBO “into the light”, and document connections and sources of funds.

Business model and transactional profile

A bank’s scoring of a corporate client today relies not only on the industry but also on the expected transactional pattern:

  • payment volumes and frequency;
  • share of cross-border transfers;
  • currencies;
  • types of counterparties and jurisdictions.
If the model looks non-standard, banks may refuse service to companies with non-standard business models, particularly often when onboarding fintech and payment companies.

In COREDO’s practice there was a client: a payment intermediary with a history of high chargebacks and disputed transactions at the previous PSP. We conducted a legal audit of the company before submitting the bank application, rebuilt the contractual base with merchants, implemented an anti-fraud policy and prepared an evidence base to justify the legality of revenues. After that, reopening an account after a compliance refusal became possible at another European bank.

Client history and external signals

Banks widely use:

  • negative news screening and reputational risk;
  • public registers, court cases, media;
  • internal and external watchlists/blacklists.
If a company has already been delisted by a bank and offboarded, this affects how it is perceived by other banks.

We encountered the case “client on another bank’s blacklist: what to do”: we collected documents explaining the past case (an erroneous alert on a transaction, incorrect interpretation of a counterparty), and prepared a separate memorandum for the new bank, minimizing the risk of inclusion in the bank’s internal blacklist already at the application stage.

Bank risk appetite and scorecard

Even a legally perfect structure may not pass a bank’s internal scorecard for assessing corporate clients.

What applies here:

  • the risk-based approach in banks and client refusal if the total scoring score is below the threshold;
  • temporary restrictions by industry (for example, a bank “closes the window” to new crypto clients);
  • changes in country policies.

At COREDO, our bank-selection consultations always begin with an assessment: do the client’s business model and the potential bank’s risk appetite match by country and industry.

What to do in case of a bank refusal?

Illustration for the section 'What to do in case of a bank refusal?' in the article 'Bank refusal without explanation – how to build a repeat onboarding'

If a bank refusal occurs without explanation, the company has three key tasks:

  1. record the consequences (and not worsen the situation);
  2. understand what exactly triggered it;
  3. set up a repeat onboarding after the bank refusal – either with the same bank or with another bank.

Maintaining control of the situation

Practical minimum:

  • do not argue emotionally with the bank and do not ‘press’ for disclosure of reasons;
  • request a written notice of refusal/account closure (if the bank issues one);
  • clarify the account closure timeframe and the procedure for withdrawing funds;
  • record in your system the date and circumstances of the refusal – this will be useful when analyzing the bank refusal and preparing for repeat onboarding.
At this stage COREDO usually steps in with legal support in cases of bank refusal: we assess whether there is value in a legal challenge strategy, or whether it is more appropriate to focus on onboarding with another financial institution.

Internal due diligence of the company

Before applying to a new bank, it is important to:

  • conduct a legal audit of the company before submitting the application to the bank;
  • assess how your company appears through the lens of AML/KYC:
    • beneficiaries;
    • contractual framework;
    • counterparty policy;
    • source of funds / source of wealth;
    • transaction and blocking history.

The COREDO team often models a bank’s risk assessment of a client: we apply an approach similar to the bank’s logic, analyzing jurisdiction, industry, reputation, media screening, structure, and transactions. This allows us to see in advance which alerts will be triggered in a bank’s scoring of a corporate client.

How to create a transparent picture of the business

Internal package to prepare before contacting the bank:

  • corporate documents;
  • ownership structure with a visual diagram;
  • description of the business model and the value chain;
  • key contracts;
  • policy for working with counterparties;
  • financial statements.
It is at this stage that we at COREDO build transparency of cash flows for the bank: we document the economic rationale of operations, sources of receipts and expenditures, and explain why transactions go through specific jurisdictions.

Strategy for repeat onboarding

After the internal audit, the question arises: where exactly to undergo secondary onboarding after a bank refusal. Options:

  • the same bank (if the refusal is related to missing documents or incomplete disclosure of information);
  • another bank in the same jurisdiction;
  • a bank in another country, with a different risk appetite;
  • a combination of a traditional bank and EMI/fintech solutions (as part of a ‘multibanking’ strategy).
The solution developed by COREDO for clients with a history of refusals is a roadmap for repeat onboarding: we gradually change structure, contracts, and internal procedures, while simultaneously testing interest from various banks in the EU, the United Kingdom, Singapore, and other jurisdictions.

How to prepare for onboarding at a foreign bank

Illustration for the section «How to prepare for onboarding at a foreign bank» in the article «Bank refusal without explanation – how to build a repeat onboarding»

Onboarding of corporate clients in Europe and Asia today is not just filling out a form. It is a comprehensive check of KYC/KYB, transactional logic, substance and reputation.

Documents for bank onboarding

Standard package:

  • incorporation documents;
  • register of shareholders / UBO;
  • documents of directors and beneficial owners (ID, proof of address);
  • description of activities and business plan;
  • key contracts;
  • financial statements and tax filings (if there is a history).

For companies with elevated risk: additionally:

  • confirmation of economic substance (office, employees, real operations);
  • company policy & procedures on AML/KYC;
  • internal policies on counterparties and transactions;
  • description of transaction monitoring systems / transaction monitoring within the company.

The COREDO team regularly prepares KYC packages for clients for foreign banks: from corporate document templates to business description phrasing that is clear to a compliance officer.

KYC for legal entities and KYB

In KYC for legal entities and KYB procedures the bank checks:

  • who the ultimate beneficial owners and controlling persons are;
  • whether there are nominee shareholders without a real economic role;
  • whether the stated activity corresponds to the contract base;
  • whether there is confirmation of source of funds / source of wealth.
If discrepancies are identified: a high risk of refusal in the bank’s compliance check.

Therefore one of the key areas of COREDO’s AML consulting is the adjustment of contracts and business processes to AML requirements/KYC, so that the business appears to the bank exactly as it operates in reality.

How to prepare for digital onboarding

With the growth of digital onboarding / remote onboarding, banks’ requirements for the quality of data and documents have tightened. Automated systems:

  • analyze documents for forgeries;
  • cross-check data with external registries;
  • immediately run screening against sanctions lists and PEPs;
  • apply pre-configured risk scoring models based on transaction patterns.

To reduce the risk of rejection during remote onboarding, at COREDO we:

  • prepare documents in advance in formats that are easily read by systems;
  • fill out questionnaires so they are consistent with each other and with corporate documents;
  • prepare the client for possible re-identification by the bank, video interviews and follow-up questions.

Bank’s refusal to serve a company

Illustration for the section “Bank refusal to serve a company” in the article “Bank refusal without explanation – how to arrange a repeated onboarding”

Bank refusal to serve an operating company and the subsequent offboarding of the client (bank delisting) is one of the most painful scenarios.

It is often associated with:

  • triggering an alert in the transaction monitoring system and refusal of service;
  • activation of sanctions or negative media screening;
  • a change in the profile of operations without properly explaining it to the bank.

Reasons for blocks and offboarding

Typical triggers:

  • a sharp increase in turnover without prior notice;
  • a change in the geography of payments (for example, a mass entry into new markets);
  • an increase in the share of cross-border payments;
  • transactions atypical for the previously observed profile.
Internal alerts and triggers in AML systems initiate a manual review by a compliance officer. If the company cannot quickly and convincingly provide documents and explanations, the likelihood of a bank refusal following the AML check increases significantly.

How to communicate with the bank after a refusal

If a refusal has nevertheless occurred, at COREDO we almost always recommend that the client develop a communication strategy with the bank after the refusal:

  • record exactly which questions compliance raised;
  • prepare a structured package of responses and documents;
  • if possible, request a formal reconsideration (if there are grounds).
Sometimes this allows the scenario to be shifted from a “hard delisting” to a controlled exit or to postpone the account closure date, which is critical for operational activity.

How to reduce the risk of compliance rejections

Illustration for the section «How to reduce the risk of compliance rejections» in the article «Bank refusal without explanation – how to arrange a repeat onboarding»

Mature businesses today perceive banking compliance support services not as «additional expenses», but as an investment in access to the financial infrastructure.

Which internal policies do banks need?

From COREDO’s practice, the minimum looks like this:

  • AML policy and procedures (KYC/KYB, handling high-risk counterparties, sanctions lists);
  • transaction monitoring policy;
  • procedure for responding to requests from banks and regulators;
  • a documented policy on sources of funds and confirmations of beneficiaries’ incomes;
  • a retention policy for documents and the evidentiary record.
This way the company demonstrates to the bank that anti-money-laundering legislation for business is not a formality, but an integrated part of risk management.

How to manage a bank’s reputational risk

Banks pay special attention to:

  • beneficial owners’ public profile;
  • media mentions;
  • litigation and regulatory cases.
When the COREDO team helps clients manage reputational risk with a bank, we:

  • conduct negative-news screening in advance and view the company through the bank’s eyes;
  • prepare explanations for sensitive cases;
  • where necessary, structure communications so the bank receives context rather than fragments of information.

Multibanking strategy and choice of jurisdictions

One of the most practical takeaways we advise our clients is: don’t build your business relying on a single bank. Especially when it comes to an international group of companies.

Why do businesses need multibanking?

The strategic objective is to distribute:

  • operational payments;
  • reserves;
  • settlements with regulators and partners

across several banks and jurisdictions with different bank risk appetites by jurisdiction and industry.

With this approach, even a bank’s rejection of PSPs and payment intermediaries, or offboarding at a single bank, won’t paralyze operations.

How to choose banks in Europe and Asia

Our experience at COREDO has shown that for companies from the CIS operating in the EU and Asia, it’s important to consider:

  • real economic substance in the chosen country;
  • transparency of the tax model;
  • the presence of a direct and clear beneficial owner;
  • the bank’s sector policy.
We often structure things to combine:

  • company incorporation and subsequent bank onboarding in the same jurisdiction;
  • and opening additional accounts in other countries (for example, one account in the EU, another in Singapore).

How to minimize rejections during COREDO onboarding

I’ll outline, in practical terms, how the COREDO team typically gets involved in projects where there is already a refusal to open a corporate bank account or a risk of delisting.

Site audit and strategy

  1. Legal and compliance audit: structure, contracts, beneficiaries, transactions.
  2. Modeling bank scoring for a corporate client across different jurisdictions and types of banks.
  3. Developing a strategy:
    • we adapt the business model and structure to the requirements of target banks (restructuring the business model to meet the bank’s requirements);
    • or we choose financial institutions whose risk appetite better matches the company’s current profile.

KYC dossier and onboarding: preparation

The COREDO team has carried out dozens of projects where the key to success was the careful preparation of the KYC package for a foreign bank:

  • we prepare a package of documents and business descriptions;
  • we work out responses to standard and complex questions from compliance officers;
  • we prepare a guide for an in-depth compliance interview with the bank;
  • we manage communications until a decision is reached.
In account-opening cases for high-risk companies (fintech, PSP, crypto), we almost always combine client preparation with adapting the company’s internal policies & procedures for AML/KYC so the bank sees not only the ‘documents submitted’ but also the maturity of internal controls.

AML support for companies

A separate area: support after account opening:

  • assistance in responding to regular queries about transactions and counterparties;
  • documenting changes (change of beneficiaries, changes to the structure, expansion of payment geography);
  • preparing for limit increases or the addition of new products.
COREDO’s experience shows: companies that invest in systematic AML support far less frequently encounter a bank’s refusal to service their business or a bank refusal following AML checks.

To summarize my experience since 2016, resilience to bank rejections is not about “finding the one right bank”, but about building your business, structure and processes so that banks see you as a predictable, manageable and understandable partner.

And it is exactly here — from registering legal entities abroad to obtaining financial licenses and supporting complex onboardings in banks across the EU, the UK, Singapore and other jurisdictions — that the COREDO team helps clients keep their focus: not merely to open an account, but to build a sustainable model for interacting with the financial system for years to come.

To summarize my experience as the founder of COREDO, most questions and problems for international businesses today arise not from company registration or even from obtaining a license, but from how to move forward in a world of continuous transaction monitoring and strict AML compliance requirements.

An entrepreneur sees one thing: “the payment was delayed again”, “the bank requested a package of documents”, “the client’s wallet is blocked pending investigation”.
But here’s what’s happening behind the scenes: a complex AML transaction monitoring system, hundreds of AML rules, dozens of AML scenarios, thousands of AML alerts daily and a constant struggle between risk and customer experience.

In this article I’ll break down three things:
  1. which typical suspicious transaction monitoring scenarios most often trigger alerts;
  2. how these scenarios look from the perspective of a bank/fintech/licensed company;
  3. what an owner or chief financial officer can do to reduce the number of unnecessary alerts without exposing the business to regulatory risk.

I base this on COREDO’s real-world practice: company registration in the EU and Asia, obtaining financial licenses, setting up AML functions and supporting clients in the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Cyprus, Estonia, the United Kingdom, Singapore, Dubai and other jurisdictions.

Why a payment ends up in AML monitoring

Illustration for the section «Why a payment ends up in AML monitoring» in the article «Transaction monitoring – common scenarios that trigger alerts»
Any bank, fintech, payment institution, crypto exchange or virtual asset service provider is required to have a functioning anti-money laundering monitoring system. This is not “desirable”, but a direct requirement of regulators in the EU, the United Kingdom, Singapore, the UAE, and many countries in Asia and the CIS.

Inside such a system there are always three layers:

  • KYC and transaction monitoring
    Customer profile, customer risk rating, customer behavior profile, expected turnover and expected transaction pattern. It is precisely through the combination KYC + transaction monitoring that the system determines whether this transaction is normal for a specific customer.
  • Rule-based / scenario-based transaction monitoring
    A set of aml scenarios and aml rules that catch unusual transaction patterns, high-risk transactions, cross-border transactions with increased risk, operations with high-risk jurisdictions, PEPs and sanctions alerts, etc.
  • Alert handling & investigations
    Generation of transaction monitoring alerts, their prioritization, investigation, escalation, and, if necessary, submission of a suspicious activity report (SAR) to the financial intelligence unit (FIU) and a full aml transaction monitoring audit trail.
All of this must operate under a risk-based approach (RBA): the higher the risk, the stricter the scenarios, the lower the thresholds, the faster the response.

Common scenarios that trigger AML alerts

Illustration for the section «Frequent scenarios that trigger AML alerts» in the article «Transaction monitoring – frequent scenarios that trigger alerts»
Typical scenarios that most often trigger AML alerts are recurring patterns of client behavior and transactions that automated systems recognize as potentially suspicious operations. By breaking down scenarios such as structuring / smurfing and payment fragmentation, it is easier to understand why alerts fire on them more often and how the compliance team responds.

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One of the most “classic” scenarios of suspicious transaction monitoring:
  • the client regularly makes many small payments,
  • each of them just below formal AML transaction thresholds,
  • in total over a short period this is a significant volume.

Systems see such smurfing / structuring alerts as:

  • frequent operations for similar amounts;
  • splitting a single logical payment into a chain of small ones;
  • fragmentation between related accounts or related-party transactions.
For B2B clients this is often linked to legitimate business processes, but structuring transaction monitoring tends to respond strictly by default.
From COREDO’s practice:

In one holding with operations in the EU and Asia, the accounting department was used to splitting payments between several partners and legal entities to speed up approvals. After the implementation of a new real-time AML transaction monitoring system, the bank began to raise AML alerts en masse. The solution developed at COREDO included rewriting payment flows, updating the business process descriptions for the bank, and adjusting AML rules and value-based thresholds to the real business model.

Key to reducing false positives:
clearly document transaction profiling, the business rationale for structuring, and agree this with the bank/provider.

Rapid turnover of funds in the account

Rapid movement of funds alerts occur when money:

  • arrives and leaves almost immediately;
  • moves quickly through several accounts;
  • pass through complex chains (back-to-back, round-tripping funds, mirror transactions).

Common triggers:

  • intra-group transactions monitoring between related companies;
  • rapid turnover through corporate accounts with a small balance;
  • a sudden increase in turnover without a clear explanation.
In COREDO’s practice this regularly appears with trading companies, international logistics, and distribution structures. They indeed operate with low margins and rapid turnover – to the system this looks like the layering stage of money laundering.

What helps:

  • a documented customer behavior profile and a description of business cycles;
  • transparent contracts, invoices, and supply chain payment risk logic;
  • pre-configuring scenarios for the client type: trade, fintech, payment provider, etc.

Unusual geography and high-risk jurisdictions

One of the most frequent questions from clients:
“Why does a payment to a new country immediately trigger an alert?”

The answer is simple: geolocation anomaly monitoring and high-risk country transaction monitoring are mandatory elements of financial crime compliance.

The system monitors:

  • the sender’s and recipient’s countries;
  • correspondent banks (correspondent banking risk, nested relationships risk);
  • links to sanctioned or offshore jurisdictions;
  • sharp changes in geography (yesterday – only the EU, today – payments to several high-risk jurisdictions simultaneously).
For many fintech projects and neobanks that COREDO works with, launching a new market in Asia or Africa inevitably triggers a spike in cross-border transaction monitoring alerts.

The right strategy:

  • adapt AML scenarios in advance taking into account regional typologies Europe / Asia / Africa;
  • conduct an AML risk assessment for new directions;
  • update the customer risk rating taking into account new countries and products.

Dormant account reactivation: sudden reactivation

Dormant account reactivation alerts: one of the most underestimated yet dangerous scenarios:

  • the account was unused for a long time;
  • then large or numerous transactions occur in a short period;
  • especially if the nature of the transactions or the geography changes.
For the bank this is a classic indicator of account takeover, fraudulent use of an old account, or an attempt to use a “sleeping” profile for money mule schemes.

This can be inconvenient for the business: the company “unfroze” one of its old accounts in Europe, started new operations – and received a series of AML alerts and requests for documents.

The COREDO team in such cases builds a clear plan with the bank:
  • pre-notification of the planned account reactivation;
  • description of the new expected transaction pattern;
  • if necessary – updating KYC and enhanced Due Diligence (EDD).

Large transactions and high risks

Large value transaction alerts trigger when value-based thresholds are exceeded, often in combination with:

  • non-standard counterparties;
  • high-risk industries (gaming, gambling, certain MCCs, cash-intensive businesses);
  • an unusual currency or jurisdiction;
  • an unusual frequency of large transactions.
A separate block – cash-intensive business monitoring, high-risk merchant category codes (MCC), prepaid cards and vouchers risk, stored value accounts monitoring.
In such cases high-risk transactions monitoring is almost always combined with enhanced verification of documents and sources of funds.

For a corporate client it is critical here:

  • describe limits and typical amounts in advance;
  • provide transparent documents for key contracts;
  • monitor so that one-off large transactions nseemed like an inexplicable “bulging” of the turn.

Crypto and virtual assets in banking

A topic that has come up more frequently in COREDO’s practice in recent years – cryptocurrency transaction monitoring, virtual asset service provider aml monitoring and on-ramp / off-ramp transaction monitoring.

Triggers:

  • regular transfers to crypto exchanges and back;
  • fiat payments to unknown VASPs;
  • transactions involving stablecoins and DeFi monitoring through custodial wallets;
  • transfers related to high-risk exchanges or anonymizing services.
Traditional banks view this through the prism of:
  • virtual assets and crypto exchanges risk;
  • source of funds and beneficial ownership transparency;
  • risks of layering and the integration stage of money laundering through crypto instruments.
For clients licensed to provide crypto services and supported by COREDO, we always design a separate architecture:
  • specialized scenarios for crypto-related transaction monitoring;
  • device and channel analysis in AML (web, mobile, API);
  • integration with blockchain data providers and high-risk address lists.

Customer behavior in AML alerts

Illustration for the section «Customer behavior in AML alerts» in the article «Transaction monitoring – common scenarios that trigger alerts»
With modern regulatory expectations, a single simple set of rules «if amount > X, generate an alert» is no longer enough. The following come into play:

  • customer behavior monitoring AML;
  • transaction frequency analysis and velocity checks in transaction monitoring;
  • behavioral analytics in transaction monitoring and anomaly detection in AML monitoring.

The system looks not only at absolute amounts, but also at:

  • deviations from the customer behavior profile;
  • out-of-pattern transactions;
  • seasonality and cyclicality of transactions;
  • correlation with new products or markets.
From COREDO’s experience:

One European neobank faced a situation where, when scaling its customer base several times, the number of AML alerts grew exponentially. After analysis, it turned out that some rules were too «global» and did not account for segmentation. We reworked the model: added segmentation by separating retail and corporate clients, took into account business types, average transaction amounts, and transaction frequency. This allowed reducing AML false positives by more than half without increasing risk.

For businesses this means:
the better you know and describe your actual behavior, the easier it is to configure scenario-based transaction monitoring that reacts to anomalies rather than to normal operational activity.

How the AML transaction monitoring system works

Illustration for the section «How the AML transaction monitoring system works» in the article «Transaction monitoring – common scenarios that trigger alerts»
An entrepreneur needs to understand not only the scenarios themselves but also how the system operates as a whole.

Rule-based or machine learning?

In COREDO’s real projects for implementing and configuring systems for banks, fintechs and payment institutions, a hybrid model is most often used:

  • rule-based transaction monitoring
    Classic rules and scenarios: thresholds, country lists, structuring patterns, specific trade-based money laundering red flags, invoice fraud transaction patterns, mule account detection scenarios, scam-driven transfer detection.
  • machine learning in transaction monitoring
    Anomaly detection algorithms, supervised vs unsupervised AML models, behavioral analytics, recommendations for alert prioritization and reduction of false positives.
Critical for the regulator are: explainable AI (XAI) in AML, model governance in AML, model validation and backtesting, clear data lineage in AML systems.
If you, as a business owner, use a third-party platform or are launching your own fintech project, I recommend asking the provider direct questions:
  • how AML model risk management is implemented;
  • whether there are procedures for AML model validation for transaction monitoring;
  • what audit trail and AML documentation exist;
  • how data quality issues in transaction monitoring are addressed.

Calibration and threshold testing

The second critical area is AML transaction monitoring calibration:

  • AML alert thresholds optimization;
  • tuning suspicious transaction monitoring scenarios;
  • above the line / below the line testing AML;
  • AML scenario effectiveness testing.
At the board level the key question is simple:
“Why do we have so many alerts and so much manual work?”
The answer usually lies in three areas:
  • thresholds and scenario parameters do not match a real risk-based approach;
  • there is no regular scenario library management and scenario coverage assessment;
  • there is no functioning AML continuous learning feedback loop from analysts to rule owners.
COREDO’s practice shows:
after the first wave of monitoring system implementation companies often live with “semi-tested” settings for years. This creates an illusion of control, but in practice yields either an avalanche of false positives or a high risk of false negatives.

Governance, KPIs and working with the business

A working AML transaction monitoring function is not only about technology and scenarios, but also about proper governance:

  • AML alerts governance framework;
  • the three lines of defence model in AML;
  • governance of the financial crime function and financial crime committees;
  • regular internal audits of transaction monitoring and independent validation of AML systems;
  • regulatory inspections and reviews, preparation for inspections and addressing findings.

For the board and senior management, the following are important:

  • key risk indicators (KRI) for AML;
  • management information (MI) for AML;
  • service level agreements (SLA) for alert handling;
  • team workload and resource planning for AML teams;
  • AML transaction monitoring ROI and cost of compliance vs cost of non-compliance.
The COREDO team often gets involved precisely at this level:
we help build governance, define KPIs and KRIs, prepare for a regulator inspection and explain why this particular monitoring architecture matches the risk profile of a specific business.

What entrepreneurs and CFOs can do now

Illustration for the section «What entrepreneurs and CFOs can do now» in the article «Transaction monitoring – frequent scenarios that trigger alerts»
I’ll list practical steps that significantly reduce the “pain” of AML monitoring for operating businesses and are almost mandatory when launching new projects in Europe and Asia.

How to map your business model to AML

For a bank, your business is a set of risks, not just revenue. The task is to help the compliance team understand you.
I recommend preparing:

  • a description of the business model with a focus on payment flows;
  • customer segments, customer risk rating by groups;
  • typical volumes, currencies, geography, expected transaction pattern;
  • a list of high-risk industries if you work with them (gaming, gambling, cash-intensive, high-risk MCCs);
  • group structure, ultimate beneficial owner (UBO) screening, complexity of corporate structure and use of virtual office / co-working addresses.
At COREDO we regularly prepare such documents for clients, simultaneously using them during company registration, licensing and AML risk management setup.

Transparency of banks and providers

Even large international banks often hide the logic of scenarios behind the formulation “required by the regulator”.

In practice you can and should:
  • discuss transaction monitoring common red flags and typical scenarios that trigger for your business;
  • ask for examples of frequent AML alert scenarios in transaction monitoring for your type of business;
  • clarify how the bank uses name screening vs transaction screening, sanctions screening and transaction monitoring, adverse media screening and PEP checks.
The higher-quality dialogue you build, the easier it is to jointly optimize thresholds, reduce the number of unjustified alerts and avoid blocks for formal reasons.

Invest in an internal AML function

For licensed companies (payment institutions, EMI, forex, crypto platforms, neobanks) this is a mandatory requirement of regulators in Europe and Asia.

But even for “ordinary” trading and service companies with an international payment flow, an internal financial crime compliance function becomes a competitive advantage.

This can be implemented in different ways:

  • an in-house department + external COREDO support for complex issues;
  • partial outsourcing of AML monitoring, where an internal compliance officer manages the provider;
  • managed services for transaction monitoring, if the business is not ready to build a large team.
In any case, having a person who understands the difference between alert volume and alert quality, knows how to work with case management in AML systems, and recognizes when a transaction warrants SAR triggers, is the best protection against regulatory claims and unexpected blocks.

Data and IT landscape quality

Even the most expensive AML platform is powerless if:

  • data sources are not synchronized;
  • there are gaps in KYC, UBO, geodata, IP, device;
  • there is no control over data quality issues in transaction monitoring.
In COREDO projects we always start with:
  • analysis of data ingestion and data mapping;
  • checking data quality controls and completeness checks;
  • the need for data enrichment (IP, device, geo), device fingerprinting in fintech, IP address risk indicators, geolocation risk scoring.
Only after that does it make sense to seriously talk about scenario calibration, ML models and reducing false positives.

How to choose a jurisdiction and a license

choosing a jurisdiction for a holding or a financial license directly affects which AML transaction monitoring regulatory expectations you will have to meet.

The COREDO team supports clients in:
  • the EU (including the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Cyprus, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, the United Kingdom, etc.);
  • Singapore, some Asian and Middle Eastern jurisdictions;
  • CIS countries.
At the planning stage we always consider:
  • local typologies from regulators and industry bodies;
  • expectations for transaction monitoring in cross-border payments;
  • requirements for governance of the financial crime function and the resource intensity of the AML function;
  • scalability prospects: AML monitoring for multi-jurisdictional business, synchronization of rules across different countries.
This allows not just to obtain a license, but also to build a sustainable model in which AML monitoring does not block business growth.

How does COREDO help in practice?

Over the years the COREDO team has implemented dozens of projects where registration of legal entities, obtaining financial licences and the configuration of AML transaction monitoring were part of a single strategy:
  • support for the launch of fintech projects and payment institutions in the EU;
  • registration and support of crypto platforms and VASP;
  • configuration of AML monitoring for neobanks, including real-time transaction monitoring alerts;
  • optimization of existing monitoring systems for international holdings operating in Europe and Asia.

The approach is always the same:

  1. We understand the business model and the real risk exposure.
  2. We build the architecture of the AML/CTF function and a risk-based approach.
  3. We help select and implement a technological solution (including cloud-based AML platforms, API-based integration with core banking, data lakes for AML analytics).
  4. We configure scenario design, threshold setting, above/below the line testing.
  5. We build governance, MI/KRI, escalation processes and interactions with the regulator.
  6. We stay close as a long-term partner: we update scenarios, support during audits, and help adapt to new markets and products.
If you are already dealing with constant AML alerts, payment blocks, a burden on your team, or are only planning to expand into new jurisdictions and obtain licences, now is the right time to view AML transaction monitoring not as a “regulator-imposed problem”, but as a strategic element of managing risk and the cost of doing business.
At COREDO I see my task and the team’s task as translating the complex language of regulators and monitoring systems into the understandable language of an entrepreneur — and vice versa. When both sides speak the same language, transaction monitoring ceases to be a brake on growth and becomes part of a resilient and scalable business model.
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