Information from the SBA regarding the disclosure of client
details in payment transactions, securities transactions and other
transaction types in connection with SWIFT
Banks primarily use the services of SWIFT for payment transactions and the processing of
securities transactions. At present, there is no other company that offers such services
worldwide. Below we answer the questions that are posed to us most frequently with
regard to SWIFT and the risks connected with disclosing data abroad.
What is SWIFT?
S.W.I.F.T. stands for "Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication". It is
a cooperative headquartered in Belgium and its members are made up of banks from
numerous countries. SWIFT standardises the exchange of messages between financial
institutions, i.e. the transmission of information between financial institutions, in connection
with payment transactions and securities transactions, for example. The main participants
in the message transmission system are banks, brokers, asset managers and national and
international central securities depositaries. SWIFT has very high standards with regard to
data security and uses a secured network, which sends messages in an encrypted form,
for the transmission of information. You can find more information about SWIFT on its
homepage at www.swift.com.
How does SWIFT work?
In order to demonstrate how SWIFT works, we will use the following example: If you
authorise your bank to send EUR 500 to a friend in Italy, the bank enters the order in an
electronic form known as a SWIFT message, which is provided by SWIFT. The bank
debits EUR 500 to your account and sends the SWIFT message via SWIFT to your friend's
bank in Italy. The encrypted SWIFT message informs your friend's bank that there is a
transfer order for him and that the equivalent of EUR 500 should be debited to the offset
account that your bank has with this particular receiving bank and credited to your friend.
Please note: SWIFT only exchanges encrypted messages. No funds are exchanged
via SWIFT.
What does SWIFT do with your data?
In addition to its message transfer network, SWIFT currently also operates two computer
centres for data processing, in the US and the Netherlands, with a further centre in the
pipeline for Switzerland. At these computer centres, the messages within the SWIFT
network are encrypted, checked to ensure they have the correct structure, uniquely
referenced, stored in a cache and inspected for alterations. The data is processed in one
computer centre and saved at a second for security reasons (backup). The storage period
at SWIFT is a maximum of 124 days. During this time, the messages are saved at both
computer centres. Following this period, the messages are deleted from all databases at
all locations. The information is stored for reasons of operational security, in case a
financial institution requests that SWIFT reproduce messages. From the end of 2009
SWIFT will make available a facility which will allow participants to store data about
transactions in Europe not only at a computer centre in the Netherlands but also at one in
Switzerland.
Disclosure of data
What does this mean for your payment transactions?
For the processing of domestic and cross-border
payments, information about the
ordering customer is disclosed to the banks and system operators involved in Switzerland
and abroad. This information is required primarily under the applicable provisions for the
combating of money laundering and financing of terrorism. The main information provided
includes the name, address and account or identification number of the ordering customer
although date of birth and place of birth may be provided in place of the address. In the
case of domestic payment transactions, this information may be omitted, with the
exception of the account or identification number, although it must be forwarded to the
beneficiary's bank within three working days if it is requested. The banks and system
operators in question are primarily correspondent banks of the bank issuing the payment,
payment system providers (e.g. SIX Interbank Clearing AG in Switzerland) or SWIFT. It is
also possible that the parties involved in the transaction may pass on the data, for
processing or data backup to mandated third parties in other countries for instance.
Furthermore, details about the ordering customer are provided to the beneficiary in
Switzerland or abroad.
For
domestic payments in foreign currencies, information on the person issuing the
order is also disclosed to the banks and system operators abroad which are involved in the
transaction. In the case of
domestic payments in Swiss francs, it can also not be ruled
out that information on the person issuing the payment will be sent abroad. This can occur,
for example, if a bank is connected indirectly to the Swiss interbank payment system
("SIC") via remoteGate rather than having a direct connection or if SWIFT is used to make
clarifications regarding a transaction.
What does it mean if a bank is connected to SIC via remoteGate?
Domestic payments in Swiss francs are processed via SIC. This payment system is
operated by SIX Interbank Clearing AG by mandate of the Swiss National Bank. Most
financial institutions in Switzerland have direct access to SIC. However, there are some
banks in Switzerland that execute only a few domestic transactions in Swiss francs,
meaning that a connection to SIC would be relatively expensive. In 2000, banks such as
these and institutions abroad were given the option of accessing SIC via SWIFT when SIX
Interbank Clearing AG, commissioned and supported by the Swiss National Bank,
developed remoteGate. When accessing SIC via SWIFT, data on the principal and the
beneficiary are sent abroad and saved in SWIFT's computer centres. This is the case with
banks that use remoteGate. However, it is not only the clients of banks that use
remoteGate who are affected by the transfer of information abroad. Clients of banks which
execute transactions with the users of remoteGate are also affected. If a bank that uses
SIC sends a payment order to a bank that is connected to SIC via remoteGate, the
payment order is transferred from SIC to the SWIFT system, meaning that data on the
principal and the beneficiary is sent abroad.
What does this mean for securities transactions?
For the
processing of domestic and cross-border securities transactions and
inquires in connection with such transactions
, there are two main areas which involve
the disclosure of data to the banks and central depositaries involved in Switzerland and
abroad.
For
deliveries and withdrawals of securities to and from custody accounts and
custody account transfers
, the custody account number, the name and the address of
the end beneficiary in Switzerland may be sent abroad when this data is transmitted via
SWIFT by the involved banks and central depositaries to ensure orderly processing.
Furthermore, for
securities held abroad on behalf of bank clients, the name of the
securities holder
or the name of the registered shareholder, and in some cases address
details, are included in SWIFT messages. These SWIFT messages affect, for example,
special transactions of the foreign depositaries of Swiss banks, such as the opening of
special custody accounts (in the name of the client), subscriptions and redemptions of
foreign funds made in the name of the client, physical transfers of a client's special
holdings held abroad, the entry and re-registration of shareholders in foreign registers and
other special cases involving foreign capital transactions and the exercise of voting rights.
What does this mean for other transactions?
For
other transactions such as documentary credits, guarantees, collections and foreign
exchange transactions, all details on the transaction in question (e.g. names, addresses
and account numbers of the parties involved in the transaction) are communicated to the
banks and system operators involved via SWIFT and are therefore communicated abroad.
As is the case with payment transactions and securities transactions, inquiries regarding
transactions may also be made via SWIFT.
Why is data disclosed?
The information discussed above is disclosed in order to fulfil statutory and regulatory
requirements in Switzerland and abroad. For example, in the case of cross-border
payments, data on the ordering customer must be provided. The provision of this
information also enables the orderly, efficient processing of transactions.
Are your details abroad protected?
Data sent abroad is no longer protected by Swiss law and is subject to the respective
foreign legal system. Foreign laws and regulations may require that this data be passed on
to authorities or other third parties, for instance. This was the case in 2001 when the US
Treasury required the release of data from the SWIFT computer centre in the US following
the terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center in New York. The US Treasury assured the
EU authorities that it would adhere to European data protection standards and agreed to
the relevant controls.