Australia clears Sportsbet after anti-money laundering remediation

July 3 (Reuters) – Australia’s financial crime watchdog said on Friday that online betting firm Sportsbet had completed required ​improvements to its anti-money laundering controls after it ‌admitted serious deficiencies two years ago.
The Australian Transaction Reports and Analysis Centre accepted the company’s remediation undertaking ​in 2024, following some concerns it had ​raised over Sportsbet’s compliance with anti-money laundering and ⁠counter-terrorism financing obligations, including risk assessment, customer ​monitoring and suspicious matter reporting.
“Sportsbet was required to ​undertake significant remediation to uplift its systems, controls and governance,” AUSTRAC CEO Brendan Thomas said in a statement, ​adding that the requirements have now been ​met.
Sportsbet, which calls itself Australia’s biggest sports betting firm, did not ‌immediately ⁠respond to Reuters.
An external auditor assured the regulator that the company had implemented the necessary remediation measures.
AUSTRAC said it would continue to closely monitor the ​gambling sector, ​which it ⁠considers vulnerable to money laundering risks, particularly in online environments where ​transactions occur rapidly and with limited ​face-to-face ⁠interaction.
The watchdog had first ordered an audit of Flutter Entertainment (FLTRF.L), -owned Sportsbet in 2022 as online betting surged in ⁠Australia ​after the outbreak of ​the COVID-19 pandemic forced physical stores to shut.

Reporting by Keshav ​Singh Chundawat in Bengaluru; Editing by Sonia Cheema.

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