San Francisco, California-based Banking-as-a-Service company Treasury Prime unveiled its new compliance solution this week. The new offering – a suite of compliance tools, resources, and guidance from regulatory experts – gives fintechs the ability to create and launch their own risk-based compliance programs in a matter of weeks.
The compliance suite has three main components. First is a toolkit that enables firms to customize their compliance program and have more control over the account opening experience. Second, the new offering provides for direct partnerships with bank partners rather than outsourcing compliance to third parties. And, third, Treasury Prime’s compliance suite includes guidance from regulatory experts on key issues such as Bank Secrecy Act (BSA) and Anti-Money Laundering (AML) compliance. Each of these features is tailored to the specific and unique risk profiles of individual fintechs.
Sheetal Parikh, Associate General Counsel and VP of Compliance Solutions for Treasury Prime noted that the rise of stricter compliance standards for fintechs make new compliance solutions for this industry all the more urgently needed. “Regulators now expect fintechs to adhere to the same level of regulatory obligations as banks if they’re going to be offering banking products,” Parikh said. “Our new solution provides fintechs (with) the sophisticated tools and expert guidance needed to quickly build a strong compliance framework that meets the robust compliance standards imposed on banks.”
To facilitate the new compliance offering, Treasury Prime had teamed up with a pair of regtech innovators, Alloy and Unit21. The Alloy partnership will bring compliance and identity management solutions for both KYC and AML via a single API connection. Courtesy of Treasury Prime’s partnership with Unit21, banks and fintechs will be able to deploy pre-configured rule-sets and models to monitor transactions for suspicious activity. Real-time collaborative alert investigation is also a feature of the Unit21 collaboration.
Founded in 2017, Treasury Prime was recognized last fall as “Best Banking-as-a-Service” platform at the Tearsheet Embedded Awards, and named to CB Insights Fintech 250 roster of top fintech startups for 2021. In recent months, the company has partnered with Emprise Bank ($2.3 billion in assets) to help the institution with its new embedded banking initiative. Treasury Prime also teamed up with women-owned Piermont Bank to help early stage startups go live with basic banking services as part of the collaboration’s Quick Start Program.
Treasury Prime has raised more than $31 million in funding according to Crunchbase. The company’s investors include QED Investors, Deciens Capital, Nyca Partners, Pacific Western Bank, Susa Ventures, and Y Combinator, among others. Chris Dean is co-founder and CEO.