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Getting ready for VAT digitisation: automation is key

Source: Finance Derivative

hristiaan Van Der Valk, Vice President for Strategy and Regulatory at Sovos, says technology will power real strategic success for companies required to follow continuous transaction controls (CTCs).

A growing number of governments and businesses around the world are adopting digital-first approaches for a multitude of processes, resulting in a need to move away from traditional paper-based invoicing and embrace real-time tax reporting. This trend has been largely led by Latin American countries such as Brazil, Chile and Mexico. Through adopting real-time reporting via electronic invoicing systems, they have been able to better understand their economies, reduce fraud, and close VAT gaps.

The shift to continuous transaction controls (CTCs) allows transaction data to be automatically streamed to governments, reducing the need for resource-intensive business systems and document audits for tax administrations. Through the use of rich, standardised data, tax authorities are able to compute a business’s tax liability. Businesses are generally not required to be heavily involved in this process.

With this requirement – combined with invoicing – businesses would be able to avoid filing periodic tax returns, relieving them of the burden of running VAT compliance teams and filing reports that bring no benefit. The practice, however, calls for a more comprehensive data management approach and proactive data reconciliation across different sources of government-controlled transaction data. For this reason, companies need access to a high-quality dataset in case they must challenge government-determined tax liability.

It can be problematic to have poor data quality in a VAT environment that relies heavily on legacy reporting. For example, there have been instances in which reports were inconsistent or didn’t correspond to accounting data in audits. Consequently, fines or penalties may be imposed. However, in the world of CTCs the consequences of data quality issues are of a very different magnitude. Your financial and physical supply and demand chains can practically grind to a standstill if your data isn’t approved by the tax administration – especially in nations where the tax administration ‘clears’ the invoice in real-time such as in Italy, Mexico and Brazil.

Many businesses with responsibilities in VAT jurisdictions are missing something important here. Beginning to utilise automation and other more specialised tools for producing VAT returns is a critical step toward harnessing the benefits from the mandated transition to CTCs as opposed to focusing on the challenges.

Manual is outdated

A lot of businesses are still using manual processes like spreadsheets to manage their VAT compliance, which essentially involves the time-consuming production and submission of VAT returns.

Through implementing technology like automated rules in software, companies can maximise the validity of VAT data. As well as simplifying and re-risking VAT reporting activities, the effort required to design the steps to enhance data using automated rules engines means establishing structured definitions of ‘what’s wrong with your transaction data?’ These definitions can then be used to identify the cause of quality concerns in upstream business processes and address them in order to dramatically improve CTC readiness.

For many businesses, the majority of quality concerns are down to the manual and paper-based processes used in internal workflows and trading partner relationships. Therefore, automation will play a vital role in properly preparing for CTCs.

Preparing data in this manner for VAT enforcement means that a business is paving the way for a more data-driven approach to compliance in general. Companies will increasingly be required to coordinate data being submitted to tax administrations automatically from a range of business process and accounting systems, once CTCs and other VAT digitisation initiatives become operational.

Keeping up to date with the expanding scope of information that is handed over to tax administrations in these automated data transmissions is crucial, so that companies can maintain a level of control over the image of their business operations that is constructed for the tax authorities.

As well as this, a business may benefit from this insight across data encompassing the full supply chain and transactions.  For instance, this information gathered could be turned into tactics to help with strategic planning.

Business leaders may reduce expenses, boost resilience, and improve controls by automating tax and business operations and adopting a data-driven approach to compliance, allowing for a more accurate and detailed understanding of granular reporting needs.

Organisations should prioritise the building of dashboards utilising modern analytics tools to prepare for this huge transition. It’s also important to have a well-organised evidence base with clean digital archives. Technology and the insight it brings will be the driving factor for real strategic success as economies recover from the pandemic.

Data flow is key

As tax authorities and governments work to reduce VAT gaps, greater visibility into corporate databases is at the top of their agenda. This is accomplished through the government’s digitisation of all tax reporting, in which data is delivered at regular intervals that correspond to the flow of transactions and the government’s data requirements.

It is imperative that transaction data, relevant primarily for VAT purposes (though not exclusively), be received in a transactional manner. Meanwhile, other types of information, like payment data or inventory movement, may be requested on a weekly or monthly basis, whereas broader accounting data might be requested more frequently.

The introduction of CTCs should not be viewed as an IT formality, but as the first step in tax administrations gaining easy, timely and effective access to source data. The digitisation of tax will enable administrations to access data on a regular basis, as well as at a granular level.

As companies transition from manual data entry into this new world of automated data exchange, they should concentrate on why this change is important rather than how it is happening. The real prize here is not getting the ‘plumbing’ to work according to government specifications; focusing on this ‘how’ question means that companies may be missing out on a potentially critical business enabler, but equally they may be inadvertently setting themselves up for much higher levels of compliance risk.

With the introduction of CTCs and various forms of detailed digital reporting, companies should be prepared to be exposed to much more stringent audits. The reason for this is that data quality or consistency issues will gradually become more transparent to tax administration teams, which will increasingly be enabled to respond to even the smallest inconsistencies that may previously have gone under the radar with surgical precision.

The higher level of visibility allows tax authorities to cross-check more company data, its trading partners and third parties’ data. These abilities will be vastly improved as more governments complement CTC requirements with mandates for SAF-T and similar electronic auditing requirements. Through thorough analysis of this growing mass of real-time and historic data, a firm’s operations can be fully understood.

Successfully adapting to CTCs means investing in the journey rather than the destination. As everything becomes more digitised, organisations must stay on top of these changes and maintain the same level of data insights as tax authorities do. There will be a growing need for this as more countries introduce CTC regimes (both France and Germany are on the horizon).

Adapting business tools to deliver better data insights is essential to facilitating tax digitisation, both to satisfy global tax authorities and to achieve a competitive advantage in the market. In short, companies should remain fully alert and prepared to ensure a smooth transition and successful outcome of CTCs, which are the logical next step on the road to business transparency.

The domino effect of CTCs

The willingness of autonomous governments to accept digital tax reporting will determine how widespread its implementation becomes. Following more than a decade of success with these methods in Latin America, governments all over Europe, for example, have made major moves toward introducing CTCs. In doing so, there is a great deal of preparation that international companies need to do which can take a considerable amount of time and resources.

In all jurisdictions with indirect tax systems, moving toward increasingly digitised tax controls is the only path. With real-time data, governments can better understand and analyse their country’s economic health, while also enhancing fiscal controls and reducing fraud. It’s just a matter of time until these digital programmes become standard practice on a global level, as countries all across the world begin to recognise their success in reducing fraud, increasing efficiency and closing VAT gaps.

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Business

PSD3 and the Real-Time Fraud Imperative: What the Regulation Actually Demands of Financial Infrastructure 

Baiba Miezere, Group Product Development Director at Eastnets 

The payments industry has spent years treating fraud prevention as a detection problem. PSD3 reframes it as an infrastructure problem, and that distinction matters enormously for how institutions should now be thinking about their technology stack. 

The Regulatory Signal Worth Reading Carefully 

PSD3 is frequently discussed in terms of its compliance burden: stronger authentication, expanded liability, tighter rules around authorised push payment fraud. But the more important signal is structural. By increasing liability for fraud losses and accelerating the shift toward instant payment rails, the regulation is effectively forcing fraud prevention out of the back office and into the transaction execution path itself. While PSD was concentrating more on cards, pull payments, reversible transactions, PSD3 addresses rapidly growing pain-point in financial market: instant payments, irreversible push payments, open banking Account-to-account payments, real time fraud.   

This is a meaningful change. For most institutions, fraud review has historically happened after the fact, a monitoring function that flags anomalies, investigates cases, and seeks recovery. That model was always imperfect, but it was manageable when payment cycles gave you hours or days. Instant payments collapse that window to seconds. Once funds move, recovery options are limited. The liquidation point, where fraudsters convert access into irreversible transfers, now happens faster than most legacy fraud systems can respond. Fraud methods have also rapidly evolved: social engineering scams, synthetic identities, account takeovers, authorised push payment fraud – all requiring shift from traditional post-transaction rule-based monitoring to real-time cross-payment channels detection, combined with behavioural biometrics and artificial intelligence layer.  

PSD3 doesn’t just tighten rules. It implicitly requires a different architecture, different tooling. 

Why Behavioural Intelligence Is Now Central, Not Optional 

The fraud typologies that PSD3 is most focused on, particularly APP fraud and account takeover, share a common characteristic: they’re hard to catch at the transaction level alone. A payment instruction may look entirely legitimate in isolation. The anomaly only becomes visible when you layer in behavioural context: Is this consistent with how this customer normally behaves? Is the session access pattern unusual? Is the same device and behavioural pattern spotted across other accounts and payment methods?  Has the beneficiary relationship changed recently? 

This shift explains why the industry has been moving toward a more integrated approach to fraud prevention. To comply with PSD3 and evolving fraud, institutions shall combine entity-level risk profiling, session-level intelligence, and transaction-level risk scoring to create a fuller view of risk before a payment is executed. 

The challenge is that, in most institutions, these capabilities remain siloed. Behavioural analytics may sit in a separate system or be missing altogether, while transaction monitoring is split across channels, with one solution for cards and another for wire transfers. This often leaves instant payments, account-to-account payments, crypto payments, and buy-now-pay-later flows insufficiently covered, especially when detection and decisioning must happen within milliseconds. 

The result is a fragmented control environment, with no unified decision point that brings all relevant signals together before a payment is released. 

The gap between these layers is where fraud increasingly lives. Schemes evolve precisely to exploit the seams between detection systems. Static rules, however sophisticated, are inherently reactive, they catch what’s already been seen. The more durable approach combines rules-based detection for known patterns with unsupervised machine learning that identifies deviations from normal behaviour without requiring prior fraud examples. This handles both the known unknowns and the genuinely novel. 

The Swift Dimension That Often Gets Overlooked 

Much of the conversation around PSD3 and instant payments focuses on domestic retail rails, which makes sense given where consumer fraud volumes are concentrated. But high-value cross-border payments represent a distinct and underserved risk surface. 

Swift traffic sits largely outside the scope of consumer-focused fraud tools. Yet correspondent banking flows carry significant value, and the attack vectors, compromised operator credentials, fraudulent payment instructions, manipulation of debit confirmations, are well-documented. The ability to monitor Swift messages at multiple interception points, cross-reference MT900 confirmations against MT103 instructions, and, critically, issue stop-and-recall instructions via the GPI tracker for payments already in-network, meaningfully extends the intervention window beyond what’s possible on domestic rails. 

Very few fraud prevention architectures address this channel natively alongside retail payments. That gap deserves more attention as institutions think about end-to-end coverage. 

From Compliance Burden to Architecture Decision 

The institutions that will navigate PSD3 most effectively aren’t those that treat it as a compliance checkbox. They’re the ones that use the regulatory moment to reassess their fraud prevention architecture more fundamentally, asking not just “what do we need to do to comply?” but “what does a genuinely real-time, multi-channel fraud prevention capability actually look like, and do we have it?” 

That question tends to surface uncomfortable answers. Fragmented point solutions. Offline analysis loops. Gaps in channel coverage. Detection capabilities that operate after execution rather than within it. Manual fraud investigation processes. Rapidly growing fraud volumes that institutions are expected to manage without proportionally increasing investigator teams and operational costs. 

The regulation provides the mandate. The harder work is architectural: building or acquiring a unified control layer that sits within the payment workflow, combines behavioural and transactional signals, covers the full range of payment rails, and makes preventive decisions in real time rather than purely detective ones after the fact. Done well, this approach can strengthen detection, improve the customer experience, reduce operational costs, and significantly increase the effectiveness and productivity of fraud investigators.  

That’s not a product category. It’s an infrastructure requirement. And PSD3 has just made it non-negotiable. 

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Business

The compliance cost trap and why efficiency must be the next frontier

Hassan Zebdeh, Financial Crime and Payment Advisor at Eastnets, outlines how banks can achieve stronger compliance outcomes by embracing more efficient, connected ways of working. 

Compliance has become one of the most resource-intensive functions inside modern banks. Year after year, institutions invest more people, more technology and more time into meeting expanding regulatory expectations, yet many find themselves no closer to achieving meaningful reductions in risk. Or cost. 

At the same time, financial crime is evolving daily, payments are moving in real time and regulators are increasingly focused on outcomes rather than process. While effort may increase, effectiveness doesn’t always follow suit. The systems and processes that once supported compliance in a pre-AI age are now being stretched to their limits, revealing a widening gap between what institutions put in and what they get back. 

This growing imbalance raises a critical question for the industry: how financially sustainable is the current approach to compliance, and what needs to change if banks are to keep pace with risk and regulation? 

The growing strain on compliance

Regulatory compliance can now account for more than 13% of operating costs, yet many banks continue to struggle with the same operational challenges. For most, rising spend has become the default setting for keeping up with regulatory obligations, rather than a reliable way to improve how risk is managed in practice. 

Part of the challenge lies in how compliance has evolved. In recent years alone, banks have had to absorb a wave of new and evolving requirements – from the EU’s AML Package and DORA’s operational obligations to global FATCA/CRS reporting deadlines and many other regulations globally. The response to these changes has often involved layering new controls, systems and processes onto existing ones, adding complexity without fundamentally rethinking how compliance has changed. 

The result is an environment that’s increasingly fragmented and difficult to scale. Compliance teams are expected to deliver faster detection, clearer auditability and stronger risk differentiation, while still relying on operating systems shaped by outdated processes and disconnected data. And yet, a single alert can take anywhere up to 22 hours to action – while some instant payments schemes require decisions in seconds, other nations still operate within minutes or longer. Sanctions lists are also changing, with the Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) imposing sanctions on [https://”/]over 1,300 individuals and entities in 2025 alone, with this likely to double in 2026​. Banks are having to manage risk continuously, even as they attempt to modernise operations that were never designed for today’s pace, landscape or scale. 

Making matters harder, many firms are struggling to find and retain professionals with the right mix of legal, technical and operational expertise to work on these older platforms too. Experienced professionals are retiring en-masse, while nearly half of the new entrants lack the right experience needed to step into these roles effectively. Then again, why would the modern workforce want to work on outdated systems when they can choose new, more agile players within the industry? 

Taken together, this all culminates into a costly endeavour. There is little being done on a broader scale to address the underlying mismatch between rising complexity and operational capacity. Therefore, to keep pace with risk and regulation, we need an entirely different approach; one that focuses more on how compliance is designed, connected and executed. 

Reimagining compliance for a real-time world

For banks willing to rethink how compliance operates, this moment presents a clear opportunity to not only strengthen oversight, but to escape a cycle of rising cost and diminishing returns. As regulatory expectations rise and financial infrastructure accelerates, institutions have a chance to move beyond reactive expansion and build compliance frameworks that are both more effective and more economically sustainable. 

An efficiency-driven compliance framework is central to breaking this cycle. Rather than increasing headcount or layering new processes each time risk or regulation evolves, the focus needs to be on improving how compliance work is performed. By reducing duplication and allowing better decision-making at scale, efficiency helps banks contain costs while improving outcomes, addressing the root cause of the compliance cost trap. The question becomes; how can organisations unlock these improvements? In practice, this shift is anchored in four core capabilities that together redefine modern compliance. 

First, automation helps decouple compliance effectiveness from both headcount growth and large-scale system change. By streamlining the likes of data collection, enrichment and alert handling on top of existing environments, automation reduces manual effort without requiring a full ‘rip and replace’ approach of legacy platforms. This lowers the cost of day-to-day compliance activity while improving consistency and investigation speed. 

Next, risk-based approaches make sure resources are applied where they make the most difference. In practice, this means deeper scrutiny for higher-risk customers, geographies or transaction patterns, while allowing faster, lighter-touch processing for low-risk activity. With AI models and agents, banks can learn from historical patterns, detect subtle anomalies and adapt to evolving fraud and financial crime typologies, using a risk-based approach to automatically reduce false positives. But by tailoring controls to actual exposure, institutions can improve outcomes while reducing unnecessary operational burden. 

The third capability is streamlined reporting. This can be a time-consuming component of compliance, but automated, standardised reporting helps institutions meet regulatory obligations more efficiently, particularly across jurisdictions. By producing consistent, explainable and audit-ready outputs, financial institutions can reduce the recurring cost of manual reconciliation, remediation and regulatory engagement – all while strengthening compliance confidence. 

Finally, interoperability underpins efficiency. Compliance systems rarely operate in isolation and replacing them outright is too costly and disruptive. Interoperable environments, however, allow institutions to modernise incrementally – connecting existing systems, eliminating duplication and extending the value of current investments – without downtime or operational risk. 

Together, these four capabilities help shift compliance away from perpetual cost growth and toward a more stable, scalable model. Efficiency simply becomes the next frontier. Not as a shortcut, but as the mechanism through which banks strengthen defences, control costs and remain resilient in an increasingly demanding regulatory environment. 

Escaping the cost trap

As regulation becomes more outcome-focused and financial crime continues to evolve, banks are being pushed to reconsider not how much they spend on compliance, but how effectively that investment is put to work. 

Efficiency now represents the next frontier of compliance. And those institutions that rethink how compliance is designed, connected and scaled will be better positioned to strengthen defences, control cost growth and respond faster to change.  

The opportunity ahead is to move compliance beyond perpetual expansion and toward purposeful design. For banks, regulators and the wider financial ecosystem, the objective is clear: build compliance frameworks that are fit for the future, resilient by default and capable of keeping pace with risk – all without letting cost become the limiting factor. 

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Business

Why Resilience Is Replacing Prevention as the Defining Cybersecurity Strategy

by Manuel Sanchez, Information Security and Compliance Specialist, iManage

For decades, cybersecurity centered around prevention. Build the right walls around your perimeter, deploy the right tools, train your people not to click the wrong links, and you could keep the bad actors out.

Today, the question driving security strategy is no longer “how do we stop a breach?” but “how do we survive one?” It is a subtle but profound shift in philosophy, and it is reshaping everything from how IT and Security leaders structure their teams to how they select their vendors and deploy AI.

Rehearsing for the worst

The practical expression of this shift is visible in how security teams are being restructured. Organisations are establishing dedicated disaster recovery teams – not to prevent incidents, but to contain and recover from them when they occur. These teams maintain detailed, regularly updated playbooks covering everything from backup restoration to stakeholder communications, with roles pre-assigned and procedures rehearsed well in advance.

In many ways, this mirrors the logic behind disaster drills: fire alarms matter, but knowing the evacuation routes and the post-incident recovery plan determines how well an organisation survives. Critically, responsibility cannot rest with the CISO alone. Business continuity after a cyber incident is a whole-company challenge – which means every core part of the organisation is involved to sustain critical business operations.

Governance in the gray areas

Running alongside this shift is a governance crisis that is easy to underestimate until it becomes a serious risk. As organisations adopt more applications across more vendors and hosting services, the shared responsibility model that was supposed to keep cloud accountability clear has become increasingly difficult to enforce.

The sheer volume of cloud applications in use at any given enterprise is too vast for consistent governance under current approaches – and bad actors have become skilled at identifying exactly where vendor responsibility ends, and customer accountability begins, then operating precisely in that “gray area”. Being aware of this risk and putting preventative measures in place is important, but recognising the role these cloud applications play and the impact to key business operations if these applications were compromised, is critical.

Meanwhile, data volumes continue to grow exponentially, and unstructured data continues to accumulate in the background across many digital systems. Why is this important? If you don’t know what data you have, where it is stored, who has access to it, and, most importantly, how it is protected – onsite or cloud backup – this makes the recovery process a lot harder.

AI agents on the rise – and with it new risks

Although the focus of this article is on resilience, prevention must still remain an essential part of your defences. On that front, the accelerating adoption of autonomous AI in cyber defence tasks is reshaping security operations as visibly as anything else happening in the field right now. The volume, speed, and sophistication of modern threats have simply outpaced what human analysts can manage in real time.

The shift is toward AI that doesn’t just flag anomalies for human review, but actively detects, analyses, and neutralises threats as they emerge, even using predictive models to anticipate attacks before they fully materialise. This frees human experts to focus on strategic decisions and complex defence work rather than spending their days firefighting.

Autonomous AI does, however, introduce risks of its own. When AI agents operate across systems – accessing sensitive repositories, triggering actions, sharing data – they expand the attack surface in ways that aren’t always immediately visible.

Managing the digital identities of AI agents, much like managing employee access credentials, is becoming a critical security discipline. Accordingly, comprehensive traceability frameworks that log every action an agent takes are no longer optional; they are the foundation of responsible AI deployment in any security context.

The supply chain wake-up call

The case for moving from a “prevention” mindset to a “resilience” one is further bolstered by recent high-profile breaches via compromised managed service providers, which have forced a fundamental reset in how organisations evaluate their vendors.

The era of cost-first selection is over. Security credentials, demonstrated through continuous and verifiable evidence, are now non-negotiable for any provider hoping to retain enterprise clients – and what organisations are demanding goes well beyond point-in-time audits. They want real-time visibility into every third-party integration, every software update, and every vendor interaction – including the cloud services the vendors themselves use.

“Trust but verify” has become the operational standard, and providers who cannot demonstrate validated controls and live monitoring are finding themselves out of contention. It is a structural shift that will reshape the vendor landscape considerably — and it is already underway.

A new era demands a new approach

In the end, prevention still matters, but resilience – instilled via the key focus areas above – is what turns disruption into survivable events rather than existential crises. The organisations that are honest about the limits of prevention and embrace the shift towards resilience won’t just better withstand the next wave of attacks – they’ll be differentiating themselves from competitors still clinging to yesterday’s playbook.

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