• About Us
  • The Team
  • Newsletter
  • Advertise with Us
GGRAsia
  • Home
  • Macau
  • Philippines
  • Singapore
  • Japan
  • Rest of Asia
  • World
  • Industry Talk
  • Trends & Tech
  • CSR
Reading: Singapore reviews its casino law regarding FATF compliance
Ad image
  • About Us
  • The Team
  • Newsletter
  • Advertise with Us
GGRAsia
  • Home
  • Macau
  • Philippines
  • Singapore
  • Japan
  • Rest of Asia
  • World
  • Industry Talk
  • Trends & Tech
  • CSR
Reading: Singapore reviews its casino law regarding FATF compliance
Ad image
Search
  • Home
  • Macau
  • Philippines
  • Singapore
  • Japan
  • Rest of Asia
  • World
  • Industry Talk
  • Trends & Tech
  • CSR
GGRAsia > Newsletter > Newsletter 5 > Singapore reviews its casino law regarding FATF compliance
Latest NewsNewsletterNewsletter 5SingaporeTop of the deck

Singapore reviews its casino law regarding FATF compliance

Newsdesk Published June 8, 2020
Share
3 Min Read

Singapore’s government and its casino regulator are reviewing provisions in the country’s Casino Control Act in order to ensure they “fully” comply with reporting standards recommended for such business by the Paris-based Financial Action Task Force (FATF), it has been confirmed to GGRAsia.

“The Ministry of Home Affairs and CRA [Casino Regulatory Authority] are reviewing the legislative thresholds in the Casino Control Act with a view to lowering these thresholds further to fully comply with the FATF standards,” the CRA said in a statement emailed to GGRAsia.

The “thresholds” referred to were the “Casino Control Act’s customer due diligence thresholds of SGD10,000 [US$7,177] for cash transactions and SGD5,000 for deposit transactions,” which “are higher than the FATF standards of US$/EUR3,000 (around SGD4,500),” added the CRA in its email. The story had been reported first by Bloomberg.

In a November mutual evaluation report of Singapore’s anti-money laundering efforts and countermeasures against terrorist financing, the FATF had said the city-state was only “partially compliant” with its standards, based on “deficiencies with regard to the inadequate customer due diligence requirements applicable to casinos, real estate agents, precious stones and metals dealers and accountants.”

The FATF did not refer to any particular Singapore casino. The local market is a duopoly divided between Marina Bay Sands, operated by a unit of United States-based Las Vegas Sands Corp; and Resorts World Sentosa, run by Genting Singapore Ltd.

The CRA stated in its response to GGRAsia: “As noted in the 2019 report, Singapore has made substantive progress in strengthening measures to tackle money laundering/terrorism financing,” and had “addressed most of the issues” raised in an earlier FATF report issued in 2016.

The regulator said it had “worked with Singapore’s casino operators to implement a lower threshold of SGD5,000 for cash transactions,” and that such steps were “already in place”.

The CRA further noted to GGRAsia that its prevention of money laundering and terrorism financing measures were “reviewed by CRA on a continuing basis”. It added: “Where necessary, CRA strengthens and augments them accordingly.”

The FATF was set up in 1989 as an initiative of the G7 group of the world’s richest countries to develop policies to combat money laundering.

Last week the CRA told GGRAsia it was aware – prior to its publication – of a Bloomberg report that said Marina Bay Sands was being investigated by the United States Department of Justice over compliance procedures in relation to that venue’s anti-money laundering controls. Las Vegas Sands told GGRAsia it had no comment on that report.

(Updated June 9, 9.47am)

Share This Article
Facebook Twitter Whatsapp Whatsapp LinkedIn Email Copy Link Print

Latest News

S.Korea, China to boost mutual air-traffic rights in first easing for seven years: reports
June 4, 2026
Osaka city to start soon RFP for Yumeshima expansion supporting MGM Osaka
June 4, 2026
Gaming veteran Patrick Ramsey joins board of IGT parent
June 4, 2026

Most Popular

HeadlinesLatest NewsNewsletterNewsletter 1World

Wynn Resorts’ largest shareholder Tilman Fertitta to acquire U.S. casino operator Caesars Entertainment

May 29, 2026
HeadlinesLatest NewsMacauNewsletterNewsletter 1

Sands China hires ex-MGM China exec Hubert Wang as COO

May 29, 2026
HeadlinesJapanLatest NewsMacauNewsletterNewsletter 2

Potential MGM Resorts buyout could trigger review of Macau, Japan assets: analysts

June 3, 2026
HeadlinesLatest NewsMacauNewsletterNewsletter 3

Challenging for Macau to get significant per-capita increase in non-gaming spending: CreditSights

May 29, 2026

Code of Ethics

Privacy Policy

Useful Links

Contact Us

Follow US
Copyright 2026 TEAM Publishing and Consultancy Ltd / All rights reserved
Sign up to our FREE Newsletter

Subscribe now and never miss our latest news!

Zero spam, unsubscribe at any time.