Legal services:

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

AML consulting:

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

Obtaining a crypto license:

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

Registration of legal entities:

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

Opening bank accounts:

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

COREDO TEAM

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

Our clients

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

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

Exactly
Unitpay
Grispay
Newreality
Chicrypto
Xchanger
CONVERTIQ
Crypto Engine
Pion

I have been building COREDO since 2016 with a single goal: to help entrepreneurs and CFOs quickly and safely scale their businesses through international structures, licensing and high-quality compliance. In recent years the European market has given us a new tool that genuinely expands financing for long-term projects and opens private investors’ access to illiquid asset classes. This is about ELTIF 2.0: the updated European form of long-term investment funds with a distribution passport. Below: my perspective as the founder and a practitioner of the COREDO team, so that you can make an informed decision: to launch your own ELTIF, invest in one, or use it as part of your corporate strategy.

Why does business need ELTIF 2.0 today?

Illustration for the section «Why does business need ELTIF 2.0 today?» in the article «ELTIF 2.0 – opportunities for retail investors»

ELTIF 2.0 frees the hands of managers who want to finance infrastructure, real assets, private equity and SME lending, while also expanding capital-raising channels via retail investors. For entrepreneurs it means new money for construction and M&A, and for family offices and corporate investors — a diversification tool with a clear regulatory framework. The COREDO team has already implemented dozens of projects for fund registrations, licensing and distribution in the EU, Asia and the CIS; that experience shows where ELTIF works particularly effectively.
The second reason is alignment with European standards. EU ELTIF rules are integrated with the Alternative Investment Fund Managers Directive (AIFMD), MiFID II, PRIIPs and the ESG framework (SFDR and the EU taxonomy). This increases supervisory predictability, facilitates passporting of ELTIF 2.0 across the European Union and reduces legal fragmentation. In practice COREDO confirms: when you structure a fund in line with these rules from day one, time-to-market shortens and distributors connect more quickly.

ELTIF 2.0: EU rules and opportunities

Illustration for the section “ELTIF 2.0: EU rules and opportunities” in the article “ELTIF 2.0 – opportunities for retail investors”

ELTIF is a licensable alternative investment fund focused on long-term and often illiquid assets. Version 2.0 eased a number of the first edition’s restrictions: the criteria for eligible ELTIF assets have been broadened, working with co‑investments and SPV/holdco chains has been simplified, limits on ELTIF leverage have been clarified, and flexibility has been introduced regarding liquidity and redemptions. As a result, the product has moved closer to what the market has long needed: institutional discipline with the ability to attract retail capital.
ELTIF and infrastructure projects are a natural fit. Transport, energy, social infrastructure, digital networks, as well as renewable energy projects in ELTIFs receive financing on a 7–12 year horizon and beyond. On the debt side, infrastructure debt solutions are available; on the equity side – infrastructure equity and private equity/venture capital strategies within ELTIFs to support the growth of technology and industrial companies. In some cases COREDO helped combine such strategies into a multi‑asset structure where debt generates coupon cash flow and equity provides upside.

ELTIF for investors: access and protection

ELTIFs for private investors have become a reality. Retail investors’ access to ELTIFs has been expanded, while protective mechanisms remain in place: suitability and appropriateness tests for ELTIFs under MiFID II, target market assessment and product governance at distributors. KIDs and disclosure for ELTIFs under PRIIPs are mandatory, which standardizes the description of risks, costs and performance scenarios. COREDO’s practice confirms that correct configuration of the KID, scenario analysis and risk warnings increases sales conversion without compromising compliance quality.
The risks for retail investors in ELTIFs lie in illiquidity, long horizons and the volatility of valuations of non‑market assets. We address them through a transparent lock‑up period, clear maturity and redemption principles, as well as well‑designed redemption gates and suspension of redemptions in case of stress. It is important to explain liquidity mismatch and manage expectations for investors: this is not UCITS, and the secondary market for ELTIF units operates differently.

Minimum investments and fees

Minimum investment requirements for ELTIF 2.0 depend on the jurisdiction and the target market; for the retail segment regulators allow a threshold starting from several thousand euros subject to suitability tests and client portfolio exposure limits. In some countries a retail cap applies — a limit on the share of ELTIFs in an investor’s assets. I recommend building mechanisms into the term sheet to control these limits on the distributor side to avoid subsequent claims from NCAs.
The fee structure of an ELTIF includes management fees, performance fees, carried interest (if applicable), as well as ongoing charges. The practice of disclosing costs and fees in ELTIFs requires detail: the accrual basis, high‑water mark, hurdle rate and the method for calculating carried interest. We take into account the impact of exit fees and early redemption penalties on investor behavior and align this with the KID and marketing materials to provide a consistent picture of costs.

How to avoid liquidity mismatch

Liquidity and redemption in ELTIFs: a key design factor. ELTIF 2.0 allows limited redemption windows provided there are liquidity management mechanisms: staged redemptions, queueing, redemption gates and procedures for suspension agreed with the depositary. Restrictions on early redemptions in ELTIFs are explainable by the nature of the assets; the manager’s task is to record them transparently in the fund policy and the KID.
The secondary market for ELTIF units is developing. How does the ELTIF secondary market work in practice? Most often it involves organized platforms and partnerships with liquidity providers, as well as bilateral transactions observing transferability of units and transfer restrictions. At COREDO we implemented tokenization of units and digital registers where NCAs permit DLT solutions: this speeds up settlements and reduces operational risks without compromising AML/KYC controls.

Eligible assets and valuation models

Illustration for the section «Eligible assets and valuation models» in the article «ELTIF 2.0 – opportunities for retail investors»

What assets are permitted in ELTIF 2.0? The list is broader than before: equity and quasi-equity in non‑blue‑chip names, debt and SME issuances, infrastructure assets and projects, real estate and other real assets, as well as stakes in other funds subject to concentration limits. Asset concentration limits in ELTIF protect the investor from excessive risk to a single borrower or asset, and I recommend using internal limits that are stricter than the regulatory ones.
In infrastructure it is important to separate strategies: infrastructure debt vs infrastructure equity. Debt portfolios provide a predictable cash yield and lower standard deviation; equity approaches require a detailed growth model and active asset management. For VC within ELTIF we separately agree capital calls and drawdown mechanics to avoid capital being idle while retaining control over subscriptions.

Valuation of illiquid assets and NAV

Approaches to valuing illiquid assets in ELTIF must be transparent. We apply NAV valuation methodologies for illiquid assets based on discounted cash flows, comparable market multiples and independent valuation (third‑party valuation). For infrastructure a discount rate is used that reflects country risk, contract structure (PPAs, concessions) and inflation indexation.
Scenario analysis and stress testing of the portfolio are mandatory within risk management. We show investors the risk‑adjusted return via IRR, TVPI, DPI and ROI metrics, and for a large deal — a scenario ROI calculation taking into account sensitivity to monetary policy and inflation. ELTIF performance assessment for long‑term investors is built on project cohorts and the distribution schedule, not on short‑term NAV fluctuations.

How to manage risks and hedge?

The use of leverage in ELTIF and its limits are governed by ELTIF 2.0 and AIFMD: borrowing restrictions (leverage caps) are tied to strategy and asset liquidity. We use subordinated debt, subscription lines and the fund’s credit structure to smooth capital calls while maintaining cash flow transparency. Interest rate and currency risk hedging instruments — swaps, forwards, option structures — reduce IRR volatility without destroying upside.
Contingency planning and crisis scenario management include triggers to review redemptions, redistribution of capital calls and disclosure discipline. Internal control and the manager’s compliance procedures oversee conflicts of interest, side letters and deal prioritization, in order to protect retail and the institutional base equally.

How to launch ELTIF 2.0

Illustration for the section ‘How to launch ELTIF 2.0’ in the article ‘ELTIF 2.0 – opportunities for retail investors’

The solution developed at COREDO is a phased roadmap: choice of jurisdiction, strategy design, document preparation, coordination with the NCA, setup of custody and the depositary, compliance and the start of distribution. We combine legal work with operational design: from the LP/GP model and partners’ legal agreements to sales due diligence and distributor integration. This approach saves months and removes misalignment between lawyers, the administrator and the sales team.
Regulatory obligations of ELTIF 2.0 managers are based on AIFMD: reporting to the NCA and ESMA, risk disclosure, leverage limits, liquidity management and depositary oversight. Prospectus exemptions and simplified documentation are available in places, but we always proceed from a standard of full transparency to withstand inspections by any EU regulator.

Choice of jurisdiction

Luxembourg and Ireland are the flagships. A rich ecosystem of depositaries, administrators, auditors and the NCA’s readiness to engage speed up passporting for collective investment products. For venture and infrastructure themes we often approach via Luxembourg with SPVs at the portfolio level in the EU and the UK. In certain strategies Cyprus and Estonia are appropriate for SPVs and holdco structures when local double tax treaties and operational simplicity are important.
Relocation of the manager and fund registration of an ELTIF in the EU are possible either through an in-house AIFM licence or by appointing an external manager (appointed AIFM). Our experience at COREDO has shown that for debut teams an external AIFM speeds up the start, and moving to an in-house licence should be considered as AUM grows. For deals with Asian and Middle Eastern components we connect Singaporean and Dubai platforms at the pipeline level while retaining ELTIF status in the EU.

Fund: SPV/holding company, capital calls

SPV and holdco structures and target companies determine tax and operational efficiency. We design the custody chain and the role of the depositary so that all cash flows are traceable and depositary liability and the custodian’s duties are performed without disruptions. Capital calls and the drawdown mechanics are synchronized with subscriptions at distributors; subscription lines and the fund’s credit structure reduce cash drag and allow investors to enter with less idle cash.
Management of the manager’s conflicts of interest is recorded in policy, disclosed in the KID/prospectus, and also overseen by an independent director and the depositary. Share classes and unit classes are configured for different channels: institutional classes without trail fees and retail classes that account for platform costs.

Depositary and asset custody

ELTIF 2.0 requirements for the depositary and asset custody are fundamentally important. The depositary controls compliance with the investment policy, holds custody, tracks flows and verifies NAV calculations. COREDO’s practice confirms: early selection of the depositary and alignment of the LPA/prospectus save months in approvals with the NCA.
Compliance: AML/KYC for international investors, FATCA/CRS and investor tax reporting, documenting investor communications and product marketing — this is the baseline. Our AML team builds a risk-based approach: sources of funds, beneficial ownership structure, sanctions and PEP checks, ongoing transaction monitoring. For cross-border flows we use agreed W-8/W-9 forms, CRS self-certification and qualification procedures under double tax treaties.

Distribution and retail in the EU, Asia and the CIS

Illustration for the section “Distribution and retail in the EU, Asia and the CIS” in the article “ELTIF 2.0 – opportunities for retail investors”

ELTIF distribution rules in the European Union require notifying the NCA in the home member state and using ELTIF 2.0 passporting to enter other EU markets. Next: local adaptation of marketing materials, a KID in the country’s language and channel settings taking MiFID II into account. For clients from Asia and the CIS it is important to plan the subscription currency, FX hedging and tax requirements for repatriation of payments in advance.
The role of distributors and retail investment platforms is growing. We integrate ELTIF with platforms that can perform suitability and appropriateness tests, conduct product governance and target market assessment, and provide transparent onboarding. Cross-border distribution in the EU and the CIS requires alignment of the legal and operational parts: a single data room with the KID, prospectus, SFDR disclosure and training materials for sales staff will be useful here.

Distribution and client tests

MiFID II requirements for the distribution of complex products determine the sales process. Suitability criteria for selling ELTIFs to retail clients take into account investment experience, objectives, horizon and risk tolerance. We structure product governance so that the distributor receives a clear picture: target segment, concentration limits, warnings about illiquidity, and scenario outcomes.
KID and PRIIPs: not just a formality. We configure the Key Information Document together with the prospectus and SFDR disclosure to avoid inconsistencies. We incorporate ESMA guidance and regulatory practices on ELTIF 2.0 into marketing templates, and include national competent authorities (NCAs) in checklists for each country.

Taxation and investor reporting

Taxation of investments in ELTIF depends on the status of the fund and the investor. Tax consequences for corporate investors in ELTIF include participation rules, withholding at source on coupons/dividends, and the application of double tax treaties. For investors from Asia and the CIS, local CFC rules, taxation of capital gains and reporting requirements are important.
FATCA/CRS and tax reporting of investors require the correct classification of the fund and the qualification of each LP. We ensure control of FFI status, prepare reports and exchanges in standard formats. For ESG strategies we separately show compatibility of ELTIF assets with the EU Taxonomy and SFDR requirements for ELTIF, which helps corporate investors collect their own non-financial reporting.

Liquidity of units on the secondary market

What does the ELTIF secondary market look like? Today it is a mix of OTC deals, specialized secondary platforms for trading units of illiquid funds and solutions from liquidity providers. Transferability of units and transfer restrictions are governed by the LPA and national law; COREDO pre-defines the procedure so that transactions proceed quickly and without risk of losing status-eligibility.
The market for secondaries and the role of liquidity providers are strengthening as the retail base grows. We test tokenization of units and digital registers where permitted: to speed up KYC and T+0/T+1 settlements. Exit mechanisms, early redemption penalties and exit fees must be synchronized with the liquidity policy and disclosure in the KID so as not to create false expectations.

COREDO cases: from idea to first closing

Recently the COREDO team implemented an ELTIF in renewable energy, registered in Luxembourg and distributed in Germany, Italy, the Czech Republic and Slovakia. We built the SPV chain, appointed an external AIFM, agreed the depositary and set up subscription lines. Anchor investors, seed capital and initial closings provided the critical mass of AUM, after which we connected retail channels with adapted share classes.
Another project — converting an ELTIF to the retail segment from a purely institutional infrastructure debt strategy. The conversion to the retail segment required a complete rework of the KID, disclosure of costs and fee structure, as well as distributor training on product governance. As a result, the fund opened access for ticket sizes from €10–25 thousand, while preserving leverage discipline and strict project underwriting.
A separate case — an ELTIF for investors from Asia and the CIS. We prepared a cross-border distribution scheme taking into account local suitability rules, integrated AML/KYC procedures and structured tax optimization with regard to double tax treaties. The result: clear onboarding, correct FATCA/CRS reporting and a distributions plan with currency risk hedging.

Renewable energy infrastructure and long-term capital

In renewable energy infrastructure we modelled IRR, MOIC and TVPI for each project cohort, taking into account discounting at the risk-free rate and premiums for country and technology risk. ESG Due Diligence and impact measurement are built into the investment process: SFDR article, compliance with the EU taxonomy and transparent emissions KPIs. This discipline eased negotiations with NCAs and distributors and sped up the first closing.

Transitioning the fund to the retail segment

We conducted a governance audit: reviewed concentration limits, updated the liquidity policy, added retail investor protection mechanisms in ELTIF 2.0 and harmonized disclosure with the KID. Conflict-of-interest management and a transparent performance fee/carry structure increased client trust. In marketing we used a prospectus-driven approach without excessive promises.

Cross-border distribution and AML for investors from Asia and the CIS

COREDO established a sales due diligence procedure and issuer checks, and also segmented risks by jurisdiction. AML/KYC for international investors covered source-of-funds checks, corporate chain reviews and sanctions lists; adapting documents into local languages sped up verification. Result: a steady inflow of subscriptions, no flags from the depositary and predictable reporting to the NCA.

Entrepreneurs’ questions

How can a retail investor invest in ELTIF 2.0? Through a licensed distributor or platform, by passing suitability/appropriateness tests, signing the KID and the subscription documents. Minimum subscription requirements and the retail cap depend on the market; they should be clarified in advance.
The comparison between ELTIF and UCITS for retail clients comes down to liquidity and asset composition. UCITS: daily liquidity and liquid securities; ELTIF: illiquid long-term assets and limited redemptions, but potentially higher risk-adjusted returns. Liquidity management in ELTIF funds is based on planning redemptions and developing the secondary market.
What assets are permitted in ELTIF 2.0? Infrastructure, real estate, stakes in private companies, SME loans, participations in qualifying funds, subject to limits. Restrictions on borrowed financing in ELTIF control leverage and protect the investor.
How to assess returns? Evaluating ELTIF returns for long-term investors involves IRR by investment cohorts, TVPI/DPI at the fund level, sensitivity to interest rates and inflation, and scenario analysis. The use of leverage in ELTIF and the limits define the framework for return and risk; currency and interest-rate hedging smooth the profile.

How COREDO scales the product

Product scalability on international markets is about synchronizing legal, distribution and operational infrastructure. COREDO sets up the pipeline for working with anchor investors, seed capital and initial closings, then connects platforms, distributor banks and independent consultants. We create a unified data room, prepare training materials for sales teams, establish CRM processes and reporting to NCA/ESMA.
ESG integration increases demand among corporate and retail clients. We conduct ESG due diligence and impact measurement, check assets for compatibility with the EU taxonomy and set up SFDR disclosure. In parallel we carry out tax structuring, currency hedging and configure document flow for stable capital calls.
We keep operational costs of managing long-term assets under control through administrative automation and clear SLAs with providers. Sales due diligence, risk disclosure practices and consumer protection build trust; in crisis scenarios we activate contingency planning in advance to protect capital and reputation.

Conclusions

ELTIF 2.0 is a mature European instrument that gives businesses access to long-term capital and investors access to real assets within a transparent regulatory framework. At COREDO we combine legal precision, financial engineering and compliance so the product works in practice: with clear liquidity rules, understandable fees, carefully considered risks and effective distribution. If you need to launch or scale an ELTIF, the COREDO team is ready to go the whole way: from the idea and choice of jurisdiction to the first closing and sustainable subscription flows, with responsibility and attention to every detail.

I often hear the same request from owners and asset managers: provide a structure that accelerates a fund’s launch, withstands institutional due diligence, and scales without pain. The Variable Capital Company in Singapore (Singapore VCC) addresses exactly these needs. In recent years the COREDO team has completed dozens of VCC design and registration projects for hedge funds, credit strategies, venture and multi-asset platforms, and I see how quickly the VCC is becoming the standard in Asia and a practical alternative to European and UK formats.

The VCC was created as the market’s response to flexibility, technological sophistication, and regulatory predictability. Its structure supports an umbrella VCC with sub-funds, strict asset segregation and unified corporate processes.

COREDO’s experience confirms: with sound architecture operational costs fall and time-to-market shortens without compromises on compliance and risk management.

VCC architecture and asset segregation

Illustration for the section «VCC architecture and asset segregation» in the article «Variable Capital Company in Singapore – structure for hedge funds 2026»
The basic model – an umbrella VCC structure under which one or several sub-funds are created. Each sub-fund has separate assets and liabilities, and the legislation provides for statutory segregation, i.e., legal separation at the level of law rather than only by contract. This is critical for hedge funds with different risk strategies, where the investor mandate and liquidity vary across sub-funds.

Our experience at COREDO has shown that multi-strategy managers find it beneficial to consolidate common functions (directors, administrator, auditor, compliance) at the “umbrella” level and allocate portfolio decisions to the sub-funds. This reduces duplication of costs, simplifies reporting, and transfers of assets between VCC sub-funds during rebalancing proceed through transparent procedures at the level of the board of directors and the administrator.

An additional advantage: the registration of sub-funds and their asset segregation do not require the creation of separate legal entities. This speeds up the launch of new strategy lines, simplifies the closing or reorganization of VCC sub-funds and disciplines corporate governance.

VCC Act 2018 and 2026 Amendments: the Role of MAS

Illustration for the section «VCC Act 2018 and 2026 Amendments: the Role of MAS» in the article «Variable Capital Company in Singapore – structure for hedge funds 2026»
The legal foundation is laid by the VCC Act 2018, and the 2026 amendments strengthen AML/CFT controls, the disclosure of beneficial ownership, and the quality of reporting. The Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) coordinates supervision through the requirements of the SFA (Securities and Futures Act) and the rules for Collective Investment Schemes (CIS), and also introduces clarifications to the MAS 2026 reporting requirements, including electronic channels and standardized templates.

In 2026 the emphasis shifted to operational risk management and cybersecurity, so that fund platforms comply with new outsourcing methods and cloud storage.

The solution developed at COREDO combines a cybersecurity policy for VCCs, agreements with IT providers, an incident log, and regular stress tests for critical systems, which helps to pass MAS inspection requests smoothly.

From a classification standpoint, a VCC can support both closed and open strategies within a CIS, providing flexibility in liquidity and instruments. The COREDO team is accustomed to drafting documents so that a sub‑fund’s investment mandate clearly falls into the appropriate category and internal procedures comply with the SFA.

How to set up a VCC for a hedge fund

Illustration for the section «How to set up a VCC for a hedge fund» in the article «Variable Capital Company in Singapore – structure for hedge funds 2026»
I start with a product roadmap: strategy, liquidity, investor geography, institutional requirements. Then we structure the legal shell: VCC registration in Singapore, define the board composition, and choose the corporate secretary and CSP.

At this stage it is especially important to carry out Due Diligence when selecting a CSP for the VCC: the provider must ensure SLA on timelines, competencies in AML/KYC and experience integrating with administrators.

Next – Licensing of the fund manager (FMC/CMS). To manage assets registration as a Fund Management Company (FMC) is required: depending on AUM and client type the Registered Fund Management Company (RFMC) scheme or Capital Markets Services (CMS) licence will be suitable.

Our roadmaps take growth into account: it is often sensible to start as an RFMC, and as AUM and the institutional base grow transition to CMS without rebuilding the entire operating model.

In parallel we arrange agreements: custodian and depositary functions, fund administrator and transfer agent, independent auditor, provider of independent valuation (for illiquid assets). At the level of investment documentation we set up management fee and performance fee with high-water mark and hurdle rate, waterfall distribution of income and side pockets for illiquid positions. The COREDO team pays attention to both legal logic and operational feasibility so that the administrator correctly calculates NAV and carried interest.

VCC Taxation in Singapore

Illustration for the section “VCC Taxation in Singapore” in the article “Variable Capital Company in Singapore – structure for hedge funds 2026”
VCC taxation in Singapore relies on preferential regimes (including the Enhanced Tier Fund), exemptions for investment income when criteria are met and tax residency is confirmed. Economic substance rules and demonstration of activity are important: board meetings in Singapore, qualifying resident directors, local compliance and on-the-ground operational functions.

For certain profiles we add management company substance and staffing requirements to strengthen the position during international inquiries.

There is a network of double taxation avoidance agreements with investors from the EU and Asia. We model cash flows and withholding taxes by beneficiary country, and also review transfer pricing and related parties in the VCC structure if the manager’s service company is present. For GST (Goods and Services Tax) special rules apply to funds; properly structured exported services and interactions with non-residents affect the calculation.

COREDO’s practice confirms: clear documentation of the “centre of management and control” and a well-thought currency structure and profit allocation of the VCC help reduce tax risks associated with the VCC and ensure a steady ROI for investors.

AML/CFT, KYC and e-KYC Compliance 2026

Illustration for the section "AML/CFT, KYC and e-KYC Compliance 2026" in the article "Variable Capital Company in Singapore – structure for hedge funds 2026"
AML compliance for VCC is based on a risk-based approach: PEP checks, sanctions screening, sources of funds and the obligation to file SARs for suspicious transactions.

AML/CFT 2026 updates strengthen requirements for periodic risk reassessment and customer due diligence.

I ensure that the policy reflects actual operations: investor risk profiles are aligned with the sub-fund strategy, and triggers for Enhanced Due Diligence are logical and measurable.

KYC and e-KYC for VCC have become standard. We build a digital investor onboarding workflow: document collection, e-signature, liveness-check, address verification, automatic sanctions screening and UBO mapping. The beneficial ownership register must be up to date and reconciled with the administrator’s and transfer agent’s data. For US clients: FATCA reporting and GIIN settings; for others: Common Reporting Standard (CRS).

COREDO’s portfolio includes solutions that combine FATCA and CRS profiles into a single investor profile.

Finally, the impact of PDPA (Personal Data Protection Act) and GDPR when working with European investors requires conscious data management: minimization, storage, access and deletion. We document the roles of controller and processor, and define secure channels for exchanges with administrators and distributors.

Operating model: NAV, IFRS, audit

The custodian and depository are anchor partners. In Singaporean practice the custodian provides safekeeping and the processing of corporate actions, and a trustee is appointed for some CIS-structures. We compare servicing by asset classes, cut-offs for settlements, fee models and prime brokerage capabilities. The administrator and transfer agent close the NAV, maintain investor records, calculate fees and produce reporting; the SLA should fix deadlines, responsibilities and the business continuity plan.

NAV valuation practices for complex assets are set by the valuation policy: fair value hierarchy, independent quotes, model prices, role of an independent valuation provider.

I insist on a revaluation calendar, a “challenge” process by the administrator and unambiguous documentation in the investment committees.

Financial reporting under IFRS and external audit requirements are the basis of trust. Auditor independence, the agreed scope of sample testing across sub-funds and the timeline for completion of audits are critical to the marketing cycle.

Our clients receive a “DDQ-ready” folder: financial statements, conflicts of interest policy, annual compliance report and cybersecurity questionnaires.

Liquidity, risks and leverage

Liquidity management and redemption gates in VCC begin with designing terms: redemption periods, notice periods, lock-up periods, suspension of redemptions and side pocket structures. For illiquid assets, side pockets and special purpose vehicles within a VCC help protect investors of the underlying sub-fund. We tie the policy to the actual turnover of assets, stress testing and liquidity ranking.

The use of borrowed leverage and limits for a VCC are linked to prime brokerage agreements and margin financing. The COREDO team sets up collateral agreements, governance for margin calls and limits on leverage. For derivative operations we deploy frameworks for margin requirements, counterparty risk assessment, as well as policies on securities lending and credit risk.

At the core – the risk management framework: VAR, stress testing, scenario analysis, limits by asset classes and concentrations, three lines of defense and regular reports to the board of directors. This approach simplifies discussions with institutional investors and reduces operational risk for both the manager and the investor.

Engaging with Investors in the EU

AIFMD marketing rules require careful thinking. For many strategies, fund marketing in Europe is through a VCC: country-specific NPPR requirements and/or working via Reverse Solicitation. Passporting from Singapore to the EU does not apply, so we develop country-by-country maps: where reverse solicitation is permitted, where a local representative is required and what disclosures are necessary.

In complex cases we prepare legal opinions and reliance letters for foreign investors.

Servicing EU investors and GDPR requirements come to the forefront. We formalize subscription channels, KID/KIID materials where necessary, and agree disclosures on remuneration, ESG and risks. Market access strategies to attract institutional investors from the EU, Asia and the CIS include a roadshow schedule, selecting a custodian with a recognised name and audit practices accepted by institutions.

For the US and many Asian jurisdictions FATCA and CRS are important, as is the correct investor classification.

Our document packages help complete KYC quickly, without sacrificing the thoroughness of the checks.

Tokenization without regulatory gaps

Tokenization of fund shares in a VCC and tokenisation of fund shares require careful legal scrutiny. Singapore allows digital solutions subject to compliance with the SFA and rules on digital tokens; smart contracts and automation of distributions (distributions) are possible if the administrator, custodian and audit agree on control points. I insist on an independent reconciliation of the token register with the investor register at the transfer agent.

Crypto hedge funds in a VCC, legal risks around custody, AML and volatility. We set up custodial chains with certified crypto custodians, include additional KYC requirements and valuation methodologies for illiquid/digital positions.

The AML/CFT 2026 updates and their impact on VCCs in the digital domain strengthen transaction monitoring, source-of-funds checks for cryptoassets and sanctions screening of addresses.

Cybersecurity, a mandatory element: cybersecurity controls, vulnerability log, DLP, access control and cloud storage policy. Such measures are important not only for MAS, but also for due diligence by exchanges and prime brokers.

Cost calculation, ROI and scaling

The cost of launching and maintaining a VCC depends on the number of sub-funds, the manager’s license, the composition of partners and the geography of investors. In a typical configuration CAPEX includes registration, legal documentation, setup of service providers and the IT stack; OPEX includes administration, audit, compliance, custodian fees, directors and D&O insurance. I recommend performing a cost-benefit analysis: OPEX vs CAPEX when choosing a VCC, expected AUM, fee terms and the load on the back-office.

Return on investment (ROI) when using a VCC is improved by umbrella fund efficiency, fast registration of sub-funds and economies of scale on services.

KPIs and ROI metrics for a fund structure: IRR on the manager’s capital, MOIC on platform investments, TER for each sub-fund, investor onboarding speed and NAV close time. Scaling a hedge fund via a VCC relies on modularity: new sub-funds are opened according to a ready checklist with vetted counterparties.

How to organize a hedge fund waterfall in a VCC? We fix the management fee, performance fee, high-water mark and hurdle rate, and set out the clawback mechanics and crystallization dates. For currency structuring and profit calculation the VCC uses the fund’s base currency, an FX hedging policy and a transparent profit calculation per share class. If necessary we include re-domiciliation and cross-border migration of funds to transfer assets into the VCC without tax or operational shocks.

Reorganization and liquidation of VCC sub-funds, as well as liquidation, winding-up procedures and creditor priorities, are described in advance in the constitutional documents and the liquidity management policy. This reduces the risk of disputes and simplifies coordination with investors.

VCC, SICAV and English structures

Jurisdictional comparisons show: VCC wins on speed of launch, sub-fund flexibility and tech-enabled compliance. The Luxembourg SICAV is familiar to European institutional investors and provides a strong “passport” in the EU, but requires more time and budget.

English structures benefit from a common-law approach and a provider ecosystem, but after recent regulatory changes are not always optimal for pan-Asian marketing.

At COREDO I prefer to match the structure to the strategy and the investor. For pan-Asia capital raising and tech funds, VCC often leads; for deep distribution into the EU, SICAV remains a strong option. There is no “one-size-fits-all” here — it’s important to design the architecture, budget and licensing roadmap.

Relocating a management company to Singapore: pros and cons

Relocating a management company to Singapore strengthens the economic presence (substance) of a VCC: resident directors, a local risk-management and compliance team, board meetings, working relationships with MAS. Pros: tax predictability, access to Asian investors, a well-developed infrastructure of custodians and administrators.

Downsides, requirements for staffing and operational discipline: you will need to invest in processes, PDPA procedures, cyber security and regular reporting. If the strategy targets Europe, parallel services in the EU under GDPR and AIFMD distribution will remain relevant. I am considering hybrid models: a manager in Singapore plus a distribution office in key cities in Europe or Asia.

COREDO case studies: how it works in practice

Case 1. Multi-strategy VCC with two sub-funds for public and private assets. We designed the umbrella, organized an RFMC with a scalable roadmap on the CMS, engaged a global custodian and administrator, and set up an independent valuation provider for private positions. Within 12 months AUM surpassed the target, and the transition to the CMS was completed without interrupting marketing. Investors from the EU entered via reverse solicitation under agreed legal opinions.

Case 2. Crypto hedge fund inside a VCC with a pilot for tokenization of shares. We engaged a specialized crypto custodian, strengthened the AML policy with on-chain monitoring, and implemented e-KYC with liveness checks and sanctions screening of addresses. NAV was calculated using an independent valuation model and pricing sources agreed with the auditor. The COREDO team built smart contract checkpoints for distributions and reconciliation with the transfer agent.

Case 3. A family office with an Enhanced Tier Fund and four sub-funds by asset class. We optimized the tax profile, set KPIs for TER and operational SLAs, and appointed independent directors and an audit committee. Within the structure there was a side pocket for illiquid assets and an SPV for securitization transactions. Institutional due diligence was completed without issues, and IFRS reporting was closed in line with the marketing cycle.

ESG maturity for institutional investors

VCC corporate governance and independent directors are not a formality. I implement board charters, committees (audit, risk), a meeting schedule and a policy on conflicts of interest and related party transactions. This minimizes risks and increases the parties’ confidence.

ESG and sustainable investing in the context of VCC manifest in disclosures, due diligence of providers, voting policy and data management. Investors expect consistency: asset selection criteria, metrics, escalation procedures and independent verification where possible.

Founder’s pre-launch checklist

  • due diligence of the fund manager and track record, including operational incidents.
  • custodian vs trustee role in Singapore practice and compatibility with prime brokerage.
  • fund administrator responsibilities and SLAs, experience with the required asset class.
  • transfer agency and investor register maintenance, integration with e-KYC.
  • independent valuation provider and valuation methodologies for illiquid assets.
  • risk management framework: VAR, stress testing, scenario analysis and limits.
  • valuation policy, fair value hierarchy and involvement of third parties.
  • external audit requirements and auditor independence.
  • beneficial ownership register and disclosure requirements.
  • FATCA reporting for US investors and the Common Reporting Standard (CRS).
  • AIFMD rules, reverse solicitation and local NPPRs in the EU.
  • cybersecurity controls and cloud storage for fund administration.
  • legal opinions for distributions and reliance letters for key jurisdictions.

Cost and timelines: a realistic benchmark

For a standard VCC with one sub-fund and RFMC, it’s reasonable to plan 3–5 months from the kick-off session to the first close, assuming prompt decisions and ready investment content. Budgets depend on the choice of providers and architecture, but the main share is made up by administration, audit, custodian and independent directors. I always provide two to three scenario budgets to align OPEX with target AUM and the required TER.

When scaling through additional sub-funds, timelines shorten because the legal framework and providers are already set up.

This is where the VCC shows its real advantage: rapid launch of new strategies with controlled margins and manageable risks.

VCC and the role of COREDO

VCC is not just a legal form. It is an infrastructure platform for strategy, marketing and compliance that helps accelerate growth, keep risk manageable, and speak to institutional investors in the same language. In light of the 2026 amendments to the VCC Act and tightening AML/CTF standards, funds with strong substance, clear policies and disciplined reporting will gain a strategic advantage.

I build roadmaps tailored to the needs of owners and managers: from a blank slate to first close and scaling.

The COREDO team brings a comprehensive approach: licensing (FMC/CMS), tax structuring and Enhanced Tier Fund, AML/KYC compliance and e-KYC, setting up a custodian, administrator and independent valuation, as well as marketing support in the EU taking into account AIFMD and GDPR.

If you are considering a Singapore VCC as a base for a hedge strategy or multi-asset platform, I invite you to discuss architecture, ROI and the roadmap: pragmatically, step by step, and with accountability for the outcome.

I have been running COREDO across the markets of Europe, Asia and the CIS since 2016 and have seen how **whistleblowing** in fintech has turned from a formality into a pillar for sustainable growth. When early signals from inside reach a competent team, the business wins across the board: compliance quality improves, regulatory risks decrease, and investors see the maturity of corporate governance. COREDO’s practice confirms: a properly configured complaints system in a fintech company speeds up the detection of breaches, improves AML controls and saves remediation budgets.

I regard **whistleblowing** as a business process with a clear architecture, SLA and measurable ROI. It is not only compliance with the EU’s **whistleblowing** requirements, but also an operational protection of informants in financial services, embedded into a compliance framework for fintechs, crypto firms, payment providers and neo-banks. In this article I will compile the strategy, operational practices and lessons from COREDO cases: from channel architecture to performance metrics and scaling across international markets.

Directive (EU) 2019/1937 and standards

Illustration for the section «Directive (EU) 2019/1937 and standards» in the article «Whistleblowing in fintech – complaint system under EU directives»
The European Directive on the protection of whistleblowers (Whistleblower Directive), Directive (EU) 2019/1937, sets minimum standards for companies, including the financial sector. National implementation of the directive in the EU and the risks of non-compliance vary by country, but the direction is clear: reliable internal channels, protection from retaliation, confidentiality and timely feedback to the whistleblower. In financial services there are also industry frameworks: EBA recommendations and guidance on internal channels and risk management, as well as ESMA expectations for the capital markets and fintech companies working with securities and derivatives.

GDPR underpins any processing of complaints. **Confidentiality and GDPR** in complaints mean clear legal bases, data minimisation, pseudonymisation and clear retention periods. In practice this translates into a DPIA for the complaint system, the assignment of roles and responsibilities to the whistleblower officer, and the regulation of interaction with the DPO: the DPO’s job description and cooperation with the DPO should directly take the whistleblowing processing workflow into account.

Channels and deadlines under the EU directive
The directive requires mandatory channels of communication: an internal reporting channel for whistleblowers and the option of an external reporting channel to the regulator (national contact points and competent authorities). Internal reporting rules provide for acknowledgement of receipt of a complaint within seven days and feedback on the results within three months (with a possible extension up to six months in justified circumstances). Such regulated response times under the directive discipline the process and set SLA standards for compliance teams.

National implementation and sanctions
National implementation of the directive in the EU and the risks of non-compliance include regulatory fines and legal risks for breaching the directive. In EU case law there are examples of sanctions for the absence of internal channels, breaches of whistleblower confidentiality or missed deadlines. The financial consequences of non-compliance (fines, reputational risk) often exceed the costs of implementation. In some jurisdictions administrative and criminal consequences are added for ignoring a complaint, especially where possible economic crimes or money laundering are involved.

privacy by design in the GDPR
The impact of the GDPR on the processing of reports is reflected in details: conditions for anonymity and two-way anonymous communication, pseudonymisation and storage of complaint data, encryption and secure storage of records, cross-border transfer of complaint data and the legal bases for this. **Privacy by design** for reporting systems: not a slogan, but concrete measures: end-to-end encryption for **whistleblowing**, multi-factor authentication for reporting portals, protection of the communication channel from DDoS and leaks, as well as evaluating platform providers against SOC/ISO standards and checking their audit trail. At COREDO we usually build a DPIA for the complaint system at the start of a project; this reduces the likelihood of regulatory ‘surprises’.

Architecture of the complaints system in fintech

Illustration for the section 'Architecture of the complaints system in fintech' in the article 'Whistleblowing in fintech – complaints system under EU directives'
The complaints system in a fintech company is not just a ‘mailbox’. It is a set of processes and technologies: whistleblower channels (in-house software vs outsourcing), a secure reporting platform, triage and prioritization procedures, integration with case management systems and interaction with AML/SAR processes. I recommend viewing the architecture as a target operating model with clear interfaces and responsibilities.

Platform selection and security

Choosing a platform for secure reporting determines the resilience of the entire program. At the technology level I require end-to-end encryption for **whistleblowing**, multi-factor authentication, certified crypto libraries, segmented storage and strict access roles. I also look specifically at protection of the communication channel from DDoS and leaks, integrity logs and continuous monitoring. When evaluating platform vendors against SOC/ISO standards I am interested in independent audits (for example, ISO 27001, SOC 2 Type II), the presence of an audit trail, two-way anonymous communication features and GDPR compatibility.

Integration with case management systems, automation of investigations and workflows, as well as incident visualization tools for the board of directors simplify management of the complaint lifecycle. Compatibility of the complaints system with transaction monitoring systems helps speed up verification of signals related to AML, fraud and conflicts of interest.

Scaling for international fintech
Scaling a complaints system for international fintech relies on international jurisdiction and cross-border complaints. Scaling challenges during international expansion are usually related to local data storage and retention requirements, language localization and cultural specifics. Regional particularities in the EU, Asia and the CIS during implementation may require distributed hosting, mechanisms to restrict cross-border transfer of complaint data and local escalation procedures to national competent authorities.

The crypto sector adds nuances: regulation regarding cryptocurrencies and complaints is actively evolving, so compliance and **whistleblowing** in crypto firms must take into account the Travel Rule, risks of KYC circumvention and interaction with exchanges and custodial providers. The link between **whistleblowing** and AML/SAR is particularly strong here.

Integration of the compliance framework
I recommend tying **whistleblowing** to AML processes, KYC/CDD, IT security and HR. SAR vs internal report, the difference and interaction should be clear to every line of defense: an internal report triggers a corporate investigation, while a SAR to the FIU is a regulatory report of suspicious activity. I consider compatibility with transaction monitoring systems and a unified case management ecosystem mandatory: it reduces the time to gather evidence and improves the quality of legal assessment of reports.

Processes from report to resolution

Illustration for the section “Processes from report to resolution” in the article “Whistleblowing in fintech – complaint system under EU directives”
The heart of the program: investigation management after a report and a well-thought-out triage methodology. The solution developed at COREDO combines risk scoring, automatic checks against registers of breaches and the involvement of subject-matter experts. Signal analysis: how to reduce false positives is not only a matter of algorithms, but also of data-source settings, category clarity, and staff training.

Best practices for triage and prioritization

Transparent rules govern triage: triage methods — scoring and prioritization of reports by harm, likelihood, regulatory criticality and management involvement. Machine learning for clustering complaints and NLP for automatic categorization of reports help ease the team’s workload and improve response times. I add KRIs for corporate ethics risk and KPIs and metrics for the complaints program’s effectiveness — for example, the share of valid reports, average time to remediation, repeat incidents and the quality of feedback to the whistleblower.

Investigation management

legal assessment of reports and evidence collection require discipline: documenting investigations and preserving the chain of custody, legal standards for evaluating evidence, version control of artifacts and independent verification. Integration with case management systems and an audit trail ensures consistency and readiness for external review. Outsourcing investigations to an independent provider may be necessary in conflicts of interest or in complex cases where specialized expertise is required.

Escalation and engagement with external authorities

Internal/external escalation procedures set thresholds: when an internal resolution is sufficient and when an external reporting channel to the regulator is required. Interaction with the FIU and national supervisory authorities, as well as transferring data to the FIU and liaising with law enforcement, should follow pre-approved scenarios. The COREDO team helps clients prepare notification templates for regulators and evidence packages for different cases to meet regulated response times and the level of detail expected by competent authorities.

Roles, responsibility and culture

Illustration for the section «Roles, responsibility and culture» in the article «Whistleblowing in fintech – complaints system under EU directives»
The compliance manager and the board of directors’ responsibility – key to maturity. I expect the board to approve a whistleblower policy, establish safeguards against retaliation and receive regular reports on the program’s status. The roles and responsibilities of the whistleblower officer include receiving reports, communicating with the whistleblower, initiating triage, and monitoring deadlines and anonymity.

Policies and instructions
A whistleblower policy for payment providers, compliance and **whistleblowing** in crypto firms, and implementing a **whistleblowing** program in a neo-bank require nuance. For payment organizations the policy should take into account PSD2/EMI risks; for crypto — risks of AML and sanctions circumvention; for neo-banks: a complex third-party matrix and open banking. I typically propose a whistleblower policy template with an annex: directive requirements on communication channels, internal reporting rules, safeguards against retaliation, escalation procedures, confidentiality and GDPR, data storage and retention periods.

Training and change management

Staff training and change management are the key to trust in the system. Training line managers and leadership helps reduce “noise” and improve the quality of the initial assessment. Change management and communication with staff include open Q&A, anonymized case studies, regular reminders about channels and encouragement to report. Building an ethical culture and encouraging reporting increase the number of useful signals, and the impact of corporate culture on report volumes becomes a measurable KPI.

Protection against retaliation and anonymous communication

Safeguards against retaliation include a ban on disciplinary measures against bona fide whistleblowers, oversight of HR decisions, confidential consultations with HR and an independent appeals channel. Whistleblower anonymity and two-way communication are supported through platforms with pseudonyms, one-way disclosure and metadata control. In some jurisdictions anonymous rewards and incentives for whistleblowers are possible, and I will align such practices in advance with local law and regulators’ expectations.

How to calculate ROI

Illustration for the section «How to calculate ROI» in the article «Whistleblowing in fintech – complaint system under EU directives»

risk assessment when implementing a complaint system and the ROI of implementing a **whistleblowing**-system interest financiers no less than lawyers. I consider the basic ROI metrics: cost per case (cost per case), time to remediation (time to remediation), reduction in operational losses through early detection of violations and the share of prevented external investigations. Costs and benefits of internal reporting consist of platform licenses, training, investigations and savings on fines, downtime and reputational losses.

Maturity indicators: KPI and KRI
I use a three-level system of indicators:

  • KPI: time to confirmation, time to triage, time to resolution, share of substantiated cases, reporters’ satisfaction with the quality of feedback.
  • KRI for corporate ethics risk: increase in the number of reports in risk areas (without decline in quality), share of severe cases, incident recurrence.
  • Maturity indicators of the whistleblower program: presence of a DPIA, integration with AML/SAR, independence of the appointed officer, regular reports to the board, benchmarking of **whistleblowing** programs by industry.

Economic efficiency model

The program’s economic efficiency calculation model takes into account return on investment (ROI) scenarios: prevention of regulatory fines, reduction of IT process downtime during abuse incidents, and reduction of fraud losses. Scenarios are built on probabilities: baseline (compliance only), advanced (early detection), strategic (systemic integration with transaction monitoring and HR). In COREDO’s experience, the strategic scenario pays off faster, especially for companies with intensive payment flows and international expansion.

Implementation: plan and COREDO cases

The COREDO team has implemented dozens of deployments, from startups to large groups. Implementing **whistleblowing** in a startup vs a large company differs in process depth and governance frameworks, but the stages are similar.

Project implementation plan

  1. Diagnosis and design: maturity assessment, DPIA for the complaints system, compliance gap vs Directive (EU) 2019/1937, EBA/ESMA expectations.
  2. Solution selection: reporting channels: software vs outsourcing, choosing a platform for secure messages, assessment by SOC/ISO, privacy by design.
  3. Integration: case management system and audit trail, compatibility with transaction monitoring systems, integration with HR processes and disciplinary procedures, linkage with conflict of interest policy.
  4. Policies and training: whistleblower policy template, escalation procedures, staff training and change management, communication with personnel.
  5. Testing and launch: testing the complaints channel (penetration tests), DDoS protection checks, incident response and trust recovery plan.
  6. Operations and measurements: KPIs/KRIs, reporting tools for management and the board, audit of the effectiveness of the whistleblower program.

COREDO cases

  • Neo-bank in the EU: implementing a **whistleblowing** program at a neo-bank took 12 weeks. Integration with AML/SAR and transaction monitoring reduced time to triage by 38% and false positives by 22%. National contact points received two external reports with correct notification templates – the regulator accepted the responses without additional requests.
  • Payment provider in Central Europe: a whistleblower policy for payment providers and two-channel escalation helped uncover a scheme to bypass limits. Documenting investigations and preserving the chain of evidence ensured successful cooperation with law enforcement and the FIU. The company avoided a fine, receiving only an order to improve third-party controls.
  • Crypto firm with a hub in Asia: compliance and **whistleblowing** in crypto firms were integrated into Travel Rule processes. Machine learning for complaint clustering and NLP for automatic categorization of messages reduced the compliance line’s workload by 30%. A regulatory review confirmed compliance with the directive and local data protection rules, and the board approved additional budget to scale in the CIS.

Risks of non-compliance during inspections

Preparation for inspections by supervisory authorities is part of the regular operational cycle. Engagement with banking sector regulators, ESMA observers and financial ombudsmen requires clear dossiers, transparent logs and readiness for interviews. corporate governance and **whistleblowing** go hand in hand: stakeholders – boards of directors, investors, the auditor – expect regular and clear reporting.

Audit and reporting on complaints
Audit and reporting on complaints for the regulator are built on standardized datasets: complaint categories, response times, investigation status, and remedial and preventive measures. Reporting tools for management and the board provide a dashboard with trends, risk heatmaps and KPI/KRI details. Data retention policies and timeframes are aligned with GDPR and local regulations; encryption and secure storage of records are verified by an independent audit.

Preparation for inspections: stress tests

I recommend regular stress tests: testing the complaints channel (penetration tests), checking DDoS controls, simulating a mass influx of reports and an analytical review of bottlenecks. Preparation for investigating complex economic crimes includes forensic playbooks, role assignments, access to external experts and readiness for public communications. We work through the ethical and reputational aspects of public investigations in advance so the company can confidently maintain its stance when interacting with the media and investors.

How COREDO Helps

Our experience at COREDO has shown: there is no single “box”, context matters: licenses, jurisdictions, group structure, digital maturity. The COREDO team designs a compliance framework for fintech taking into account Directive (EU) 2019/1937, GDPR and industry guidance, selects and implements platforms, configures two-way anonymous communication, integrates AML/SAR and case management, trains staff and establishes metrics. We treat culture with care: without trust in the channels and protection against reprisals, the system will not work.

COREDO helps conduct a DPIA, build escalation procedures, organize external reporting of violations in the financial sector, prepare notification templates, and, if necessary, outsource investigations to an independent provider. For groups with an international presence we configure cross-border transfer of complaint data in line with local rules, and manage the vendor chain for complaint platforms. As a result, the company gains not just compliance, but a working mechanism for the early detection and remediation of risks.

Conclusions

**Whistleblowing** – is not a ‘regulatory burden’, but a reliable tool for managing risks and reputation. When a fintech has internal and external channel architecture, privacy by GDPR standard, well-designed triage and investigations, as well as board support and effective communication, the program begins to deliver measurable benefits. You will see clear KPIs, a clear KRI profile, a comprehensible ROI and a real reduction in operational losses.

If you are preparing to launch or upgrade a program, start with a diagnosis: assess channels, roles, integrations and metrics. The COREDO team will gladly share methodologies, case studies and templates, and will also help adapt the solution for the EU, Asia and the CIS. With correct implementation, **whistleblowing** strengthens corporate ethics, accelerates the AML framework and increases business resilience; it is precisely the foundation on which international growth is built.

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