A review by the Swiss Financial Market Supervisory Authority (FINMA) has found that despite improvements, Swiss financial institutions still have significant weaknesses in their risk analysis for money laundering, especially concerning politically exposed persons and crypto services.

"Problematic business relationships or increased money laundering risks could be overlooked more easily."
Switzerland’s reputation as a global fortress for financial integrity faces a critical test as the national regulator uncovers systemic gaps in the country’s anti-money laundering (AML) defenses. In a sweeping re-examination of more than 30 major banks, the Swiss Financial Market Supervisory Authority (FINMA) warns that while progress has been made, the industry’s risk analysis remains dangerously fragmented. This is not a mere administrative hiccup; it is a fundamental crack in the wall of Swiss financial security. The regulator’s findings reveal that institutions are frequently failing to record risks in sufficient detail, allowing potentially illicit transactions to slip through the cracks of outdated monitoring systems. The urgency is palpable: FINMA is now demanding immediate corrective action to prevent the Swiss banking sector from becoming a playground for international financial criminals. The message is clear—complacency is the greatest enemy of the Swiss franc.
A staggering number of financial institutions are still struggling to manage Politically Exposed Persons (PEPs) with the required level of rigor. FINMA’s investigation highlights an alarming trend: banks are authorizing exceptions to internal requirements far too generously. By under-categorizing the risks associated with foreign despots and high-ranking officials, Swiss banks risk repeating the scandals of the past where millions in stolen assets were hidden within the Alpine nation. The regulator found that warning indicators were often defined so poorly that problematic business relationships were practically invisible to internal compliance teams. This 'generosity' in risk assessment creates a backdoor for corruption. While the industry claims to have modernized, the data suggests that when faced with complex company structures, many banks simply look the other way, failing to pierce the veil of shell companies that obscure the true beneficial owners of the wealth.
The digital revolution is moving faster than the compliance departments tasked with policing it. FINMA has specifically called out crypto services as a primary area of weakness, noting that risk analyses in this sector are often superficial and fail to account for the unique anonymity and speed of blockchain transactions. As Switzerland positions itself as 'Crypto Valley,' the lack of robust risk frameworks within traditional banks offering these services is a ticking time bomb. The regulator’s report indicates that the intersection of complex corporate structures and digital assets creates a 'perfect storm' for money laundering. In many cases, banks are entering the crypto space without the sophisticated tools necessary to track the provenance of funds. This gap between innovation and regulation is where the most significant threats currently reside. FINMA’s directive is explicit: institutions must evolve their risk analysis to match the complexity of the 21st-century financial landscape or face severe regulatory consequences.
The days of 'light-touch' regulation are over. FINMA is now issuing a new set of stringent instructions and expectations for money laundering risk analysis, which it describes as the 'most important instrument' for preventing the financing of terrorism and illicit activity. This move signals a shift toward a more aggressive supervisory posture. Banks are no longer just expected to have a policy; they must prove that their policy is effective in real-time. The implications for the Swiss financial center are profound. Failure to comply will not just result in fines, but could lead to restricted licenses and a devastating blow to institutional reputations. As global pressure on tax havens and financial secrecy intensifies, Switzerland is choosing to lead through transparency and rigorous oversight. The message to the world is clear: Switzerland is cleaning house, and those who cannot meet the new standard of vigilance will be left behind in the old world of banking.