FINTECH’S AML REALITY, 2020–2025: HOW DIGITAL RAILS ENABLE—AND DETER—MONEY LAUNDERING

Authors

  • Anas Alqudah

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.52152/801047

Keywords:

FinTech architectures, Anti–money laundering, Stablecoins, Financial crime controls

Abstract

This paper examines how contemporary FinTech architectures shape anti–money laundering (AML) outcomes. We focus on three practice shifts: (i) the growing use of stablecoins on low-fee rails during layering, (ii) cross-chain composability that shortens interdiction windows and exposes Travel Rule gaps, and (iii) uneven financial-crime controls at high-growth FinTechs relative to incumbents. We analyze public evidence from 2020 to 2025—enforcement orders, supervisory reviews, and industry analytics—using a structured coding template and cross-validating against primary sources. We then translate the patterns into operational metrics that can be monitored by issuers, virtual-asset service providers, and supervisors, including time-to-freeze, unfreeze error rate, Travel Rule match rate across counterparties, and case conversion rates from off-chain alerts to on-chain actions, with targets ranging from 12to 24 months.

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Published

2025-07-15

Issue

Section

Article

How to Cite

FINTECH’S AML REALITY, 2020–2025: HOW DIGITAL RAILS ENABLE—AND DETER—MONEY LAUNDERING. (2025). Lex Localis - Journal of Local Self-Government, 23(10), 850-867. https://doi.org/10.52152/801047