Having supported the inception and rollout of ISO 20022, we predict that by end 2023 over 90 per cent of the world’s high value financial transactions will use the new standard. 
However, 
while firms focus on technical readiness, not enough consideration has 
been given to the downstream impact on financial crime (FC) controls.  
Ready your organisation and your systems 
Many 
firms have prioritised core systems updates to support ISO data 
processing but robust readiness extends beyond system changes. Firms 
need to ensure full organisational readiness.
All 
impacted staff across first and second lines need to understand the 
impact of ISO 20022 for their role. By providing targeted training for 
affected personnel, you can educate staff on how ISO 20022 impacts their
 responsibilities as risk owners and stewards. Operating procedures also
 need to be updated to reflect the new standard. Without these critical 
updates, significant knowledge will be lost when the current message 
types are turned off in 2025.
Improve risk mitigation across all financial crime controls
Having 
guided several international direct participant banks to develop CHAPS  
readiness plans, we found that payments data is not always effectively 
used within FC screening and monitoring. 
Yes, 
screening tools will be updated to capture and process ISO payment 
files, but FC controls relating to money laundering, sanctions evasion 
and fraud must be updated to use additional payment information for 
improved risk mitigation. 
Three key areas firms should be exploring:
- Sanctions screening:
 ISO makes it significantly more effective to screen sanctioned 
entities, including PEPs, monitoring against fields that previously 
contained shortened and often inaccurate data. Integrating the new 
payments format into screening controls will improve true positive rates
 and reduce operational impact. This will also produce a smoother 
end-customer experience and faster payments processing.
- Transaction Monitoring:
 The identification of money laundering typologies beyond typical risk 
factors – such as high-risk geographies and rapid movement of funds – 
often requires experienced investigative resource to provide 
case-by-case insights. Firms should familiarise themselves with ISO 
20022’s new format to capitalise on additional remittance data, 
including structured information on debtors and creditors. Accessing 
more complete payment fields will improve the identification of 
typologies – specific combinations of risk characteristics within 
transactions that pertain to criminal activity. Teams will also improve 
their understanding of end-to-end payment flows and counterparty 
verification, resulting in more robust risk coverage
- Fraud monitoring:
 Higher-quality data will improve the identification of fraudulent 
payments and enable more efficient fund recovery. This will also enable 
the shift towards real-time monitoring and
 tackling of more complex fraud risk. To benefit from the additional 
data, firms should examine existing fraud monitoring controls, identify 
pain points, and overlay with higher quality data. 
The devil is in the data 
Additional
 data within payment messages could create further benefits for firms, 
leading to significant operational efficiencies and more effective 
cross-checking against customer risk profiles. This will ultimately feed
 into perpetual KYC models and enrich standard and periodic CDD 
processes. 
More 
enriched and accurate payment information allows firms to understand 
customer spending patterns and trends, providing intuitive analysis. 
Through AI adoption and use of Natural Language Processing (NLP), 
‘predicting’ customers’ financial requirements will become a closer 
reality. 
ISO data 
is richer and more accurate but that does not automatically translate 
into more effective financial crime risk management. Firms must 
challenge whether they are effectively checking customers’ risk 
profiles, improving KYC models, and capitalising on the additional 
insights which ISO brings. An ISO 20022 health check can help FC teams 
explore the advantages of the new standard. The time to explore these 
opportunities is now.