Countering terrorist financing and Layering: Difference between pages

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(CTF).
1.


Countering terrorist financing comprises policies and procedures designed to detect, prevent and deter attempts to finance terrorist activities.
''Money laundering.''


A number of CTF policies and procedures are similar to those used to combat money laundering.
The undertaking of a series of financial transactions with the intention of disguising the true source of laundered money.


This is often the second stage of money laundering.


Countering terrorist financing is also known as Countering the financing of terrorism or Combating the financing of terrorism.  
It would follow initial 'placement' of the illegally obtained money into the legitimate financial system.




== See also ==
2.
* [[4MLD]]
 
* [[Anti money laundering]]
''Market manipulation.''
* [[FBI]]
 
* [[Financial Action Task Force]]
The (illegal) practice of simultaneously entering a large number of orders intended to be cancelled - for example to buy - together with a smaller number of orders intended to be executed - for example to sell.
* [[FinCEN]]
 
* [[High-risk country]]
The intention is to artificially influence the market price with the subsequently cancelled orders, and to take advantage of that artificial market price with the executed orders.
* [[Know-your-customer]]
* [[National Crime Agency]]
* [[Terrorist financing]]




=== Other resources ===
== See also ==
* [[Integration]]
* [[Layered hedging]]
* [[Market abuse]]
* [[Market manipulation]]
* [[Placement]]
* [[Spoofing]]


[[Media:2015_03_Mar_-_Squeaky_clean.pdf| Squeaky Clean, The Treasurer, 2015 student article on anti money laundering implications for corporate treasurers.]]
[[Category:Compliance_and_audit]]
[[Category:The_business_context]]

Latest revision as of 00:17, 28 February 2024

1.

Money laundering.

The undertaking of a series of financial transactions with the intention of disguising the true source of laundered money.

This is often the second stage of money laundering.

It would follow initial 'placement' of the illegally obtained money into the legitimate financial system.


2.

Market manipulation.

The (illegal) practice of simultaneously entering a large number of orders intended to be cancelled - for example to buy - together with a smaller number of orders intended to be executed - for example to sell.

The intention is to artificially influence the market price with the subsequently cancelled orders, and to take advantage of that artificial market price with the executed orders.


See also