Compliance
Adverse Media Screening Is High-Stakes Task For Banks, Other Financial Firms – Study

Checking customers and counterparties against news and media sources to identify claims of fraud, corruption, financial crime and other risk is an inevitable and important task for the private banking and wealth sector. A new survey delves into the details, including the impact of how AI and other tech affect the issues.
The old saying that there’s no such thing as bad publicity
doesn’t go down well with private banks and wealth managers.
Tracking media reports about people and institutions is essential
in firms’ AML and KYC processes, where penalties for failings can
run to billions of dollars.
Evidence from a new survey – The State of Adverse
Media Screening – suggests that adverse media coverage is a
factor that financial firms pay significant attention
to.
According to a 27-page report released in early June from
Ripjar, 93 per cent of
financial services leaders rate adverse media screening as
critical or very important in their risk frameworks; 90 per cent
intend to raise spending on this area in the next 12 months.
Ripjar is an AI-native provider of smarter screening
solutions. It polled 400 senior financial services
decision-makers across the UK, the US, France and Germany.
Adverse media screening is defined as the process of checking
customers and counterparties against global news and media
sources to identify allegations of financial crime, fraud,
corruption or other risk.
Ripjar – which has commented
on issues such as privacy for WealthBriefing – said its
research showed that 77 per cent of respondents already conduct
adverse media screening. Separately, 82 per cent carry out
politically exposed person (PEP) screening and 79 per cent screen
for sanctions.
“Adverse media screening has rapidly become one of the
highest-stakes disciplines in financial crime compliance. 93 per
cent of financial services leaders now rate it as critical
or very important to their risk frameworks, and 90 per cent plan
to increase investment over the next 12 months,” Matt Mills
(pictured below), Ripjar CEO, said in the report.
Matt Mills
“The cost of standing still is not theoretical. Financial
institutions have paid more than $69 billion in AML enforcement
actions globally since the 2007 financial crisis. In 2024 alone,
penalties against banks worldwide jumped 522 per cent
year-on-year to $3.65 billion.
“The pattern across the largest recent cases is the same: adverse
signals existed, in the open, for years before enforcement
landed. What was missing was not the data but the ability to
surface it continuously and act on it in time,” he said.
Information service providers provide data, some provided from
media sources, of use to bankers and wealth advisors screening
for potential money laundering and related risks. For example,
this news service has spoken
to Dow Jones and Moody’s
Analytics. Other firms operating in this area include
smartKYC, S&P
Global Market Intelligence, Experian and FactSet.
There can be frictions: Demands for accessible data which can be fed into these systems clashes with privacy concerns, including the extent to which beneficial ownership should sit on public registers. (See articles here and here.)
Without ability to rapidly screen potential clients, wealth
managers can be forced into setting long onboarding times –
creating a potential
“abandonment” problem. This news service hears that in
jurisdictions such as Singapore,
which have tightened compliance regulations, long
onboarding times are a headache.
High speed
The report found that the most dangerous adverse media failures
are caused not by a lack of data but by periodic review models in
a world that moves continuously, at high speed.
Some 58 per cent of those questioned said they still rely on
manual internet searches. The report also found that more than a
quarter don’t screen continuously.
“We call this the intent-capability gap: the distance between
what compliance leaders know adverse media screening should be,
and what their current tooling delivers. In an enforcement
environment where individual penalties run into the billions, it
is both reputationally and commercially vital that financial
institutions close this gap,” Mills said.
In March, Mills commented
in these pages about topics such as the “right to be
forgotten” and efforts by policymakers, whether well-meaning or
not, to allow certain information to be scrubbed off the internet
and other sources. Earlier this year, the Ministry of Justice in
the UK ordered of the Courtsdesk archive to be deleted, removing
millions of historical cases from public access but subsequently
withdrew its demand following an intense backlash. Courtsdesk,
which contains an extensive database of UK court records, has
become a critical resource for journalists needing to search,
verify and report on criminal cases. However, after pushback from
journalists and lawmakers who cited open justice concerns, the
government halted this move to explore other options.