[Federal Register: May 12, 2009 (Volume 74, Number 90)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Page 22129-22142]
From the Federal Register Online via GPO Access [wais.access.gpo.gov]
[DOCID:fr12my09-15]
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DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
31 CFR Part 103
RIN 1506-AA97
Financial Crimes Enforcement Network; Amendment to the Bank
Secrecy Act Regulations--Definitions and Other Regulations Relating to
Money Services Businesses
AGENCY: Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN), Department of
the Treasury.
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking.
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SUMMARY: The Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (``FinCEN''), a
bureau of the Department of the Treasury (``Treasury''), is proposing
to revise the regulations implementing the Bank Secrecy Act (``BSA'')
regarding money services businesses (``MSBs'') to clarify which
entities are covered by the definitions. Specifically, we are reviewing
the MSB regulatory framework with a focus on providing efficient and
effective regulation for the industry, as well as improving the ability
of regulators, law enforcement, and FinCEN to safeguard the U.S.
financial system from the abuses of terrorist financing, money
laundering, and other financial crime.
The proposed changes are intended to more clearly delineate the
scope of entities regulated as MSBs, so that determining which entities
are obligated to comply will be more straightforward and predictable.
This rulemaking proposes to amend the current MSB regulations in the
following ways: By ensuring that certain foreign-located MSBs with a
U.S. presence are subject to the BSA rules; by updating the MSB
definitions to reflect past guidance and rulings, current business
operations, evolving technologies, and merging lines of business; and
by combining all of stored value into one category, without
substantively changing the existing definition, so that issuers of
stored value and sellers or redeemers of stored value are in the same
category. In addition, this rulemaking solicits comments on stored
value to assist FinCEN with a future rulemaking proposing a revised
definition of stored value and revising related regulations.
DATES: Written comments on the notice of proposed rulemaking must be
submitted on or before September 9, 2009.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments, identified by RIN 1506-AA97, by any
of the following methods:
Federal e-rulemaking portal: http://www.regulations.gov.
Follow the instructions for submitting comments. Refer to Docket number
TREAS-FinCen-2009-0002.
Mail: FinCEN, P.O. Box 39, Vienna, VA 22183. Include RIN
1506-AA97 in the body of the text.
Inspection of comments: Comments may be inspected, between 10 a.m.
and 4 p.m., in the FinCEN reading room in Vienna, VA. Persons wishing
to inspect the comments submitted must request an appointment with the
Disclosure Officer by telephoning (703) 905-5034 (Not a toll free
call).
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Regulatory Policy and Programs
Division, FinCEN (800) 949-2732 and select option 1.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Introduction
The term MSB, as currently defined in the BSA regulations, refers
to each of the following distinct categories of financial service
providers: (1) Currency dealer or exchanger, (2) check casher, (3)
issuer of traveler's checks, money orders, or stored value, (4) seller
or redeemer of traveler's checks, money orders, or stored value, (5)
money transmitter, and (6) the United States Postal Service.\1\
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\1\ 31 CFR 103.11(uu)(1)-(6).
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MSBs play a critical role in providing financial services to, among
others, a segment of the population that generally does not maintain
bank accounts. Law enforcement, FinCEN, and other federal regulators
have repeatedly stressed the need to prevent transactions that
typically flow through these businesses from going underground, which
would diminish transparency with respect to these transactions. Because
MSBs
[[Page 22130]]
provide needed financial services to numerous communities throughout
the country and often facilitate the transmission of money to those in
foreign countries, they are vital to both domestic and foreign
economies.
In drafting this rulemaking, FinCEN reviewed past industry survey
studies that were conducted to gain perspective on the size, revenue,
geographic distribution, and other characteristics of the various
service sectors of MSBs. The industry has grown in size and operational
complexity since FinCEN first proposed MSB regulations in 1997.
A 1997 study estimated that the MSB industry population (both
principals and agents) was around 158,000, and provided approximately
$200 billion annually in financial services.\2\ The study estimated
that fewer than ten large businesses accounted for the bulk of MSB
activity (involving money transmissions, money orders, traveler's
checks, and check cashing and currency exchange) conducted within the
United States. The financial services were provided primarily through
systems of agents.
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\2\ Coopers and Lybrand LLP, ``Non-Bank Financial Institutions:
A Study of Five Sectors'' (Feb. 28, 1997).
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In 2005, FinCEN again studied the MSB population and services
provided and determined that the industry had grown to approximately
$284 to $305 billion annually in financial services.\3\ The increase
reflected a growth rate for the MSB industry of about 50% over the
previous decade. The study found that approximately 50% of all MSBs
offered both check cashing and money order services.
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\3\ KPMG 2005 Money Services Business Industry Survey Study
(Sept. 26, 2005), available on FinCEN's Web site, http://
www.fincen.gov.
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This rulemaking proposes to amend 31 CFR 103.11(uu) by revising the
MSB definitions. In addition to discussing our rationale for such
revisions, we have asked questions of the general public to assist us
with understanding the impact that the proposed changes may have on the
affected businesses, as well as on law enforcement and regulatory
efforts. These questions are asked both throughout the document and
again in section IV with additional specific requests for comments.
In drafting this rulemaking, we have proposed folding all of stored
value into one category so that issuers of stored value and sellers or
redeemers of stored value are in the same category, without making any
substantive changes to the definition of this category. We have
determined that a separate, comprehensive proposal is warranted for
stored value and will make such a proposal at a later date. To
facilitate this process, we urge interested parties to respond to the
requests for comments about stored value that we have included within
this rulemaking.\4\
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\4\ See Section IV, below.
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II. Background
A. Statutory and Regulatory Background
The BSA, Titles I and II of Public Law 91-508, as amended, codified
at 12 U.S.C. 1829b, 18 U.S.C. 1951-1959, and 31 U.S.C. 5311-5314 and
5316-5332, authorizes the Secretary of the Treasury (the ``Secretary'')
to issue regulations requiring financial institutions to keep records
and file reports that the Secretary determines ``have a high degree of
usefulness in criminal, tax, or regulatory investigations or
proceedings, or in the conduct of intelligence or counterintelligence
matters, including analysis, to protect against international
terrorism.'' \5\ The Secretary's authority to administer the BSA and
its implementing regulations has been delegated to the Director of
FinCEN.\6\ FinCEN has interpreted the BSA through implementing
regulations (``BSA regulations'' or ``BSA rules'') that appear at 31
CFR Part 103.
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\5\ 31 U.S.C. 5311.
\6\ See Treasury Order 180-01 (Sept. 26, 2002).
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The BSA defines the term ``financial institution'' to include, in
part: A currency exchange; an issuer, redeemer, or casher of travelers'
checks, checks, money orders, or similar instruments; the United States
Postal Service; a person involved in the transmission of funds; and any
business or agency which engages in any activity which is determined by
regulation to be an activity which is similar to, related to, or a
substitute for these activities.\7\
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\7\ 31 U.S.C. 5312(a)(2)(J), (K), (R), (V), and (Y).
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The Director of FinCEN, through delegated authority, has
implemented regulations under the BSA interpreting the recordkeeping,
reporting, and other requirements of the BSA. Like other financial
institutions under the BSA, MSBs must implement anti-money laundering
(AML) programs, make certain reports to FinCEN, and maintain certain
records to facilitate financial transparency. MSBs are required to: (1)
Establish written AML programs that are reasonably designed to prevent
the MSB from being used to facilitate money laundering and the
financing of terrorist activities; \8\ (2) file Currency Transaction
Reports (CTRs) \9\ and Suspicious Activity Reports (SARs) \10\ and (3)
maintain certain records, including those relating to the purchase of
certain monetary instruments with currency; \11\ relating to
transactions by currency dealers or exchangers; \12\ and relating to
certain transmittals of funds.\13\ Most types of MSBs are required to
register with FinCEN \14\ and all are subject to examination for BSA
compliance by the Internal Revenue Service (IRS).\15\
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\8\ See 31 CFR 103.125.
\9\ See 31 CFR 103.22.
\10\ See 31 CFR 103.20. Check cashers and transactions solely
involving the issuance, sale or redemption of stored value are not
covered by the SAR requirement. See 31 CFR Sec. 103.20(a)(1), (5).
\11\ See 31 CFR 103.29.
\12\ See 31 CFR 103.37.
\13\ See 31 CFR 103.33(f)-(g).
\14\ See 31 CFR 103.41.
\15\ 31 CFR 103.56(b)(8).
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B. Past Public MSB Meetings
In 1997, FinCEN held public meetings to give members of the
financial services industry an opportunity to discuss the proposed MSB
regulations and any impact they might have on operations.\16\ In
drafting the final rules defining the MSB categories,\17\ FinCEN relied
on the contributions from these public forums.
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\16\ These public meetings were held in Vienna, Virginia, on
July 22, 1997; New York, New York, on July 28, 1997; San Jose,
California, on August 1, 1997; Chicago, Illinois, on August 15,
1997; and Vienna, Virginia, on September 3, 1997. The discussions
focused on how businesses operate and how best to regulate them.
Discussion regarding whether a definitional threshold was warranted
and if so, how to arrive at one, provided invaluable information to
FinCEN.
\17\ Definitions Relating to, and Registration of, Money
Services Businesses, 64 FR 45438 (Aug. 20, 1999) (``1999
Rulemaking'').
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On March 8, 2005, FinCEN held a fact-finding meeting in Washington,
DC on the provision of banking services to MSBs.\18\ MSBs recounted
their challenges in obtaining and maintaining banking services due to
the perception that their businesses posed a high risk of money
laundering and terrorist financing. In 2006, FinCEN issued an advance
notice of proposed rulemaking seeking input on how to address these
challenges,\19\ and received 142 comments in response, which have
informed this rulemaking.\20\
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\18\ FinCEN conducted the meeting through the Non-bank Financial
Institutions and the Examination Subcommittees of the Bank Secrecy
Act Advisory Group (``BSAAG''). BSAAG is an advisory group created
by Congress consisting of industry, regulatory, and law enforcement
participants for the purpose of engaging in open dialogue related to
the protection of the U.S. financial system from money laundering,
terrorist financing, and other abuses. BSAAG uses a variety of
permanent and ad hoc subcommittees to identify and analyze relevant
issues.
\19\ Provision of Banking Services to Money Services Businesses,
71 FR 12308 (March 10, 2006).
\20\ These comments are available in files dated March 10 and
May 15, 2006 at http://www.fincen.gov/statutes_regs/frn/reg_
proposal_comments.html.
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[[Page 22131]]
C. The Term ``Money Services Businesses''
In 1999, FinCEN added ``money services business'' to the definition
of ``financial institution'' in the BSA regulation.\21\ The term MSB
was created to: (1) clarify statutory language in a way that
effectively captured industry operations and (2) refine a subset of
non-bank financial institutions that are not subject to federal
functional regulation at the federal level. We substituted the term
``money services business'' for the statutory term ``money transmitting
business'' to avoid using a general term that could too easily be
confused with ``money transmitter,'' which was being proposed as a
specific category of MSB.\22\
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\21\ 1999 Rulemaking, supra note 17, at 45438.
\22\ See Definition and Registration of Money Services
Businesses, 62 FR 27890, 27890 (May 21, 1997) (``1997 Proposal'').
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Over the years, MSBs have asserted that using a single term to
identify actors engaging in particular diverse activities is inadequate
for assessing money laundering and terrorist financing risks.
Furthermore, industry has argued that the use of the term MSB has
adversely affected their access to banking services. For these reasons,
industry has asked us to eliminate the term ``money services business''
to describe this particular group of non-bank financial institutions
and describe the businesses as ``non-bank financial institutions.''
It would be ineffective and confusing to use the broader term
``non-bank financial institution'' to describe the subset of ``MSBs.''
Even in the late 1990s, the term ``non-bank financial institutions''
encompassed broker-dealers in securities and casinos, as well as those
businesses currently incorporated within the term MSB. The term is even
less helpful now, as there are more types of non-bank financial
institutions subject to BSA regulations, such as mutual funds,
insurance companies, credit card system operators, dealers in precious
metals, stones, and jewels, and futures commission merchants.
Despite the diverse risks posed across and even within MSB
industries,\23\ MSBs share certain qualities. In particular, these
businesses offer financial services that Congress grouped together in
the BSA.\24\ MSBs provide a range of financial services to many people
without bank accounts similar to those services offered by banks to
their customers. FinCEN therefore sees the continuing utility in the
general term ``MSB'' as a concise way to refer to certain non-bank
financial institutions that are without a federal functional regulator;
\25\ that offer specific services (often in combination), and that have
similar BSA requirements.
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\23\ FinCEN has expressed its view that not all MSBs pose the
same level of risk and will not require the same level of due
diligence. See, e.g., FFIEC Manual (2007) at 277 (Non-bank Financial
Institutions--Overview--Providing Banking Services to Money Services
Businesses) and ``Interagency Interpretive Guidance on Providing
Banking Services to Money Services Businesses Operating in the
United States'' (April 26, 2005) (``[t]he range of products and
services offered, and the customer bases served by money services
businesses, are equally diverse * * * while they all fall under the
definition of a money services business, the types of businesses are
quite distinct''). We also have communicated this message at
compliance schools for banking examiners, on public panels, and at
other speaking engagements.
\24\ See 31 U.S.C. 5330(d)(1).
\25\ The Internal Revenue Service examines these businesses only
for compliance with the BSA. It is not a ``functional'' regulator of
MSBs.
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D. Genesis of the Proposed Revisions
In June 2007, FinCEN adopted its BSA efficiency and effectiveness
initiative, which includes as one of its initial provisions, clarifying
the scope of the MSB definitions. The initiative makes it a priority
for FinCEN to review, and revise if appropriate, the MSB definitions in
light of the money laundering risks posed.
We believe the current MSB regulatory definitions should be revised
to describe with greater particularity the types of activity that would
subject a business to the BSA rules.\26\ For example, under the current
regulations, to be deemed a check casher, a business only has to cash
checks in amounts greater than the definitional threshold. The
regulatory language does not provide insight, for instance, into the
types of instruments a check casher may accept and does not detail what
may be redeemed and whether it could be a combination of items (e.g.,
currency, another instrument, or a combination of instruments). The
intent in clarifying the definitions is to resolve such ambiguities in
the regulations so that the rules can be applied with more certainty by
potential MSBs, the banks who maintain accounts for them, law
enforcement, and regulators. The rationale for our proposed changes is
provided in the section-by-section analysis below.
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\26\ The 1997 open forums on MSBs included discussions on
whether to create definitions based on the type of institution
involved or instead based on the activity or function performed by
an entity regardless of the type of institution. Ultimately, FinCEN
determined that changes in the industry over time may make relying
on the type of institution problematic while creating definitions
based on the underlying activity would enable the regulations to
account for new technologies, services, and products.
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E. Need for Review and Updates
Nearly ten years have passed since FinCEN issued the BSA
regulations defining the categories of MSBs.\27\ Since that time,
FinCEN has received numerous requests to clarify the application of the
MSB regulations to particular businesses. Over one-third of these
requests came from persons inquiring whether or not they were an
MSB.\28\ Some of these requests for guidance reflect significant
technological advances such as the online provision of financial
services, as well as new financial products developed after the
publication of our current rules such as stored value products and
electronic currency. All of these developments have changed the nature
of the MSB industry. Where possible, we have provided guidance to the
industry on how to interpret and apply the regulations.
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\27\ 1999 Rulemaking, 64 FR 45438 (Aug. 20, 1999).
\28\ This statistic comes from a review of requests for guidance
from our Regulatory Helpline.
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With respect to check cashers and money transmitters in particular,
we have developed a large body of guidance in the years since the
issuance of the final MSB regulations. For check cashers, FinCEN's
guidance and rulings provide several examples of activities that do not
meet the regulatory definition of a check casher, though they may
involve check activity in amounts exceeding the regulatory threshold.
Examples of businesses that are not check cashers include: (1) A payday
lender that holds checks as collateral for repayment of the loan by the
customer and does not deposit or negotiate the checks; \29\ (2) a
business cashing its employees' payroll checks; \30\ (3) a business
cashing its own checks issued as payment for goods or services provided
by non-employees; \31\ (4) a tax preparer cashing its own refund
anticipation loan checks for taxpayers for whom it has prepared tax
returns; \32\ and (5) a consumer finance company cashing its own loan
checks to borrowers.\33\
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\29\ FinCEN Ruling 2002-2 (Definition of Check Casher (Payday
Lenders)), (Feb. 5, 2002).
\30\ FinCEN Guidance 2006-G005 (Frequently Asked Questions--
Businesses Cashing Their Own Checks) (March 31, 2006).
\31\ Id.
\32\ Id.
\33\ FinCEN Ruling 2007-R001 (Whether a Publicly Traded Company
that Cashes its own Checks Issued to Loan Customers is a Money
Services Business) (Jan. 8, 2008).
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Similarly, over the years, FinCEN has issued guidance and
administrative rulings that provide examples of
[[Page 22132]]
activities that do not meet the regulatory definition of a money
transmitter, even though entities engaged in such activities may be
involved in accepting and transmitting funds, such as: (1) Payment
processing businesses that only provide merchants with a portal to
financial institutions with access to the ACH system for the receipt of
payments for goods and services already provided;\34\ (2) debt
management companies, with respect to their submission of payments to
creditors on behalf of debtors in conjunction with a debt management
plan;\35\ (3) merchants and ATMs associated with a network of banks
that accept and transmit funds that will become stored value used
through the network, but that do so only as a conduit between
individual banks and their customers;\36\ and (4) businesses that only
accept payments on behalf of the utilities with which they have
contracted, and that decline to accept and transmit funds for any other
purpose.\37\
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\34\ FinCEN Ruling 2003-8 (Definition of Money Transmitter
(Merchant Payment Processor)) (Nov. 19, 2003).
\35\ FinCEN Ruling 2004-4 (Definition of Money Services
Businesses (Debt Management Company)) (Nov. 24, 2004).
\36\ FinCEN Ruling 2008-R005 (Whether Certain Reloadable Card
Operations are Money Services Businesses) (March 10, 2008)
(Merchants and ATMs associated with a network of banks were not
deemed money transmitters).
\37\ FinCEN Ruling 2008-R006 (Whether an Authorized Agent for
the Receipt of Utility Payments is a Money Transmitter) (May 21,
2008).
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Given the nature and scope of these important interpretative
rulings, we think it is appropriate to update, streamline, and clarify
the MSB regulations by incorporating these interpretations into the
proposed regulatory revisions and extending them where appropriate. The
proposed regulations also reflect proposed policy changes, on which we
also seek comment.
III. Section-by-Section Analysis
Pursuant to FinCEN's authority to interpret the provisions of 31
U.S.C. 5312, this document proposes to amend 31 CFR Part 103, primarily
by revising the definitions of ``money services business.'' These
proposed changes would affect multiple categories of MSBs by: (1)
Removing the ``doing business'' language in the definition of MSB
merely for purposes of removing unclear language without broadening the
application of the regulation beyond its present scope and (2) revising
the general language to ensure that activity within the United States
that does not involve the physical presence in the United States of an
MSB's agent, agency, branch or office is directly regulated. The
proposed changes are more fully discussed below.
A. Meaning of the Term ``Money Services Business''
In issuing the current MSB regulations in 1999, FinCEN was
responding to a growing need to apply effective BSA regulation to a
relatively little known or little understood part of the financial
sector in the United States.\38\ FinCEN's regulations established broad
definitions for each enumerated MSB activity. This had the effect of
capturing national and multinational MSB operations as well as the
small enterprises that competed with them. It also captured businesses
that exclusively provided MSB services as well as businesses that
provided both financial services and unrelated products or
services.\39\
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\38\ See 1999 Rulemaking, 64 FR 45439.
\39\ Id.
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Since the issuance of these regulations, FinCEN has continued to
seek input on defining the categories of MSBs appropriately and
establishing appropriate dollar thresholds for activity with the goal
of covering those businesses that are significantly engaged in
providing products and services that are legitimate subjects of
regulatory interest. FinCEN is now in a position to tailor the 1999
definition in a number of ways.
Doing Business
The current regulatory definition of MSB includes ``[e]ach agent,
agency, branch, or office within the United States of any person doing
business, whether or not on a regular basis or as an organized business
concern, in one or more of the capacities listed in paragraphs (uu)(1)
through (uu)(6) of this section.'' \40\ Banks and persons registered
with, and regulated or examined by, the Securities and Exchange
Commission or the Commodity Futures Trading Commission have been
excluded from the MSB definitions.\41\
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\40\ 31 CFR 103.11(uu) (emphasis added).
\41\ Id.
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Whether a person is doing business as an MSB depends on all of the
facts and circumstances. We use the term ``doing business'' to mean the
activity in which the person is engaged, rather than any status that
the entity has either taken on itself or been assigned, such as a
business licensed by a state. In this proposed rulemaking, FinCEN
continues to regulate an MSB by its activity and the context in which
the activity occurs and not simply its status. Whether a person is a
business in any formal sense should not be determinative of whether it
is subject to the MSB definitions, absent statutory requirements to the
contrary.
To avoid confusion that might result from the focus on the status
of an entity and not its activity and the context in which the activity
occurs, we have revised the language in the MSB definition in section
103.11(uu) by deleting the ``doing business'' language and replacing it
with ``engaged in activities * * *'' ``Doing business'' had caused
uncertainty which we expect will be alleviated with this change. By
removing the phrase ``doing business,'' however, we do not intend to
broaden the application of the regulation beyond its present scope. To
the extent that a person engages in one or more of the enumerated
activities listed in the definition, it is an MSB; to the extent that a
person does not engage in such activities, it is not.
Dollar Threshold
The regulation currently includes an activity threshold of $1,000
for any person in any one day. This threshold applies to all MSB
categories, except money transmitters which do not have any activity
threshold, and was established to exclude certain activities under that
dollar amount from the BSA requirements.\42\
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\42\ See 1999 Rulemaking, 64 FR at 45446 (the threshold attempts
to eliminate treating certain businesses as MSBs, like grocery
stores and hotels, which cash checks and exchange currency as an
accommodation to customers otherwise buying goods and services).
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The issue of a dollar threshold was discussed at FinCEN's publicly-
held meetings in 1997 with the industry to vet issues arising from the
originally proposed rules. During the meetings, various methods of
arriving at a dollar threshold were discussed. Certain members of the
industry proposed a threshold based on total gross fee income. FinCEN
did not favor that approach because it allowed for potential
manipulation on the part of a business seeking to avoid the
registration requirement by not collecting a fee and obtaining payment
for the service in some other way. Some participants also recommended
tying the threshold to an economic indicator, like the minimum for
social security payments or the federal minimum wage, which was
ultimately rejected. In the final rule, FinCEN doubled the originally
proposed threshold of $500 in part based on input received from the
industry.\43\
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\43\ The final rule also indicated that many MSB transactions
regularly occur in amounts greater than the originally proposed
definitional threshold of $500. See 1999 Rulemaking, 64 FR at 45446.
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[[Page 22133]]
Although FinCEN does not propose amending the current threshold in
this rulemaking, we are considering the need for a separate rulemaking
to make possible adjustments to the threshold. A lower threshold may
increase the amount of information available to law enforcement by
expanding the scope of entities subject to BSA requirements, but would
also add additional entities that conduct incidental and low-value MSB
activities in which the benefits of regulation many not outweigh the
costs. Moreover, the effect on the clients whom these MSBs serve would
need to be carefully studied. Conversely, a higher threshold may remove
from the scope of the BSA entities that conduct incidental and low-
value MSB activities in which the benefits of regulation many not
outweigh the costs.
Questions for Comment
We seek information on the average daily transaction
amount for the different MSB services offered: check cashing; money
orders; money transmission; foreign exchange; stored value; and
traveler's checks.
We specifically seek comment from law enforcement on how
adjusting the threshold higher or lower would impact their
investigations and prosecutions.
We specifically seek comment from community groups on how
adjusting the threshold higher or lower would impact the clients who
utilize MSB firms.
Foreign-Located MSBs
The BSA authorizes us to define a domestic financial institution
without reference to its physical presence in the United States. 31
U.S.C. 5312(b)(1) states that the term ``domestic financial
institution'' applies to an action in the United States, not to the
physical location of the financial agency or institution taking the
action. Thus, it is within FinCEN's authority to write regulations
establishing that a foreign-located business that meets the definition
of a ``financial institution'' and is conducting business in the United
States in such a capacity is a ``domestic financial institution.''
We propose to use this authority to amend the regulatory language
implementing 31 U.S.C. 5312(a)(2)(J), (K), and (R)--the provisions on
which our regulatory definition of MSBs is based--to ensure that
certain foreign-located entities engaging in MSB activities in the
United States are subject to the requirements of the BSA. We propose to
do this by revising our MSB definition to state that an entity is
defined as an MSB by the activity it conducts within the United States,
and not exclusively by the physical presence of one or more of the
entity's agents, agencies, branches or offices within the United
States. Accordingly, we propose the following text: ``The term ``money
services business'' shall include a person wherever located engaged in
the activities that take place wholly or in substantial part within the
United States, in one or more of the capacities listed in paragraphs
(uu)(1) through (uu)(6) of this section, whether or not on a regular
basis or as an organized business concern. This includes but is not
limited to maintenance of any agent, agency, branch, or office within
the United States.''
Technological advances make it increasingly possible for MSBs to
offer financial services through mechanisms other than ``brick and
mortar'' locations. Foreign entities can and do offer services in the
U.S. through other instrumentalities, such as the Internet or a U.S.-
based bank account. Under this rulemaking, we seek to ensure that a
foreign-located entity engaging in activities in the United States in
one of the capacities listed in 31 CFR 103.11(uu)(1)-(5) is regulated
as an MSB. We intend to include an entity that has a presence in the
U.S. by means of the internet or similar mechanism, or by means of an
account with a U.S. financial institution and who, for instance, is
transmitting money through the account with U.S. customers or
recipients. Establishing the degree to which the activities of a
foreign-located MSB occurs within the United States depends on all the
facts and circumstances and whether U.S. customers or recipients are
involved in the activities.\44\ If a foreign-located business is an MSB
according to our regulations, then it will have the same reporting and
recordkeeping and other requirements as an MSB with a physical presence
in the United States, with respect to its U.S. activities.\45\
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\44\ See FinCEN Ruling 2004-1 (March 29, 2004). Guidance
(Definition of Money Services Business) (Foreign-Located Currency
Exchanger With U.S. Bank Account) (A foreign-located currency
exchanger whose only presence in the U.S. was a bank account was not
deemed an MSB when the currency exchange transactions occurred
solely in a foreign country for foreign-located customers and the
use of the U.S. bank account was limited to issuing and clearing
dollar-denominated monetary instruments.)
\45\ See Section II.A of this rulemaking above for MSB
compliance obligations.
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FinCEN seeks to ensure that our AML regulations apply equally to
all persons engaging in activities in the United States as MSBs. The
U.S. system is not fully protected when some MSB transactions are
covered and others are not. We are concerned that mechanisms such as
the Internet increasingly can be used to conduct business within the
United States from a foreign jurisdiction. Use of such mechanisms may
avoid both our regulations and the regulations of the foreign
jurisdiction. This undermines the legitimate interest of the United
States in protecting its own financial system from abuse.
Effectively regulating the use of the U.S. financial system by all
actors, both domestic and foreign, is consistent with the efforts to
establish an international community designed to help countries and
other jurisdictions work in concert to protect the inextricably
intertwined global financial system. These efforts in turn help support
the efforts of individual countries to prevent their financial systems
from being used as conduits for financial crimes.
We seek comment on the effectiveness of the proposed text changes
regarding the application of the MSB definition to certain foreign-
located MSBs. In addition, we request input on the effectiveness of
examining and enforcing such entities' compliance with BSA
requirements, such as the requirement that a foreign-located MSB
maintain registration records in the United States that are readily
available at the request of FinCEN or any appropriate law enforcement
agency.\46\ Moreover, we seek comment on the implications of requiring
a foreign-located MSB to file SARs with respect to transactions taking
place within the United States and the ability to enforce the
confidentiality and safe harbor provisions of the SAR,\47\ or to
enforce the issuance of a civil money penalty \48\ on such an MSB.\49\
We seek comment
[[Page 22134]]
from law enforcement on how such changes may impact their work if
certain foreign businesses were regulated as MSBs. Alternatively, we
solicit comment on whether we should expand the definition of ``foreign
financial institution'' \50\ in the foreign correspondent account rule
to include check cashers and issuers and/or sellers of traveler's
checks and/or money orders.
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\46\ See 1999 Rulemaking, 64 FR at 45441 (``A money services
business is not required to keep records required by section Sec.
103.41 in a centralized location so long as the records are
maintained in the United States'').
\47\ 31 CFR 103.20(d). See also FinCEN Form 107 (Registration of
Money Services Business) (Jan. 2005), which allows for the
registration of a foreign located MSB in Part III.
\48\ 31 CFR 103.56-103.57.
\49\ The practical issues that may arise in enforcing these
requirements are distinct from the legal issues as to whether FinCEN
has the authority to impose these requirements on foreign-located
MSBs, and whether federal courts have the authority to impose
sanctions for the failure of a foreign-located MSB to comply with
these requirements. MSB activity wholly or substantially within the
United States is an economic activity substantially affecting
interstate commerce, and it is therefore clearly amenable to federal
regulation. See United States v. Morrison, 529 U.S. 598, 609-610,
120 S.Ct. 1740, 1749-1750 (2000). As noted, the BSA authorizes
FinCEN to regulate action within the United States without reference
to the actor's physical presence in the United States. See 31 U.S.C.
Sec. 5312(b)(1). Finally, the nature of MSB activity is such that a
foreign-located MSB engaging in such activity wholly or
substantially within the United States is making a conscious
decision to do so and is aware of where the activity is taking
place. It should therefore be possible to identify a federal
judicial district with which the foreign-located MSB has sufficient
minimum contacts that the maintenance of a suit against the foreign-
located MSB does not offend due process or traditional notions of
fair play and substantial justice, see International Shoe Co. v.
Washington, 326 U.S. 310, 316, 66 S.Ct. 154, 158 (1945), either
because the suit arises out of the MSB's specific contacts with the
district and the MSB has purposefully directed its efforts towards
residents of the district, see Burger King v. Rudzewicz, 471 U.S.
462, 476, 105 S.Ct. 2174, 2184 (1985), or because the MSB has
maintained continuous and systematic general business contacts with
the district, see Helicopteros Nacionales de Colombia v. Hall, 466
U.S. 408, 416, 104 S.Ct. 1868, 1873 (1984). It should therefore be
possible for a federal court to assert personal jurisdiction over
the MSB on either a general jurisdiction or specific jurisdiction
theory, notwithstanding the MSB's lack of physical presence in the
United States. See Gator.com Corp. v. L.L. Bean, Inc., 341 F.3d
1072, 1079 (9th Cir. 2003) (federal district court has personal
jurisdiction over defendant lacking physical presence in district
because defendant's ``highly interactive'' website operates as
``virtual store'' in district), Gorman v. Ameritrade Holding Corp.,
293 F.3d 506, 512-513 (D.C.Cir. 2002) (federal district court may
have personal jurisdiction over defendant lacking physical presence
in district because residents of district ``use its website to
engage in electronic transactions with the firm''); see also
Glencore Grain Rotterdam B.V. v. Shivnath Rai Harnarain Co., 284
F.3d 1114, 1123-1126 (9th Cir. 2002) (federal district court may
have personal jurisdiction over defendant notwithstanding
defendant's lack of physical presence in the United States), United
States v. Swiss American Bank, Ltd., 274 F.3d 610, 619-625 (1st Cir.
2001) (same).
\50\ 31 CFR 103.175(h).
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B. Meaning of the Term ``Dealer in Foreign Exchange''
Pursuant to FinCEN's authority to interpret the provisions of 31
U.S.C. 5312, this section proposes to amend 31 CFR Part 103 by amending
the regulation implementing 31 U.S.C. 5312(a)(2)(J), which defines ``a
currency exchange'' as a financial institution and 31 U.S.C.
5312(a)(2)(Y) and (Z), which permit the Secretary to designate as a
financial institution ``any business * * * which engages in any
activity * * * which is similar to, related to, or a substitute for any
activity in which any business [defined to be a financial institution]
is authorized to engage [or] any other business whose cash transactions
have a high degree of usefulness in criminal, tax, or regulatory
matters.''
Currently, 31 CFR 103.11(uu)(1) defines a ``currency dealer or
exchanger,'' as ``[a] currency dealer or exchanger (other than a person
who does not exchange currency in an amount greater than $1,000 in
currency or monetary or other instruments for any person on any day in
one or more transactions).'' The proposed changes would revise 31 CFR
103.11(uu)(1) to state: ``Dealer in Foreign Exchange. A person who
accepts the currency, or other monetary instruments, funds, or other
instruments denominated in the currency, of one or more countries in
exchange for the currency, or other monetary instruments, funds, or
other instruments denominated in the currency, of one or more other
countries in an amount greater than $1,000 for any other person on any
day in one or more transactions, whether or not for same-day
delivery.''
The term ``dealer in foreign exchange'' can be found in the first
BSA regulations published in 1972.\51\ Although the term later was
deleted from the regulations, the deletion and subsequent changes were
not intended to change the meaning of the category.\52\ The use of the
word ``dealer'' in the proposed definition is intended to include both
dealers (persons taking one side of a position and seeking to earn a
spread) and brokers (persons bringing the buyers and sellers together
for a commission and who, like a dealer, will conduct the transaction
on its books and through its accounts). ``Dealer'' is intended to
include all persons who are in the business of engaging in transactions
involving the current or future acquisition or disposition of funds
denominated in a particular currency by exchanging them for funds
denominated in another currency.
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\51\ See 37 FR 6912 (April 5, 1972) (defining ``financial
institution'' to include ``a person who engages as a business in
dealing in or exchanging currency as, for example, a dealer in
foreign exchange or a person engaged primarily in the cashing of
checks'').
\52\ See 51 FR 30233, 30234 (Aug. 25, 1986) (proposing to define
``financial institution'' to include ``a currency dealer or
exchanger, including a check casher,'' with no notice that this
change in language would constitute a change in the scope of the
definition); 52 FR 11436, 11439-11440 (Apr. 8, 1987) (adopting the
proposed language changes).
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We have removed the word ``currency'' from the name of the category
to make clear that businesses that meet this definition may be
exchanging not only currency, but also other monetary instruments,
funds, or other instruments that are denominated in currency. Although
the statute uses the language ``currency exchange,'' \53\ we believe
the language was intended to capture the underlying activity involved
in foreign exchange services and that our interpretation is consistent
with the original intent and current industry practices. We seek
comment on the name change of this category of MSB and whether the
revision is consistent with current practices.
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\53\ 31 U.S.C. 5312(a)(2).
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The insertion of the word ``foreign'' clarifies our consistent
position that any exchange that occurs in the United States could be
covered by this definition, even if it does not involve U.S. dollars.
Therefore, if all other requirements are fulfilled, and a business
exchanges currency, other monetary instruments, funds or other
instruments denominated in a currency other than U.S. dollars for
currency, other monetary instruments, funds or other instruments
denominated either in dollars or in another non-U.S. currency, we would
consider the business a dealer in foreign exchange for purposes of our
rules. Though such a transaction may not involve U.S. dollars, the
potential use of a dealer in foreign exchange to launder money, finance
terrorism, or carry out other illicit activity nevertheless would
impact the U.S. financial system and should be subject to regulation.
This proposed clarification also reflects the reality of the
international nature of money laundering and terrorist financing as
well as the jurisdictional responsibility of the U.S. Government to
safeguard the financial system against those risks. Although U.S.
dollars are considered an attractive medium for money laundering and
terrorist financing because of the worldwide acceptance of the dollar
as a means of payment, failing to capture exchanges within the United
States of two foreign (non-U.S. dollar) currencies or of payment
instruments denominated in two foreign currencies would leave a
significant class of potentially vulnerable transactions that occur
within the United States unregulated.
The proposed definition also clarifies that dealing in foreign
exchange is not limited to the physical exchange of the currency of one
country for the currency of another country. The phrase ``currency, or
other monetary instruments, funds, or other instruments'' clarifies
which mediums of exchange are included under the current rule's
phrasing ``currency or monetary or other instruments.'' Our current
rules and existing body of administrative rulings make clear our
determination that a person that
[[Page 22135]]
converts funds denominated in the currency of one country to funds
denominated in the currency of another country is a currency dealer or
exchanger.\54\ ``Other instruments'' is intended to capture those types
of payment instruments that do not fall precisely into one of the other
categories, but nevertheless are readily recognizable as payment
instruments.
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\54\ See FinCEN Ruling 2008-R003 (Whether a Person That is
Engaged in the Business of Foreign Exchange Risk Management is a
Currency Dealer or Exchanger or Money Transmitter) (May 9, 2008);
FinCEN Ruling 2008-R002 (Whether a Foreign Exchange Dealer is a
Currency Dealer or Exchanger or Money Transmitter) (May 9, 2008);
and 31 CFR 103.37(b)(6).
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The addition of the phrase ``of one or more other countries'' \55\
to the text of the definition signals a proposed policy clarification,
which we believe better comports with a more common understanding of
the business of exchanging currency. This phrase indicates that a
person would no longer be considered a dealer in foreign exchange when
converting currency, other monetary instruments, funds or other
instruments denominated in U.S. currency for currency, other monetary
instruments, funds or other instruments also denominated in U.S.
currency. Similarly, if a person were to accept currency, other
monetary instruments, funds or other instruments denominated in a
particular foreign currency in exchange for currency, other monetary
instruments, funds or other instruments denominated in that same
foreign currency, that person would not be considered an MSB. By way of
example, a person accepting a traveler's check denominated in Mexican
pesos in exchange for Mexican pesos in currency form would not be
considered a dealer in foreign exchange.
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\55\ The addition of ``one or more other countries'' is intended
to capture the fact that some foreign currencies are used by
multiple countries. For instance, the Euro is used by the member
states of the European Union. Accordingly, a dealer in foreign
exchange may accept funds of one or more other countries in exchange
for funds of one or more other countries.
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The proposed language ``for any other person'' was inserted into
the definition to explicitly reflect the interpretation that a person
is not a dealer in foreign exchange ``[t]o the extent that [he is]
exchanging * * * and transporting [his] own money on behalf of
[him]self.'' \56\
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\56\ See, e.g., FinCEN Ruling 2003-9, (Definition of Money
Services Business (Money Transmitter/Currency Dealer or Exchanger))
(October 20, 2003). See also, FinCEN Ruling 2004-3, (Definition of
Money Services Business (Money Transmitter/Currency Dealer or
Exchanger)) (Aug, 17, 2004).
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We added the phrase ``whether or not for same-day delivery'' to
account for the potential time difference between the date on which the
exchange rate is agreed and the date of the exchange. Common settlement
terms in foreign exchange markets include: (1) Same-day or cash--where
the parties both agree to an exchange of currency and conclude the
exchange on the same working day; (2) spot--where the parties agree to
an exchange of currency on one date, with the exchange taking place two
working days thereafter; (3) cash forward--where the parties agree to
an exchange of currency on one date, with the exchange of currency
deferred until an agreed-upon date in the future; and (4) future--where
the parties agree to an exchange of currency on one date, with
settlement to occur in an agreed upon delivery period in the future
typically by payment of an amount reflecting the change in the foreign
currency rate between the time of the agreement and delivery. A
contract for future delivery of currency may also be settled with the
delivery of currency, resulting in the exchange of the currencies
underlying the futures contract.
The subject definition would apply only to exchanges of currency in
the over-the-counter markets.\57\ Exchange-traded contracts and the
persons who intermediate them are regulated by the Commodity Futures
Trading Commission, and therefore are excluded from the definition of
dealer in foreign exchange.\58\ However, currency is an ``excluded
commodity'' under the Commodity Exchange Act,\59\ and foreign exchange
futures may be traded over-the-counter in limited circumstances,
Consequently, this discrete category of futures contracts would fall
within this definition.
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\57\ The terms of a spot, forward, or futures contract typically
will permit either delivery of the underlying foreign currency or
settlement of the contract in the local currency. As the option of
delivering the foreign currency always exists, these contracts cause
the contracting parties to fall under the dealer in foreign exchange
definition.
\58\ 31 CFR 103.11(uu).
\59\ 7 U.S.C. 1a(13).
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Requests for Comment
Does limiting this definition to only dealers in foreign
exchange increase the risk for money laundering? How? We especially
seek input from law enforcement.
Does the definition appropriately include the mediums of
exchange that are used to effect these transactions?
Should all categories of MSB be required to maintain and
retain additional records on customers similar to those of currency
dealers and exchangers in 31 CFR Sec. 103.37?
C. Meaning of the Term ``Check Casher''
Currently, under 31 CFR Sec. 103.11(uu)(2), a check casher is
defined as ``a person engaged in the business of a check casher (other
than a person who does not cash checks in an amount greater than $1,000
in currency or monetary or other instruments for any person on any day
in one or more transactions).'' FinCEN is proposing to amend 31 CFR
103.11(uu)(2) to clarify the meaning of the term ``check cashing'' by
splitting the existing regulatory definition into two subsections--one
defining check cashing activity and one excluding certain activity from
that definition.
The proposed revision would change the definition of check cashier
to state (in part): ``A person who accepts checks (as defined in the
Uniform Commercial Code [U.C.C. Article 3--Negotiable Instruments Sec.
3-104]) or monetary instruments (as defined in Sec. 103.11(u)(1)(ii),
(iii), (iv) and (v)) in return for currency or a combination of
currency and other monetary instruments or other instruments in an
amount greater than $1,000.''
``In return'' has been added to the definition to more accurately
describe the activity that occurs when cashing a check or redeeming a
monetary instrument. The Uniform Commercial Code reference has been
added in order to provide a clear definition of ``check.'' A reference
to the definition of ``monetary instruments'' has also been provided.
``Other instruments'' is intended to capture those types of payment
instruments that do not fall precisely into one of the other
categories. The term is meant to capture those instruments that are
readily recognizable as payment instruments--an instrument such as a
stored value card that is treated in commerce as a cash equivalent--
without capturing goods or services that may be purchased with a check
or monetary instrument.
For the sake of efficiency, this proposed definition would also
incorporate the redeeming of monetary instruments into the definition
of check casher. Given its similarity to check cashing, we believe it
is unnecessary to treat this activity separately from check
cashing.\60\ Accordingly, under this proposal, a person engaged in
redeeming monetary instruments (including traveler's checks and money
orders) would be a check casher if it redeemed checks for currency or a
combination of currency and monetary or other instruments. Our intent
in this revision is not to capture activity that is tantamount to
merely exchanging one
[[Page 22136]]
monetary instrument for another monetary or other instrument and
accordingly, the proposed rule would require currency to be included in
the redeeming.
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\60\ FinCEN does not interpret ``redeem'' to include payment
instruments or mechanisms taken in exchange for goods or services.
See 1999 Rulemaking, 64 FR at 45441-45443.
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The proposed revision also would clarify what activities would not
be subject to the check casher definition. The proposed definition also
would include the following: ``Whether a person is a check casher as
described in this section is a matter of facts and circumstances. The
term `check casher' shall not include: a person that sells closed loop
stored value \61\ purchased with a check, monetary instrument or other
instruments as referenced above in this definition; a person that
redeems its own checks; \62\ or a person that only holds a customer's
check as collateral for repayment by the customer of a loan.\63\ These
businesses are being excluded from the definition of check casher
because of their limited purpose and low risk.''
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\61\ We are proposing to define closed-loop stored value as
stored value that is limited to a defined merchant or location (or
set of locations), such as a specific retailer or retail chain, a
college campus, or a subway system. Cf., Federal Reserve Board, A
Summary of the Roundtable Discussion on Stored-Value Cards and Other
Prepaid Products (Nov. 12, 2004) available at http://
www.federalreserve.gov/paymentsystems/storedvalue/.
\62\ See FinCEN Guidance FIN-2006-G005 (Frequently Asked
Questions--Businesses Cashing Their Own Checks) (March 31, 2006).
\63\ FinCEN Ruling 2002-2 (Definition of Check Casher (Payday
Lenders)), (Feb. 5, 2002).
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Finally, under the current regulations, redeemers of traveler's
checks and money orders currently have SAR obligations while check
cashers do not. As we are proposing to combine these two current
categories of MSB, we seek comment on whether FinCEN should amend its
regulations in a future rulemaking to require check cashers to report
suspicious activity to FinCEN under the BSA. Would such a requirement
be necessary, considering, for example, that issuers of traveler's
checks and money orders will continue to have SAR reporting
requirements with respect to the instruments that they issue?
Requests for Comment
Should there be an exemption or other relief for certain
types of lower risk checks (e.g., federal, state, or local government
entitlement checks)?
Should check cashers be subject to a SAR requirement?
Should there be any other exceptions or limitations on the
check casher definition?
FinCEN invites comment on the impact of the proposed
changes, if any, on current business practices.
We specifically seek comment from law enforcement on how
the proposed changes may affect their investigations and prosecutions.
D. Meaning of the Term ``Issuer or Seller of Traveler's Checks or Money
Orders''
FinCEN proposes to replace existing sections 103.11(uu)(3),
``issuer of traveler's checks, money orders, or stored value'' and
103.11(uu)(4), ``seller or redeemer of travelers checks, money orders,
or stored value'' with new section 103.11(uu)(3), ``issuer or seller of
traveler's checks or money orders.'' This proposed new section defines
an issuer or seller of traveler's checks or money orders as ``[a]
person that (i) issues traveler's checks or money orders that are sold
in an amount greater than $1,000 for any person on any day in one or
more transactions or (ii) sells traveler's checks or money orders in an
amount greater than $1,000 for any person on any day in one or more
transactions.''
The proposed rule eliminates the ``redeemer'' language that is
contained in our current definitions. Although the current rules
include those who ``redeem'' traveler's checks and money orders,
traveler's checks typically are redeemed by their issuers, making a
separate redemption category redundant in such circumstances. Moreover,
redeeming a traveler's check or money order by a non-issuer is close
enough to the activity of a check casher that we think it can be
incorporated into that definition with little difficulty.\64\
Accordingly, we are removing the ``redeemer'' provision from the
proposed rule.
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\64\ FinCEN has never held that a business that provides goods
or services in exchange for payment in the form of money orders or
traveler's checks is an MSB. See 1999 Rulemaking, 64 FR at 45447.
Accordingly, only a business that redeems these instruments for
currency, or exchanges them for a combination of currency and
monetary or other instruments would be considered an MSB,
specifically a check casher, under the proposed rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The proposed rule defines an issuer by virtue of the amount at
which its monetary instruments or travelers checks are sold, as opposed
to the amounts at which they are issued. For example, we contemplate
the amount of the sale including the face value of the monetary
instruments plus any fees. Because money orders are not issued in round
dollar increments like traveler's checks, but are rather sold either
directly by the issuer or by its agent to a customer who specifies the
exact amount, a business must look at this activity to determine
whether its transactions exceed the definitional threshold per person
per day. Similarly, although traveler's checks are usually issued in
large round amounts (e.g., $20, $50, or $100), the definition is linked
to the aggregate amount at which those checks are sold, either directly
by the issuer or at the agent level, to a customer in a single day.
Requests for Comment
Is it appropriate to link the definitional threshold for
an issuer to the value at which the money orders and traveler's checks
are sold?
In light of the proposed definition of a check casher, is
the ``redeemer'' provision no longer necessary for traveler's checks
and money orders?
E. Meaning of the Term ``Stored Value''
Under the current rules, FinCEN addresses traveler's checks, money
orders, and stored value under two separate definitions: issuers and
sellers or redeemers of those products. FinCEN proposes to group
issuers, sellers, and redeemers of stored value together. Our intent in
the proposed new section is not to change the regulatory definitions
regarding issuers, sellers, or redeemers of stored value in this
rulemaking but simply to group such providers of stored value together
in one category. Accordingly, the new section would be revised as
follows: ``A person who (1) issues stored value (other than a person
who does not issue such stored value in an amount greater than $1,000
to any person on any day in one or more transactions) or (2) sells or
redeems stored value (other than a person who does not sell or redeem
such stored value for an amount greater than $1,000 from any person on
any day in one or more transactions).''
Although FinCEN does not intend to substantively amend the category
of issuers, sellers, or redeemers of stored value in this rulemaking,
we are reviewing the current status of the stored value regulatory
regime, and we are considering possible future revisions. In 1999,
FinCEN issued a final rulemaking deferring certain requirements for the
stored value industry based on the complexity of the industry and the
desire to avoid unintended consequences with respect to an industry
then in its infancy. Mindful of these continuing issues, FinCEN is
deferring the proposal of a new rulemaking regarding issuers, sellers,
and redeemers of stored value at the present time. FinCEN will continue
to study the nature and the risks of this emerging industry before
proposing a separate future rulemaking. At this point, FinCEN is not
proposing to revise the definition of stored value found at 31 CFR
103.11(vv).
[[Page 22137]]
F. Meaning of the Term ``Money Transmitter''
We propose to revise the regulation interpreting 31 U.S.C.
5312(a)(2)(R), which defines funds transmission under the BSA as ``a
licensed sender of money or any other person who engages as a business
in the transmission of funds, including any person who engages as a
business in an informal money transfer system or any network of people
who engage as a business in facilitating the transfer of money
domestically or internationally outside of the conventional financial
institutions system.''
The implementing regulation, 31 CFR 103.11(uu)(5), currently
defines a money transmitter as ``Any person, whether or not licensed or
required to be licensed, who engages as a business in accepting
currency, or funds denominated in currency, and transmits the currency
or funds, or the value of the currency or funds, by any means through a
financial agency or institution, a Federal Reserve Bank or other
facility of one or more Federal Reserve Banks, the Board of Governors
of the Federal Reserve System, or both, or an electronic funds transfer
network; or any other person engaged as a business in the transfer of
funds.''
The proposed definition of money transmitter would read in part,
``a person who provides money transmission services. The term ``money
transmission services'' means the acceptance of currency, funds, or
other value that substitutes for currency from one person AND the
transmission of such currency, funds, or the value to another location
or person by any means. ``Any means'' includes through a financial
agency or institution; a Federal Reserve Bank or other facility of one
or more Federal Reserve Banks, the Board of Governors of the Federal
Reserve System, or both; or an electronic funds transfer network.''
The current regulation additionally contains a facts and
circumstances limitation that excludes from the money transmitter
definition persons that are engaged in the business of money
transmission as an integral part of the execution and settlement of the
transaction. Integral includes entities that could not engage in their
businesses without engaging in the transmission of funds. In
retrospect, it has been difficult for potential money transmitters to
apply this exemption. We are proposing to clarify the limitations to
the definition by using concise exceptions and by removing phrases that
have been difficult to interpret.
The proposed definition of money transmitter is ``a person who
provides money transmission services.'' This language is consistent
with existing language in the BSA.\65\ The proposed definition removes
the phrase ``engages as a business'' as FinCEN continues to regulate an
MSB by its activity and the context in which the activity occurs and
not by its status. The removal of ``engages as a business'' is not
intended to broaden the regulation beyond its present scope.
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\65\ 31 U.S.C. 5330 uses the language ``any business that
provides * * * money transmitting or remittance services.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The proposed definition also removes the phrase ``whether or not
licensed or required to be licensed.'' While this phrase reflects
language in 31 U.S.C. 5312, we find the phrase to be unnecessary
because it does not add substantive value to the meaning of money
transmitter.
Consistent with the current definition of money transmitter, the
proposed language defines ``money transmission services [as] the
acceptance of currency, funds, or other value that substitutes for
currency from one person AND the transmission of such currency, funds,
or the value to another location or person by any means.'' The proposed
regulatory definition of money transmission services includes the
phrase ``or other value that substitutes for currency'' to state that
businesses that accept stored value or other currency equivalents as a
funding source and transmit that value are providing money transmission
services.\66\
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\66\ This proposed rulemaking largely reserves the discussion of
stored value for a future date. As previously stated, FinCEN intends
to issue a separate rulemaking proposing a revised definition of
stored value and revising related regulations.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
By including the transmission of value, the current and proposed
regulatory definitions of money transmitter are worded to include
informal value transfer systems, including hawalas.\67\ Such activity
is money transmission, and the providers are money transmitters subject
to the requirements of the BSA.\68\
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\67\ ``An `informal value transfer system' refers to any system,
mechanism, or network of people that receives money for the purpose
of making the funds or an equivalent value payable to a third party
in another geographic location, whether or not in the same form.''
FinCEN Advisory Issue 33 (Informal Value Transfer Systems) (March
2003). Hawala is an alternative remittance system that operates
outside of, or parallel to, ``traditional'' banking or financial
channels.
\68\ Id.
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The proposed regulatory definition of money transmission services
also adds the phrase ``to another location or person.'' Although this
phrase is not in the statutory definition of money transmitting
service, it is implicit in the statutory definition's use of the word
``transmitting.'' Transactions involving the acceptance of currency
from one person at one location and the return of that currency to that
same person at the same location would not be considered a money
transmission service. The addition of the phrase ``to another location
or person,'' will explicitly convey our interpretation.
The phrase ``any means'' is defined in the old rule to include
transmission ``through a financial agency or institution; a Federal
Reserve Bank or other facility of one or more Federal Reserve Banks,
the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, or both; or an
electronic funds transfer network.'' We moved the phrase ``any means''
to a different part of the definition only to increase reader
comprehension, and the change in placement of the phrase has no
substantive effect on the meaning of the definition.
The current regulations also include in the definition, ``Any other
person engaged as a business in the transfer of funds.'' \69\ This
phrase has led to confusion making it difficult for a person to assure
themselves that they do not fall under the definition. Therefore, we
have removed the phrase from the proposed definition to minimize
confusion. As noted above, our intention is that hawalas be covered by
other language in this definition. The deletion of this language is not
intended in any way to lessen the applicability of our definition of
``money transmitter'' to hawalas.
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\69\ 31 CFR 103.11(uu)(i)(b).
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As mentioned above, the current regulation provides for facts and
circumstances, or limitations regarding the definition of a money
transmitter, and states ``whether a person `engages as a business' in
the activities described in paragraph (uu)(5)(i) of this section is a
matter of facts and circumstances. Generally, the acceptance and
transmission of funds as an integral part of the execution and
settlement of a transaction other than the funds transmission itself
(for example, in connection with a bona fide sale of securities or
other property), will not cause a person to be a money transmitter
within the meaning of paragraph (uu)(5)(i) of this section.'' \70\
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\70\ 31 CFR 103.11(uu)(5)(ii).
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The proposed regulation also has a facts and circumstances
limitation that incorporates existing interpretations of the current
limitation by adding explicit language reflecting policy developed
through administrative ruling letters
[[Page 22138]]
and guidance. The proposed limitation language reads, ``whether a
person is a money transmitter as described in this section is a matter
of facts and circumstances. The term `money transmitter' shall not
include a person that only * * *'' engages in the following activity:
``Provides the delivery, communication, or network access services
used by a money transmitter to support money transmission services. * *
*'' We find that institutions that are used by money transmitters
solely for the purpose of providing a medium of communication or
transportation of information between money services businesses and
their agents, financial institutions, or service providers should not
fall under the definition of money transmitter.
``Acts as a payment processor to facilitate the purchase or payment
of a bill for a good or service through a clearance and settlement
system by agreement with the creditor or seller * * *.'' Although
payment processors may provide a money transmission service, the
service is ancillary to their primary business of coordinating payments
either from a debtor to a creditor or, if operating at the point-of-
sale, from a purchaser to a merchant.\71\ A payment processor could not
provide the primary service of coordination without providing ancillary
money transmission services, but because the money transmission
services are ancillary, and because they are generally low risk, we
think it appropriate for entities engaged in this activity to be
excluded from the definition. Note, however, that this limitation only
applies to transmission services by payment processors on behalf of the
creditor or seller and not the debtor or buyer. We believe that a
contractual agreement for transmission services between the creditor or
seller and the money transmitter is a relatively controlled flow of
money that poses little money laundering risk, provided that the funds
are transmitted only to the creditor or seller with whom the payment
processor has contracted and not to another location or person.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\71\ FinCEN Ruling 2003-R008 (Definition of Money Transmitter)
(Nov. 19, 2003).
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``Operates a clearance and settlement system or otherwise acts as
an intermediary solely between BSA regulated institutions. This
includes but would not be limited to the Fedwire system, electronic
funds transfer networks, certain registered clearing agencies regulated
by the SEC, and derivatives clearing organizations, or other
clearinghouse arrangements established by a financial agency or
institution. * * *'' We view persons who solely provide a clearance and
settlement system or act as intermediaries between BSA regulated
institutions and do not provide other types of money transmission
services as mere instrumentalities that the financial institutions use
to process their transfers. Therefore, these instrumentalities should
not be included in the definition of money transmitter.
``Provides closed loop stored value.'' We also are proposing to
exclude a person who provides closed loop stored value from the
definition of money transmitter. Generally, a closed loop system refers
to stored value that is limited to a defined merchant or location or
set of locations.\72\
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\72\ See supra note 63.
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We do not want the language of the proposed money transmitter
definition to be so broad as to include a person that issues a closed
loop stored value card, such as most gift cards. For example, we do not
want a department store that sells gift cards that only may be used at
that department store, or a mall operator who sells gift cards that may
only be used within the confines of the mall operator's locations, to
be subject to the MSB rules as a money transmitter.
In addition to not being a money transmitter under this proposed
rule, FinCEN previously determined that a person solely issuing,
selling, or redeeming closed loop stored value is not an ``issuer,
seller or redeemer of stored value'' and is therefore not subject to
BSA regulation as an MSB under that MSB category either.\73\ The fact
of this exclusion, however, should not be read to imply that all
persons who provide open loop stored value are money transmitters. In
part, this is because a significant amount of the open loop stored
value issued within the U.S. is issued by or through a depository
institution, a category of financial institution that expressly is
excluded from the definition of MSB by statute and regulation. \74\
Further discussion of open loop stored value will be included in a
forthcoming rulemaking.
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\73\ See FinCEN Ruling 2003-R004 (Definition of Money
Transmitter/Stored Value (Gift Certificates/Gift Cards)) (Aug. 15,
2003) (FinCEN does not currently interpret the definition of stored
value to include closed system products such as a mall-wide gift
card program).
\74\ See 31 U.S.C. 5330(d)(1)(C), 31 CFR 103.11(uu).
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``Physically transports currency, other monetary instruments, other
commercial paper, or other value that substitutes for currency as a
person engaged in such business from one person to the same person at
another location or to an account belonging to the same person at a
financial institution, provided that the person engaged in physical
transportation has no more than a custodial interest in the currency,
other monetary instruments, other commercial papers, or other value at
any point during the transportation;''
This limitation encompasses past armored car rulings. We previously
ruled that although armored car services may fall within the definition
of a money transmitter, to the extent that they deliver currency on
behalf of BSA regulated institutions, they should not be treated as
money transmitters when they cannot be viewed as participating, or
having a stake in the financial transaction that they are conducting on
behalf of the BSA regulated institution.\75\ We additionally determined
that an armored car is not a money transmitter when it moves currency
on behalf of a private party to an account or another location of the
same party without taking a financial stake in the transaction.\76\
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\75\ FinCEN Ruling 2004-R003 (Definition of Money Services
Business) (Aug. 17, 2004). See also FinCEN 2003-R007 (Definition of
Money Transmitter) (Oct. 28, 2003).
\76\ Id. In such instance, the armored car is merely a conduit
or vehicle and has no control over the financial transaction.
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In this proposed exclusion, the person engaged in physical
transportation cannot have more than a custodial interest in what is
being moved at any point during the transportation.\77\ Thus, the
limitation would not apply to such a person if it deposited currency or
monetary instruments that it was transporting into its own operating
account at a bank, regardless of the identity of the ultimate recipient
of the funds represented by the currency or monetary instruments. The
limitation would also not apply to such a person if it actually
purchased a monetary instrument, and then transported the monetary
instrument. We solicit comment on whether our use of the phrase ``no
more than a custodial interest'' adequately encapsulates a meaningful
distinction between a person that merely transports items of monetary
value on behalf of another and a person that takes title or ownership.
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\77\ The ``custodial'' language is intended to replace the
language from past rulings ``stake in the transaction'' for purposes
of clarifying the armored car limitation.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
This proposed exclusion would apply to transport initiated by any
person, not only to transport initiated by a BSA-regulated institution.
Additionally, when transport is initiated by a bank, a broker-dealer or
other SEC-regulated
[[Page 22139]]
financial institution, or a futures commission merchant or other CFTC-
regulated institution, a transport business such as an armored car
would not be a money transmitter, regardless of whether the transport
is to another location or person. In such circumstances, when the
transport business does not take title or ownership or the items do not
in any manner convert, the transport business merely is acting as an
extension of the bank or the SEC- or CFTC-regulated financial
institution, all of which are exempt from the proposed definition of
money services business at paragraph (uu)(7). We solicit comment on the
use of ``custodial'' language to convey that title or ownership or
items do not convert during physical transport like armored car
services.
``Accepts and transmits funds only integral to the sale of goods or
the provision of services, other than money transmission services, by
the person who is accepting and transmitting the funds.''
Similar to circumstance (B), we view persons that sell goods or
provide services other than money transmission services, and only
transmit funds as an integral part of that sale of goods or provision
of services, not to be money transmitters. For example, brokering the
sale of securities, commodity contracts, or similar instruments is not
money transmission notwithstanding the fact that the person brokering
the sale may move funds back and forth between the buyer and seller to
effect the transaction. The person who is accepting and transmitting
the funds simply offers a service other than money transmission
services. Also, this limitation would include a debt management company
that, unlike in circumstance (B), contracted with a debtor as a medium
to provide payment to its creditors.\78\ This circumstance is similar
to circumstance (B), but uses broader language to encompass those
persons who operate under facts and circumstances similar to those
stated herein.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\78\ FinCEN Ruling 2004-R004 (Definition of Money Services
Business) (Nov. 24, 2004).
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Requests for Comments
Should intermediaries of money transmission services
acting between two BSA regulated entities be removed from the
definition of money transmitter?
Related Regulations--
G. Service of Legal Process
There currently is no provision within 31 CFR part 103 that
requires foreign-located MSBs to designate an agent to accept service
of legal process in the United States. In order to enhance the ability
of U.S. law enforcement and regulatory agencies to reach these MSB
registrants, we are proposing the following additional language to 31
CFR Sec. 103.41: ``Each foreign-located person engaged in activities
in the United States as a money services business shall designate the
name and address of a person who resides in the United States and is
authorized, and has agreed to be an agent, to accept service of legal
process with respect to compliance with this part, and shall identify
the address of the location within the United States for records
pertaining to (b)(1)(iii) of this section.''
IV. Request for Comments
FinCEN invites comments on all aspects of the proposal to revise
the MSB definitions and related regulations. If you are currently an
MSB, please indicate in your response which MSB service(s) you offer
and whether you offer the services in an agent capacity. We
specifically invite comment on the above-referenced Request for
Comments, as well as the following:
Funds--Is there a need to define the term ``funds'' for purposes of
the BSA? We use ``funds'' to refer to money held in bank accounts and
``value of funds'' to denote something different from money actually
held in a bank account, such as the value reflected on a stored value
card in a chip-based product.
MSB Regulations--
Aggregating MSB Services. Should transactions involving
multiple MSB services be aggregated for purposes of determining whether
definitional thresholds have been met?
Stored Value. FinCEN intends to issue a separate
rulemaking proposing a revised definition of stored value and revising
related regulations. However, we seek your input on stored value
generally, and specifically on the following:
[cir] Definition of stored value: We seek input on refining the
current definition of ``stored value'' in 31 CFR 103.11(v). In doing
so, we would like your comment on the appropriateness of a definition
that would be based upon the following principles:
Definition should be technologically neutral and
consistent with actual use of stored value within the economy.
Definition should be neutral in regards to the type of
entity that provides/issues the stored value.
For purposes of this request for comment, please provide your
comments and suggestions on how to better define the term ``stored
value'' given the following two existing legal definitions:
Current definition in 31 CFR 103.11 (vv). ``Funds or
monetary value represented in digital electronics format (whether or
not specially encrypted) and stored or capable of storage on electronic
media in such a way as to be retrievable and transferable
electronically.''
Uniform Money Services Act definition of stored value as
``monetary value that is evidenced by an electronic record'' where
``record'' is ``information that is inscribed on a tangible medium or
that is stored in an electronic or other medium and is retrievable in
perceivable form'' and ``monetary value'' is ``a medium of exchange,
whether or not redeemable in money'' and ``money'' is ``a medium of
exchange that is authorized or adopted by the United States or a
foreign government. The term includes a monetary unit of account
established by an intergovernmental organization or by agreement
between two or more governments.''
Alternatively, we seek comment on this potential
definition: ``electronic monetary value that is generally accepted as a
medium of exchange, whether or not redeemable for currency or funds.''
[cir] Treatment of stored value as money transmission. Some states
already have started to include stored value within their money
transmission laws. We have recognized, moreover, that some stored value
is a subset of our definition of money transmitter.\79\ For purposes of
this request for comment, we would request input on the following:
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\79\ See 1997 Proposed Rule, 62 FR at 27893. (The Department of
the Treasury stated that businesses that operate systems that permit
the transmission of stored value are within the statutory definition
of money transmitting services and specifically within the
regulatory definition of money transmitter.) See also, 1999
Rulemaking, 64 FR at 45446. (FinCEN determined not to exclude
``stored value'' from the definition of ``money transmitter'' but
rather treated it as a subclass so that it could be excluded from
the operation of certain substantive rules, in particular MSB
registration and suspicious activity reporting requirements).
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How would treating all forms of stored value as a form of
money transmission impact the needs of industry, law enforcement, or
regulators?
Should open loop stored value be regulated differently
from closed loop? If so, how?
Should only certain uses or types of value transfers
involving stored value be considered money transmission? If so, please
describe or explain.
If stored value were excluded completely from being
considered a
[[Page 22140]]
form of money transmission, how would that affect the industry, law
enforcement, or regulators?
[cir] Treatment of stored value players and products
Should we regulate only issuers of stored value or also
sellers and redeemers as well? Why? How should we define them? Should
there be a threshold for determining whether an entity is an issuer,
seller, or redeemer of stored value? What should the threshold be?
Should the definitional threshold be consistent with the other
categories of MSBs that are subject to thresholds?
Should regulatory requirements vary depending on whether
the stored value product is in bearer form or not? Should regulatory
requirements vary depending on whether the stored value product is
anonymous versus tied to an identifiable account holder?
Should memory chip products be regulated differently from
magnetic stripe products?
Are the distinctions between open and closed loop stored
value systems still meaningful? FinCEN recognizes that modern closed
loop stored value systems operate internationally. As a result, these
international closed-loop systems may pose additional money laundering
risks when compared with the shopping mall-wide stored value systems
that we have previously determined are not stored value for purposes of
the BSA rules.
What other issues or questions should be considered in
developing the appropriate regulatory framework for stored value in
light of the actual risks of money laundering and terrorist financing
associated with these systems?
Foreign-located MSBs
[cir] Should foreign MSB principals engaged in MSB activities with
U.S. persons or residents through U.S. agents or through a U.S. bank
account, be subject to the BSA rules?
[cir] Would adding check-cashers and issuers, sellers or redeemers
of money orders and/or traveler's checks to 31 CFR 103.175(h), making
them each foreign financial institutions that are subject to special
due diligence by banks, broker-dealers, and other financial
institutions that are obligated to comply with our rule implementing
the correspondent account provisions of the USA PATRIOT Act, be a
sufficient alternative? What would the consequences be?
[cir] Would U.S.-based MSBs move offshore if foreign MSBs are
excluded?
[cir] How should domestic agents of foreign-located principals be
treated if foreign-located principals are excluded from registration?
Thresholds
[cir] For ease of compliance, should the regulatory threshold
remain uniform for the categories of MSBs that have a threshold or
should the threshold differ among the types of businesses to
distinguish between the risks of certain types of activities? How would
this affect the operations of businesses providing multiple MSB
services?
V. Proposed Location in Chapter X
As per the Federal Register Notice of November 7, 2008, FinCEN is
separately proposing to remove Part 103 of Chapter I of Title 31, Code
of Federal Regulations, and add Chapter 1000 to 1099 (Chapter X). As
such and if finalized, the proposed changes herein would be reorganized
according to the changes proposed in the Notice of Proposed Rulemaking
(NPRM) for Chapter X. The planned reorganization will have no
substantive affect on the proposed regulatory changes herein. The
proposed regulatory changes of this specific NPRM would be renumbered
according to the proposed Chapter X as follows:
(a) 103.11(h) would be moved to 1010.100(m).
(b) 103.11(uu) and its parts would be moved to 1010.100(gg)
(c) 103.41(a)(2) would be moved to 1022.380(a)(2). Current sections
103.41(a)(2) and (a)(3), proposed to be redesignated, would be
renumbered therein as 1022.380(a)(3) and (a)(4) respectively.
(d) 103.175(h)(3) would be moved to 1010.605(f)(3).
VI. Regulatory Flexibility Act
Pursuant to the Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA) (5 U.S.C. 601 et
seq.), FinCEN certifies that these proposed regulation revisions will
not have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small
entities. This rulemaking imposes no new recordkeeping or reporting
requirements on the MSB. In large part, the proposed rule updates the
MSB definitions to integrate past guidance and rulings into the
regulatory text. Incorporating existing interpretations into the
regulatory text would have no impact on small entities that have been
aware of these interpretations for years. In addition, the proposal
combines all of stored value into one category, without substantively
changing the existing definition, so that issuers of stored value and
sellers or redeemers of stored value are in the same category. This
structural proposal would not impact small entities. Accordingly, a
regulatory flexibility analysis is not required.
VII. Paperwork Reduction Act Notices
The reduction of the recordkeeping requirement contained in this
proposed rule is being submitted to the Office of Management and Budget
for review in accordance with the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44
U.S.C. 3507(d)). Since we are making requirements clearer for foreign
entities, there is a potential that certain foreign-located MSBs
conducting business in the United States may see an increase in the
collection and reporting of information. However, any such potential
may likely be offset by the corresponding exceptions we have made
explicit regarding the type of business activity that would make a
business an MSB. Comments on the issue of possible foreign reporting
and other questions should be sent to the Desk Officer for the
Department of Treasury, Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs,
Office of Management and Budget, Paperwork Reduction Project (1506),
Washington, DC 20503 with a copy to the Financial Crimes Enforcement
Network by mail or comments may also be submitted by e-mail to oira_
submission@omb.eop.gov with a copy to regcomments@fincen.gov. Please
submit comments by one method only. Comments are welcome and must be
received by September 9, 2009.
This proposed rulemaking does not impose any new reporting or
recordkeeping requirements. Instead, it seeks to clarify the scope of
the existing MSB definitions and related rules. To the extent that we
have eliminated any uncertainty or ambiguities with this proposal and
to the extent that we narrow the scope of businesses subject to
reporting or recordkeeping requirements, we will have reduced
regulatory obligations.\80\
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\80\ This amendment to 31 CFR 103.11 and 103.41 makes explicit
that certain foreign MSBs that conduct operations in the U.S. must
register with FinCEN as an MSB and will be subject to certain BSA
recordkeeping and reporting requirements.
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Amendment to the Bank Secrecy Act Regulations--Definitions and Other
Regulations Relating to Money Services Businesses
In accordance with requirements of the Paperwork Reduction Act of
1995, 44 U.S.C. Sec. 3506(c)(2)(A), and its implementing regulations,
5 CFR 1320, the following information concerning the collection of
information of the Amendment to the Bank Secrecy Act Regulations--
Definitions and Other Regulations Relating to Money Services Businesses
is presented to assist those persons wishing to comment on the
information collection.
[[Page 22141]]
FinCEN anticipates that this proposed rule, if enacted as proposed,
would result in no additional forms to be filed annually.\81\ This is
an estimate, based on a projection of the size and volume of the
industry.
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\81\ Id.
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Description of Affected Financial Institutions: Money Services
Businesses as defined in 31 CFR 103.11(uu).
Estimate Number of Affected Financial Institutions: 42,000.
Estimate Average Annual Burden Hours per Affected Financial
Institution: The estimated average decrease in burden associated with
the recordkeeping requirements in this proposed rule is one hour per
affected financial institution.
Estimated Total Annual Burden: minus 42,000 hours. FinCEN
specifically invites comment on the accuracy of FinCEN's estimate of
the reduction in burden on respondents and any other aspects of our PRA
estimates.
Comments are specifically requested concerning:
Whether the proposed collection of information is necessary for the
proper performance of the functions of FinCEN, including whether the
information will have practical utility;
The accuracy of the estimated burden associated with the proposed
collection of information;
How the quality, utility, and clarity of the information to be
collected may be enhanced; and
How the burden of complying with the proposed collection of
information may be minimized, including through the application of
automated collection techniques or other forms of information
technology.
VIII. Executive Order 12866
It has been determined that this proposed rule is not a significant
regulatory action for purposes of Executive Order 12866.
IX. Unfunded Mandates Act of 1995 Statement
Section 202 of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (``Unfunded
Mandates Act''), Public Law 104-4 (March 22, 1995), requires that an
agency prepare a budgetary impact statement before promulgating a rule
that may result in expenditure by state, local, and tribal governments,
in the aggregate, or by the private sector, of $100 million or more in
any one year. If a budgetary impact statement is required, section 202
of the Unfunded Mandates Act also requires an agency to identify and
consider a reasonable number of regulatory alternatives before
promulgating a rule. FinCEN has determined that it is not required to
prepare a written statement under section 202 and has concluded that on
balance the proposals in the Notice of Proposed Rulemaking provide the
most cost-effective and least burdensome alternative to achieve the
objectives of the rule.
List of Subjects in 31 CFR Part 103
Authority delegations (government agencies), Banks and banking,
Currency, Investigations, Law enforcement, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
Proposed Amendments to the Regulations
Accordingly, 31 CFR part 103 is proposed to be amended as follows:
PART 103--FINANCIAL RECORDKEEPING AND REPORTING OF CURRENCY AND
FINANCIAL TRANSACTIONS
1. The authority citation for part 10 is revised to read as
follows:
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1829b and 1951-1959; 31 U.S.C. 5311-5314,
5316-5332; title III, secs. 311, 312, 313, 314, 319, 326, 352,
Public Law 107-56, 115 Stat. 307.
2. Section 103.11 is amended as follows:
a. Adding paragraph (i);
b. Revising paragraph (uu) introductory text;
c. Revising paragraph (uu)(1);
d. Revising paragraph (uu)(2);
e. Revising paragraph (uu)(3);
f. Revising paragraph (uu)(4);
g. Revising paragraph (uu)(5);
h. Adding paragraph (uu)(7).
Sec. 103.11 Meaning of terms.
* * * * *
(i) Closed loop stored value. Stored value that is limited to a
defined merchant or location (or set of locations), such as a specific
retailer or retail chain, a college campus, or a subway system.
* * * * *
(uu) Money services business. The term ``money services business''
shall include a person wherever located engaged in activities that take
place wholly or in substantial part within the United States, in one or
more of the capacities listed in paragraphs (uu)(1) through (uu)(6) of
this section, whether or not on a regular basis or as an organized
business concern. This includes but is not limited to maintenance of
any agent, agency, branch, or office within the United States.
(1) Dealer in foreign exchange. A person who accepts the currency,
or other monetary instruments, funds, or other instruments denominated
in the currency, of one or more countries in exchange for the currency,
or other monetary instruments, funds, or other instruments denominated
in the currency, of one or more other countries in an amount greater
than $1,000 for any other person on any day in one or more
transactions, whether or not for same-day delivery.
(2) Check casher--(i) In general. A person that accepts checks (as
defined in the Uniform Commercial Code [U.C.C. Article 3--Negotiable
Instruments Sec. 3-104]), or monetary instruments (as defined at Sec.
103.11(u)(1)(ii), (iii), (iv), and (v)) in return for currency or a
combination of currency and other monetary instruments or other
instruments, in an amount greater than $1,000.
(ii) Facts and circumstances; Limitations. Whether a person is a
check casher as described in this section is a matter of facts and
circumstances. The term ``check casher'' shall not include:
(A) A person that sells closed loop stored value purchased with a
check, monetary instrument or other instruments as referenced above in
this definition;
(B) A person that solely accepts monetary instruments as payment
for goods or services other than check cashing services;
(C) A person that engages in check cashing for the verified maker
of the check who is a customer otherwise buying goods and services;
(D) A person that redeems its own checks; or
(E) A person that only holds a customer's check as collateral for
repayment by the customer of a loan.
(3) Issuers and sellers of traveler's checks or money orders. A
person that:
(i) Issues traveler's checks or money orders that are sold in an
amount greater than $1,000 for any person on any day in one or more
transactions; or
(ii) Sells traveler's checks or money orders in an amount greater
than $1,000 for any person on any day in one or more transactions.
(4) Issuer, seller, or redeemer of stored value. A person that:
(i) Issues stored value (other than a person that does not issue
such stored value in an amount greater than $1,000 to any person on any
day in one or more transactions); or
(ii) Sells or redeems stored value (other than a person that does
not sell or redeem such stored value for an amount greater than $1,000
from any person on any day in one or more transactions).
[[Page 22142]]
(5) Money transmitter--(i) In general. A person that provides money
transmission services. The term ``money transmission services'' means
the acceptance of currency, funds, or other value that substitutes for
currency from one person AND the transmission of such currency, funds,
or the value to another location or person by any means. ``Any means''
includes through a financial agency or institution; a Federal Reserve
Bank or other facility of one or more Federal Reserve Banks, the Board
of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, or both; or an electronic
funds transfer network.
(ii) Facts and circumstances; Limitations. Whether a person is a
money transmitter as described in this section is a matter of facts and
circumstances. The term ``money transmitter'' shall not include a
person that only:
(A) Provides the delivery, communication, or network access
services used by a money transmitter to support money transmission
services;
(B) Acts as a payment processor to facilitate the purchase or
payment of a bill for a good or service through a clearance and
settlement system by agreement with the creditor or seller;
(C) Operates a clearance and settlement system or otherwise acts as
an intermediary solely between BSA regulated institutions. This
includes but would not be limited to the Fedwire system, electronic
funds transfer networks, certain registered clearing agencies regulated
by the SEC, and derivatives clearing organizations, or other
clearinghouse arrangements established by a financial agency or
institution;
(D) Provides closed loop stored value;
(E) Physically transports currency, other monetary instruments,
other commercial paper, or other value that substitutes for currency as
a person engaged in such business from one person to the same person at
another location or to an account belonging to the same person at a
financial institution, provided that the person engaged in physical
transportation has no more than a custodial interest in the currency,
other monetary instruments, other commercial papers, or other value at
any point during the transportation; or
(F) Accepts and transmits funds only integral to the sale of goods
or the provision of services, other than money transmission services,
by the person who is accepting and transmitting the funds.
* * * * *
(7) Limitation. For the purposes of this section, the term ``money
services business'' shall not include:
(i) A bank;
(ii) A person registered with, and functionally regulated or
examined by, the Securities and Exchange Commission or the Commodity
Futures Trading Commission.
* * * * *
3. Section 103.41 is amended by redesignating paragraphs (a)(2) and
(a)(3) as paragraphs (a)(3) and (a)(4) respectively, and adding new
paragraph (a)(2) to read as follows:
Sec. 103.41 Registration of money services businesses.
(a) * * *
(2) Foreign-located money services business. Each foreign-located
person engaged in activities in the United States as a money services
business shall designate the name and address of a person who resides
in the United States and is authorized, and has agreed to be an agent
to accept service of legal process with respect to compliance with this
part and shall identify the address of the location within the United
States for records pertaining to paragraph (b)(1)(iii) of this section.
* * * * *
Dated: May 5, 2009.
James H. Freis, Jr.,
Director, Financial Crimes Enforcement Network.
[FR Doc. E9-10864 Filed 5-11-09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4810-02-P