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Financial Monitoring Without Exceptions: A New Reality for Banks and Businesses in Ukraine

03/ 06/ 2026
  Financial monitoring in Ukraine is evolving and developing in line with European legislation and is increasingly expanding into the activities of various sectors of the economy, no longer limited exclusively to banking institutions. This was stated by Hanna Horbenko, Head of the Ukrainian Compliance Association NGO and Director of the Compliance and Financial Monitoring Department at JSC “OTP Bank”, who moderated the National Finmon Forum 2026. “Tools and approaches to financial monitoring and compliance will continue to develop and improve. Today, they form the foundation of trust in the financial system and provide protection for the economy against shadow schemes. This is a kind of ‘immunity’ against violations of the law that safeguards the state and society,” commented Hanna Horbenko. The event was organized and jointly held in Kyiv by the Ukrainian Compliance Association and LIGA ZAKON. It was attended by business representatives, and speakers included representatives of the regulator, members of parliament, compliance officers of systemically important banks, reporting entities (primary financial monitoring entities), international lawyers, and analysts working within the evaluation process. The forum addressed issues of risk assessment at various levels, examined common business mistakes and the grounds for inspections by law enforcement agencies, and discussed drop schemes as well as new approaches to restricting banking operations aimed at combating financial “mules.” Representatives of the banking sector explained how customer risk profiles are formed, the roles of auditors, lawyers, and financial intermediaries, what information is shared between entities, and why different participants may assess the same transaction differently. Currency control and international payments were also key topics, including typical errors in foreign economic activity, the role of documentation and intermediaries, and the reasons for possible delays in banking transactions. The use of AI in financial monitoring and the existence of cryptocurrency in Ukraine were also discussed. Forum participants concluded that the need to comply with EU standards creates a new reality for all supervised entities. In particular, the requirement to actively combat money laundering is transforming the approaches used by banks and primary financial monitoring entities, increasingly impacting business operations and unifying financial monitoring standards across different sectors of the economy.

Financial monitoring in Ukraine is evolving and developing in line with European legislation and is increasingly expanding into the activities of various sectors of the economy, no longer limited exclusively to banking institutions. This was stated by Hanna Horbenko, Head of the Ukrainian Compliance Association NGO and Director of the Compliance and Financial Monitoring Department at JSC “OTP Bank”, who moderated the National Finmon Forum 2026.

“Tools and approaches to financial monitoring and compliance will continue to develop and improve. Today, they form the foundation of trust in the financial system and provide protection for the economy against shadow schemes. This is a kind of ‘immunity’ against violations of the law that safeguards the state and society,” commented Hanna Horbenko.

The event was organized and jointly held in Kyiv by the Ukrainian Compliance Association and LIGA ZAKON. It was attended by business representatives, and speakers included representatives of the regulator, members of parliament, compliance officers of systemically important banks, reporting entities (primary financial monitoring entities), international lawyers, and analysts working within the evaluation process.

The forum addressed issues of risk assessment at various levels, examined common business mistakes and the grounds for inspections by law enforcement agencies, and discussed drop schemes as well as new approaches to restricting banking operations aimed at combating financial “mules.” Representatives of the banking sector explained how customer risk profiles are formed, the roles of auditors, lawyers, and financial intermediaries, what information is shared between entities, and why different participants may assess the same transaction differently. Currency control and international payments were also key topics, including typical errors in foreign economic activity, the role of documentation and intermediaries, and the reasons for possible delays in banking transactions. The use of AI in financial monitoring and the existence of cryptocurrency in Ukraine were also discussed.

Forum participants concluded that the need to comply with EU standards creates a new reality for all supervised entities. In particular, the requirement to actively combat money laundering is transforming the approaches used by banks and primary financial monitoring entities, increasingly impacting business operations and unifying financial monitoring standards across different sectors of the economy.

This material is provided by a member company or partner organization of the European Business Association as part of an informational collaboration. The Association is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of the information presented. The views, opinions, and recommendations expressed in this material are solely those of the authors and do not reflect the official position of the European Business Association.

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