Daily Compliance Brief — U.S. Intensifies Focus on Sanctions Evasion Through Trade-Based Schemes
March 26, 2026
Signal
U.S. authorities have reinforced enforcement focus on sanctions evasion risks embedded within trade-based financial flows, particularly those involving complex supply chains and intermediary entities.
Recent supervisory and enforcement messaging highlights how trade structures, including misinvoicing, transshipment, and the use of third-country intermediaries, are being leveraged to obscure links to sanctioned parties.
The development reflects increasing concern that traditional sanctions screening controls may be insufficient to detect evasion techniques embedded within legitimate-looking trade transactions.
Why it matters
Financial institutions should reassess trade finance controls, including documentation review, pricing anomalies, and counterparty risk linked to supply chain structures.
Transaction monitoring frameworks may need enhancement to capture red flags associated with trade-based sanctions evasion, particularly in cross-border activity involving higher-risk jurisdictions.
Compliance teams should also strengthen coordination between sanctions, AML, and trade finance functions to ensure effective identification and escalation of complex evasion patterns.