Financial Crimes Enforcement Network; Amendment to the Bank Secrecy Act Regulations-Definitions and Other Regulations Relating to Prepaid Access, 36589-36608 [2010-15194]
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Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 123 / Monday, June 28, 2010 / Proposed Rules
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
31 CFR Part 103
RIN 1506–AB07
Financial Crimes Enforcement
Network; Amendment to the Bank
Secrecy Act Regulations—Definitions
and Other Regulations Relating to
Prepaid Access
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AGENCY: Financial Crimes Enforcement
Network (‘‘FinCEN’’), Treasury.
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking.
SUMMARY: FinCEN is proposing to revise
the Bank Secrecy Act (‘‘BSA’’)
regulations applicable to Money
Services Businesses with regard to
stored value or prepaid access. More
specifically, the proposed changes
include the following: renaming ‘‘stored
value’’ as ‘‘prepaid access’’ and defining
that term; deleting the terms ‘‘issuer and
redeemer’’ of stored value; imposing
suspicious activity reporting, customer
information and transaction information
recordkeeping requirements on both
providers and sellers of prepaid access
and, additionally, imposing a
registration requirement on providers
only; and exempting certain categories
of prepaid access products and services
posing lower risks of money laundering
and terrorist financing from certain
requirements.
The proposed changes are intended to
address regulatory gaps that have
resulted from the proliferation of
prepaid innovations over the last ten
years and their increasing use as an
accepted payment method. If these gaps
are not addressed, there is increased
potential for the use of prepaid access
as a means for furthering money
laundering, terrorist financing, and
other illicit transactions through the
financial system. This would
significantly undermine many of the
efforts previously taken by government
and industry to safeguard the financial
system through the application of BSA
requirements to other areas of the
financial sector. In this proposed
rulemaking, we are reviewing the stored
value/prepaid access regulatory
framework with a focus on developing
appropriate BSA regulatory oversight
without impeding continued
development of the industry, as well as
improving the ability of FinCEN, other
regulators and law enforcement to
safeguard the U.S. financial system from
the abuses of terrorist financing, money
laundering, and other financial crime. In
the course of our regulatory research
into the operation of the prepaid
industry, we have encountered a
number of distinct issues, such as the
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appropriate obligations of payment
networks and financial transparency at
the borders, and we anticipate future
rulemakings in these areas. We will seek
to phase in any additional requirements,
however, as the most prudent course of
action for an evolving segment of the
money services business (‘‘MSB’’)
community.
DATES: Written comments on the notice
of proposed rulemaking must be
submitted on or before July 28, 2010.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments,
identified by RIN 1506–AB07, by any of
the following methods:
• Federal e-rulemaking portal: https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
Refer to Docket number TREAS–
FinCEN–2009–0007.
• Mail: FinCEN, P.O. Box 39, Vienna,
VA 22183. Include RIN 1506–AB07 in
the body of the text.
Inspection of comments: Public
comments received electronically or
through the U.S. Postal Service sent in
response to a ‘‘Notice and Request for
Comment’’ will be made available for
public review as soon as possible on
https://www.regulations.gov. Comments
received may be physically inspected in
the FinCEN reading room located in
Vienna, Virginia. Reading room
appointments are available weekdays
(excluding holidays) between 10 a.m.
and 3 p.m., by calling the Disclosure
Officer at (703) 905–5034 (not a toll free
call).
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Regulatory Policy and Programs
Division, FinCEN (800) 949–2732 and
select option 1.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Introduction
A. Development of the Prepaid Industry
Prepaid products, also variously
known as stored value, stored value
cards, or prepaid cards, have emerged in
recent years into the mainstream of the
U.S. financial system. As consumers
have embraced the convenience and
security of being able to transact many
daily commercial activities
electronically, more and more areas of
American commerce explore ways to
reap the advantages of electronic
payment delivery.
This migration to electronic delivery
has escalated greatly in recent years,
most especially over the last 3–5 years.1
1 ‘‘Study findings suggest * * * the market for
open-loop gift/prepaid cards is increasing * * *
more than twice as many gift card purchasers/
receivers bought or were given a general purpose
gift card in 2008 as were in 2005.’’ Hitachi
Consulting ‘‘Payments Study Highlights Continued
Growth in Credit, Debit Cards,’’ February 2009.
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As consumer comfort levels rise and
technology costs fall, continued growth
in all types of electronic payment
options appears likely. As the Federal
Reserve Board noted in its 2007
Payments Study, electronic payments
comprised over two-thirds of all noncash payments.2
By certain accounts,3 the launch of
the first stored value/prepaid product
traces to the magnetic stripe-bearing gift
cards introduced by Blockbuster Video
in 1995 to replace the company’s former
paper gift certificates. The change
allowed the merchant to offer the
purchaser a more attractive product
that, unlike its paper-based predecessor,
could be issued in any denomination.
The gift cards also allowed the balance
to be monitored and offered security
features against alteration or fraud. The
Blockbuster Gift Card began the rapid
migration by most gift card sellers to
plastic from paper.
Beginning in the year 2000, VISA, Inc.
moved into the prepaid space by
introducing its Buxx card, targeted at
the teen/young adult market as a money
management tool and a more secure way
for parents to provide college students
with funds for living expenses.
MasterCard launched a competitor card
(iGen) in 2001, and American Express
began marketing its prepaid card in
October 2002 as a general purpose gift
card that was good anywhere that
American Express was accepted. The
convergence of the initial retailerexclusive gift cards 4 such as
Blockbuster, Sears or Amazon.com with
these ‘‘branded’’ cards, bearing a Visa,
MasterCard, American Express or
Discover logo, meant that consumers
could easily find a gift card for any
purpose and in virtually any amount.
A simultaneous market development
involved in-store gift card kiosks, such
as Gift Card Mall, launched in 2001 by
Blackhawk Network, a subsidiary of
Safeway Stores, Inc. Blackhawk
Network pioneered the establishment of
2 Of electronic payments, ‘‘[c]ard payments alone
comprised over half of non-cash payments.’’ The
2007 Federal Reserve Payments Study—Non-cash
Payment Trends in the United States: 2003–2006,
pg. 5.
3 CardTrak News, Blockbuster Giftcard press
release, January 15, 1996.
4 Retailer-specific prepaid products are generally
characterized as ‘‘closed loop,’’ meaning that there
are a finite number of locations at which the
devices can be used. Closed loop programs involve
a known provider of goods or service at the time
of sale. Conversely, ‘‘open loop’’ refers to a type of
prepaid access device that can be used at any
accepting retail location. Generally, open loop cards
are branded network cards, such as: VISA,
MasterCard, American Express and Discover. See
also Footnote 34 in this NPRM for a discussion of
FinCEN’s previous proposal of a regulatory
definition relating to closed loop stored value.
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in-store gift card retail centers, located
in supermarkets and convenience stores,
which meant that the purchaser no
longer had to visit a particular retailer,
restaurant, or entertainment center to
buy gift cards for department and
discount stores, movie theaters, theme
parks, and on-line vendors such as
iTunes. Although initial marketing
strategies for these ‘‘malls’’ targeted a
specific consumer niche, the varied
vendors represented and the
convenience appealed to a broader-thanexpected audience. A 2006 study 5
undertaken by the American Bankers
Association (‘‘ABA’’) and Dove
Consulting revealed strong consumer
preference for both giving and receiving
retailer-specific gift cards, deemed both
more personal than cash and more
valued by the recipient.
Within the context of the abovereferenced developments, there are a
myriad of factors that have spurred the
growth of the prepaid industry
including: (1) The effort to market costeffective financial products to
individuals who are either unbanked or
underbanked; 6 (2) the effort by
governmental entities, at Federal and
State and local levels, to deliver an
increasing number of benefits through
prepaid cards, which can be used at
ATMs as withdrawal devices or used at
points of sale (‘‘POS’’) to purchase goods
and services; and (3) the move by many
employers to pay some workers, such as
construction workers, day laborers, and
others, through cards, which they
regularly reload 7 with scheduled
earnings for as long as the individual
remains an employee. Generally, these
cards can also be used at ATMs and at
retail POS.
With respect to the first factor,
concerning the needs of the unbanked
and underbanked, the use of prepaid
cards has been promoted by various
advocacy groups 8 as an effective, lowercost method to deliver necessary
financial services. For a variety of
cultural or educational reasons, or due
to language barriers, some individuals
have found the traditional banking
environment overly intimidating or
5 2005/2006 Study of Consumer Payment
Preferences, published October 2005.
6 ‘‘A Tool for Getting By or Getting Ahead?
Consumers’ Views on Prepaid Cards,’’ by Center for
Financial Services Innovation; authors Gordon,
Romich and Waithaka (2009), pg. 7. See also, FDIC
Survey of Unbanked and Underbanked Households
(December 2009), available at https://www.fdic.gov/
householdsurvey/full_report.pdf.
7 ‘‘Load’’ and ‘‘reload,’’ as used in the prepaid
access context, refer to the initial provision of value
and all subsequent provisions of value to a prepaid
access program.
8 See ‘‘A Tool for Getting By or Ahead * * *,’’
referenced in footnote 6.
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unsuited to their financial services
needs. Many have never established
banking relationships, or have found
them cost-prohibitive for their limited
needs, and have turned to the
‘‘alternative financial service provider’’
marketplace,9 accessing businesses such
as payday lenders, pawnshops, and
check cashing facilities. Often, the fees
associated with these alternatives may
be high in relation to the dollar value of
the transaction.10 The development and
promotion of prepaid cards introduced
a new non-traditional banking
alternative for these individuals. Many
of the major industry members engaged
in prepaid access are aggressively
courting this unbanked market segment
by increasing marketing efforts and by
also lowering fees.11
With respect to the latter two factors,
concerning government and employer
payments, the use of a prepaid card
replaces the issuance of paper checks,
offering benefits to the government
entity or employer such as lower
transaction costs, accounting
efficiencies, safeguards against
alteration or loss, and others. For the
recipient, many of the same security
concerns are addressed, as well as the
immediacy and reliability of the
payment, which no longer has to be sent
by mail and can be used without the
need for negotiation at a bank or check
cashing facility.
As the general public has become
more attuned to seeing plastic where
paper formerly dominated, it has been
willing, and sometimes eager, to accept
transition to a card or similar
convenient device, such as a key fob.12
The advantages to the consumer include
eliminating the need to carry cash,
security against loss/theft and the ability
to track and limit spending, among
others. For the financial services
industry, it offers a profitable retail
payment product whose acceptance by
the general public and the vast majority
of the American and global marketplace
is attractive.
B. The Need for Rulemaking
Notwithstanding the benefits of
prepaid access, based on discussions
with the law enforcement community,
FinCEN believes that it may be
9 ‘‘Alternative Financial Services: A Primer,’’ FDIC
Quarterly, 2009, Vol. 3, No. 1.
10 See materials referenced in footnote 6.
11 American Banker, June 4, 2009, p. 1.
12 As used in this discussion, ‘‘key fob’’ refers to
a type of contactless payment device, typically
attached to a key chain, which might resemble a
disc-shaped ornament or token. It contains an
electronic chip from which a compatible
mechanism is able to communicate payment
instructions to the holder of the corresponding
account.
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vulnerable to money laundering. Many
of the same factors that make prepaid
access attractive to consumers make it
vulnerable to illicit activity. For
example, the ease with which prepaid
access can be obtained combined with
the potential for relatively high velocity
of money through accounts involving
prepaid access and anonymous use, may
make it particularly attractive to illicit
actors. These individuals value the
ability to receive and distribute a
significant amount of funds without
being subject to many of the reporting
requirements that would apply to
comparable transactions using cash or
involving an ordinary demand deposit
account at a bank. FinCEN solicits
comment on the money laundering and
terrorist financing vulnerabilities that
prepaid access products or services may
pose. Depending on the sensitivity of
such information, this information may
be maintained in a confidential docket.
The purpose of this rulemaking is to
establish clear requirements under the
BSA with respect to certain non-bank
actors involved in the provision of
prepaid access. In doing so, FinCEN
intends to bring an appropriate degree
of transparency to the sector; facilitate
the provision of valuable information to
regulatory and law enforcement
agencies; and enhance the resilience of
the prepaid industry against illicit
activity. While a limited degree of
regulatory oversight over the prepaid
industry exists at present, we believe
that it is now time to bring this industry
within the full ambit of the BSA. We
believe that our endeavors in this regard
will be assisted by the fact that many in
industry already use automated fraud
monitoring systems that evaluate data
points similar to those relevant to detect
suspicious transactions and other
information relevant to the BSA.
In proposing this rule, FinCEN is also
reiterating a clear distinction that
already exists in our regulations
between money services businesses and
depository institutions, both of which
play roles in prepaid access transaction
chains. Depository institutions are
already held responsible for a full slate
of anti-money laundering (‘‘AML’’)
obligations, and those responsibilities
will not change as a result of this
rulemaking. Further, these depository
institutions are subject to regular
examinations by their Federal regulators
where they are assessed for compliance.
Consequently, with this rulemaking, we
intend to bring non-bank entities in the
prepaid sector under regulatory
treatment that is more consistent with
other financial institutions, such as
depository institutions, subject to the
BSA.
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In this proposed rulemaking, we will
attempt to address vulnerabilities in the
types of prepaid programs that present
potential for abuse, and to impose
requirements on those within the
transaction chain that possess the
greatest ability to control the program’s
operations, either directly or through an
oversight role, and those who may have
relevant consumer information. At the
same time, we do not want to stifle
growth or innovation within the
payments industry. Finally, we
recognize that, while we will frequently
refer to the ‘‘card’’ in describing this
payment method, it is becoming
increasingly apparent that the plastic
card entails only one possible method of
enabling prepaid access. Accordingly,
we intend for this rulemaking to be as
forward-looking and as technologically
neutral as possible; today prepaid access
can be provided through a card, a
mobile phone, a key fob or any other
object to which relevant electronic
information can be affixed. In some
contexts, there may even be no physical
object, as access to prepaid value can be
enabled through the provision of
information over the telephone or the
Internet. We intend for our rule to be
applicable to whatever tomorrow’s
payment environment offers as well.
However, we seek comment on whether
the rulemaking is sufficiently
technologically neutral, and if not, in
what areas it can be improved for these
considerations.
FinCEN does not intend for this rule
to have an impact on two other payment
methods that bear some outward
similarities to prepaid access, namely
the use of credit cards or debit cards.
The proposed terminology in this
rulemaking is meant to establish a clear
difference between those systems and
prepaid access. FinCEN anticipates
obtaining further insight from the
rulemaking and public comment
process to ensure that we employ the
most accurate and precise terminology
possible.
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A. Statutory and Regulatory Background
The BSA, Titles I and II of Public Law
91–508, as amended, codified at 12
U.S.C. 1829b and 1951–1959, and 31
U.S.C. 5311–5314 and 5316–5332,
authorizes the Secretary of the Treasury
(the ‘‘Secretary’’) to issue regulations
requiring financial institutions to keep
records and file reports that the
Secretary determines ‘‘have a high
degree of usefulness in criminal, tax, or
regulatory investigations or proceedings,
or in the conduct of intelligence or
counterintelligence matters, including
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13 31
U.S.C. 5311.
Treasury Order 180–01 (Sept. 26, 2002).
15 ‘‘MSB’’ is a term FinCEN created that refers to
certain non-bank financial institutions that offer
specific services (often in combination) and are
without a Federal functional regulator.
16 31 CFR 103.11(uu) implementing 31 U.S.C.
5312(a)(2)(J), (K), (R) and (V).
17 31 U.S.C. 5312(a)(2)(Y).
18 See 31 CFR 103.125.
19 See 31 CFR 103.22.
20 See 31 CFR 103.20. Check cashers and
transactions solely involving the issuance, sale or
redemption of stored value are not covered by the
SAR requirement. See 31 CFR 103.20(a)(1) and
(a)(5).
21 See 31 CFR 103.29.
22 See 31 CFR 103.33(f)–(g).
23 See 31 CFR 103.41.
24 See 31 CFR 103.56(b)(8).
14 See
II. Background of This Rulemaking
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analysis to protect against international
terrorism.’’ 13 The Secretary’s authority
to administer the BSA and its
implementing regulations has been
delegated to the Director of FinCEN.14
FinCEN has interpreted the BSA
through implementing regulations
(‘‘BSA regulations’’ or ‘‘BSA rules’’) that
appear at 31 CFR part 103.
FinCEN has defined the BSA term
‘‘financial institution’’ to include
‘‘money services businesses,’’ 15 a
category that includes: A currency
dealer or exchanger; a check casher; an
issuer, seller, or redeemer of traveler’s
checks, money orders, or stored value;
and money transmitter.16 FinCEN is
authorized to deem any business
engaged in an activity determined by
regulation to be an activity similar to,
related to, or a substitute for these
activities a ‘‘financial institution.’’ 17
The Director of FinCEN, through
delegated authority, has issued
regulations under the BSA
implementing the recordkeeping,
reporting, and other requirements of the
BSA. Like other financial institutions
under the BSA, MSBs must implement
AML programs, make certain reports to
FinCEN, and maintain certain records to
facilitate financial transparency. MSBs
are required with some exceptions to:
(1) Establish written AML programs that
are reasonably designed to prevent the
MSB from being used to facilitate
money laundering and the financing of
terrorist activities; 18 (2) file Currency
Transaction Reports (‘‘CTRs’’) 19 and
Suspicious Activity Reports (‘‘SARs’’); 20
and (3) maintain certain records,
including records relating to the
purchase of certain monetary
instruments with currency,21 relating to
transactions by currency dealers or
exchangers, and relating to certain
transmittals of funds.22 Most types of
MSBs are required to register with
FinCEN 23 and all are subject to
examination for BSA compliance by the
Internal Revenue Service (‘‘IRS’’).24
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B. Past Public Meetings With the MSB
Industry
In 1997, FinCEN held public meetings
at various locations throughout the
country to give members of the financial
services industry an opportunity to
discuss the proposed MSB regulations
and any impact they might have on
operations. In drafting the final rules
defining the MSB categories, FinCEN
relied on the contributions from these
public forums.
The proceedings of those meetings,
with respect to stored value and money
transmission, reveal a shared
acknowledgement by FinCEN and
industry that the prepaid business
existed only in an early developmental
stage at that time, and that it was
important not to stifle innovation.
Although the industry was in its
infancy, many issues surrounding
prepaid products today were discussed
and debated then, such as establishing
appropriate audit trails and the need for
information gathering on certain
customers. Among other conclusions,
these meetings resulted in the following
pronouncements:
• The money transmission definition
should be sufficiently flexible to
encompass the traditional concept of
wiring funds, while also capturing
alternative types of payments, both
electronic and manual.25
• FinCEN officials acknowledged that
the use of the term ‘‘stored value’’ might
be somewhat imprecise, and lead to the
conclusion that only ‘‘value or
representation of value that is stored
either on a chip or on a hard drive
somewhere’’ was correctly labeled
stored value. Despite these misgivings,
the term stored value was chosen as the
best available at the time.26
We find the proceedings of these
meetings informative and persuasive in
guiding the current rulemaking. Not
only did these forums occur at various
25 Transcript of FinCEN meeting, held in New
York City, NY. A FinCEN official in attendance
stated, ‘‘Just as a point of clarification, again, under
our definitions, as proposed in our rules, and also
our intent, is not to restrict money transmitters to
those businesses that only provide currency, cash,
to customers, and the notion of a money transmittal
will take place regardless of whether the form is in
checks or in money orders or in travelers checks,
or the more traditional notion of wire transfer
credits to an existing bank account.’’
26 Transcript of FinCEN meeting, held in San Jose,
CA. A FinCEN official in attendance stated, ‘‘ * * *
the concept is that there is a new something which
we called fundamental monetary value represented
in digital format and stored or capable of storage on
electronic media in such a way as to be retrievable
and transferable electronically. We called that
stored value, because frankly we couldn’t think of
anything else to call it * * *. We were kind of
aware that when we used the term, people were
going to think we were only talking about stored
value cards. And we decided to take that risk.’’
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locations around the country, but they
also involved a number of different
perspectives from throughout the
financial services industry. Early
entrants into the stored value
marketplace, seasoned banking
professionals, Federal and State
regulators and service providers such as
data processing representatives were all
either in attendance or represented.
There was considerable discussion
among the participants that illustrated
the struggle to define the shifting
payments environment as it was only
beginning to take full advantage of new
technologies.27
C. The Terms ‘‘Stored Value’’ and
‘‘Prepaid Access’’
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A FinCEN official in attendance at the
1997 meetings observed that the term
‘‘stored value’’ was imprecise for the
meaning being ascribed to it. The
concept at issue, as he described it,
involved monetary value represented in
digital format that was stored or capable
of being stored on electronic media in
such a way as to be retrievable and
transferable electronically.28
The key distinction to be drawn from
his observation is that the ‘‘value’’ to
which he refers is not ‘‘stored’’ on the
card; rather, the value is stored in a
location or a medium that can be
accessed electronically through the card
or an alternative device. Given the
nascent nature of the stored value
industry approximately ten years ago,
the limitations of descriptive terms are
easily understood. The term ‘‘stored
value’’ gained a foothold following
FinCEN’s publication of the 1999 MSB
regulation, which included issuers,
sellers and redeemers of stored value in
the definition of MSB.29
In this Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking (‘‘NPRM’’), we intend to
replace the terms ‘‘issuer’’ and
‘‘redeemer’’ of stored value. These terms
are not useful as the primary focal point
for our regulatory efforts with respect to
this industry for the following reasons:
• ‘‘Issuers’’ are generally banks, which
means that, by definition, they cannot
be deemed MSBs under our rules.30
Additionally, the activities of banks are
covered under other BSA regulations.
• ‘‘Redeemers’’ is a term formerly
used in the context of several MSB
27 Transcript of FinCEN meeting, held in San Jose,
CA. An industry member in attendance stated,
‘‘* * * these products are all * * * evolving * * *.
The ACH system is old * * * batch processing, it’s
clunky * * *. We are working very hard to develop
new systems that work better, that are more
efficient, that are faster * * * ’’
28 See supra note 26.
29 31 CFR 103.11(uu)(3), (4).
30 31 CFR 103.11(uu).
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definitions that FinCEN is seeking to
eliminate.
Instead, we propose to introduce the
terms ‘‘prepaid access’’ and ‘‘provider of
prepaid access,’’ with the latter used to
characterize a distinct category of MSB
and a primary focus of our regulatory
efforts.31 We believe that these terms
offer a more accurate characterization of
the role and the payment product which
we seek to bring more fully within the
scope of the BSA.
Although considerable discussion
occurred in 1997 regarding divergent
strategies for chip-enabled cards vs.
magnetic stripe-bearing cards,
developments over the last twelve years
reveal a far more harmonized evolution.
The magnetic-stripe card continues to
be the technology used most in the
United States.32 Even in situations
where a card or other device is
characterized as ‘‘chip-based,’’ this chip
principally transfers the magnetic stripe
functionality to a smaller unit of
information. The miniaturized size
allows for installation in any number of
various devices such as cell phone
screens and key chain tokens. Whether
magnetic stripe or chip-based, the value
to which the payment device gives
access remains in an account; not in any
way ‘‘stored’’ on the card. Therefore, we
find the purported dichotomy forecast
in 1997 to be unpersuasive for purposes
of this rulemaking. We consider this
proposed rule to encompass cards and
all other emerging payment devices,
such as mobile phones, currently in the
marketplace and on the horizon.
We seek public comment regarding
the terms ‘‘prepaid access’’ and
‘‘provider of prepaid access,’’ and
whether they offer the best, most
meaningful description of the
product(s).
D. May 12, 2009 Money Services
Business NPRM
On May 12, 2009, FinCEN published
an NPRM entitled ‘‘Amendment to the
Bank Secrecy Act Regulations—
Definitions and Other Regulations
Relating to Money Services Businesses’’
31 For the remainder of this document, and in the
accompanying rule text, we will use the terms
‘‘prepaid access’’ and ‘‘provider of prepaid access.’’
However, as noted in the final paragraph of this
section, we solicit public comment for the best term
for the payment mechanism at issue.
32 A repeated question raised with respect to
chip-based cards concerns those in use in Europe
and Asia, and whether that variety will migrate to
use in the United States. At present, there appears
to be little appetite for installing the necessary
payments infrastructure to enable such use at the
point of transaction. In the event that such
developments occur in the future, we believe that
our rule text employs the necessary flexibility to
encompass any such new payment devices.
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in the Federal Register.33 Comments
concerning the 2009 MSB NPRM from
the industry and public were accepted
through the close of the comment period
on September 9, 2009.
In the 2009 MSB NPRM, FinCEN
proposed to revise the MSB definition
by describing with more clarity the
types of financial activity that will
subject a business to the BSA
implementing rules. The proposal
incorporated past FinCEN rulings and
policy determinations into the
regulatory text and sought to make it
easier for MSBs to determine their
responsibilities.
FinCEN also solicited comments on a
number of stored value/prepaid
questions in an effort to garner
information regarding the accurate
definition(s) or terminology for this
payment device, to determine the
appropriate treatment as an MSB
component, and to identify the various
participants comprising the numerous
prepaid business models. Those
comments have assisted FinCEN in
drafting the current proposed
rulemaking.
The comments covered a significant
range of opinions. A consumer rights
organization and an association of State
regulatory agencies urged a more
rigorous regulatory scheme,
encompassing any and all types of
prepaid business models. The
comments received from business
entities in the prepaid industry
generally suggested that closed loop
products 34 should not be encompassed
within the proposed rulemaking
because they posed very minimal
money laundering risk. They asserted
that stored value/prepaid products are
often wrongly categorized as monetary
instruments and, while more closely
allied with money transmission, they
most accurately deserve a separate
category as a form of money
transmission.
E. Credit CARD Act of 2009
On May 22, 2009, the President
signed Public Law 111–24, the Credit
Card Accountability Responsibility and
Disclosure (CARD) Act of 2009 (CARD
Act). Section 503 of the CARD Act
requires the following:
33 74 FR 22129 (May 12, 2009) (hereinafter 2009
MSB NPRM).
34 In its 2009 MSB NPRM, FinCEN proposed a
definition for closed loop stored value as ‘‘Stored
value that is limited to a defined merchant or
location (or a set of locations) such as a specific
retailer or retail chain, a college campus, or a
subway system.’’ 74 FR 22129, 22141 (May 12,
2009). In the present rulemaking, FinCEN is
proposing a similar definition for closed loop
prepaid access.
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1. No later than 270 days from the
date of enactment, the Treasury
Secretary, in consultation with the
Secretary of the Department of
Homeland Security (‘‘DHS’’), must issue
final regulations regarding the sale,
issuance, redemption, or international
transport of stored value, including
stored value cards.
2. The regulations regarding
international transport may include
reporting requirements pursuant to
§ 5316 of title 31, United States Code.
3. The regulations shall take into
consideration current and future needs
and methodologies for transmitting and
storing value in electronic form.
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III. Current Regulatory Scheme
Under the current rules, FinCEN
addresses traveler’s checks, money
orders, and stored value under two
separate definitions: ‘‘issuers’’ under 31
CFR 103.11(uu)(3) and ‘‘sellers or
redeemers’’ of those products under 31
CFR 103.11(uu)(4). The regulations
currently include an activity threshold
of $1,000 for any person in any one day,
which applies to all MSB categories
except money transmitters.35 Money
transmitters are not subject to any dollar
level threshold at all. Accordingly, an
issuer, seller or redeemer of stored
value, as defined by our regulations, is
required to file CTRs 36 and to establish
a written AML program, including
policies, procedures, and internal
controls commensurate with its
activities and reasonably designed to
prevent it from being used to facilitate
money laundering and the financing of
terrorist activities.
In 1999, when FinCEN issued its final
MSB rule,37 it deferred certain
requirements for the prepaid or stored
value arena based on its complexity and
the desire to avoid unintended
consequences with respect to an
industry then in its infancy. Therefore,
unlike most other categories of MSB, an
issuer, seller, or redeemer of stored
value is not required to register as an
MSB with FinCEN or to file SARs.
Consistent with a regulatory delegation
of examination authority 38 the IRS
currently examines money services
businesses, including those falling
within the scope of FinCEN’s
regulations with respect to stored value,
35 31 CFR 103.11(uu). This activity based
threshold of $1,000 has remained the same since
1999. See Definitions Relating to and Registration
of, Money Services Businesses, 64 FR 45438 (Aug.
20, 1999).
36 See 31 CFR 103.22; reporting of cash
transactions exceeding $10,000.
37 Definitions Relating to, and Registration of,
Money Services Businesses, 64 FR 45438 (Aug. 20,
1999).
38 31 CFR 103.56(b)(8).
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for compliance with the BSA, as these
entities are not otherwise subject to
more general supervision by a Federal
functional regulator.
In the 2009 MSB NPRM, we proposed
folding all of stored value into one
category so that issuers of stored value
and sellers or redeemers of stored value
would be in the same category. In the
2009 MSB NPRM, FinCEN did not
propose making any substantive
changes to the definition of this
category. After further consideration of
the issue, however, we now offer a
substantive change to the definition of
the category, and thus to the overall
regulatory scheme, by shifting our focus
from issuers and redeemers to
‘‘providers’’ of prepaid access, while
retaining regulatory focus on retail
‘‘sellers’’ in this arena.39
IV. Prepaid Access as a Distinct Form
of Money Transmission
Prepaid access involves the
transmission from one point to another
of funds that have been paid in advance.
It is empirically similar to activity
engaged in by persons defined as
‘‘money transmitters,’’ but the
mechanisms for directing that the
money be transmitted are different.
Based on this understanding, as well as
on some of the concepts brought
forward in the responses to our 2009
MSB NPRM, FinCEN is proposing to
treat providers of prepaid access as a
distinct category of MSB, keeping it
separate from the category established
for money transmitters, while at the
same time acknowledging prepaid
access should be regulated in a similar
fashion.40 While distinct, many
responsibilities imposed on money
transmitters and other MSB categories
generally would be imposed on prepaid
access providers: there would be a
requirement to file SARs and to register
with FinCEN as an MSB. Separate
requirements would be imposed with
respect to sellers of prepaid access.
39 Please refer to regulatory text for 103.11(uu)(4),
wherein we propose further amendments to the
revisions proposed in the May 2009 MSB NPRM.
40 Though the regulatory requirements may be
similar, or even identical, the effects of those
requirements on the two types of MSBs may differ,
depending on their different prevailing business
models. For example, the business models of most
providers of prepaid access currently appear to
involve the use of electronic funds transfers subject
to the Electronic Funds Transfer Act (‘‘EFTA’’), 15
U.S.C. 1693 et seq. So long as that is the case, the
Funds Transfer Rule, 31 CFR 103.33(f), and the
Travel Rule, 31 CFR 103.11(jj), should not impose
specific recordkeeping requirements on providers of
prepaid access, because electronic funds transfers
subject to the EFTA are exempt from the Funds
Transfer Rule and the Travel Rule.
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V. Reporting on International
Transportation of Prepaid Access
As noted previously, Section 503 of
the CARD Act authorizes Treasury to
establish reporting requirements with
respect to stored value pursuant to 31
U.S.C. 5316 41 and requires the
consideration of current and future
needs and methodologies for
transmitting and storing value in
electronic form. 31 U.S.C. 5316 and
corresponding FinCEN regulations
require persons transporting or shipping
currency and monetary instruments
across the U.S. border in an aggregate
amount over $10,000 to provide a report
of such transportation or shipment.42
We have consulted extensively with our
law enforcement colleagues and are
seeking information, including but not
limited to, risk assessments evaluating
the likelihood of illegal action.
Depending on the sensitivity of such
information, this information may be
provided in a confidential docket.
Presently, there is no similar
requirement to report the transportation
of prepaid access products across the
border. FinCEN recognizes the value of
collecting information on international
transactions and payment flows, and is
engaging with the Department of
Homeland Security and other members
of the law enforcement community in
an attempt to identify appropriate
solutions. We invite comment on any
aspect of the international transport
issue as part of this effort. We seek
comment from the law enforcement
officials and the greater public on the
risks prepaid access transactions pose
and the types of transactions that are
particularly vulnerable to money
laundering, terrorist financing, and
other illicit transactions through the
financial system. We also seek comment
on the activity threshold for prepaid
access transactions.
VI. A Shift in Regulatory Obligations
A difficulty in regulating prepaid
access is determining which entity or
entities involved should be responsible
for compliance with BSA requirements.
The prepaid landscape includes a
number of different types of actors with
different roles. These actors and roles
are not consistent throughout the
41 Section 503 of the CARD Act requires Treasury
to issue regulations ‘‘regarding the sale, issuance,
redemption, or international transport of stored
value,’’ which FinCEN in this NPRM interprets to
be essentially synonymous with ‘‘prepaid access.’’
Section 503 also provides that regulations regarding
international transportation ‘‘may include reporting
requirements pursuant to [31 U.S.C. 5316].’’ The
implementing regulation for 31 U.S.C. 5316 is 31
CFR 103.23.
42 31 CFR 103.23.
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industry and some entities perform
multiple roles. Given the difficulty in
identifying the provider and the
changing nature of the industry, it is
vital that a provider of prepaid access be
defined on the basis of its activities.
FinCEN is proposing removing
‘‘issuers’’ and ‘‘redeemers’’ from the
definition of money services business
and imposing AML program, reporting,
and recordkeeping obligations on the
business entity that engages in activity
that demonstrates the most control and
oversight of transactions—what FinCEN
proposes to define as the ‘‘provider of
prepaid access.’’
The provider is the entity that FinCEN
believes is in the best position to file
CTRs and SARs, maintain or have
access to transaction records, and
establish and maintain AML programs
because it is likely to have business
relationships with most or all of the
other participants in the transaction
chain. Accordingly, it has the relevant
information or access to the information
to make and file relevant and
meaningful BSA reports and records.
Centralizing primary BSA obligations in
the prepaid provider will unify an
otherwise fragmented transaction chain
where it is likely that no single player
has the necessary financial transparency
to comply adequately with BSA
requirements. Shifting the requirements
to one player may enrich the
information available, provide greater
financial transparency for appropriate
regulators and administrators, and allow
law enforcement to obtain relevant
information with respect to various
aspects of a prepaid access transaction
chain without having to seek it from
multiple sources.
Providers of prepaid access should
anticipate developing AML programs
that relate to their role as the centralized
point in the chain for relevant
information. These programs should
include elements such as (a) internal
policies and procedures that
contemplate the collection and
processing of information to be used for
the evaluation, completion, and
submission of SARs and CTRs; and (b)
training programs for other industry
members with whom it contracts for
prepaid support services to be able to
identify suspicious activity to inform
the program provider. FinCEN seeks
comment on the costs that may be
associated with developing these
policies, procedures, and training
programs. FinCEN also seeks comment
on the costs that may be associated with
developing information technology
systems and anti-money laundering
programs.
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VII. Participants in the Prepaid
Environment
As discussed previously in this
NPRM, the historical background
surrounding the early regulation of the
MSB industry involved the effort to
identify the many participants who
collectively comprised the non-bank
financial services universe. A shift that
occurred with the issuance of the 1999
regulation was to focus more intensively
on the activity being performed in the
movement of funds, or the execution of
a transaction. Where previous statutory
and regulatory anti-money laundering
efforts generally targeted the entity,
commonly banks, thrifts, credit unions,
et al., the new policy direction required
an understanding that, in many cases,
the delivery of a financial service was
only a single component of many
different lines of business for a
particular business entity.
For example, a convenience store
might offer retail grocery products,
gasoline, an on-premises fast food
establishment, a car wash, and the sale
of money orders. Similarly, a travel
agency might offer extensive consumer
and business booking services, guided
tours, trip planning and, for customer
convenience, also deal in foreign
exchange and the sale of traveler’s
checks. In these and similar situations,
it is the particular financial services
activity that is intended to be captured
by regulation, not the universe of
convenience stores or travel agencies.
As we seek to more precisely define
the duties and the responsible party
among the parties in the prepaid
operating environment, we are again
focused specifically on the activities
executed. We appreciate that executing
a prepaid transaction almost necessarily
involves greater technological
complexity and the involvement of
more participants in a transaction chain
than would check cashing or the sale of
money orders. Despite the multiple
parties involved, however, we consider
it imperative to center our primary
regulatory responsibilities on the party
exercising the principal degree of
oversight and control that we believe
exists in any prepaid program. We are
also mindful that, among all the typical
parties, a very important role is that of
the seller. The seller alone has face-toface dealings with the purchaser and is
privy to information unavailable
elsewhere in the transaction chain. For
that reason, we believe the seller to be
secondarily important among all the
entities involved in the program.
The prepaid marketplace has evolved
over time without developing a
universally-accepted set of labels or
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categories to describe its participants. In
some cases, this may be attributable to
individuals or companies operating in
multiple capacities, thus blurring
conceptually what parameters may or
may not exist for a particular role. For
other reasons, such as multiple points of
entry to this line of business or widely
disparate purposes for initiating a
prepaid program, the participants may
choose no actual titles or labels for the
functions they perform. The roles are
defined and executed strictly according
to the contractual terms established.
While our proposed rule text will
confer responsibilities on the ‘‘provider
of prepaid access,’’ using no current
industry term of art, we believe it is
important to provide context to
understand how we came to choose this
term, and to describe how we see the
comprehensive prepaid industry
landscape. In the Section-by-Section
analysis, following the discussion of the
role of the ‘‘provider of prepaid access,’’
we also describe the various industry
members that we understand to be
standard participants in a prepaid
program.
VIII. Alternative Regulatory
Approaches To Consider
We believe that our approach for
imposing regulatory obligations on the
central player in the prepaid program
offers the advantages of simplicity and
efficiency for regulatory and law
enforcement purposes. Centralizing BSA
duties and recordkeeping in a particular
party would enable law enforcement
officials acting in time-critical situations
to direct requests to a single party.
We also look to the seller as an
important link in the transaction chain.
The seller is uniquely situated to see the
first step in the establishment of a
prepaid relationship, and to interact
directly with the purchaser who may, or
may not, be the ultimate end-user of the
card. The requirements of this party to
maintain records over a five-year time
period and to report suspicious activity,
also serve law enforcement’s needs.
We have reviewed the viability of
requiring each participant along the
prepaid access chain to be subject to the
BSA recordkeeping and reporting
requirements. In balancing the burdens
verses the benefits of this approach, we
believe that providing central points
along the transaction chain, i.e., the
provider and seller of prepaid access,
offers the most utility to law
enforcement and the least burden to the
industry.
We appreciate, however, that such an
approach is not the only approach and
we request comments on alternative
methods to achieve the same ends. The
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many participants in the transaction
chain likely bring specialized
knowledge to the program. By imposing
a separate, stand-alone obligation on
each party along the transaction chain,
we may facilitate the collection of more
detailed information, not filtered
through any secondary perspective. As
FinCEN may consider such an alternate
approach, we seek comment on which
prepaid program participants offer the
most meaningful information, such as
transaction information, purchaser
information, or card holder information.
In determining whether an entity
offering money services is an MSB for
purposes of the BSA implementing
regulations, entities are not required to
aggregate transactions across distinct
money service categories to any person
on any day (in one or more transactions)
in determining whether thresholds
apply. In its 2009 MSB NPRM, FinCEN
sought comment on whether it should
reconsider its previous position with
respect to transactions involving
multiple MSB services, and require that
such multiple services be aggregated for
purposes of determining whether
definitional thresholds have been met.
We received industry comments on this
issue generally opposed to such a
development. FinCEN is still
considering the matter and welcomes
any further comments on this issue,
particularly with respect to the
inclusion of the sale of prepaid access
in connection with other money service
business products.
IX. Parameters of This Rulemaking
This NPRM pertains only to nonbanks. As noted earlier, this rulemaking
does not establish new requirements
and does not change existing
requirements for banks. Banks may
participate in the provision of prepaid
access in a variety of ways and may
enlist the services of a variety of agents
acting on their behalf. As also stated
earlier, banks are subject to the full
panoply of BSA/AML program,
recordkeeping and reporting
requirements. Similarly, as discussed in
more detail herein, this rulemaking
neither establishes new requirements
nor changes existing requirements for
persons registered with, and regulated
or examined by, the Securities and
Exchange Commission (‘‘SEC’’) or the
Commodity Futures Trading
Commission (‘‘CFTC’’).
This rulemaking establishes the
categories of MSBs that will be
regulated in the prepaid arena. It also
identifies which actors will not be
regulated where their activities are
confined to those that present less
opportunity for misuse by illicit actors
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seeking to launder money or finance
illicit activities. As discussed further
herein, such categories of actors may
include those dealing solely in the
provision of payroll or job and health
benefits through prepaid access.
This rulemaking departs from
FinCEN’s previous stance on closedloop prepaid access in one respect.
Historically, FinCEN’s regulatory
interpretations 43 have held that the
traditional ‘‘gift cards’’ that are
redeemable only by a single retailer
pose limited risk for money laundering
or evading financial transparency. In
this rulemaking, FinCEN proposes
subjecting providers and sellers of
closed loop prepaid access to BSA
requirements in such circumstances that
involve international use or person to
person payments. Because financial
transparency can be obscured, if the
prepaid access product can be used
internationally and other persons or
non-depository sources can add or
deplete the funds associated with it,
FinCEN is proposing a regulatory
construct under which certain providers
and sellers of closed loop prepaid access
would be subject to the BSA
implementing rules.44
We believe that this treatment is
warranted given information provided
by our law enforcement colleagues,
maintained in a confidential docket,
that closed loop gift cards have a strong
appeal for criminal enterprises to
launder cash proceeds in trade
(merchandise). The criminals focus
particularly on merchants who maintain
retail locations both within and outside
of the United States. The ability to
redeem the value placed on the card on
either side of the border is a convenient,
anonymous method to move and
masquerade illicit funds freely. The
proposed rule would clarify that
providers of prepaid closed loop access
that can be used within and outside our
43 FinCEN Ruling 2003–4 (Definition of Money
Transmitter/Stored Value—Gift Certificates/Gift
Cards) (Aug. 15, 2003).
44 In several contexts, FinCEN has articulated the
heightened money laundering and terrorist
financing vulnerabilities associated with
international transactions. The concern about
international use is consistent with FinCEN’s
frequently repeated position that the specific
geographic locations at which a financial product
or service is offered must be taken into account in
assessing the risks associated with that product or
service. See, e.g., Bank Secrecy Act/Anti-Money
Laundering Act Examination Manual for Money
Services Businesses (December 2008), p. 21. The
concern about person-to-person transfers is
consistent with guidance that FinCEN has issued
with respect to intra-institutional transfers of value
from one subaccount to another by other types of
financial institutions. See, e.g., FIN–2008–G008
(September 10, 2008), Application of the Definition
of Money Transmitter to Brokers and Dealers in
Currency and Other Commodities.
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36595
borders are within the scope of BSA
regulatory requirements.
We question whether it might now be
appropriate to revisit the rationale that
we have previously applied to closed
loop prepaid access even when such
prepaid access is limited solely to
domestic use. Are there inherent
vulnerabilities in closed loop prepaid
access that require our consideration? Is
closed loop prepaid access that allows
use at more than a single retail facility
(for example, to a shopping mall) more
vulnerable to abuse than a traditional
closed loop product? FinCEN solicits
comment on whether and how it should
reconsider its existing interpretation
with respect to closed loop gift cards.
X. Consideration of Examination
Authority
As noted earlier, the IRS has been
delegated the authority to examine
money services businesses for
compliance with the BSA, given that
there is not a Federal functional
regulator with broad supervision over
money services businesses. With respect
to providers of prepaid access, FinCEN
seeks comment on any particular
aspects of the prepaid access sector that
should be considered when making a
decision about whether and how to
delegate examination authority.
XI. Future Rulemakings Contemplated
We acknowledge that the proposed
revisions to the regulatory text do not
address the full array of regulatory
considerations raised by the marketing
and use of prepaid access. FinCEN
recognizes that despite its many positive
aspects, as with any innovation in the
delivery of monetary value, prepaid
access can be misused. Our goal is to
recognize these vulnerabilities and to
assist law enforcement in promoting
transparency throughout the financial
system. Our further goal is to undertake
this effort while mindful of the many
legitimate, beneficial uses of these
payment products.
The prepaid environment is no longer
limited to simply commercial business
uses; increasingly, the Federal
government is making widespread use
of prepaid access in delivering benefits
to individuals such as certain Social
Security payments and disaster relief
assistance. By no means do we intend
to curtail the growth or migration to
prepaid access where there are
regulatory controls in place. Where all
of the parties and transactions can
reveal a legitimate audit trail, FinCEN
and its law enforcement colleagues raise
no objection.
We believe that there may be other
areas and aspects concerning the
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prepaid business environment that
warrant future regulatory scrutiny. As
noted earlier, we intend to engage in a
rulemaking on instituting reporting
requirements on the international
transport of prepaid access. If there are
other areas in need of consideration for
future rulemaking, we ask for the public
to offer comment.
XII. Section-by-Section Analysis
Pursuant to FinCEN’s authority to
interpret the provisions of 31 U.S.C.
5312, this document proposes to amend
31 CFR part 103, primarily by revising
the definition of ‘‘stored value’’ as stated
below. These proposed changes include
the following: (1) Renaming ‘‘stored
value’’ as ‘‘prepaid access’’ and defining
that term; (2) deleting the terms ‘‘issuer
and redeemer’’ of stored value; (3)
imposing suspicious activity reporting,
customer information and transaction
information recordkeeping requirements
on both providers and sellers of prepaid
access and, additionally, imposing a
registration requirement on providers
only; and (4) exempting certain
categories of prepaid access products
and services posing lower risks of
money laundering and terrorist
financing from certain requirements.
A. Meaning of the Term ‘‘Closed Loop
Prepaid Access’’
The proposed term ‘‘closed loop
prepaid access’’ is defined as prepaid
access to funds or the value of funds
that is limited to a defined merchant or
location (or a set of locations) such as
a specific retailer or retail chain, a
college campus, or a subway system.
This proposed definition supersedes the
definition proposed in FinCEN’s 2009
MSB NPRM.45 It is similar to the
previous proposed definition, but it
replaces the term ‘‘stored value’’ with
‘‘prepaid access’’ and uses more precise
language.
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B. Meaning of the Term ‘‘Provider of
Prepaid Access’’
1. In General
In general, this term will apply to any
person that serves in the capacity of
oversight and control for a prepaid
program. The determination of the
applicability of this term to any given
player in the program’s transaction
chain will be a matter of facts and
circumstances; we do not ‘‘assign’’ this
term to any particular role. We
recognize that there may be situations in
which no single party alone exercises
exclusive control. However, we do
believe that there will always be a party
in the transaction chain with the
45 74
FR 22129, 22141 (May 12, 2009).
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predominant degree of decision-making
ability; that person plays the lead role
among all the others, and is in the best
position to serve as a conduit for
information for regulatory and law
enforcement purposes.
We wish to state clearly and
emphatically that identifying the
provider of prepaid access is not simply
an arbitrary decision by the program
participants. As with other MSBs, the
role of the provider of prepaid access is
determined through the facts and
circumstances surrounding the activity;
no single act or duty alone will be
determinative. While not exhaustive, we
consider the following activities to be
strong indicators of what entity acts in
a principal role:
• The party in whose name the
prepaid program is marketed to the
purchasing public. For example, whose
press release trumpets the launch of a
new product? Whose name is used in
print, on-line advertisements, and on
the face of the card/device itself ? In
legal parlance, the individual or entity
who ‘‘holds himself out’’ as the lead
player will be a very important
determining characteristic.
• The party who a ‘‘reasonable
person’’ would identify as the principal
entity in a transaction chain—the
principal decision-maker.
• The party to whom the issuing bank
looks as its principal representative in
protecting its network relationship and
its brand integrity.
• The party who determines
distribution methods and sales
strategies.
• The party whose expertise in the
prepaid environment is recognized by
the others, particularly by the issuing
bank, as instrumental in bringing
together the most appropriate parties for
the delivery of a successful program.
We intend for these enumerated
characteristics to illustrate that there is
no one single determinant; the provider
of prepaid access need not do, or refrain
from doing, any single activity. The
totality of the facts and circumstances
will identify the provider of prepaid
access.
(a) Organizing the Prepaid Program
A logical first step in the
determination of the party to be deemed
the provider of prepaid access is to look
to the initiation and establishment of
the program itself. This may involve
actions or activities as diverse as
identifying the need for a prepaid
program, developing a business plan, or
obtaining financing and contracting
with other principals. This step alone,
however, is not dispositive in
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determining that a party is appropriately
deemed a provider of prepaid access.
We can easily foresee situations
where the initiator of a prepaid program
recognizes early in the process that
unique skills and industry expertise are
necessary to carry the program through
to fulfillment; for example, when a
corporation’s human resources
department decides to transfer its
payroll distribution from paper checks
to reloadable prepaid cards. In that case,
although the human resources
department may well have identified
the need for a prepaid program, and
may have established some threshold
parameters, it may choose to cede the
program to an expert in the industry by
contracting with an outside third party.
Most likely, under these circumstances,
the party assuming these duties from the
corporation’s human resources officials
will step into the role of the provider of
prepaid access. The totality of the
circumstances remains the basis for this
determination.
(b) Setting the Terms and Conditions
and Determining That the Terms Have
Not Been Exceeded
Principally, this element in the
determination of the status of a provider
will concern the technical specifications
involved in establishing and operating
the prepaid program. For example, the
terms and conditions may encompass a
range of decisions ranging from sales
locations for prepaid access, fees
assessed for activation and reloading,
and avenues to access customer service
assistance and myriad others.
While there may be many
considerations that factor into
establishing the terms and conditions,
such as cost considerations, marketing
partnerships and demographic targets,
the provider of prepaid access will be
the party best situated to understand the
entire prepaid landscape. The provider
of prepaid access brings its industry
understanding to the program, and
should be in a position to convey the
pros and cons of varying business
decisions to the other parties in the
program.
(c) Determining the Other Businesses
That Will Participate in the Transaction
Chain, Which May Include the Issuing
Bank, the Payment Processor, or the
Distributor
As discussed in (b) above, the
provider of prepaid access possesses the
inside industry understanding, and
presumably the industry contacts and
relationships as well, to identify the
other parties necessary for a prepaid
program. Our understanding of the
industry is that some issuing banks and
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processors are particularly well-known
as market leaders in the prepaid
environment. Given this specialization,
it may be that a provider of prepaid
access will be more likely to seek out
and to strike agreements with such
specialty organizations. Or, a provider
of prepaid access may choose its
operating partners with an eye toward
geographic proximity, or specialized
expertise in a particular line of prepaid
access, such as payroll programs. As
with the four other factors enumerated
herein, this element should not be
considered in isolation but as one
determinant when identifying a
provider.
(d) Controlling or Directing the
Appropriate Party To Initiate, Freeze, or
Terminate Prepaid Access
As one of the five criteria enumerated
in determining the provider of prepaid
access in a prepaid operating
environment, the ability to affect the
movement of funds between parties
and/or entities is very important. We
understand that the provider of prepaid
access may exercise this authority alone,
in tandem with other principals or at
the direction of law enforcement or
judicial authority. It is a key ability that
demonstrates an element of oversight
and decision-making power that is less
apparent, and much less discretionary,
among the other program participants.
We believe that there will be
situations, in the operation of any
prepaid program, that require a central
decision-maker to determine whether a
particular transaction should be
disallowed or, in the alternative, to
approve an otherwise irregular
transaction due to mitigating
circumstances. The provider of prepaid
access will be the logical decisionmaker in these situations, given its
primacy in the prepaid program. The
contractual agreements among the
parties may even require the sharing of
information with a central point of
contact for this specific purpose. While
the processor may flag the transaction
and/or deactivate the card, and the
issuing bank and the network may
confer about authorization, it is
generally at the direction of the provider
of prepaid access that these decisions
are made and these actions are taken,
absent some other compelling reason for
the processor, issuing bank or network
to act unilaterally.
Additionally, if a SAR filing is
warranted, it is the provider of prepaid
access who possesses the most
comprehensive ‘‘big picture’’ perspective
and is in the best position to provide the
most meaningful information. It is
precisely the provider’s relationship to
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all of the parties in the transaction chain
which is of great value to law
enforcement.
We acknowledge that the above may
be a very basic illustration of a far more
complex series of communications and
actions. But, we believe that, ultimately,
there is a party who must be in the
dominant position to harmonize the
duties and responsibilities of the other
participants. The determination of the
identity of the provider of prepaid
access will be influenced considerably
by the element of oversight and control
it can freely exercise.
(e) Engaging in Activity That
Demonstrates Control and Oversight of
Transactions
This criterion among the five is
intended to capture situations where the
party exercising control and oversight
may be evidenced by activities that do
not fit squarely within items a through
d, preceding. To the extent that both the
prepaid industry and our understanding
of it continue to evolve, this criterion
provides the flexibility needed to ensure
reasonable longevity for the rule.
2. Distinguishing the Role of Banks and
Certain Non-MSB Financial Institutions
Under This Rulemaking
By definition under FinCEN’s
regulations, MSBs exclude banks and
entities registered with, and regulated or
examined by the SEC or the CFTC.46
Accordingly, while banks in particular
often play a critical role with respect to
prepaid access, banks (and persons
registered with and regulated or
examined by the SEC or the CFTC)
cannot be providers of prepaid access
under the rule proposed in this NPRM.
The record collection processes
proposed in this MSB rulemaking do
not apply to banks. In situations where
a bank functions like a provider of
prepaid access as defined under this
proposed rulemaking, FinCEN expects
that the bank’s compliance with its preexisting regulatory obligations 47 under
the BSA, including responsibility for
understanding thoroughly the nature
and activities of, and the information
collected by, the various other actors in
the bank’s program, satisfies the policy
46 31
CFR 103.11(uu).
Federal banking agencies have addressed
banks’ responsibilities when involved in prepaid
programs in a number of different circulars and
guidance pieces, e.g. OTS Memo to CEOs #254
‘‘Guidance on Gift Card Programs’’ (February 28,
2007); OCC Advisory Letter AL 2004–5, Payroll
Card Systems (May 6, 2004), and the FFIEC
Examination Manual, ‘‘Expanded Examination
Overview and Procedures for Products and
Services; Electronic Cash, Overview; subsection
Prepaid Cards/Stored Value Cards’’ (April 2010
update).
47 The
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goals that underlie this NPRM. FinCEN
also expects that, in such situations, the
bank is responsible for providing timely,
comprehensive information to requests
posed by law enforcement.
Generally, FinCEN believes that such
bank-driven prepaid programs are not
prevalent within the payments industry.
Most often, the bank’s role appears
limited to providing the link to the
network brand as the issuing bank,
holding funds that will be accessed
through a prepaid program, and
supporting the decisions made by its
partners for the establishment and
operation of the prepaid program.
Moreover, FinCEN is not aware of any
entities registered with and regulated or
examined by the SEC or CFTC that are
actively engaged in the prepaid access
industry in such a way as to approach
the equivalent of a provider or seller of
prepaid access, and solicits comment on
the extent to which such entities are
engaged in the prepaid access industry.
We reiterate, however, that even if
situations existed in which any such
entity functioned like a provider or
seller of prepaid access, this entity
would not be a provider or seller of
prepaid access under the rule proposed
in this NPRM, because of the general
exclusion of such entities from the
definition of MSB under FinCEN’s
regulations.48
As described earlier in this NPRM, in
beginning this rulemaking process we
sought to understand the prepaid
industry comprehensively, including its
many participants along the transaction
chain. To provide the reader with
context, in the following, we attempt to
identify the component parties and to
briefly describe their role. To the degree
that our sketch of the landscape is
inaccurate or incomplete, we seek
guidance and clarification from the
commenting public:
Program Sponsor: The entity that
establishes the program relationship(s),
identifies and procures the necessary
parties and sets contractual terms and
conditions. FinCEN expects that in
many instances the program sponsor
will be the provider of prepaid access,
but given that this term is currently not
employed in a uniform fashion across
industry, there are also situations in
which a program sponsor may not meet
the description of the provider of
prepaid access.
Program Manager: A common term of
art used in the prepaid industry. We
characterize the Program Manager as the
entity that functions as an operations
‘‘control center’’ for the program. This
function ensures that the program’s day48 Id.
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to-day operations flow smoothly, and
will troubleshoot problems as they arise
(e.g., computer outages, card
functionality problems, network
authorization issues), either firsthand or
by delegating to the appropriate party
within the prepaid program.
Network: Any of the payment
networks, including MasterCard, VISA,
Discover and American Express.
Distributor: The entity, as distinct
from the network, that ‘‘brands’’ the card
with its business identity. It may also
play a central role in marketing the card
through its regular communications
with customers.
Processor: The entity that conducts
the transaction processing and
facilitates funds management and
tracking. As defined by an industry
trade group,49 the ‘‘core processing
functions’’ consist of:
i. Card account set-up and card
activation;
ii. Provision of authorizations for card
transactions;
iii. Value load and reload processing;
and
iv. Security/fraud control and
reporting.
The processor’s role in loading and
reloading value is largely ministerial,
executed pursuant to instructions from
the card network, the ACH or the reload
facility handling a cash transaction. For
the other enumerated duties, the
processor receives operating
instructions from the program manager
or other program authority.
Issuer, Issuing Bank: The depository
institution whose contractual
involvement is required in order to
invoke the network brand (Visa,
MasterCard, Discover, American
Express) and which also may serve as
the holder of funds that have been
prepaid and are awaiting instructions to
be disbursed.
Retailer and/or Reload Facility: The
various retail locations, including,
among many others, convenience stores,
drugstores, and supermarkets where an
individual consumer can purchase a
prepaid card. Typically, the cards are
maintained on a retail ‘‘j-hook’’ display
fixture, from which the consumer can
select the product of his choice and
purchase onsite. The card’s value may
be inaccessible until the purchaser
subsequently activates the card through
a prescribed verification system, often a
toll-free phone call; or, a very low dollar
amount may be accessible to the card
purchaser prior to verification.
49 The Network Branded Prepaid Card
Association (NBPCA) ‘‘Recommended Practices for
Anti-Money Laundering Compliance for U.S.-Based
Prepaid Card Programs,’’ (2008) pg. 7.
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The Reload function varies, but the
evolving model appears to be a selfoperated kiosk at locations such as
Western Union offices and Wal-Mart
MoneyCenters.
C. Meaning of the Term ‘‘Prepaid
Program’’
There may be circumstances where
prepaid access products or services, or
even the entire prepaid program(s) of a
specific provider of prepaid access, are
organized in such a way, or are of such
minimal risk, that those products,
services or provider need not fall within
the regulatory strictures of the BSA. A
prepaid access program whose
operations fall squarely within one or
more of the limitations described below
in (1)–(5) will not bear characteristics
conducive to money laundering or illicit
behavior under the BSA. A provider of
a range of products and services, only
some of which fall within the
exemptions, will be subject to regulation
as a provider of prepaid access and as
an MSB, but the exempt products and
services will not be subject to certain
BSA requirements. The types of prepaid
programs considered outside the
parameters of this rulemaking are:
1. The Payment of Benefits, Incentives,
Wages, or Salaries Through Payroll
Cards or Other Such Electronic Devices
for Similar Purposes
We believe that in most employer—
employee relationships, the necessary
personal details regarding the employee
(such as full name, address, date of birth
and a government identification
number) are known to the employer. In
those situations, where the individual
employees paid under the program are
identified by the employer, and where
this information is shared with (or made
available to) the provider of prepaid
access, there are sufficient checks on
possible money laundering abuse to
warrant exclusion for this type of
program. These payroll programs, in
addition to regularly scheduled wage
and benefits payments, may also
include bonus or incentive payments
paid at intervals outside the norm. This
limitation applies only when the
employer (or appropriately designated
third parties), and not the employee, can
add to the funds to which the payroll
card or other such electronic device
provides access. The payment of
employees generally does not represent
an opportunity for the placement of illgotten funds into the financial system.
This exemption does not contemplate
scenarios in which an employer does
not have a direct relationship with an
employee and works through a third
party to pay the employee, such as in
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certain instances with a freelance
employee.
We understand that some members of
law enforcement would prefer to subject
all prepaid payroll programs to the full
range of BSA obligations. They assert
that criminals often establish shell
companies and use these fictitious
entities and non-existent employees as
conduits to launder illicit funds. They
believe that the potential for abuse of
prepaid payroll cards is considerable
and have voiced their concerns to us.
We therefore seek public comment
regarding the need to institute
additional safeguards and/or conditions
prior to excluding prepaid access to
payroll funds from the full extent of
BSA responsibilities. What
qualifications must a payroll program
establish to ensure that the employer
obtains all the necessary information
regarding each employee participant,
and that the information is kept current?
Are there methods to ensure that the
company and employees are legitimate,
and that the program is valid?
2. Payment of Government Benefits
Such as Unemployment, Child Support,
and Disaster Assistance Through
Electronic Devices
These types of benefits, payable at the
State and Federal level, currently range
across a great many areas including
unemployment, child support,
disability, Social Security, veterans’
benefits and disaster relief assistance.
Additionally, this category of prepaid
program may include provision of
public transit benefits. Given
governmental oversight over these
programs and the source of the funds,
we see minimal opportunity for the
placement or layering of illicit funds
into the financial system.
Our research into Federal benefit
payments reveal that there are some
unique programs currently employing
branded prepaid access as the delivery
mechanism for the payment of benefits.
Upon verification of the individual’s
eligibility for a benefit payment, the
Federal agency refers the individual to
an issuing bank for account
establishment and program enrollment.
To date, the programs have operated
very successfully, and the members of
the public receiving such benefits report
a high degree of satisfaction based on
the superior physical security of prepaid
access as compared to paper checks, the
reliability of periodic payment delivery
and the broad commercial acceptance of
prepaid access. FinCEN solicits
comment on whether such Federal
government prepaid programs are of
such a low risk for money laundering
abuses that even if the prepaid product
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or service can be used internationally,
or meets other criterion which
invalidates an exemption, the programs
should continue to be exempt.
3. Disbursement of Reimbursement
Funds From Pre-Tax Flexible Spending
Accounts for Health Care and
Dependent Care Expenses
Generally administered by a central
payor, these programs are pre-funded by
employee and/or employer
contributions to an account maintained
by the payor. Any monies not
reimbursed to the employee by the end
of the calendar year (or allowed grace
period) are forfeited to the Internal
Revenue Service.50 There are maximum
annual dollar limits established for
these accounts, and the funds can only
be accessed as reimbursement for
defined, qualifying expenses. We
believe that these types of highlycontrolled, low risk accounts are of
minimal value to potential money
launderers as a means of placing or
layering funds. For this reason, we do
not include these prepaid programs
within the scope of the current
rulemaking.
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4. Providing Prepaid Access to Funds
Subject to Limits That Include a
Maximum Value as Indicated Below,
Where Such Maximum Value Is Clearly
Visible on the Prepaid Access Product:
(a) At the Point of Initial Load, the Load
Limit Cannot Exceed $1,000; (b) At Any
Point in the Lifecycle of the Prepaid
Access, No More Than $1,000 in Total
Maximum Value May Be Accessed; and
(c) On Any Given Day, No More Than
$1,000 Can Be Withdrawn With the Use
of the Prepaid Access
The foregoing dollar maximums
associated with this particular
limitation are intended to distinguish
the many situations where prepaid
products are purchased solely as a onetime gift or convenience choice. In these
situations, the purchaser wants simply
to substitute prepaid access for
currency, generally in modest amounts.
As long as the dollar maximum
accessible by the prepaid access is
clearly visible, and no subsequent
loading or reloading can increase the
funds beyond the stated maximum, we
believe that the potential for misuse is
slight. Under these circumstances, the
prepaid program would not fall within
the scope of this regulation. FinCEN
wishes to emphasize that tying the
threshold to the requirement of having
50 Any flexible spending programs, or other
similar health expense-related programs, must
receive the same tax treatment by the IRS, or they
will not be considered to fall within this limitation.
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the maximum amount clearly indicated
on the product is a departure from the
current regulations, and that it is meant
to encourage industry to take steps
towards greater transparency in this
arena.
We have chosen a $1,000 maximum
for this provision for a number of
reasons: (1) Industry research findings
for average and maximum initial loads;
(2) consistency with thresholds
established for other MSB categories;
and (3) dollar level yielding greatest
utility of information for law
enforcement, while posing minimal
burden to consumers and the prepaid
access industry.
We request public comment on the
following considerations regarding this
section of the proposed rule:
• We seek comments from the public
on whether the $1,000 activity-based
threshold is appropriate. Please provide
us with comments regarding alternative
dollar limits, higher or lower than this
proposal, daily or otherwise, and tied to
a clearly delineated dollar amount or
not. What merits are derived and what
vulnerabilities are created by increasing
or decreasing the threshold? Would an
additional activity limit threshold, such
as annual multi-thousand thresholds
that exist in some European countries,
have benefits over our use of a daily
dollar level?
• What is the technological feasibility
of these requirements? What cost
implications and practical burdens are
raised by these requirements for the
provider of prepaid access, the
processor, or any other parties in the
transaction chain to enable the
application of the exemption?
• What practical implications and
what technological challenges arise if
different limits are established for
transfers, aggregate value, withdrawals,
and velocity?
5. Providing Closed-Loop Prepaid
Access
We believe that closed-loop prepaid
access, whose use is limited to a small
range of acceptance, for a very specific
type of good or service, also
appropriately falls outside the
parameters of this rulemaking. Closedloop providers, who are explicitly
known to the purchaser at the point of
sale, generally operate with
considerable oversight of the full extent
of the transaction chain, with the
generation of a substantial audit trail to
validate such. The effort required to use
closed-loop products for the placement,
layering or integration of funds makes
them unattractive and unlikely vehicles
for moving large sums of money
efficiently.
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However, a closed-loop provider
could be subject to the BSA
implementing rules under this proposal
if the prepaid access is no longer limited
in range. A departure from current
regulatory policy, this NPRM would
subject a closed-loop provider to the
BSA rules if the prepaid access product
could be used internationally or if other
persons and non-depository sources had
access and could transfer the value of
the funds. The exceptions to the
limitations are more fully discussed
below.
The explanations provided in the
preceding sections for allowing certain
prepaid access programs to fall outside
of the requirements of proposed 31 CFR
part 103.11(uu)(4)(iii) can also serve to
bring otherwise excluded programs
under the BSA rules if the risk factors
change. Specifically, in situations where
the provider administers a prepaid
program with features that introduce an
increased level of risk and serve to
diminish financial transparency, that
program may be subject to the full
extent of obligations under proposed 31
CFR 103.11(uu)(4)(iii), even if the other
program characteristics fall squarely
within 1 through 5, above. The
determination of whether the provider
must comply with all BSA requirements
must be analyzed for all of the
program’s attendant facts and
circumstances.
We believe that the characteristics
cited under proposed 31 CFR
103.11(uu)(4)(ii)(B)(1)–(3),
• Funds or value transmitted
internationally;
• Internal transfers within a program
between individual cardholders; or
• For anything that does not qualify
as closed-loop prepaid access, the
ability to load funds or the value of
funds from non-depository sources
allows for an element of anonymity that
obscures the financial transparency
necessary to ameliorate regulatory and
law enforcement concerns. While not
inherently suspect, the risks associated
with these types of transactions
diminish the clarity and audit trail that
is generally found in payroll, flexible
spending accounts, government benefits
and closed loop systems.
Additionally, inherent risk is
associated with any international
prepaid transaction simply because it
invokes governmental authority outside
our domestic boundaries. The phrase
‘‘international prepaid transaction’’ is
intended to capture a domestic-issued
prepaid product used outside of the
United States. ‘‘International prepaid
transaction’’ could also include a
foreign-issued prepaid product that is
marketed or used in the United States.
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In such an instance, the provider of
prepaid access could be a foreignlocated MSB subject to the BSA
implementing rules.51
Our law enforcement stakeholders
have warned of the potential use in an
underregulated environment of prepaid
access products transported across our
borders to effect high volume, high
velocity movement of funds in a manner
that may be extremely attractive to those
engaged in criminal activity. Although
not all international transactions
involve criminal behavior, we believe
that these transactions impose a level of
risk that requires full BSA compliance,
regardless of the type of prepaid
program in which the provider is
engaged.
We have identified the above five
types of prepaid programs as being of
less risk based on our current
understanding of comparative
vulnerabilities. FinCEN seeks comment
from law enforcement, industry, and the
general public concerning their own
assessment for money laundering and
terrorist financing risks posed by these
prepaid programs or prepaid programs
in general.
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D. Meaning of the Term ‘‘Seller of
Prepaid Access’’
The seller of prepaid access is the
party with the most face-to-face
purchaser contact and thus becomes a
valuable resource for capturing
information at the point of sale, unlike
any other party in the transaction chain.
Typically, the seller is a general purpose
retailer, engaged in a full spectrum
product line through a business entity
such as a pharmacy, convenience store,
supermarket, discount store or any of a
number of others. Precisely because this
party deals face-to-face with the
purchaser, and has the ability to capture
unique information in the course of
completing the transaction, we believe
the seller should fall within the
regulation’s direct reach.
Because the seller’s role is
complementary with, but not equal to,
the authority and primacy of the
provider of prepaid access, we choose
not to require registration with
FinCEN.52 The seller, we believe, is
51 2009 MSB NPRM, 74 FR 22129, 22133 (May 12,
2009).
52 With respect to certain business models,
FinCEN expects that a provider of prepaid access
may also be a seller of prepaid access. In such
contexts, as in other areas where regulatory overlap
exists, the more expansive of the two competing
applicable regulations will apply. For example, a
provider of prepaid access will not be absolved
from a registration requirement simply because it is
also a seller of prepaid access. In noting that a
provider of prepaid access may also be a seller,
FinCEN is not implying that all providers of
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generally acting as an agent on behalf of
the provider and this treatment is
consistent with other agents under the
MSB rules. However, the seller’s agency
does not excuse compliance with the
other responsibilities assigned under
this proposed rule: (1) The maintenance
of an effective AML program, (2) SAR
reporting, and (3) recordkeeping of
customer identifying information and
transactional data.
Coverage of sellers under this
definition does not include situations
where applicable exemptions to the
scope of covered prepaid programs
apply. Thus, a retailer who sells only
those prepaid access products that fall
within the scope of the exemptions to
the definition of prepaid programs will
have no BSA responsibilities under this
rulemaking. Such retailers will,
however, still have responsibilities
under the BSA with respect to filing
reports on the receipt of currency in
excess of $10,000 in the course of
engaging in a trade or business.53 While
this reporting requirement will ensure
some transparency within the context of
the sale of prepaid access that otherwise
falls outside the scope of BSA
regulations, FinCEN is actively
considering whether this level of
reporting is enough to detect and deter
abuse of prepaid access by illicit actors
that might seek to launder funds
through the bulk purchase of such
prepaid access products.
FinCEN is considering whether to
include as an addition to the proposed
definition of seller of prepaid access, an
activity-based threshold, similar to such
thresholds that we have used in other
contexts. Consistent with these other
approaches, FinCEN is considering
whether to include within the definition
of sellers of prepaid access those entities
that sell any form of prepaid access,
regardless of its inclusion in a BSA
covered prepaid program, in an amount
over $1,000 to any person on any day
in one or more transactions. FinCEN
believes there may be merit in having
greater transparency for all high-value
prepaid access above $1,000. Such a
threshold would trigger suspicious
activity reporting and other obligations
on covered sellers to enhance
transparency and deter illicit use.
Imposing reporting requirements on
such sellers would also lead to the
ability of the law enforcement
community to pursue persons deemed
prepaid access will also be sellers. FinCEN notes
that with respect to some prepaid programs, such
as those pertaining to government benefits, and
payroll, there may be no seller or retail outlet
associated with the program.
53 These reports, filed on FinCEN Form 8300, are
required under 31 CFR 103.30.
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to have structured transactions to avoid
a report required of a financial
institution.
E. Meaning of the Term ‘‘Prepaid
Access’’
The current regulations use the term
‘‘stored value.’’ 31 CFR 103.11(vv)
defines the term as funds or the value
of funds represented in digital
electronic format (whether or not
specially encrypted) and stored or
capable of storage on electronic media
in such a way as to be retrievable and
transferable electronically. The use of
the term ‘‘stored value,’’ as discussed
previously in section II–B of the
Preamble, was known from its inception
to be a less-than-perfect label for this
payment mechanism, given that no
value is actually ‘‘stored’’ on the card.
Very shortly after the publication of the
MSB final rule in 1999, the term
‘‘prepaid’’ emerged as the more common
industry term. We now revise our term
to correspond to the more accurate and
the more prevalent term in the
marketplace.
This proposal is an opportunity to
employ more precise terminology while
still striving for regulatory flexibility so
that the rule will not become obsolete
with the next innovative product. We
believe the proposed language has the
necessary regulatory elasticity to survive
future technological advancements.
Specifically, we propose defining
‘‘prepaid access’’ as an ‘‘electronic device
or vehicle, such as a card, plate, code,
number, electronic serial number,
mobile identification number, personal
identification number, or other
instrument that provides a portal to
funds or the value of funds that have
been paid in advance and can be
retrievable and transferable at some
point in the future.’’
1. Removal of Exemption of Stored
Value Transactions From Suspicious
Activity Reporting
FinCEN proposes to revise the
regulation implementing 31 U.S.C.
5318(g) which requires MSBs to report
certain suspicious activity. In particular,
FinCEN proposes to remove the
exemption that previously accorded
issuers, sellers and redeemers of stored
value a lighter BSA regime by not
requiring them to report suspicious
activity under 31 CFR 103.20. The
implementing regulation currently
states:
[e]very money services business described in
§ 103.11(uu)(1), (3), (4), (5), or (6), shall file
with the Treasury Department * * * a report
of any suspicious transaction relevant to a
possible violation of law or regulation. * * *
Notwithstanding the provisions of this
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section, a transaction that involves solely the
issuance, or facilitation of the transfer of
stored value, or the issuance, sale, or
redemption of stored value, shall not be
subject to a reporting under this paragraph
(a), until the promulgation of rules
specifically relating to such reporting.
The proposed definition will remove
the stored value exemption from
paragraph (a)(5) of 31 CFR 103.20. When
the current regulation was
implemented, it contemplated that
issuers, sellers, and redeemers of stored
value were among the institutions that
could provide valuable information
concerning suspicious transactions.54
However, FinCEN determined that it
was not appropriate to specifically
require issuers, sellers, and redeemers of
stored value to file SARs because of the
infancy of the use of stored value
products in the United States.55
The reasons for exempting
transactions solely involving stored
value from SAR reporting are no longer
applicable. Moreover, the reasons for
requiring the reporting of these
transactions have increased. Since the
implementation of the SAR rule for
MSBs, the growth of the industry has
made it an attractive medium through
which money launderers can conduct
illicit transactions. Prepaid access is
easily transportable and, in some cases,
can be loaded from a number of
different locations.
In developing their programs,
providers of prepaid access have often
implemented technological solutions to
combat fraud and to increase transaction
efficiencies. These same technology
solutions can logically provide
additional information that may prove
useful in identifying suspicious activity
that will have a high degree of
usefulness in criminal, tax, and
regulatory investigations and
proceedings. Therefore, the proposed
regulation will remove the exemption
for providers from filing SARs.
We believe that prepaid access sellers
also serve a potentially valuable role in
reporting suspicious activity through
SAR filings. Although they may not
employ the same sophisticated
technology solutions as many providers,
their position as the uniquely-situated
customer contact point offers
information at least as important. These
sellers represent the first step in the
transaction chain. Such a direct, handson role is unique and potentially highly
valuable to the law enforcement
community.
54 62
FR 27900, 27904 (May 21, 1997).
55 Id.
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2. Requirement That Prepaid Access
Providers Retain Transaction
Information
Our discussions with the law
enforcement community have revealed
the utility of detailed records and
recordkeeping on the part of regulated
financial institutions, over a substantial
period of time, generally five years. This
facilitates investigations in which law
enforcement is attempting to reconstruct
a pattern, or a history of transaction
activity, that substantiates criminal
behavior involving prepaid products or
services. In § 103.125, we discuss
recordkeeping related to the customer
involved in the initial purchase of the
prepaid access product. Under § 103.40,
we seek recordkeeping related to the
actual usage, the transaction history,
surrounding a prepaid product over a
five year time period.
We emphasize, however, that records
to be retained under this section are
only those generated in the ordinary
course of business by a business entity
involved in transaction processing. We
believe that these records would
routinely reflect (1) type of transaction
(ATM withdrawals, POS purchase, etc.),
(2) amount and location of transaction,
(3) date and time of transaction, and (4)
any other unique identifiers related to
transactions. These records need not be
kept in any particular format, or by any
particular entity in the transaction
chain. The provider of prepaid access
bears the responsibility, however, to
establish these recordkeeping
requirements either internally or on the
part of a third party entity. Additionally,
the records must be easily accessible
and retrievable upon the appropriate
request of law enforcement or judicial
order. Although we are currently
proposing that records of relevant
transactions may be kept in various
locations at the direction of the provider
of prepaid access, FinCEN is also
considering whether there should be a
requirement that the provider of prepaid
access maintain all such records in a
central location. FinCEN seeks comment
on the costs and benefits of such a
requirement to maintain transaction
records more centrally.
3. Removal of Registration Exemption
for Issuers, Sellers and Redeemers of
Stored Value
FinCEN proposes to revise the
regulation implementing 31 U.S.C. 5330
that requires MSBs to register with
FinCEN. Specifically, FinCEN proposes
to amend 31 CFR 103.41 by removing
the exemption from registration
accorded to issuers, sellers, and
redeemers of stored value. The
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implementing regulation currently
states, ‘‘* * * each money services
business * * * must register with the
Department of the Treasury* * *’’ It
states further, ‘‘[t]his section does not
apply to * * * a person to the extent
that the person is an issuer, seller, or
redeemer of stored value.’’
FinCEN is proposing to revoke the
exemption from registration previously
accorded to issuers, sellers, and
redeemers of stored value. Since the
initial exemption, the stored value
industry has experienced rapid growth
and market maturity; FinCEN no longer
feels that regulation will inhibit the
successful development of the industry.
Additionally, the lack of a registration
requirement may result in a market
imbalance between providers of prepaid
access and other MSBs that offer
competing services. By removing the
exemption, providers of prepaid access
will now be required to register as MSBs
with FinCEN. The rule makes it clear
that for every prepaid program there
must be a non-bank provider of prepaid
access registered with FinCEN.56 We
wish to emphasize, however, that like
all other MSB agents, sellers of prepaid
access are not required to register.
FinCEN anticipates that identifying
information about the component
entities involved in a prepaid program
will be fundamentally important to the
law enforcement community. We
believe that the most efficient way to
obtain this information and make it
available for law enforcement use is via
the registration process, and FinCEN
will be considering ways in which the
MSB Registration form, FinCEN Form
107, can be updated to accommodate
such information. We solicit comments
on the use of the form to collect this
information.
4. Requirement That Providers and
Sellers of Prepaid Access Retain
Customer Information
FinCEN proposes to revise the
regulation implementing 31 U.S.C.
5318(h) that requires MSBs to maintain
an adequate anti-money laundering
program. Specifically, FinCEN proposes
to amend 31 CFR part 103.125(d)(1) by
prescribing that, as a minimum standard
of their anti-money laundering program,
providers of prepaid access and sellers
of prepaid access must have policies
56 By virtue of the regulatory definition of a
money services business, neither a bank nor any
other participants in the bank-centered prepaid
program would be required to register with FinCEN.
In addition, if applicable, entities registered with,
and regulated by or examined by the SEC or the
CFTC would not be required to register with
FinCEN.
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and procedures for the retention of
customer identifying information.
In implementing 31 CFR 103.125,
FinCEN stated that the uniqueness of
each financial institution required the
adaptation of policies, procedures, and
internal controls to a level
commensurate to the risks in its
business model, including geography
and customer base. Therefore, it was not
intended that the standards established
in 31 CFR 103.125 would create specific
identical requirements for all MSBs.
Based on inherent risks, some
businesses would be required to
implement more policies, procedures,
and internal controls than others.
The proposed regulation will add
paragraph (d)(1)(iv) stating ‘‘[a] money
services business that is a provider or
seller of prepaid access must establish
procedures to verify the identity of a
customer of a prepaid program and must
retain such customer identifying
information, including name, date of
birth, address, and identification
number, for five years.’’ FinCEN believes
that such customer information capture
and retention is necessary for greater
financial transparency of the purchasers
of the prepaid products or services. We
anticipate that retaining such records
will not only assist the providers and
sellers, but may be of great value to law
enforcement. FinCEN seeks comment on
the value of retaining such records.
For providers and sellers of prepaid
access, this proposed customer
identification requirement is linked to
and narrowed by the proposed
definition of ‘‘prepaid program.’’
Accordingly, providers and sellers of
prepaid access involved in the delivery
and sale of a form of prepaid
arrangement not deemed a prepaid
program under 31 CFR 103.11(uu)(4)(ii),
would not be required to obtain
customer information under this part.
As we have discussed this matter with
our law enforcement colleagues
throughout the rulemaking process, we
have often heard that a standard ‘‘data
set’’ of information, typically including
name, address, date of birth and a form
of government-issued identification
containing a unique identifying number
should be required at a minimum.
FinCEN also believes that the
information proposed to be retained will
be highly useful in the investigation and
prosecution of criminal, tax, and
regulatory investigations and
proceedings. Without the requirement
that this information be retained, law
enforcement may likely be missing
valuable information.
FinCEN recognizes, however, that
verifying and retaining information on
every applicable transaction could be
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time consuming and expensive. Such
costs might be alleviated if the precise
type of information that an institution
had to collect was left to the
determination of the provider or seller
of prepaid access based on an
assessment of their risks, in a manner
consistent with other FinCEN
regulations. We seek public comment as
to the merits of incorporating a riskbased standard into the rule, instead of
the proposed combination of a riskbased approach with a mandatory set of
minimum information collection
standards.
The provider and seller are reminded
that the AML program developed for
their prepaid program or prepaid
services should accurately reflect their
business operations. The program must
be sufficiently detailed with standards
and criteria specified for how the
information is to be collected, verified,
and retained. There should also be
provisions addressing its
communication throughout the
employee ranks and for the training of
any individuals/entities acting on its
behalf.
XIII. Questions for Public Comment
FinCEN invites comments on all
aspects of the proposal to regulate
prepaid access. The following
represents a compilation of all of the
questions presented earlier in the
preamble text. They have been
aggregated here for the convenience of
the commenting public.
1. Proposed Terminology for This
Rulemaking
We seek public comment regarding
the terms ‘‘prepaid access’’ and
‘‘provider of prepaid access,’’ and
whether they offer the best, most
meaningful description of the
product(s).
2. International Transport To Be
Addressed in a Subsequent Rulemaking
FinCEN intends to undertake a
subsequent rulemaking proposal on the
international transport of prepaid
access. In the interim, we invite
comment on any aspect of the
international transport issue that we
should consider in the context of a
future reporting requirement directed at
this type of payment mechanism.
3. Alternate Approach to Designation of
a Single, Central ‘‘Provider’’
The many parties in the transaction
chain each bring specialized knowledge
to the program. By imposing a separate,
stand-alone obligation on each party
along the transaction chain, we may
facilitate the collection of more detailed
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information not filtered through any
secondary perspective. As FinCEN
considers such an alternate approach,
we seek comment on which prepaid
program participants offer the most
meaningful information, such as
transaction information, purchaser
information, or card holder information.
4. $1,000 Threshold Aggregation
In its 2009 MSB NPRM, FinCEN
sought comment on whether
transactions involving multiple MSB
services should require aggregation for
purposes of determining whether
definitional thresholds had been met.
We received industry comments on this
issue generally opposed to such a
development.
FinCEN is still considering the matter
and welcomes any further comments on
this issue, particularly with respect to
the inclusion of the sale of prepaid
access in connection with other money
services business products.
5. Closed Loop Prepaid Access,
Generally
We question whether it might now be
appropriate to revisit the rationale that
we have previously applied to closed
loop prepaid access even if such
prepaid access is limited solely to
domestic use. Are there inherent
vulnerabilities in closed loop prepaid
access that require our consideration? Is
closed loop prepaid access that allows
use at more than a single retail facility
(for example, at a shopping mall) more
vulnerable to abuse than a traditional
closed loop product? FinCEN solicits
comment on whether and how it should
reconsider its existing interpretation
with respect to closed loop gift cards.
6. Consideration of Examination
Authority
With respect to providers of prepaid
access, FinCEN seeks comment on any
particular aspects of the prepaid access
sector that should be considered when
making a decision about whether and
how to delegate examination authority.
7. Future Rulemakings Contemplated
As noted earlier, we intend to engage
in a rulemaking on instituting reporting
requirements on the international
transport of prepaid access. If there are
other areas in need of consideration for
future rulemaking, we ask for the public
to offer comment.
8. SEC and CFTC-Regulated Entities;
Involvement in Prepaid Access Sector
FinCEN is not aware of entities
registered with, and regulated or
examined by the SEC or CFTC that are
actively engaged in the prepaid access
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industry in such a way as to approach
the equivalent of a provider or seller of
prepaid access, and solicits comment on
the extent to which such entities are
engaged in the prepaid access industry.
9. Description of Participants in the
Prepaid Access Transaction Chain
To the degree that our sketch of the
landscape is inaccurate or incomplete,
we seek guidance and clarification from
the commenting public.
10. Employer Use of Prepaid Access
Program for Payroll Purposes
We understand that some members of
the law enforcement community would
prefer to subject all prepaid payroll
programs to the full range of BSA
obligations. They assert that criminals
often establish shell companies and use
these fictitious entities and non-existent
employees as conduits to launder illicit
funds. They believe that the potential
for abuse of prepaid payroll cards is
considerable and have voiced their
concerns to us. We therefore seek public
comment regarding the need to institute
additional safeguards and/or conditions
prior to excluding prepaid access to
payroll funds from the full extent of
BSA responsibilities. Are there methods
to ensure that the company and
employees are legitimate, and that the
program is valid?
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11. Requirements Placed on Limited
Value Prepaid Access To Enable
Exclusion From Regulation
We request public comment on the
following considerations regarding this
section of the proposed rule:
• Please provide us with comments
regarding alternative dollar limits,
higher or lower than this proposal, daily
or otherwise, and tied to a clearly
delineated dollar amount or not. What
merits are derived and what
vulnerabilities are created by increasing
or decreasing the threshold? Would an
additional activity limit threshold, such
as annual multi-thousand thresholds
that exist in some European countries,
have benefits over our use of a daily
dollar level?
• What is the technological feasibility
of these requirements? What cost
implications and practical burdens are
raised by these requirements for the
provider of prepaid access, the
processor, or any other parties in the
transaction chain to enable the
application of the exemption?
• What practical implications and
what technological challenges arise if
different limits are established for
transfers, aggregate value, withdrawals,
and velocity?
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12. Information Regarding the Prepaid
Access Program To Be Derived Through
Registration Process
FinCEN anticipates that identifying
information about the component
entities involved in a prepaid program
will be fundamentally important to the
law enforcement community. We
believe that the most efficient way to
obtain this information and make it
available for law enforcement use is via
the registration process, and FinCEN
will be considering ways in which the
MSB Registration form, FinCEN Form
107, can be updated to accommodate
such information. We solicit comments
on the use of the form to collect this
information.
13. Capture and Retention of Customer
Information
FinCEN believes that such customer
information capture and retention is
necessary for greater financial
transparency of the purchasers of the
prepaid products or services. We
anticipate that retaining such records
will assist not only the providers and
sellers but may be of great value to law
enforcement. FinCEN seeks comment on
the value of retaining such records.
14. Mandatory Data Set of Customer
Information vs. Risk-Based Assessment
of Necessary Information Variables
FinCEN recognizes that verifying and
retaining information on every
applicable transaction could be time
consuming and expensive. Such costs
might be alleviated if the precise type of
information that an institution had to
collect was left to the determination of
the provider or seller of prepaid access
based on an assessment of their risks, in
a manner consistent with other FinCEN
regulations. We seek public comment as
to the merits of incorporating a riskbased standard into the rule instead of
the proposed combination of a riskbased approach with a mandatory set of
minimum standards.
15. Certification of Regulatory Burden
• FinCEN’s research has revealed that
AML and customer identification
requirements are currently imposed on
providers of prepaid access (and
through them, to sellers of prepaid
access) by the partner bank that is
authorized to issue the prepaid access
by the payment network. FinCEN
solicits confirmation of this fact, and
any substantial divergence between the
current contractual obligations of a
provider or seller, and the requirements
specified by the proposed rule.
• Please provide comment on any or
all of the provisions in the proposed
rule with regard to (a) the impact of the
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provision(s) (including any benefits and
costs), if any, in carrying out
responsibilities under the proposed rule
and (b) what alternatives, if any,
FinCEN should consider.
XIV. Proposed Location in Chapter X
As discussed in a previous Federal
Register Notice, 73 FR 66414, Nov. 7,
2008, FinCEN is separately proposing to
remove Part 103 of Chapter I of Title 31,
Code of Federal Regulations, and add
Parts 1000 to 1099 (‘‘Chapter X’’). If the
notice of proposed rulemaking for
Chapter X is finalized, the changes in
the present proposed rule would be
reorganized according to the proposed
Chapter X. The planned reorganization
will have no substantive effect on the
regulatory changes herein. The
regulatory changes of this specific
rulemaking would be renumbered
according to the proposed Chapter X as
follows:
(a) 103.11 would be moved to
1010.100;
(b) 103.20 would be moved to
1022.320;
(c) 103.33 would be moved to
1010.410;
(d) 103.40 would be moved to
1020.420;
(e) 103.41 would be moved to
1022.380; and
(f) 103.125 would be moved to
1022.210.
XV. Regulatory Flexibility Act
When an agency issues a rulemaking
proposal, the Regulatory Flexibility Act
(RFA) requires the agency to ‘‘prepare
and make available for public comment
an initial regulatory flexibility analysis’’
which will ‘‘describe the impact of the
proposed rule on small entities.’’ (5
U.S.C. § 603(a)). Section 605 of the RFA
allows an agency to certify a rule, in lieu
of preparing an analysis, if the proposed
rulemaking is not expected to have a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities.
Estimate of the number of small
entities to which the proposed rule will
apply:
For the purpose of arriving at an
estimated number of providers of
prepaid access, FinCEN is relying on
information regarding the industries as
identified by their North American
Industry Classification System
(‘‘NAICS’’) 57 codes. In particular,
57 NAICS was developed as the standard for use
by Federal statistical agencies in classifying
business establishments for the collection, analysis,
and publication of statistical data related to the
business economy of the U.S. NAICS was
developed under the auspices of the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB), and adopted in
1997.
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FinCEN finds that prepaid providers
will be listed as NAICS code 522320
(Financial transaction processing,
reserve and clearinghouse activities).
The United States Census Bureau
estimates there are about 3000 entities
in this classification. However, this
classification includes services that are
outside of those provided by prepaid
providers (i.e. check validation services,
bank clearinghouse associations, and
credit card processing services). Because
prepaid providers utilize electronic
funds transfers systems to conduct
business, FinCEN narrowed the
estimated industry to those entities that
are within NAICS code 522320 and
perform either electronic funds transfers
or electronic financial payment services.
FinCEN was unable to obtain a number
for these entities from the United States
Census Bureau and therefore relies on
commercial database information. Based
on this information, FinCEN estimates
that there are 700 entities that share this
classification.58 Within this
classification those entities that have
less than 7 million dollars in gross
revenue are considered small. FinCEN
estimates that 93% of the affected
industry is considered a small business,
and that the proposed regulation will
affect all of them.
For the purpose of identifying sellers,
FinCEN is unable to rely on NAICS
codes because sellers, including grocery
stores, convenience stores, and
department stores, will be classified
under the primary services that they
provide. Therefore, to arrive at an
estimated number of sellers of prepaid
access, FinCEN is relying on
information about distribution channels
obtained through informal consultations
with members of the prepaid industry.
In addition, FinCEN is relying on
prepaid access selling patterns
identified through the 2005 Money
Services Business Industry Survey
Study conducted by KPMG.
FinCEN estimates that there are
70,000 sellers of prepaid access
operating within prepaid card programs,
as defined under our proposed rule. The
inclusion of these sellers as small
businesses for regulatory purposes
would depend, in great part, on the
corporate organization of each sales
outlet.59 In consideration of the
discussions above, for the purposes of
the Regulatory Flexibility Act, FinCEN
stipulates that it is affecting a
substantial number of small businesses.
Description of the projected reporting
and recordkeeping requirements of the
proposed rule:
The proposed rule will require
prepaid providers and sellers to
implement the same BSA requirements
with which other MSBs are already
complying. By requiring this, FinCEN is
addressing vulnerabilities in the United
States financial system and is leveling
the playing field among MSBs.
Currently, all MSBs are required to
maintain AML programs, report certain
currency transactions, and maintain
certain records. Also, MSBs, except
check cashers and issuers, sellers, and
redeemers of stored value, are currently
required to file reports on suspicious
transactions. The proposed rule will
require prepaid providers and sellers to
comply with these same requirements.
The proposed rule will require only
prepaid providers, not sellers, to register
with FinCEN. Additionally, prepaid
providers and sellers will be required to
maintain records about customer
identification and transaction
information. As discussed below,
FinCEN does not foresee a significant
impact on the regulated industry from
these requirements.
58 Dun and Bradstreet, D&B Duns Market
Identifiers Plus (US) (Accessed on Nov 19, 2009)
(Search of Codes NAICS 522320 with removal of
outlying institutions).
59 Nearly 70% of the individual sales outlets of
prepaid access covered within the scope of this
proposed regulation belong to a national or regional
chain (such as a convenience store, drugstore, or
supermarket chain). If the corporation bases its
distribution strategy on a branch network, the
single, unified nation- or region-wide corporation is
considered the seller of prepaid access, the gross
annual revenue would probably exceed the
threshold for consideration as a small business, and
the number of sellers of prepaid access decreases
significantly. On the other hand, if the corporation
bases its distribution strategy on franchises, then
each individual franchisee becomes a seller of
prepaid access, and its individual gross annual
revenue might qualify it as a small business.
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AML Program Requirement in General
The proposed rule will require
prepaid providers and sellers to
maintain AML programs. Sellers that
transact in amounts greater than $1000
per person per day are already required
to maintain AML programs.
The majority of providers have not
been previously required by regulation
to maintain AML programs. However,
through discussions with industry and
representations from a prepaid card
association, FinCEN has determined
that prepaid providers are already
maintaining AML programs, typically as
part of their contractual obligations to
their partner banks or credit card
networks. When an issuing bank
partners with a prepaid provider to
reduce reputational and operational risk
the bank will require that the provider
maintain an AML program
commensurate with the bank’s risk
tolerance. To assist these prepaid
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providers, prepaid card associations
publish reports on AML best practices.
Similarly, for those sellers that transact
in ways that would subject them to the
proposal, the proposed rule would
require the maintenance of an AML
program. Because these sellers are
agents of either the provider or issuing
bank or both, they have been
contractually obligated to maintain
AML programs to assure their principal
that AML risks are mitigated. Therefore,
since providers and sellers are already
contractually obligated to fulfill the
requirement of maintaining an AML
program as proposed in this rule,
FinCEN estimates that the impact of this
requirement will be minimal.
Currency Transaction Reporting
The proposed rule will require
prepaid providers and sellers to report
transactions in currency in amounts
greater than $10,000. As stated in
FinCEN’s 1999 MSB rulemaking, sellers
that transact in amounts greater than
$1,000 per person per day are already
required to report these transactions.
Providers and sellers that transact in
amounts of $1,000 or less per person per
day have not been required to report
transactions in currency in amounts
greater than $10,000. However, because
the average load amounts for prepaid
cards are well below the $10,000
threshold and the majority of prepaid
loads above $1,000 are deposited
through direct deposit, FinCEN does not
foresee a significant burden in this
requirement. In support of this
assertion, several prepaid providers
have stated to FinCEN that they have
rarely if ever encountered a transaction
of over $10,000 in currency per person
per day associated with their prepaid
programs.
Suspicious Activity Reporting
The proposed rule will require
prepaid providers and sellers to report
on transactions of $2,000 or more which
they determine to be suspicious.
Prepaid providers and sellers have not
been previously required to comply
with such a requirement under
regulation. It is important to highlight
that these reports are not required to be
filed unless a transaction is suspicious
and is for an amount of $2,000 or more.
The average transaction amount for a
point-of-sale debit is about $40.60 This
is substantially less than the $2,000
threshold. Additionally, through an
60 Cheney, Julia ‘‘An Update on trends in the
Debit Card Market,’’ Payment Cards Center, June
2007, pg. 3 (citing The Nilson Report Issue 865);
available at https://www.phil.frb.org/payment-cardscenter/publications/discussion-papers/2007/
D2007JuneUpdateDebitCardMarketTrends.pdf.
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overview of currently operating
programs, FinCEN has determined that
few prepaid programs allow a customer
to withdraw more than $1,000 from an
automated teller machine in a day.
Lastly, in discussions with the industry,
prepaid providers indicated that they
rarely encountered transactions for
which they would file a SAR if required
by regulation. Therefore, FinCEN
estimates that the number of SARs that
will be filed by prepaid providers and
sellers will be low.
FinCEN understands that the costs in
SAR reporting go beyond the actual cost
in filing the report. These costs also
include developing systems to monitor
transactions for suspicious activity.
Because of the inherent risk of fraud
that exists in the prepaid industry or
any payment industry for that matter,
prepaid providers already utilize fraud
monitoring systems. These systems
monitor transactions of individual cards
to detect patterns that would indicate
suspicious behavior that could be fraud.
To detect fraud these systems rely on
various data points including
transaction velocity, transaction
volume, and transaction location which
are compared to a customer profile.
These same data points can be used to
detect suspicious behavior beyond
fraud.
Customer Identification Information
The proposed rule will require
prepaid providers and sellers to
implement procedures to collect and
retain customer information relating to
prepaid access within the proposed
definition of a ‘‘prepaid program.’’ As
part of their current AML programs,
sellers that transact in amounts greater
than $1000 per person per day are
already required to have policies and
procedures to maintain customer
information for certain transactions.
Other prepaid sellers and providers
have not been required to retain this
information by regulation.
Similar to the discussion of AML
programs above, prepaid providers are
currently required to obtain and retain
customer identification information
through contractual obligations with the
bank partners. Since the
implementation of § 326 of the USA
PATRIOT Act, banks have been required
to obtain customer identification for
each account they open. Through
discussions with prepaid industry
members and associations, FinCEN has
determined that, to mitigate risks, banks
have extended this requirement to their
prepaid provider partners through
contractual obligations. Therefore,
prepaid providers are already obtaining
and maintaining information on their
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customers to comply with contractual
obligations. Beyond these obligations,
prepaid providers are maintaining this
information to assist in their fraud
monitoring and targeted marketing
programs. Sellers of prepaid access also
obtain and maintain this information as
agents of their principal banks and
providers. Because it is the sellers that
have direct communication with the
customer, the obligation to collect
customer identification information has
been extended to them by their
principals.
Transaction Records Generated in the
Ordinary Course of Business
The proposed rule will require
prepaid providers and sellers to retain
transaction specific records generated in
the ordinary course of business.
Currently, providers and sellers are not
required to maintain these records by
regulation. However, because these
records are necessary for data
processing and transaction look-backs,
these institutions already retain such
records in the ordinary course of
business.
Registration of Providers
The proposed rule will require
prepaid providers to register with
FinCEN. Sellers will not be required to
register as they are agents of the
providers. The FinCEN registration form
is two pages and must be filed once
every two years. Under OMB control
number 1506–0013, FinCEN estimates
that the annual burden from reporting
and recordkeeping associated with this
registration is 2.5 hours.61
Certification
Most of the requirements in the
proposed rule reflect contractual
obligations already imposed on both
prepaid providers and sellers or the
codification of a requirement to
maintain records that are already
maintained in the ordinary course of
business. The additional burden
proposed by the rule is a registration
requirement and a SAR filing
requirement. As discussed above,
FinCEN estimates that the impact from
these requirements will not be
significant. Accordingly, FinCEN
certifies that the proposed rule will not
have a significant impact on a
substantial number of small entities.
61 The estimated average annual burden
associated with the recordkeeping requirement in
31 CFR 103.41 is 30 minutes per recordkeeper for
the completion, filing, and recordkeeping of
registration forms, and an additional 120 minutes
for the completion, filing, and recordkeeping of the
list of prepaid programs subject to the regulation.
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36605
Questions for Comment
1. FinCEN’s research has revealed that
AML and customer identification
requirements are currently imposed on
providers of prepaid access (and
through them, to sellers of prepaid
access) by the partner bank that is
authorized to issue the prepaid access
by the payment network. FinCEN
solicits confirmation of this fact, and
any substantial divergence between the
current contractual obligations of a
provider or seller, and the requirements
specified by the proposed rule.
2. Please provide comment on any or
all of the provisions in the proposed
rule with regard to (a) the impact of the
provision(s) (including any benefits and
costs), if any, in carrying out
responsibilities under the proposed rule
and (b) what alternatives if any, FinCEN
should consider.
XVI. Paperwork Reduction Act Notices
The collections of information
contained in this proposed rule are
being submitted to the Office of
Management and Budget for review in
accordance with the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C.
3507(d)). Comments on the collection of
information should be sent to Desk
Officer for the Department of the
Treasury, Office of Information and
Regulatory Affairs, Office of
Management and Budget, Paperwork
Reduction Project (1506), Washington,
DC 20503, fax (202/395–6974), or by the
Internet to
oira_submission@omb.eop.gov, with a
copy to the Financial Crimes
Enforcement Network by mail.
Comments on the collection of
information should be received by
August 27, 2010.
In accordance with the requirements
of the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995,
44 U.S.C. 3506(c)(2)(A), and its
implementing regulations, 5 CFR part
1320, the following information
concerning the collection of information
is presented to assist those persons
wishing to comment on the information
collection. The information collections
in this proposal are contained in 31 CFR
103.20, 31 Part 103.40, 31 CFR 103.41,
and 31 CFR 103.125.
AML Program for Providers and Sellers
of Prepaid Access
Anti-money laundering programs for
money services businesses (31 CFR
103.125). Office of Management and
Budget Control Number: 1506–0020.
This information is required to be
retained pursuant to 31 U.S.C. 5318(h)
and 31 CFR 103.125. The collection of
information is mandatory.
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The information collected pursuant to
31 CFR 103.125(c) will be used by
examiners to determine whether
providers of prepaid access comply with
the BSA. By defining providers and
sellers of prepaid access as MSBs, the
proposal will increase the estimated
number of entities by 70,700. However,
by removing issuers, sellers, and
redeemers of stored value from the
definition of MSB, the proposal will
reduce the estimated number of entities
by 10,000. Overall, the proposal will
increase the number of entities that
collect information under 31 CFR
103.125(c) by 60,700.
Description of Recordkeepers: MSBs
as defined in 31 CFR 103.11(uu)(4).
Estimated Number of Recordkeepers:
The proposal increases the number of
recordkeepers to 60,700.
Estimated Average Annual Burden
Hours per Recordkeeper: The estimated
average annual burden associated with
the recordkeeping requirement in 31
CFR 103.125(c) is one hour.
Estimated Total Annual
Recordkeeping Burden: The current
burden will be reduced by 10,000 hours
and increased by 70,700 hours, for a net
increase to the current burden of 60,700
hours.
jlentini on DSKJ8SOYB1PROD with PROPOSALS
Customer Identification Requirement for
Providers and Sellers of Prepaid Access
The information collected pursuant to
31 CFR 103.125(d) will be used by law
enforcement agencies in the
enforcement of criminal and regulatory
laws. The proposal affects an estimated
70,700 providers and sellers of prepaid
access. The proposal requires two
minutes of collection burden per
issuance of prepaid access product or
service.
Description of Recordkeepers: MSBs
as defined in 31 CFR 103.11(uu)(4).
Estimated Number of Recordkeepers:
The proposal increases the number of
recordkeepers to 70,700.
Estimated Average Annual Burden
Hours per Recordkeeper: The estimated
average annual burden associated with
the recordkeeping requirement in 31
CFR 103.125(d) is two minutes per
issuance of a prepaid access device. At
any given moment, there are an
estimated 7.5 million network branded
prepaid cards in the marketplace.
FinCEN estimates that the average
lifespan of a prepaid card is three years.
Therefore, FinCEN estimates that there
are 2.5 million new prepaid cards or
products issued each year. However, we
seek comment from the public on
whether the three-year average lifespan
of a prepaid card is a reasonable
assumption.
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Estimated Total Annual
Recordkeeping Burden: The burden will
be 83,300 hours.
SAR Filing for Providers and Sellers of
Prepaid Access
Suspicious activity reports for money
services businesses (31 CFR 103.20).
Office of Management and Budget
Control Number: 1506–0015.
This information is required to be
provided pursuant to 31 U.S.C. 5318(g)
and 31 CFR 103.20. This information
will be used by law enforcement
agencies in the enforcement of criminal
and regulatory laws and to prevent
money services businesses from
engaging in illegal activities. The
collection of information is mandatory.
The proposal will increase the number
of recordkeepers by 70,700.
Description of Recordkeepers: MSBs
as defined in 31 CFR 103.11(uu)(4).
Estimated Number of Recordkeepers:
On an annual basis there are
approximately 700 Providers of prepaid
access and 70,000 sellers of prepaid
access. Therefore, the number of
recordkeepers would be increased by
70,700.
Estimated Average Annual Burden
Hours per Recordkeeper: The estimated
average annual burden associated with
the recordkeeping requirement in 31
CFR 103.20 is 90 minutes per report.
Estimated Total Annual
Recordkeeping Burden: The proposal
should increase the estimated annual
burden by 144,900 hours.
Registration of Providers of Prepaid
Access
Registration for money services
businesses (31 CFR 103.41). Office of
Management and Budget Control
Number: 1506–0013.
This information is required to be
provided pursuant to 31 U.S.C. 5330
and 31 CFR 103.41. The information
will be used by law enforcement and
regulatory agencies in the enforcement
of criminal, tax, and regulatory laws and
to prevent money services businesses
from engaging in illegal activities. The
collection of information is mandatory.
As only providers of prepaid access
need register and list the prepaid
programs subject to the proposed
regulation, the number of recordkeepers
will be increased by 700.
Description of Recordkeepers:
Providers of prepaid access as defined
in 31 CFR 103.11(uu)(4).
Estimated Number of Recordkeepers:
The number of recordkeepers would be
increased by 700 MSBs.
Estimated Average Annual Burden
Hours per Recordkeeper: The estimated
average annual burden associated with
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the recordkeeping requirement in 31
CFR 103.41 is 60 minutes per
recordkeeper for the completion, filing,
and recordkeeping of registration forms,
and an additional 90 minutes for the
completion, filing, and recordkeeping of
the list of prepaid programs subject to
the regulation.
Estimated Total Annual
Recordkeeping Burden: We will increase
the number of burden hours under this
collection by 1,750 hours.
Recordkeeping and Retrieval
Requirement
Customer and Transactional Data
Recordkeeping Requirements (31 CFR
103.33, 103.38, 103.40, and 103.125).
Office of Management and Budget
Control Number: 1506–0009.
This information is required to be
provided pursuant to Section 21 of the
Federal Deposit Insurance Act (12
U.S.C. 1829) and 31 CFR 103.33, 103.38,
103.40, and 103.125. This information
will be used by law enforcement
agencies in the enforcement of criminal,
tax, and regulatory laws and to prevent
money services businesses from
engaging in illegal activities. Prepaid
providers would be required to retain
information in a format that allows for
its retrieval upon request. Both
providers and sellers of prepaid access
are responsible for the recordkeeping of
customer and transactional data that
would routinely be captured and
maintained in the ordinary course of
business under the proposed regulation,
the number of recordkeepers will be
increased by 70,700.
Description of Recordkeepers: MSBs
as defined in 31 CFR 103.11(uu)(4).
Estimated Number of Recordkeepers:
The number of recordkeepers would be
increased by 70,700 MSBs.
Estimated Average Annual Burden
Hours per Recordkeeper: The estimated
average annual burden associated with
the recordkeeping requirement in 31
CFR 103.33, 103.38, 103.40, and 103.125
is 16 hours per recordkeeper for the
maintenance of customer and
transactional data that would routinely
be captured and maintained in the
ordinary course of business under
prepaid programs subject to the
proposed regulation.
Estimated Total Annual
Recordkeeping Burden: We will increase
the number of burden hours under this
collection by 1,131,200 hours.
An agency may not conduct or
sponsor, and a person is not required to
respond to, a collection of information
unless the collection of information
displays a valid OMB control number.
Records required to be retained under
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the Bank Secrecy Act must be retained
for five years.
Request for Comments: We
specifically invite comments on: (a)
whether the proposed recordkeeping
requirements are necessary for the
proper performance of the mission of
the Financial Crimes Enforcement
Network, and whether the information
shall have practical utility; (b) the
accuracy of our estimate of the burden
of the proposed recordkeeping
requirement; (c) ways to enhance the
quality, utility, and clarity of the
information required.
XVII. Executive Order 12866
This proposed rule is a significant
regulatory action, and has been
reviewed by the Office of Management
and Budget in accordance with
Executive Order 12866 (‘‘Regulatory
Planning and Review’’). Most of the
entities that would be affected by this
rulemaking are already contractually
obliged to maintain AML programs,
verify customer identification, and keep
records of transaction information in
order to fulfill their contractual
obligations to banks and transaction
processors. Additionally, FinCEN
understands that many of these entities
already use automated fraud monitoring
systems that evaluate data points similar
to those relevant to detect suspicious
transactions. The imposition of
apparently new compliance obligations
under this proposed rule would
therefore likely not impose significant
new costs on regulated entities in this
regard.
As discussed in the RFA certification,
FinCEN estimates that because of the
low transaction limits for prepaid access
products and services neither SARs nor
CTRs will be required to be filed often.
Lastly, FinCEN estimates the
registration requirement proposed by
the rule will require 2.5 hours of
employee time annually. FinCEN
expects that the new reporting
requirements imposed by this proposed
rule would therefore likely have a
modest overall operational and
economic impact.
FinCEN solicits comment on the
economic impact of this proposed rule.
FinCEN will use this feedback to
conduct additional analysis. Given the
difficulty in quantifying or monetizing
the important incremental benefits of a
Regulation, FinCEN is considering OMB
guidance and Circular A–4 with respect
to conducting a threshold or ‘‘breakeven’’ analysis. According to OMB
Circular A–4 this analysis would
answer, ‘‘How small the value of the
non-quantified benefits could be (or
how large would the value of the non-
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quantified costs need to be) before the
rule will yield zero net benefits.’’ 62
XVIII. Unfunded Mandates Act of 1995
Statement
Section 202 of the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act of 1995
(‘‘Unfunded Mandates Act’’), Public Law
104–4 (March 22, 1995), requires that an
agency prepare a budgetary impact
statement before promulgating a rule
that may result in expenditure by the
State, local, and tribal governments, in
the aggregate, or by the private sector, of
$100 million or more in any one year.
If a budgetary impact statement is
required, section 202 of the Unfunded
Mandates Act also requires an agency to
identify and consider a reasonable
number of regulatory alternatives before
promulgating a rule. Taking into
account the factors noted above and
using conservative estimates of average
labor costs in evaluating the cost of the
burden imposed by the proposed
regulation, FinCEN has determined that
it is not required to prepare a written
statement under section 202.
List of Subjects in 31 CFR Part 103
Administrative practice and
procedure, Banks, banking, Brokers,
Currency, Foreign banking, Foreign
currencies, Gambling, Investigations,
Penalties, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Securities, Terrorism.
Proposed Amendments to the
Regulations
Accordingly, 31 CFR part 103 is
proposed to be amended as follows:
PART 103—FINANCIAL
RECORDKEEPING AND REPORTING
OF CURRENCY AND FINANCIAL
TRANSACTIONS
1. The authority citation for part 103
continues to read as follows:
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1829b and 1951–
1959; 31 U.S.C. 5311–5314, 5316–5332; title
III, secs. 311, 312, 313, 314, 319, 326, 352,
Pub. L. 107–56, 115 Stat. 307.
2. Section 103.11, as proposed to be
amended on May 12, 2009 (74 FR
22129), is proposed to be further
amended as follows:
a. Revising paragraph (i);
b. Revising paragraph (uu)(4);
c. Adding paragraph (uu)(8); and
d. Revising paragraph (vv).
The revisions and addition read as
follows:
§ 103.11
*
*
62 See
Meaning of terms.
*
*
*
OMB Circular A–4 (September 17, 2003),
p. 2.
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36607
(i) Closed loop prepaid access.
Prepaid access to funds or the value of
funds that can be used only in
transactions involving a defined
merchant or location (or a set of
locations) such as a specific retailer or
retail chain, a college campus, or a
subway system.
*
*
*
*
*
(uu) * * *
(4) Provider of prepaid access—(i) In
general. The term ‘‘provider of prepaid
access’’ means the person with principal
oversight and control over one or more
prepaid programs. Which person
exercises ‘‘principal oversight and
control’’ is a matter of facts and
circumstances. Activities that indicate
‘‘principal oversight and control’’
include:
(A) Organizing the prepaid program;
(B) Setting the terms and conditions
and determining that the terms have not
been exceeded;
(C) Determining the other businesses
that will participate in the transaction
chain underlying the prepaid access
which may include the issuing bank, the
payment processor, or the distributor;
(D) Controlling or directing the
appropriate party to initiate, freeze, or
terminate prepaid access; and
(E) Engaging in activity that
demonstrates oversight and control of
transactions.
(ii) Prepaid program. For the purposes
of this section and subject to the
limitations set forth in this paragraph
(uu)(4)(ii), a prepaid program is an
arrangement under which one or more
persons acting together provide(s) a
particular form of prepaid access.
However, an arrangement is not a
prepaid program if:
(A) The prepaid access provided is
limited to one of the following:
(1) Payment of benefits, incentives,
wage or salaries through payroll cards or
other such electronic devices for similar
purposes;
(2) Payment of government benefits
such as unemployment, child support,
and disaster assistance through
electronic devices;
(3) Disbursement of reimbursement
funds from pre-tax flexible spending
accounts for health care and dependent
care expenses;
(4) Providing prepaid access to funds
subject to limits that include a
maximum value as indicated in
paragraphs(uu)(4)(ii)(A)(4)(i) through
(iii) of this section, where such
maximum value is clearly visible on the
prepaid access product:
(i) Not to exceed $1,000 maximum
value that can be initially loaded at the
time of purchase of the prepaid access;
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(ii) Not to exceed $1,000 maximum
aggregate value (such as through
multiple transfers of value to a single
prepaid access product) that can be
associated with the prepaid access at
any given time; and
(iii) Not to exceed $1,000 maximum
value that can be withdrawn from the
prepaid access device on a single day;
or
(5) Providing closed-loop prepaid
access; and
(B) It does not permit:
(1) Funds or value to be transmitted
internationally;
(2) Transfers between or among users
of prepaid access within a prepaid
program such as person-to-person
transfers; or
(3) Unless it qualifies as closed loop
prepaid access, the ability to load
monetary value from other nondepository sources onto prepaid access.
*
*
*
*
*
(8) Seller of prepaid access. The term
‘‘seller of prepaid access’’ means any
person that receives funds or the value
of funds in exchange for providing
prepaid access as part of a prepaid
program directly to the person that
provided the funds or value, or to a
third party as directed by that person.
(vv) Prepaid access. Electronic device
or vehicle, such as a card, plate, code,
number, electronic serial number,
mobile identification number, personal
identification number, or other
instrument that provides a portal to
funds or the value of funds that have
been paid in advance and can be
retrievable and transferable at some
point in the future.
*
*
*
*
*
3. Amend § 103.20 by:
a. Revising the first sentence of
paragraph (a)(1); and
b. Removing paragraph (a)(5).
The revision reads as follows:
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(a) General. (1) Every money services
business, described in § 103.11(uu), (1),
(3), (4), (5), (6), or (8), shall file with the
Treasury Department, to the extent and
in the manner required by this section,
a report of any suspicious transaction
relevant to a possible violation of law or
regulation. * * *
*
*
*
*
*
4. Add new § 103.40 to subpart C to
read as follows:
§ 103.40 Additional records to be
maintained by providers of prepaid access.
With respect to transactions relating
to providers and sellers of prepaid
access described in § 103.11(uu)(4) and
(8) that are subject to the requirements
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Jkt 220001
§ 103.41 Registration of money services
businesses.
(a) Registration requirement—(1) In
general. Except as provided in
paragraph (a)(2) of this section, relating
to agents, and except for sellers as
defined in § 103.11(uu), to the extent
that they are not already agents, each
money services business (whether or not
licensed as a money services business
by any State) must register with FinCEN
and, in the case of a provider of prepaid
access, identify each prepaid program
for which it is the provider of prepaid
access. Each money services business
must, as part of its registration, maintain
a list of its agents as required by 31
U.S.C. 5330 and this section. This
section does not apply to the United
States Postal Service, to agencies of the
United States, of any State, or of any
political subdivision of a State. With
respect to prepaid programs, each
prepaid program must have a provider
of prepaid access registered with
FinCEN.
*
*
*
*
*
6. Amend § 103.125 by:
a. Revising paragraph (d)(1)(i); and
b. Adding new paragraph (d)(1)(iv).
The revision and addition read as
follows:
§ 103.125 Anti-money laundering
programs for money services businesses.
*
§ 103.20 Reports by money services
businesses of suspicious transactions.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
of part 103, each provider of prepaid
access shall maintain transactional
records for a period of five years. The
provider, as defined in § 103.11(uu)(4),
shall maintain transactional records
generated in the ordinary course of
business by the payment processor or
other party that facilitates prepaid
access activation, loads, reloads,
purchases, withdrawals, transfers, or
other prepaid-related transactions.
5. Amend § 103.41 by revising
paragraph (a)(1) to read as follows:
*
*
*
*
(d) * * *
(1) * * *
(i) Policies, procedures, and internal
controls developed and implemented
under this section shall include
provisions for complying with the
requirements of this part including, to
the extent applicable to the money
services business, requirements for:
(A) Verifying customer identification,
including as set forth in paragraph
(d)(1)(iv) of this section.
(B) Filing Reports;
(C) Creating and retaining records;
(D) Responding to law enforcement
requests.
*
*
*
*
*
(iv) A money services business that is
a provider or seller of prepaid access
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must establish procedures to verify the
identity of a person who obtains prepaid
access under a prepaid program, obtain
identifying information concerning such
a person, including name, date of birth,
address, and identification number, and
retain such identifying information for
five years after the termination of the
relationship.
*
*
*
*
*
Dated: June 17, 2010.
James H. Freis, Jr.,
Director, Financial Crimes Enforcement
Network.
[FR Doc. 2010–15194 Filed 6–25–10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4810–02–P
DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND
SECURITY
Coast Guard
33 CFR Part 117
[Docket No. USCG–2009–0051]
RIN 1625–AA09
Drawbridge Operation Regulation;
Atlantic Intracoastal Waterway, (AIWW)
Scotts Hill, NC
Coast Guard, DHS.
Notice of proposed rulemaking;
withdrawal.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
SUMMARY: The Coast Guard is
withdrawing its notice of proposed
rulemaking concerning the proposed
change to the regulations that governed
the operation of the Figure Eight Swing
Bridge, at AIWW mile 278.1, at Scotts
Hill, NC. The requested change would
have allowed the drawbridge to open on
signal every hour on the half hour for
the passage of pleasure vessels.
DATES: The notice of proposed
rulemaking is withdrawn on June 28,
2010.
ADDRESSES: The docket for this
withdrawn rulemaking is available for
inspection or copying at the Docket
Management Facility (M–30), U.S.
Department of Transportation, West
Building Ground Floor, Room W12–140,
1200 New Jersey Avenue, SE.,
Washington, DC 20590, between 9 a.m.
and 5 p.m., Monday through Friday,
except Federal holidays. You may also
find this docket on the Internet by going
to https://www.regulations.gov, inserting
USCG-2009-0051 in the ‘‘Keyword’’ box
and then clicking ‘‘Search.’’
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: If
you have questions about this notice,
call or e-mail Waverly W. Gregory, Jr.,
Fifth Coast Guard District; telephone
(757) 398–6222, e-mail
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 75, Number 123 (Monday, June 28, 2010)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 36589-36608]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2010-15194]
[[Page 36589]]
=======================================================================
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DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
31 CFR Part 103
RIN 1506-AB07
Financial Crimes Enforcement Network; Amendment to the Bank
Secrecy Act Regulations--Definitions and Other Regulations Relating to
Prepaid Access
AGENCY: Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (``FinCEN''), Treasury.
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: FinCEN is proposing to revise the Bank Secrecy Act (``BSA'')
regulations applicable to Money Services Businesses with regard to
stored value or prepaid access. More specifically, the proposed changes
include the following: renaming ``stored value'' as ``prepaid access''
and defining that term; deleting the terms ``issuer and redeemer'' of
stored value; imposing suspicious activity reporting, customer
information and transaction information recordkeeping requirements on
both providers and sellers of prepaid access and, additionally,
imposing a registration requirement on providers only; and exempting
certain categories of prepaid access products and services posing lower
risks of money laundering and terrorist financing from certain
requirements.
The proposed changes are intended to address regulatory gaps that
have resulted from the proliferation of prepaid innovations over the
last ten years and their increasing use as an accepted payment method.
If these gaps are not addressed, there is increased potential for the
use of prepaid access as a means for furthering money laundering,
terrorist financing, and other illicit transactions through the
financial system. This would significantly undermine many of the
efforts previously taken by government and industry to safeguard the
financial system through the application of BSA requirements to other
areas of the financial sector. In this proposed rulemaking, we are
reviewing the stored value/prepaid access regulatory framework with a
focus on developing appropriate BSA regulatory oversight without
impeding continued development of the industry, as well as improving
the ability of FinCEN, other regulators and law enforcement to
safeguard the U.S. financial system from the abuses of terrorist
financing, money laundering, and other financial crime. In the course
of our regulatory research into the operation of the prepaid industry,
we have encountered a number of distinct issues, such as the
appropriate obligations of payment networks and financial transparency
at the borders, and we anticipate future rulemakings in these areas. We
will seek to phase in any additional requirements, however, as the most
prudent course of action for an evolving segment of the money services
business (``MSB'') community.
DATES: Written comments on the notice of proposed rulemaking must be
submitted on or before July 28, 2010.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments, identified by RIN 1506-AB07, by any
of the following methods:
Federal e-rulemaking portal: https://www.regulations.gov.
Follow the instructions for submitting comments. Refer to Docket number
TREAS-FinCEN-2009-0007.
Mail: FinCEN, P.O. Box 39, Vienna, VA 22183. Include RIN
1506-AB07 in the body of the text.
Inspection of comments: Public comments received electronically or
through the U.S. Postal Service sent in response to a ``Notice and
Request for Comment'' will be made available for public review as soon
as possible on https://www.regulations.gov. Comments received may be
physically inspected in the FinCEN reading room located in Vienna,
Virginia. Reading room appointments are available weekdays (excluding
holidays) between 10 a.m. and 3 p.m., by calling the Disclosure Officer
at (703) 905-5034 (not a toll free call).
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Regulatory Policy and Programs
Division, FinCEN (800) 949-2732 and select option 1.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Introduction
A. Development of the Prepaid Industry
Prepaid products, also variously known as stored value, stored
value cards, or prepaid cards, have emerged in recent years into the
mainstream of the U.S. financial system. As consumers have embraced the
convenience and security of being able to transact many daily
commercial activities electronically, more and more areas of American
commerce explore ways to reap the advantages of electronic payment
delivery.
This migration to electronic delivery has escalated greatly in
recent years, most especially over the last 3-5 years.\1\ As consumer
comfort levels rise and technology costs fall, continued growth in all
types of electronic payment options appears likely. As the Federal
Reserve Board noted in its 2007 Payments Study, electronic payments
comprised over two-thirds of all non-cash payments.\2\
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\1\ ``Study findings suggest * * * the market for open-loop
gift/prepaid cards is increasing * * * more than twice as many gift
card purchasers/receivers bought or were given a general purpose
gift card in 2008 as were in 2005.'' Hitachi Consulting ``Payments
Study Highlights Continued Growth in Credit, Debit Cards,'' February
2009.
\2\ Of electronic payments, ``[c]ard payments alone comprised
over half of non-cash payments.'' The 2007 Federal Reserve Payments
Study--Non-cash Payment Trends in the United States: 2003-2006, pg.
5.
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By certain accounts,\3\ the launch of the first stored value/
prepaid product traces to the magnetic stripe-bearing gift cards
introduced by Blockbuster Video in 1995 to replace the company's former
paper gift certificates. The change allowed the merchant to offer the
purchaser a more attractive product that, unlike its paper-based
predecessor, could be issued in any denomination. The gift cards also
allowed the balance to be monitored and offered security features
against alteration or fraud. The Blockbuster Gift Card began the rapid
migration by most gift card sellers to plastic from paper.
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\3\ CardTrak News, Blockbuster Giftcard press release, January
15, 1996.
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Beginning in the year 2000, VISA, Inc. moved into the prepaid space
by introducing its Buxx card, targeted at the teen/young adult market
as a money management tool and a more secure way for parents to provide
college students with funds for living expenses. MasterCard launched a
competitor card (iGen) in 2001, and American Express began marketing
its prepaid card in October 2002 as a general purpose gift card that
was good anywhere that American Express was accepted. The convergence
of the initial retailer-exclusive gift cards \4\ such as Blockbuster,
Sears or Amazon.com with these ``branded'' cards, bearing a Visa,
MasterCard, American Express or Discover logo, meant that consumers
could easily find a gift card for any purpose and in virtually any
amount.
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\4\ Retailer-specific prepaid products are generally
characterized as ``closed loop,'' meaning that there are a finite
number of locations at which the devices can be used. Closed loop
programs involve a known provider of goods or service at the time of
sale. Conversely, ``open loop'' refers to a type of prepaid access
device that can be used at any accepting retail location. Generally,
open loop cards are branded network cards, such as: VISA,
MasterCard, American Express and Discover. See also Footnote 34 in
this NPRM for a discussion of FinCEN's previous proposal of a
regulatory definition relating to closed loop stored value.
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A simultaneous market development involved in-store gift card
kiosks, such as Gift Card Mall, launched in 2001 by Blackhawk Network,
a subsidiary of Safeway Stores, Inc. Blackhawk Network pioneered the
establishment of
[[Page 36590]]
in-store gift card retail centers, located in supermarkets and
convenience stores, which meant that the purchaser no longer had to
visit a particular retailer, restaurant, or entertainment center to buy
gift cards for department and discount stores, movie theaters, theme
parks, and on-line vendors such as iTunes. Although initial marketing
strategies for these ``malls'' targeted a specific consumer niche, the
varied vendors represented and the convenience appealed to a broader-
than-expected audience. A 2006 study \5\ undertaken by the American
Bankers Association (``ABA'') and Dove Consulting revealed strong
consumer preference for both giving and receiving retailer-specific
gift cards, deemed both more personal than cash and more valued by the
recipient.
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\5\ 2005/2006 Study of Consumer Payment Preferences, published
October 2005.
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Within the context of the above-referenced developments, there are
a myriad of factors that have spurred the growth of the prepaid
industry including: (1) The effort to market cost-effective financial
products to individuals who are either unbanked or underbanked; \6\ (2)
the effort by governmental entities, at Federal and State and local
levels, to deliver an increasing number of benefits through prepaid
cards, which can be used at ATMs as withdrawal devices or used at
points of sale (``POS'') to purchase goods and services; and (3) the
move by many employers to pay some workers, such as construction
workers, day laborers, and others, through cards, which they regularly
reload \7\ with scheduled earnings for as long as the individual
remains an employee. Generally, these cards can also be used at ATMs
and at retail POS.
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\6\ ``A Tool for Getting By or Getting Ahead? Consumers' Views
on Prepaid Cards,'' by Center for Financial Services Innovation;
authors Gordon, Romich and Waithaka (2009), pg. 7. See also, FDIC
Survey of Unbanked and Underbanked Households (December 2009),
available at https://www.fdic.gov/householdsurvey/full_report.pdf.
\7\ ``Load'' and ``reload,'' as used in the prepaid access
context, refer to the initial provision of value and all subsequent
provisions of value to a prepaid access program.
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With respect to the first factor, concerning the needs of the
unbanked and underbanked, the use of prepaid cards has been promoted by
various advocacy groups \8\ as an effective, lower-cost method to
deliver necessary financial services. For a variety of cultural or
educational reasons, or due to language barriers, some individuals have
found the traditional banking environment overly intimidating or
unsuited to their financial services needs. Many have never established
banking relationships, or have found them cost-prohibitive for their
limited needs, and have turned to the ``alternative financial service
provider'' marketplace,\9\ accessing businesses such as payday lenders,
pawnshops, and check cashing facilities. Often, the fees associated
with these alternatives may be high in relation to the dollar value of
the transaction.\10\ The development and promotion of prepaid cards
introduced a new non-traditional banking alternative for these
individuals. Many of the major industry members engaged in prepaid
access are aggressively courting this unbanked market segment by
increasing marketing efforts and by also lowering fees.\11\
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\8\ See ``A Tool for Getting By or Ahead * * *,'' referenced in
footnote 6.
\9\ ``Alternative Financial Services: A Primer,'' FDIC
Quarterly, 2009, Vol. 3, No. 1.
\10\ See materials referenced in footnote 6.
\11\ American Banker, June 4, 2009, p. 1.
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With respect to the latter two factors, concerning government and
employer payments, the use of a prepaid card replaces the issuance of
paper checks, offering benefits to the government entity or employer
such as lower transaction costs, accounting efficiencies, safeguards
against alteration or loss, and others. For the recipient, many of the
same security concerns are addressed, as well as the immediacy and
reliability of the payment, which no longer has to be sent by mail and
can be used without the need for negotiation at a bank or check cashing
facility.
As the general public has become more attuned to seeing plastic
where paper formerly dominated, it has been willing, and sometimes
eager, to accept transition to a card or similar convenient device,
such as a key fob.\12\ The advantages to the consumer include
eliminating the need to carry cash, security against loss/theft and the
ability to track and limit spending, among others. For the financial
services industry, it offers a profitable retail payment product whose
acceptance by the general public and the vast majority of the American
and global marketplace is attractive.
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\12\ As used in this discussion, ``key fob'' refers to a type of
contactless payment device, typically attached to a key chain, which
might resemble a disc-shaped ornament or token. It contains an
electronic chip from which a compatible mechanism is able to
communicate payment instructions to the holder of the corresponding
account.
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B. The Need for Rulemaking
Notwithstanding the benefits of prepaid access, based on
discussions with the law enforcement community, FinCEN believes that it
may be vulnerable to money laundering. Many of the same factors that
make prepaid access attractive to consumers make it vulnerable to
illicit activity. For example, the ease with which prepaid access can
be obtained combined with the potential for relatively high velocity of
money through accounts involving prepaid access and anonymous use, may
make it particularly attractive to illicit actors. These individuals
value the ability to receive and distribute a significant amount of
funds without being subject to many of the reporting requirements that
would apply to comparable transactions using cash or involving an
ordinary demand deposit account at a bank. FinCEN solicits comment on
the money laundering and terrorist financing vulnerabilities that
prepaid access products or services may pose. Depending on the
sensitivity of such information, this information may be maintained in
a confidential docket.
The purpose of this rulemaking is to establish clear requirements
under the BSA with respect to certain non-bank actors involved in the
provision of prepaid access. In doing so, FinCEN intends to bring an
appropriate degree of transparency to the sector; facilitate the
provision of valuable information to regulatory and law enforcement
agencies; and enhance the resilience of the prepaid industry against
illicit activity. While a limited degree of regulatory oversight over
the prepaid industry exists at present, we believe that it is now time
to bring this industry within the full ambit of the BSA. We believe
that our endeavors in this regard will be assisted by the fact that
many in industry already use automated fraud monitoring systems that
evaluate data points similar to those relevant to detect suspicious
transactions and other information relevant to the BSA.
In proposing this rule, FinCEN is also reiterating a clear
distinction that already exists in our regulations between money
services businesses and depository institutions, both of which play
roles in prepaid access transaction chains. Depository institutions are
already held responsible for a full slate of anti-money laundering
(``AML'') obligations, and those responsibilities will not change as a
result of this rulemaking. Further, these depository institutions are
subject to regular examinations by their Federal regulators where they
are assessed for compliance. Consequently, with this rulemaking, we
intend to bring non-bank entities in the prepaid sector under
regulatory treatment that is more consistent with other financial
institutions, such as depository institutions, subject to the BSA.
[[Page 36591]]
In this proposed rulemaking, we will attempt to address
vulnerabilities in the types of prepaid programs that present potential
for abuse, and to impose requirements on those within the transaction
chain that possess the greatest ability to control the program's
operations, either directly or through an oversight role, and those who
may have relevant consumer information. At the same time, we do not
want to stifle growth or innovation within the payments industry.
Finally, we recognize that, while we will frequently refer to the
``card'' in describing this payment method, it is becoming increasingly
apparent that the plastic card entails only one possible method of
enabling prepaid access. Accordingly, we intend for this rulemaking to
be as forward-looking and as technologically neutral as possible; today
prepaid access can be provided through a card, a mobile phone, a key
fob or any other object to which relevant electronic information can be
affixed. In some contexts, there may even be no physical object, as
access to prepaid value can be enabled through the provision of
information over the telephone or the Internet. We intend for our rule
to be applicable to whatever tomorrow's payment environment offers as
well. However, we seek comment on whether the rulemaking is
sufficiently technologically neutral, and if not, in what areas it can
be improved for these considerations.
FinCEN does not intend for this rule to have an impact on two other
payment methods that bear some outward similarities to prepaid access,
namely the use of credit cards or debit cards. The proposed terminology
in this rulemaking is meant to establish a clear difference between
those systems and prepaid access. FinCEN anticipates obtaining further
insight from the rulemaking and public comment process to ensure that
we employ the most accurate and precise terminology possible.
II. Background of This Rulemaking
A. Statutory and Regulatory Background
The BSA, Titles I and II of Public Law 91-508, as amended, codified
at 12 U.S.C. 1829b and 1951-1959, and 31 U.S.C. 5311-5314 and 5316-
5332, authorizes the Secretary of the Treasury (the ``Secretary'') to
issue regulations requiring financial institutions to keep records and
file reports that the Secretary determines ``have a high degree of
usefulness in criminal, tax, or regulatory investigations or
proceedings, or in the conduct of intelligence or counterintelligence
matters, including analysis to protect against international
terrorism.'' \13\ The Secretary's authority to administer the BSA and
its implementing regulations has been delegated to the Director of
FinCEN.\14\ FinCEN has interpreted the BSA through implementing
regulations (``BSA regulations'' or ``BSA rules'') that appear at 31
CFR part 103.
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\13\ 31 U.S.C. 5311.
\14\ See Treasury Order 180-01 (Sept. 26, 2002).
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FinCEN has defined the BSA term ``financial institution'' to
include ``money services businesses,'' \15\ a category that includes: A
currency dealer or exchanger; a check casher; an issuer, seller, or
redeemer of traveler's checks, money orders, or stored value; and money
transmitter.\16\ FinCEN is authorized to deem any business engaged in
an activity determined by regulation to be an activity similar to,
related to, or a substitute for these activities a ``financial
institution.'' \17\
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\15\ ``MSB'' is a term FinCEN created that refers to certain
non-bank financial institutions that offer specific services (often
in combination) and are without a Federal functional regulator.
\16\ 31 CFR 103.11(uu) implementing 31 U.S.C. 5312(a)(2)(J),
(K), (R) and (V).
\17\ 31 U.S.C. 5312(a)(2)(Y).
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The Director of FinCEN, through delegated authority, has issued
regulations under the BSA implementing the recordkeeping, reporting,
and other requirements of the BSA. Like other financial institutions
under the BSA, MSBs must implement AML programs, make certain reports
to FinCEN, and maintain certain records to facilitate financial
transparency. MSBs are required with some exceptions to: (1) Establish
written AML programs that are reasonably designed to prevent the MSB
from being used to facilitate money laundering and the financing of
terrorist activities; \18\ (2) file Currency Transaction Reports
(``CTRs'') \19\ and Suspicious Activity Reports (``SARs''); \20\ and
(3) maintain certain records, including records relating to the
purchase of certain monetary instruments with currency,\21\ relating to
transactions by currency dealers or exchangers, and relating to certain
transmittals of funds.\22\ Most types of MSBs are required to register
with FinCEN \23\ and all are subject to examination for BSA compliance
by the Internal Revenue Service (``IRS'').\24\
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\18\ See 31 CFR 103.125.
\19\ See 31 CFR 103.22.
\20\ See 31 CFR 103.20. Check cashers and transactions solely
involving the issuance, sale or redemption of stored value are not
covered by the SAR requirement. See 31 CFR 103.20(a)(1) and (a)(5).
\21\ See 31 CFR 103.29.
\22\ See 31 CFR 103.33(f)-(g).
\23\ See 31 CFR 103.41.
\24\ See 31 CFR 103.56(b)(8).
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B. Past Public Meetings With the MSB Industry
In 1997, FinCEN held public meetings at various locations
throughout the country to give members of the financial services
industry an opportunity to discuss the proposed MSB regulations and any
impact they might have on operations. In drafting the final rules
defining the MSB categories, FinCEN relied on the contributions from
these public forums.
The proceedings of those meetings, with respect to stored value and
money transmission, reveal a shared acknowledgement by FinCEN and
industry that the prepaid business existed only in an early
developmental stage at that time, and that it was important not to
stifle innovation. Although the industry was in its infancy, many
issues surrounding prepaid products today were discussed and debated
then, such as establishing appropriate audit trails and the need for
information gathering on certain customers. Among other conclusions,
these meetings resulted in the following pronouncements:
The money transmission definition should be sufficiently
flexible to encompass the traditional concept of wiring funds, while
also capturing alternative types of payments, both electronic and
manual.\25\
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\25\ Transcript of FinCEN meeting, held in New York City, NY. A
FinCEN official in attendance stated, ``Just as a point of
clarification, again, under our definitions, as proposed in our
rules, and also our intent, is not to restrict money transmitters to
those businesses that only provide currency, cash, to customers, and
the notion of a money transmittal will take place regardless of
whether the form is in checks or in money orders or in travelers
checks, or the more traditional notion of wire transfer credits to
an existing bank account.''
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FinCEN officials acknowledged that the use of the term
``stored value'' might be somewhat imprecise, and lead to the
conclusion that only ``value or representation of value that is stored
either on a chip or on a hard drive somewhere'' was correctly labeled
stored value. Despite these misgivings, the term stored value was
chosen as the best available at the time.\26\
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\26\ Transcript of FinCEN meeting, held in San Jose, CA. A
FinCEN official in attendance stated, `` * * * the concept is that
there is a new something which we called fundamental monetary value
represented in digital format and stored or capable of storage on
electronic media in such a way as to be retrievable and transferable
electronically. We called that stored value, because frankly we
couldn't think of anything else to call it * * *. We were kind of
aware that when we used the term, people were going to think we were
only talking about stored value cards. And we decided to take that
risk.''
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We find the proceedings of these meetings informative and
persuasive in guiding the current rulemaking. Not only did these forums
occur at various
[[Page 36592]]
locations around the country, but they also involved a number of
different perspectives from throughout the financial services industry.
Early entrants into the stored value marketplace, seasoned banking
professionals, Federal and State regulators and service providers such
as data processing representatives were all either in attendance or
represented. There was considerable discussion among the participants
that illustrated the struggle to define the shifting payments
environment as it was only beginning to take full advantage of new
technologies.\27\
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\27\ Transcript of FinCEN meeting, held in San Jose, CA. An
industry member in attendance stated, ``* * * these products are all
* * * evolving * * *. The ACH system is old * * * batch processing,
it's clunky * * *. We are working very hard to develop new systems
that work better, that are more efficient, that are faster * * * ''
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C. The Terms ``Stored Value'' and ``Prepaid Access''
A FinCEN official in attendance at the 1997 meetings observed that
the term ``stored value'' was imprecise for the meaning being ascribed
to it. The concept at issue, as he described it, involved monetary
value represented in digital format that was stored or capable of being
stored on electronic media in such a way as to be retrievable and
transferable electronically.\28\
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\28\ See supra note 26.
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The key distinction to be drawn from his observation is that the
``value'' to which he refers is not ``stored'' on the card; rather, the
value is stored in a location or a medium that can be accessed
electronically through the card or an alternative device. Given the
nascent nature of the stored value industry approximately ten years
ago, the limitations of descriptive terms are easily understood. The
term ``stored value'' gained a foothold following FinCEN's publication
of the 1999 MSB regulation, which included issuers, sellers and
redeemers of stored value in the definition of MSB.\29\
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\29\ 31 CFR 103.11(uu)(3), (4).
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In this Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (``NPRM''), we intend to
replace the terms ``issuer'' and ``redeemer'' of stored value. These
terms are not useful as the primary focal point for our regulatory
efforts with respect to this industry for the following reasons:
``Issuers'' are generally banks, which means that, by
definition, they cannot be deemed MSBs under our rules.\30\
Additionally, the activities of banks are covered under other BSA
regulations.
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\30\ 31 CFR 103.11(uu).
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``Redeemers'' is a term formerly used in the context of
several MSB definitions that FinCEN is seeking to eliminate.
Instead, we propose to introduce the terms ``prepaid access'' and
``provider of prepaid access,'' with the latter used to characterize a
distinct category of MSB and a primary focus of our regulatory
efforts.\31\ We believe that these terms offer a more accurate
characterization of the role and the payment product which we seek to
bring more fully within the scope of the BSA.
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\31\ For the remainder of this document, and in the accompanying
rule text, we will use the terms ``prepaid access'' and ``provider
of prepaid access.'' However, as noted in the final paragraph of
this section, we solicit public comment for the best term for the
payment mechanism at issue.
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Although considerable discussion occurred in 1997 regarding
divergent strategies for chip-enabled cards vs. magnetic stripe-bearing
cards, developments over the last twelve years reveal a far more
harmonized evolution. The magnetic-stripe card continues to be the
technology used most in the United States.\32\ Even in situations where
a card or other device is characterized as ``chip-based,'' this chip
principally transfers the magnetic stripe functionality to a smaller
unit of information. The miniaturized size allows for installation in
any number of various devices such as cell phone screens and key chain
tokens. Whether magnetic stripe or chip-based, the value to which the
payment device gives access remains in an account; not in any way
``stored'' on the card. Therefore, we find the purported dichotomy
forecast in 1997 to be unpersuasive for purposes of this rulemaking. We
consider this proposed rule to encompass cards and all other emerging
payment devices, such as mobile phones, currently in the marketplace
and on the horizon.
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\32\ A repeated question raised with respect to chip-based cards
concerns those in use in Europe and Asia, and whether that variety
will migrate to use in the United States. At present, there appears
to be little appetite for installing the necessary payments
infrastructure to enable such use at the point of transaction. In
the event that such developments occur in the future, we believe
that our rule text employs the necessary flexibility to encompass
any such new payment devices.
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We seek public comment regarding the terms ``prepaid access'' and
``provider of prepaid access,'' and whether they offer the best, most
meaningful description of the product(s).
D. May 12, 2009 Money Services Business NPRM
On May 12, 2009, FinCEN published an NPRM entitled ``Amendment to
the Bank Secrecy Act Regulations--Definitions and Other Regulations
Relating to Money Services Businesses'' in the Federal Register.\33\
Comments concerning the 2009 MSB NPRM from the industry and public were
accepted through the close of the comment period on September 9, 2009.
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\33\ 74 FR 22129 (May 12, 2009) (hereinafter 2009 MSB NPRM).
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In the 2009 MSB NPRM, FinCEN proposed to revise the MSB definition
by describing with more clarity the types of financial activity that
will subject a business to the BSA implementing rules. The proposal
incorporated past FinCEN rulings and policy determinations into the
regulatory text and sought to make it easier for MSBs to determine
their responsibilities.
FinCEN also solicited comments on a number of stored value/prepaid
questions in an effort to garner information regarding the accurate
definition(s) or terminology for this payment device, to determine the
appropriate treatment as an MSB component, and to identify the various
participants comprising the numerous prepaid business models. Those
comments have assisted FinCEN in drafting the current proposed
rulemaking.
The comments covered a significant range of opinions. A consumer
rights organization and an association of State regulatory agencies
urged a more rigorous regulatory scheme, encompassing any and all types
of prepaid business models. The comments received from business
entities in the prepaid industry generally suggested that closed loop
products \34\ should not be encompassed within the proposed rulemaking
because they posed very minimal money laundering risk. They asserted
that stored value/prepaid products are often wrongly categorized as
monetary instruments and, while more closely allied with money
transmission, they most accurately deserve a separate category as a
form of money transmission.
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\34\ In its 2009 MSB NPRM, FinCEN proposed a definition for
closed loop stored value as ``Stored value that is limited to a
defined merchant or location (or a set of locations) such as a
specific retailer or retail chain, a college campus, or a subway
system.'' 74 FR 22129, 22141 (May 12, 2009). In the present
rulemaking, FinCEN is proposing a similar definition for closed loop
prepaid access.
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E. Credit CARD Act of 2009
On May 22, 2009, the President signed Public Law 111-24, the Credit
Card Accountability Responsibility and Disclosure (CARD) Act of 2009
(CARD Act). Section 503 of the CARD Act requires the following:
[[Page 36593]]
1. No later than 270 days from the date of enactment, the Treasury
Secretary, in consultation with the Secretary of the Department of
Homeland Security (``DHS''), must issue final regulations regarding the
sale, issuance, redemption, or international transport of stored value,
including stored value cards.
2. The regulations regarding international transport may include
reporting requirements pursuant to Sec. 5316 of title 31, United
States Code.
3. The regulations shall take into consideration current and future
needs and methodologies for transmitting and storing value in
electronic form.
III. Current Regulatory Scheme
Under the current rules, FinCEN addresses traveler's checks, money
orders, and stored value under two separate definitions: ``issuers''
under 31 CFR 103.11(uu)(3) and ``sellers or redeemers'' of those
products under 31 CFR 103.11(uu)(4). The regulations currently include
an activity threshold of $1,000 for any person in any one day, which
applies to all MSB categories except money transmitters.\35\ Money
transmitters are not subject to any dollar level threshold at all.
Accordingly, an issuer, seller or redeemer of stored value, as defined
by our regulations, is required to file CTRs \36\ and to establish a
written AML program, including policies, procedures, and internal
controls commensurate with its activities and reasonably designed to
prevent it from being used to facilitate money laundering and the
financing of terrorist activities.
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\35\ 31 CFR 103.11(uu). This activity based threshold of $1,000
has remained the same since 1999. See Definitions Relating to and
Registration of, Money Services Businesses, 64 FR 45438 (Aug. 20,
1999).
\36\ See 31 CFR 103.22; reporting of cash transactions exceeding
$10,000.
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In 1999, when FinCEN issued its final MSB rule,\37\ it deferred
certain requirements for the prepaid or stored value arena based on its
complexity and the desire to avoid unintended consequences with respect
to an industry then in its infancy. Therefore, unlike most other
categories of MSB, an issuer, seller, or redeemer of stored value is
not required to register as an MSB with FinCEN or to file SARs.
Consistent with a regulatory delegation of examination authority \38\
the IRS currently examines money services businesses, including those
falling within the scope of FinCEN's regulations with respect to stored
value, for compliance with the BSA, as these entities are not otherwise
subject to more general supervision by a Federal functional regulator.
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\37\ Definitions Relating to, and Registration of, Money
Services Businesses, 64 FR 45438 (Aug. 20, 1999).
\38\ 31 CFR 103.56(b)(8).
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In the 2009 MSB NPRM, we proposed folding all of stored value into
one category so that issuers of stored value and sellers or redeemers
of stored value would be in the same category. In the 2009 MSB NPRM,
FinCEN did not propose making any substantive changes to the definition
of this category. After further consideration of the issue, however, we
now offer a substantive change to the definition of the category, and
thus to the overall regulatory scheme, by shifting our focus from
issuers and redeemers to ``providers'' of prepaid access, while
retaining regulatory focus on retail ``sellers'' in this arena.\39\
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\39\ Please refer to regulatory text for 103.11(uu)(4), wherein
we propose further amendments to the revisions proposed in the May
2009 MSB NPRM.
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IV. Prepaid Access as a Distinct Form of Money Transmission
Prepaid access involves the transmission from one point to another
of funds that have been paid in advance. It is empirically similar to
activity engaged in by persons defined as ``money transmitters,'' but
the mechanisms for directing that the money be transmitted are
different. Based on this understanding, as well as on some of the
concepts brought forward in the responses to our 2009 MSB NPRM, FinCEN
is proposing to treat providers of prepaid access as a distinct
category of MSB, keeping it separate from the category established for
money transmitters, while at the same time acknowledging prepaid access
should be regulated in a similar fashion.\40\ While distinct, many
responsibilities imposed on money transmitters and other MSB categories
generally would be imposed on prepaid access providers: there would be
a requirement to file SARs and to register with FinCEN as an MSB.
Separate requirements would be imposed with respect to sellers of
prepaid access.
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\40\ Though the regulatory requirements may be similar, or even
identical, the effects of those requirements on the two types of
MSBs may differ, depending on their different prevailing business
models. For example, the business models of most providers of
prepaid access currently appear to involve the use of electronic
funds transfers subject to the Electronic Funds Transfer Act
(``EFTA''), 15 U.S.C. 1693 et seq. So long as that is the case, the
Funds Transfer Rule, 31 CFR 103.33(f), and the Travel Rule, 31 CFR
103.11(jj), should not impose specific recordkeeping requirements on
providers of prepaid access, because electronic funds transfers
subject to the EFTA are exempt from the Funds Transfer Rule and the
Travel Rule.
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V. Reporting on International Transportation of Prepaid Access
As noted previously, Section 503 of the CARD Act authorizes
Treasury to establish reporting requirements with respect to stored
value pursuant to 31 U.S.C. 5316 \41\ and requires the consideration of
current and future needs and methodologies for transmitting and storing
value in electronic form. 31 U.S.C. 5316 and corresponding FinCEN
regulations require persons transporting or shipping currency and
monetary instruments across the U.S. border in an aggregate amount over
$10,000 to provide a report of such transportation or shipment.\42\ We
have consulted extensively with our law enforcement colleagues and are
seeking information, including but not limited to, risk assessments
evaluating the likelihood of illegal action. Depending on the
sensitivity of such information, this information may be provided in a
confidential docket.
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\41\ Section 503 of the CARD Act requires Treasury to issue
regulations ``regarding the sale, issuance, redemption, or
international transport of stored value,'' which FinCEN in this NPRM
interprets to be essentially synonymous with ``prepaid access.''
Section 503 also provides that regulations regarding international
transportation ``may include reporting requirements pursuant to [31
U.S.C. 5316].'' The implementing regulation for 31 U.S.C. 5316 is 31
CFR 103.23.
\42\ 31 CFR 103.23.
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Presently, there is no similar requirement to report the
transportation of prepaid access products across the border. FinCEN
recognizes the value of collecting information on international
transactions and payment flows, and is engaging with the Department of
Homeland Security and other members of the law enforcement community in
an attempt to identify appropriate solutions. We invite comment on any
aspect of the international transport issue as part of this effort. We
seek comment from the law enforcement officials and the greater public
on the risks prepaid access transactions pose and the types of
transactions that are particularly vulnerable to money laundering,
terrorist financing, and other illicit transactions through the
financial system. We also seek comment on the activity threshold for
prepaid access transactions.
VI. A Shift in Regulatory Obligations
A difficulty in regulating prepaid access is determining which
entity or entities involved should be responsible for compliance with
BSA requirements. The prepaid landscape includes a number of different
types of actors with different roles. These actors and roles are not
consistent throughout the
[[Page 36594]]
industry and some entities perform multiple roles. Given the difficulty
in identifying the provider and the changing nature of the industry, it
is vital that a provider of prepaid access be defined on the basis of
its activities.
FinCEN is proposing removing ``issuers'' and ``redeemers'' from the
definition of money services business and imposing AML program,
reporting, and recordkeeping obligations on the business entity that
engages in activity that demonstrates the most control and oversight of
transactions--what FinCEN proposes to define as the ``provider of
prepaid access.''
The provider is the entity that FinCEN believes is in the best
position to file CTRs and SARs, maintain or have access to transaction
records, and establish and maintain AML programs because it is likely
to have business relationships with most or all of the other
participants in the transaction chain. Accordingly, it has the relevant
information or access to the information to make and file relevant and
meaningful BSA reports and records. Centralizing primary BSA
obligations in the prepaid provider will unify an otherwise fragmented
transaction chain where it is likely that no single player has the
necessary financial transparency to comply adequately with BSA
requirements. Shifting the requirements to one player may enrich the
information available, provide greater financial transparency for
appropriate regulators and administrators, and allow law enforcement to
obtain relevant information with respect to various aspects of a
prepaid access transaction chain without having to seek it from
multiple sources.
Providers of prepaid access should anticipate developing AML
programs that relate to their role as the centralized point in the
chain for relevant information. These programs should include elements
such as (a) internal policies and procedures that contemplate the
collection and processing of information to be used for the evaluation,
completion, and submission of SARs and CTRs; and (b) training programs
for other industry members with whom it contracts for prepaid support
services to be able to identify suspicious activity to inform the
program provider. FinCEN seeks comment on the costs that may be
associated with developing these policies, procedures, and training
programs. FinCEN also seeks comment on the costs that may be associated
with developing information technology systems and anti-money
laundering programs.
VII. Participants in the Prepaid Environment
As discussed previously in this NPRM, the historical background
surrounding the early regulation of the MSB industry involved the
effort to identify the many participants who collectively comprised the
non-bank financial services universe. A shift that occurred with the
issuance of the 1999 regulation was to focus more intensively on the
activity being performed in the movement of funds, or the execution of
a transaction. Where previous statutory and regulatory anti-money
laundering efforts generally targeted the entity, commonly banks,
thrifts, credit unions, et al., the new policy direction required an
understanding that, in many cases, the delivery of a financial service
was only a single component of many different lines of business for a
particular business entity.
For example, a convenience store might offer retail grocery
products, gasoline, an on-premises fast food establishment, a car wash,
and the sale of money orders. Similarly, a travel agency might offer
extensive consumer and business booking services, guided tours, trip
planning and, for customer convenience, also deal in foreign exchange
and the sale of traveler's checks. In these and similar situations, it
is the particular financial services activity that is intended to be
captured by regulation, not the universe of convenience stores or
travel agencies.
As we seek to more precisely define the duties and the responsible
party among the parties in the prepaid operating environment, we are
again focused specifically on the activities executed. We appreciate
that executing a prepaid transaction almost necessarily involves
greater technological complexity and the involvement of more
participants in a transaction chain than would check cashing or the
sale of money orders. Despite the multiple parties involved, however,
we consider it imperative to center our primary regulatory
responsibilities on the party exercising the principal degree of
oversight and control that we believe exists in any prepaid program. We
are also mindful that, among all the typical parties, a very important
role is that of the seller. The seller alone has face-to-face dealings
with the purchaser and is privy to information unavailable elsewhere in
the transaction chain. For that reason, we believe the seller to be
secondarily important among all the entities involved in the program.
The prepaid marketplace has evolved over time without developing a
universally-accepted set of labels or categories to describe its
participants. In some cases, this may be attributable to individuals or
companies operating in multiple capacities, thus blurring conceptually
what parameters may or may not exist for a particular role. For other
reasons, such as multiple points of entry to this line of business or
widely disparate purposes for initiating a prepaid program, the
participants may choose no actual titles or labels for the functions
they perform. The roles are defined and executed strictly according to
the contractual terms established.
While our proposed rule text will confer responsibilities on the
``provider of prepaid access,'' using no current industry term of art,
we believe it is important to provide context to understand how we came
to choose this term, and to describe how we see the comprehensive
prepaid industry landscape. In the Section-by-Section analysis,
following the discussion of the role of the ``provider of prepaid
access,'' we also describe the various industry members that we
understand to be standard participants in a prepaid program.
VIII. Alternative Regulatory Approaches To Consider
We believe that our approach for imposing regulatory obligations on
the central player in the prepaid program offers the advantages of
simplicity and efficiency for regulatory and law enforcement purposes.
Centralizing BSA duties and recordkeeping in a particular party would
enable law enforcement officials acting in time-critical situations to
direct requests to a single party.
We also look to the seller as an important link in the transaction
chain. The seller is uniquely situated to see the first step in the
establishment of a prepaid relationship, and to interact directly with
the purchaser who may, or may not, be the ultimate end-user of the
card. The requirements of this party to maintain records over a five-
year time period and to report suspicious activity, also serve law
enforcement's needs.
We have reviewed the viability of requiring each participant along
the prepaid access chain to be subject to the BSA recordkeeping and
reporting requirements. In balancing the burdens verses the benefits of
this approach, we believe that providing central points along the
transaction chain, i.e., the provider and seller of prepaid access,
offers the most utility to law enforcement and the least burden to the
industry.
We appreciate, however, that such an approach is not the only
approach and we request comments on alternative methods to achieve the
same ends. The
[[Page 36595]]
many participants in the transaction chain likely bring specialized
knowledge to the program. By imposing a separate, stand-alone
obligation on each party along the transaction chain, we may facilitate
the collection of more detailed information, not filtered through any
secondary perspective. As FinCEN may consider such an alternate
approach, we seek comment on which prepaid program participants offer
the most meaningful information, such as transaction information,
purchaser information, or card holder information.
In determining whether an entity offering money services is an MSB
for purposes of the BSA implementing regulations, entities are not
required to aggregate transactions across distinct money service
categories to any person on any day (in one or more transactions) in
determining whether thresholds apply. In its 2009 MSB NPRM, FinCEN
sought comment on whether it should reconsider its previous position
with respect to transactions involving multiple MSB services, and
require that such multiple services be aggregated for purposes of
determining whether definitional thresholds have been met. We received
industry comments on this issue generally opposed to such a
development. FinCEN is still considering the matter and welcomes any
further comments on this issue, particularly with respect to the
inclusion of the sale of prepaid access in connection with other money
service business products.
IX. Parameters of This Rulemaking
This NPRM pertains only to non-banks. As noted earlier, this
rulemaking does not establish new requirements and does not change
existing requirements for banks. Banks may participate in the provision
of prepaid access in a variety of ways and may enlist the services of a
variety of agents acting on their behalf. As also stated earlier, banks
are subject to the full panoply of BSA/AML program, recordkeeping and
reporting requirements. Similarly, as discussed in more detail herein,
this rulemaking neither establishes new requirements nor changes
existing requirements for persons registered with, and regulated or
examined by, the Securities and Exchange Commission (``SEC'') or the
Commodity Futures Trading Commission (``CFTC'').
This rulemaking establishes the categories of MSBs that will be
regulated in the prepaid arena. It also identifies which actors will
not be regulated where their activities are confined to those that
present less opportunity for misuse by illicit actors seeking to
launder money or finance illicit activities. As discussed further
herein, such categories of actors may include those dealing solely in
the provision of payroll or job and health benefits through prepaid
access.
This rulemaking departs from FinCEN's previous stance on closed-
loop prepaid access in one respect. Historically, FinCEN's regulatory
interpretations \43\ have held that the traditional ``gift cards'' that
are redeemable only by a single retailer pose limited risk for money
laundering or evading financial transparency. In this rulemaking,
FinCEN proposes subjecting providers and sellers of closed loop prepaid
access to BSA requirements in such circumstances that involve
international use or person to person payments. Because financial
transparency can be obscured, if the prepaid access product can be used
internationally and other persons or non-depository sources can add or
deplete the funds associated with it, FinCEN is proposing a regulatory
construct under which certain providers and sellers of closed loop
prepaid access would be subject to the BSA implementing rules.\44\
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\43\ FinCEN Ruling 2003-4 (Definition of Money Transmitter/
Stored Value--Gift Certificates/Gift Cards) (Aug. 15, 2003).
\44\ In several contexts, FinCEN has articulated the heightened
money laundering and terrorist financing vulnerabilities associated
with international transactions. The concern about international use
is consistent with FinCEN's frequently repeated position that the
specific geographic locations at which a financial product or
service is offered must be taken into account in assessing the risks
associated with that product or service. See, e.g., Bank Secrecy
Act/Anti-Money Laundering Act Examination Manual for Money Services
Businesses (December 2008), p. 21. The concern about person-to-
person transfers is consistent with guidance that FinCEN has issued
with respect to intra-institutional transfers of value from one
subaccount to another by other types of financial institutions. See,
e.g., FIN-2008-G008 (September 10, 2008), Application of the
Definition of Money Transmitter to Brokers and Dealers in Currency
and Other Commodities.
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We believe that this treatment is warranted given information
provided by our law enforcement colleagues, maintained in a
confidential docket, that closed loop gift cards have a strong appeal
for criminal enterprises to launder cash proceeds in trade
(merchandise). The criminals focus particularly on merchants who
maintain retail locations both within and outside of the United States.
The ability to redeem the value placed on the card on either side of
the border is a convenient, anonymous method to move and masquerade
illicit funds freely. The proposed rule would clarify that providers of
prepaid closed loop access that can be used within and outside our
borders are within the scope of BSA regulatory requirements.
We question whether it might now be appropriate to revisit the
rationale that we have previously applied to closed loop prepaid access
even when such prepaid access is limited solely to domestic use. Are
there inherent vulnerabilities in closed loop prepaid access that
require our consideration? Is closed loop prepaid access that allows
use at more than a single retail facility (for example, to a shopping
mall) more vulnerable to abuse than a traditional closed loop product?
FinCEN solicits comment on whether and how it should reconsider its
existing interpretation with respect to closed loop gift cards.
X. Consideration of Examination Authority
As noted earlier, the IRS has been delegated the authority to
examine money services businesses for compliance with the BSA, given
that there is not a Federal functional regulator with broad supervision
over money services businesses. With respect to providers of prepaid
access, FinCEN seeks comment on any particular aspects of the prepaid
access sector that should be considered when making a decision about
whether and how to delegate examination authority.
XI. Future Rulemakings Contemplated
We acknowledge that the proposed revisions to the regulatory text
do not address the full array of regulatory considerations raised by
the marketing and use of prepaid access. FinCEN recognizes that despite
its many positive aspects, as with any innovation in the delivery of
monetary value, prepaid access can be misused. Our goal is to recognize
these vulnerabilities and to assist law enforcement in promoting
transparency throughout the financial system. Our further goal is to
undertake this effort while mindful of the many legitimate, beneficial
uses of these payment products.
The prepaid environment is no longer limited to simply commercial
business uses; increasingly, the Federal government is making
widespread use of prepaid access in delivering benefits to individuals
such as certain Social Security payments and disaster relief
assistance. By no means do we intend to curtail the growth or migration
to prepaid access where there are regulatory controls in place. Where
all of the parties and transactions can reveal a legitimate audit
trail, FinCEN and its law enforcement colleagues raise no objection.
We believe that there may be other areas and aspects concerning the
[[Page 36596]]
prepaid business environment that warrant future regulatory scrutiny.
As noted earlier, we intend to engage in a rulemaking on instituting
reporting requirements on the international transport of prepaid
access. If there are other areas in need of consideration for future
rulemaking, we ask for the public to offer comment.
XII. Section-by-Section Analysis
Pursuant to FinCEN's authority to interpret the provisions of 31
U.S.C. 5312, this document proposes to amend 31 CFR part 103, primarily
by revising the definition of ``stored value'' as stated below. These
proposed changes include the following: (1) Renaming ``stored value''
as ``prepaid access'' and defining that term; (2) deleting the terms
``issuer and redeemer'' of stored value; (3) imposing suspicious
activity reporting, customer information and transaction information
recordkeeping requirements on both providers and sellers of prepaid
access and, additionally, imposing a registration requirement on
providers only; and (4) exempting certain categories of prepaid access
products and services posing lower risks of money laundering and
terrorist financing from certain requirements.
A. Meaning of the Term ``Closed Loop Prepaid Access''
The proposed term ``closed loop prepaid access'' is defined as
prepaid access to funds or the value of funds that is limited to a
defined merchant or location (or a set of locations) such as a specific
retailer or retail chain, a college campus, or a subway system. This
proposed definition supersedes the definition proposed in FinCEN's 2009
MSB NPRM.\45\ It is similar to the previous proposed definition, but it
replaces the term ``stored value'' with ``prepaid access'' and uses
more precise language.
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\45\ 74 FR 22129, 22141 (May 12, 2009).
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B. Meaning of the Term ``Provider of Prepaid Access''
1. In General
In general, this term will apply to any person that serves in the
capacity of oversight and control for a prepaid program. The
determination of the applicability of this term to any given player in
the program's transaction chain will be a matter of facts and
circumstances; we do not ``assign'' this term to any particular role.
We recognize that there may be situations in which no single party
alone exercises exclusive control. However, we do believe that there
will always be a party in the transaction chain with the predominant
degree of decision-making ability; that person plays the lead role
among all the others, and is in the best position to serve as a conduit
for information for regulatory and law enforcement purposes.
We wish to state clearly and emphatically that identifying the
provider of prepaid access is not simply an arbitrary decision by the
program participants. As with other MSBs, the role of the provider of
prepaid access is determined through the facts and circumstances
surrounding the activity; no single act or duty alone will be
determinative. While not exhaustive, we consider the following
activities to be strong indicators of what entity acts in a principal
role:
The party in whose name the prepaid program is marketed to
the purchasing public. For example, whose press release trumpets the
launch of a new product? Whose name is used in print, on-line
advertisements, and on the face of the card/device itself ? In legal
parlance, the individual or entity who ``holds himself out'' as the
lead player will be a very important determining characteristic.
The party who a ``reasonable person'' would identify as
the principal entity in a transaction chain--the principal decision-
maker.
The party to whom the issuing bank looks as its principal
representative in protecting its network relationship and its brand
integrity.
The party who determines distribution methods and sales
strategies.
The party whose expertise in the prepaid environment is
recognized by the others, particularly by the issuing bank, as
instrumental in bringing together the most appropriate parties for the
delivery of a successful program.
We intend for these enumerated characteristics to illustrate that
there is no one single determinant; the provider of prepaid access need
not do, or refrain from doing, any single activity. The totality of the
facts and circumstances will identify the provider of prepaid access.
(a) Organizing the Prepaid Program
A logical first step in the determination of the party to be deemed
the provider of prepaid access is to look to the initiation and
establishment of the program itself. This may involve actions or
activities as diverse as identifying the need for a prepaid program,
developing a business plan, or obtaining financing and contracting with
other principals. This step alone, however, is not dispositive in
determining that a party is appropriately deemed a provider of prepaid
access.
We can easily foresee situations where the initiator of a prepaid
program recognizes early in the process that unique skills and industry
expertise are necessary to carry the program through to fulfillment;
for example, when a corporation's human resources department decides to
transfer its payroll distribution from paper checks to reloadable
prepaid cards. In that case, although the human resources department
may well have identified the need for a prepaid program, and may have
established some threshold parameters, it may choose to cede the
program to an expert in the industry by contracting with an outside
third party. Most likely, under these circumstances, the party assuming
these