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Letter from Colorado: banks and the marijuana business

Recreational drug firms finding easier access to financial services

Letter from Colorado: banks and the marijuana business

Recreational marijuana use was approved by the voters here in Colorado in November 2012 and became legal on Jan. 1, 2014.

I wish that just one day or even one daily newscast would go by without a story about marijuana. It seems to come up all the time. I recently reconnected with a friend from grade school in New Jersey, and, wouldn’t you know it, she has a son who lives here in Colorado who is in the recreational marijuana business.

The State Legislature is still passing laws to regulate it. Local jurisdictions are still passing laws to restrict it, making it more confusing about how many plants a person can have in your home in this county or that town in the state.

Now, everyone is talking about what the new Trump administration might do at the federal level, since Attorney General Sessions has expressed his opposition to marijuana legalization. Everyone wonders whether that could impact states like Colorado.

State of affairs thus far

When recreational marijuana first became legal in Colorado, banks and other financial institutions were wary about doing business with marijuana-related businesses.

The Justice Department issued the “Cole memo.” That document described the federal government’s position that marijuana is a dangerous and illegal drug, but that enforcement priorities were going to be applied to the prevention of criminal activities and the movement of the drug into states where it is not legalized.

FinCEN also provided guidance on the ongoing filing of suspicious activity reports in connection with marijuana businesses. Most institutions found the guidance unsatisfactory coupled with numerous instances of examiners who strongly discouraged any involvement with marijuana businesses during visitations.

Things have been changing here. Gradually, the marijuana industry is starting to greater receptivity to their businesses among Colorado financial institutions

Much of that has to do with the fact that it has grown so huge.

At first, the examiners wanted institutions to have a policy on whether or not the institution would bank marijuana businesses. Then, they wanted to see institutions have a policy of whether or not they would bank marijuana-related businesses. (Those are businesses that have some connection to the marijuana industry but are not in the marijuana business itself.)

If the institution was doing business with a marijuana-related business, then it also needed to have additional monitoring and controls and in place to ensure that there was no illegal or suspicious activity in connection with the account(s). The relationship had to be handled almost the same as a marijuana business.

“Related” leads to ubiquitous confusion

The biggest problem was being able to identify these marijuana-related businesses. The regulators weren’t telling banks they couldn’t bank these businesses. But, they had to be able to identify them and be able to monitor them and apply appropriate controls.

How do you identify every possible marijuana-related business?

It’s getting harder to find a business that isn’t a marijuana-related business.

For example, my dentist is a marijuana-related business because he has an ownership interest in a building that rents a space to a marijuana dispensary. My accountant is a marijuana-related business because he does the taxes for a marijuana business and gets paid from their profits.

Marijuana banking specialists emerge

Currently there are at least four financial institutions in Colorado that are willing to accept marijuana businesses as customers. Other institutions refer inquiring customers to these institutions and word of mouth in the marijuana industry has spread about these institutions. They have built the infrastructure necessary to manage the cash volumes and extra monitoring that is necessary for the higher-risk activity.

Further evolution is occurring, however.

More and more banks and other financial institutions are relaxing their restrictions on banking marijuana-related businesses. Mainly because there are so many and it’s so difficult to completely eliminate them from the bank’s portfolio. Banks are more willing to accept a customer that is somehow related to the marijuana industry, such as a company that provides marketing services exclusively to marijuana dispensaries, or an entity that owns numerous real estate properties, including one marijuana grow facility.

One further change involves disclosure by potential customers.

Colorado banks are seeing fewer instances of businesses trying to sneak in disguised as some other type of business using a business name that doesn’t reveal that it is marijuana-related. This used to be a regular practice. But, now that there are some options for them via financial institutions willing to take them as customers, so there isn’t a need for this kind of trickery.

Gradually, banking these kinds of businesses is becoming a matter of marketplace forces. The need for fraud and deception is decreasing, along with the danger of having to operate in a cash-only environment as more financial institutions mainstream these companies.

Nancy Derr-Castiglione

"Lucy and Nancy’s Common Sense Compliance” is blogged by both Lucy Griffin and Nancy Derr-Castiglione, both Banking Exchange contributing editors on compliance. Nancy, a Certified Regulatory Compliance Manager, is owner of D-C Compliance Services, an independent regulatory compliance consulting services business that has provided expertise in compliance training, monitoring, risk assessment, and policies and procedures to financial institutions since 2002. Previously, Nancy held compliance positions with Bank One Corporation and with United Banks of Colorado. In addition to serving as a Contributing Editor of Banking Exchange, Nancy has served on the ABA Compliance Executive Committee; National and Graduate Compliance Schools board; conference planning committees, and the Editorial Advisory Board for the ABA Bank Compliance magazine. She can be reached at [email protected]

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