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CBUAE revokes licenses of currency exchange house, commercial broker company

Central Bank statistics showed that the monetary base rose by 29 percent on an annual basis to reach AED 596.9 billion in October.
  • The administrative sanctions followed after the entities were found in violation of the UAE laws on combating money laundering crimes, the financing of terrorism, etc
  • The findings showed that the entities had a weak compliance framework and failed to comply with their regulatory obligations and to report regulatory breaches to the CBUAE

Abu Dhabi, UAE – The Central Bank of the UAE (CBUAE) has revoked the license of Dirham Exchange, an exchange house operating in the UAE, and struck off its name from the Register, and revoked the registration of RMB Commercial Brokers Co, a Hawaladar operating in the country.

The administrative sanctions followed after the entities were found in violation of the UAE laws on combating money laundering crimes, the financing of terrorism, and the financing of illegal organizations.

The sanctions are the result of the findings conducted by the CBUAE, revealing serious regulatory misconduct, including AML misconduct and collusion in evading CBUAE’s instructions to the exchange house not to engage in remittance transactions with certain countries.

The findings showed that they had a weak compliance framework and failed to comply with their regulatory obligations and to report regulatory breaches to the CBUAE.

The CBUAE, through its supervisory and regulatory mandates, works to ensure that all exchange houses, their owners and employees and Hawaladars abide by the UAE laws, regulations and standards adopted by the CBUAE to safeguard the transparency and integrity of the UAE financial system.