In an increasingly interconnected world, geopolitical shifts play a crucial role in shaping financial regulations. As global power dynamics evolve—whether due to trade wars, economic sanctions, conflicts, or shifting alliances—governments and regulatory bodies must adapt to safeguard financial stability.
In the opinion of Opoint chief sales officer Toby Cook, the rapid evolution of international relationships, driven by geopolitical tensions, is reshaping the financial regulatory landscape. As global dynamics intensify, regulatory bodies are facing a dual imperative – to strengthen mechanisms while grappling with the challenges of a fragmented global regulatory environment.
He said, “Rising geopolitical risks compel regulators to strengthen financial safeguards. Expect tighter controls, enhanced due diligence measures, and more rigorous reporting requirements. This strategy—similar to reinforcing a dam against surging waters—aims to prevent money laundering, sanctions evasion, and the financing of illicit activities. Such measures create a robust safety net, ensuring that financial systems can withstand external shocks.”
Equally, Cook details, the volatile global political climate may encourage regulatory divergence. “In an effort to retain competitiveness and address local economic risks, different regions might adopt bespoke regulatory frameworks. This fragmentation can complicate cross-border compliance for multinational institutions as they navigate a constantly shifting landscape of standards and expectations,” he said.
In such a complex and multifaceted environment, advanced RegTech solutions are becoming invaluable. Global adverse media screening, explains the Opoint CSO, stand out as a particularly strategic tool.
He explained, “It acts as an early warning system by continuously scanning international news, social media, and other media channels for emerging risks. This proactive monitoring can alert financial institutions to reputational threats and regulatory changes before they escalate.
“By integrating adverse media screening into compliance processes, organisations can enhance their due diligence, identify potential red flags associated with clients or regions, and adapt their risk management strategies in real time. This capability not only helps mitigate emerging risks but also supports more informed strategic decision-making,” said Cook.
Cook concluded by explaining that geopolitical tensions are prompting both tighter regulatory controls and a potential splintering of international standards.
He stated, “In response, financial institutions and RegTech providers—like Opoint—must adopt advanced monitoring solutions to navigate this intricate landscape. Global adverse media screening offers a proactive means to detect early signs of regulatory and reputational risks, ensuring that organisations remain agile and resilient amidst global uncertainty. This balanced approach not only safeguards financial systems but also empowers institutions to stay ahead of an increasingly volatile global environment.”
A major concern
Global news often has substantial repercussions on the financial system, with political movements, trade controls or disputes and sanction policies having far-reaching effects of direct and/or associated parties.
According to RelyComply, the global system is exorbitantly connected, where macroeconomic shifts in exchange rates, investment opportunities, and market sentiment have a domino effect on many sectors, nations, and individuals’ lives.
The firm remarked, “It’s no wonder, therefore, that financial institutions (acting on behalf of sensitive consumer data and directly influenced by the health of global relations) have cited geopolitical risk as one of the largest concerns, according to a Bank of England survey.
“In this day and age, traditional risks to the security of the financial infrastructure are morphing into more challenging areas, such as cyber-attacks that can be politically or fiscally motivated. Central banks are hot targets for disrupting financial flows worldwide, and such attacks have doubled since the Covid-19 pandemic.”
The South African RegTech firm remarked that if financial regulation cannot adapt to hold institutions to account for their data security or AML/KYC measures, this tech-driven geopolitical landscape can snowball further.
RelyComply said, “Alternative finance solutions built around decentralised ledgers are boosting prominence, and high-tech industries dominate the business landscape, providing grounds primed for infiltration from savvy criminals. Whole nations can struggle to keep up due to disparate regional policies around digital assets, open banking, or data privacy. Add politically driven financial decisions (the recent reneging of the US’ Corporate Transparency Act), which can cause further discrepancies in progress around data governance and transparency, which are key to compliance.”
Regulators such as FATF, RelyComply explained, have responded by prioritising the need for proactive and prepared risk management, contingent on future threats rather than reacting before it’s too late.
“This means an even greater uptake for automated compliance technology to adapt to internal risk controls, but that’s just one part. Cooperation is key. Platform providers, financial businesses, regulators and government bodies need to share ideas on robust compliance practices, particularly for those that work cross-border where regulations differ,” said the firm.
It continued, “Continuous risk management must be the standard to stay abreast of sanctions, trade disputes or financially-driven crime resulting from geopolitical events, and the ability to do so requires a cultural rethink sector-wide around implementing advanced AML solutions able to adapt to legislation and its external factors flexibly.
A new wave of regulations
According to Annalisa Camarillo, chief communications officer and head of marketing at Quantifind, geopolitical uncertainty is fueling a wave of new financial regulations, particularly in sanctions enforcement, supply chain transparency and cross-border payments.
In the area of sanctions expansion, Camarillo emphasised that ongoing geopolitical tensions have led to increasing complex and dynamic sanctions regimes. “Financial institutions are under pressure to screen transactions in real-time and detect hidden risks within supply chains,” she said.
In addition, AML and CTF regulations have strengthened, with regulators tightening scrutiny around high-risk jurisdictions and PEPs, making entity resolution and network analysis critical.
Digital asset regulation is also key. “With crypto and decentralized finance (DeFi) becoming more globally integrated, regulators are accelerating oversight of cross-border crypto transactions and stablecoins,” said Camarillo.
Camarillo concluded, “To navigate these challenges, financial institutions need AI-powered risk intelligence solutions that can adapt in real-time to evolving regulations, detect geopolitical risks in transaction data, and ensure compliance across multiple jurisdictions. The firms that embrace automation and scalable risk intelligence will be best positioned to manage uncertainty and regulatory volatility.
Greater agility
Meanwhile, Michael Thirer, CLO at Muinmos, remarked that there was ‘no doubt’ that the pace of changes and U-turns in financial regulations has picked up in recent years – raising the UK and the US as good examples of that, with their clear sentiment of simplification of regulation.
He said, “At Muinmos, we believe this makes the most important quality right now is agility. This is the age of Agile Regulation in more than one sense, and in order to be able to operate in such an age, one needs to be able to operate quickly. For example, at Muinmos we pride ourselves in giving our clients instant readiness to acquire new markets quickly, open new product lines, change processes with a click of a button etc. – this is a must these days when regulatory changes are frequent. It makes our clients able to navigate these changes much quicker and beat competition to key markets.”
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