Daily Compliance Brief — Global Regulators Increase Focus on Timeliness and Escalation of Suspicious Activity Reporting
April 22, 2026
Signal
Regulators across multiple jurisdictions are increasing scrutiny on the timeliness and escalation of suspicious activity reporting, particularly how quickly and effectively potential concerns are identified, investigated, and reported.
Recent observations highlight delays in escalation, inconsistent decision-making thresholds, and fragmented workflows between monitoring and reporting functions, raising concerns that actionable intelligence may not be delivered in a timely manner.
This reflects a broader expectation that institutions ensure reporting processes are both prompt and risk-driven, enabling authorities to act on relevant financial crime intelligence without delay.
Why it matters
Financial institutions should reassess escalation frameworks, including trigger thresholds, investigation timelines, and coordination between monitoring and reporting teams.
Reporting processes may require enhancement to ensure timely submission of suspicious activity reports, supported by clear documentation and consistent decision-making.
Compliance teams should also strengthen governance and oversight to ensure delays or breakdowns in escalation do not undermine regulatory obligations or risk detection effectiveness.