Language selection

Search

Quarterly Financial Report for the quarter ended June 30, 2021 (unaudited)

ISSN 2817-2949
Cat. No. FD3-3E-PDF

1. Introduction

This quarterly report has been prepared by management as required by section 65.1 of the Financial Administration Act, and in the form and manner prescribed by the Treasury Board in the Directive on Accounting Standards, GC 4400 Departmental Quarterly Financial Reports. This Quarterly Financial Report should be read in conjunction with the 2021–22 Main Estimates for the Financial Transactions and Reports Analysis Center of Canada (FINTRAC).

This quarterly financial report has not been subject to an external audit or review.

1.1 Authority, Mandate and Program Activities

FINTRAC (the Centre) is Canada's financial intelligence unit and anti-money laundering and anti-terrorist financing regulator. The Centre assists in the detection, prevention and deterrence of money laundering and the financing of terrorist activities. FINTRAC's financial intelligence and compliance functions are a unique contribution to the safety of Canadians and the integrity of Canada's financial system.

FINTRAC acts at arm's length and is independent from the police services, law enforcement agencies and other entities to which it is authorized to disclose financial intelligence. It reports to the Minister of Finance, who is in turn accountable to Parliament for the activities of the Centre. FINTRAC is headquartered in Ottawa, with regional offices located in Montréal, Toronto, and Vancouver.

FINTRAC was established by, and operates within the ambit of, the Proceeds of Crime (Money Laundering) and Terrorist Financing Act (PCMLTFA) and its Regulations. The Centre is one of several domestic partners in Canada's Anti-Money Laundering and Anti-Terrorist Financing Regime, which is led by the Department of Finance.

FINTRAC fulfills its mandate by engaging in the following activities:

In addition, FINTRAC is part of the Egmont Group, an international network of financial intelligence units that collaborate and exchange information to combat money laundering and terrorist activity financing. FINTRAC also contributes to other multilateral fora such as the Financial Action Task Force (FATF), the Asia-Pacific Group on Money Laundering (APG) and the Caribbean Financial Action Task Force (CFATF), participating in international policy making and the provision of technical assistance to other FIUs.

The description of the program activities for the Centre can be found in Part II of the 2021–22 Main Estimates and in the 2021–22 Departmental Plan (DP).

1.2 Basis of Presentation

This Quarterly Financial Report has been prepared by management using an expenditure basis of accounting, and a special purpose financial reporting framework designed to meet financial information needs with respect to the use of spending authorities. The accompanying Statement of Authorities includes the Centre's spending authorities granted by Parliament and those used by the Department, consistent with the Main Estimates and Supplementary Estimates for both fiscal years as well as transfers from Treasury Board central votes that are approved by the end of the quarter.

The authority of Parliament is required before monies can be spent by the Government. Approvals are given in the form of annually approved limits through appropriation acts or through legislation in the form of statutory spending authority for specific purposes.

FINTRAC uses the accrual method of accounting to prepare and present its annual departmental financial statements that are part of the departmental performance reporting process. However, the spending authorities voted by Parliament remain on an expenditure basis.

2. Highlights of Fiscal Quarter and Fiscal Year-to-Date (YTD) Results

This departmental quarterly financial report reflects the results of the current fiscal period. The following graph provides a comparison of budgetary and statutory authorities available for the first three months of 2021–22 compared to 2020–21.

Comparison of Authorities by Fiscal Year ($M). Budgetary Authorities 38.4 in 2020-21, 77.2 in 2021-22. Statutory Authorities 5.6 in 2020-21 and 6.8 in 2021-22.

2.1 Authorities Analysis

The following table provides a comparison of cumulative authorities by vote for the current and previous fiscal years.

Comparison of Cumulative Authorities Available for Use as at June 30
Authorities Available
(in thousands)
2021–22 2020–21 Variance ($) Variance (%)
Budgetary
Voted
Vote 1 – Program Authorities 77,201 38,392 38,809 101%
Statutory
Employee Benefits Plan 6,840 5,620 1,220 22%
Total Budgetary authorities 84,041 44,012 40,029 91%
Non-budgetary 0 0 0 0%
Total authoritiesFootnote 1 $84,041 $44,012 $40,029 91%

2.1.1 Voted Budgetary Authorities

The total Vote 1 program authorities available as at June 30, 2021 are $77.2 million compared to $38.4 million for the same period in 2020–21. The increase of $38.8 million or 101% is attributable to the following factors:

2.1.2 Statutory Budgetary Authorities

The total statutory authorities available as at June 30, 2021 are $6.8 million compared to $5.6 million for the same period in 2020–21. The increase of $1.2 million or 22% is attributable to the following factors:

2.2 Expenditure Analysis

The following table provides a comparison of year-to-date spending as at June 30 by vote for the current and previous fiscal years.

Comparison of Cumulative Expenditures as at June 30
Year-to-date expenditures
(in thousand $)
2021–22 2020–21 Variance
($)
Variance
(%)
Budgetary
Voted
Vote 1 – Program Expenditures 11,700 9,909 1,791 18%
Statutory
Employee Benefits Plan 1,710 1,405 305 22%
Total Budgetary expenditures 13,411 11,315 2,096 19%
Non-budgetary 0 0 0 0%
Total year-to-date expendituresFootnote 2 $13,411 $11,315 $2,096 19%

2.2.1 Voted Budgetary Expenditures

Total voted expenditures were $11.7 million in 2021–22 compared to $9.9 million in 2020–21, an increase of $1.8 million or 18%. The net increase is the result of the following variances in expenditure categories:

2.2.2 Statutory Budgetary Expenditures

Statutory expenditures increased by $0.3 million or 22% from $1.4 million during the first quarter of 2020–21 to $1.7 million in 2021–22. This variance is due to an increase in EBP expenses as a result of increased personnel expenditures.

3. Risks and Uncertainties

As Canada's financial intelligence unit and a partner in Canada's Anti-Money Laundering and Anti-Terrorist Financing Regime, FINTRAC operates in a dynamic, constantly changing environment. In seeking to identify risks and opportunities proactively, FINTRAC must anticipate and assess internal and external risk factors that can affect the design and delivery of its programs and the achievement of its strategic objectives. Additionally, FINTRAC must identify factors and risks that could adversely affect its ability to manage its resources effectively. FINTRAC maintains a Corporate Risk Profile (CRP) to identify and manage its key corporate risks. Senior level committees review the CRP regularly and the business planning process identifies activities to mitigate the risks. In 2020–21, FINTRAC updated its CRP to provide a more robust risk context, which will help the Centre in identifying, analyzing and assessing key uncertainties (risks) that may limit FINTRAC's achievement of its objectives now or in the future. The objective of the CRP is to create information that FINTRAC managers and decision makers can use when planning and setting priorities. In addition, there remains some uncertainty due to the need to manage within the ongoing public health pandemic, which has had an impact on the timing of planned initiatives and related expenditures. Due to this anomaly, year over year expenditure trends may not be as informative as in previous annual cycles.

3.1 Risk Factors and Mitigation

One area of risk identified in FINTRAC's current CRP is limited capacity and capability. As a small organization, FINTRAC faces challenges and limitations regarding its human resources capacity and its flexibility to cash manage funds. Employee engagement at all levels, along with appropriate talent and tools, is required to ensure effective resource management. As well, effective management of resources through periods of transformation is critical to ensure effective alignment of resources and to seize investment opportunities as they materialize.

Another area of risk highlighted in FINTRAC's CRP relates to the Centre's risk that legacy IM/IT hardware and software capacity will limit FINTRAC's ability to achieve its objectives. FINTRAC depends on a sophisticated information technology infrastructure to receive, store and secure approximately 30 million new financial transaction reports every year. At the same time, this infrastructure allows intelligence analysts to filter the information, analyze it, and generate actionable financial intelligence for Canada's police, law enforcement and national security agencies. This is only possible with modern systems and processes that can manage the high volume of information, make the connections and produce the needed results, all in real-time or close to it. FINTRAC continues to ensure that its business systems and processes support its ability to deliver on its mandate and to adapt to future innovations and enhancements in business requirements.

Finally, FINTRAC's IT infrastructure is a Shared Services Canada (SSC) asset. This infrastructure is aging, which could potentially have an impact on FINTRAC operations and security requirements. With competing priorities from various partner departments, and a strategic focus toward end-state services, SSC has limited funding available for legacy infrastructure. This places an additional pressure on the Centre (which has provided supplemental funding for essential initiatives) to effectively plan, allocate its resources and deliver on its programs. To mitigate, FINTRAC staff are working with SSC to update operating systems and to replace custom software with suitable Commercial Off-the-Shelf (COTS) solutions, which are secure, reliable and regularly updated by suppliers. In addition, the Centre has advanced Digital Strategy activities that includes speeding up core business through digital automation, and advanced analytics. Lastly, FINTRAC is examining enhanced solutions including information sharing across database systems and implementing advanced data analytics to increase the capability of current systems to meet anticipated increased demands.

4. Significant Changes in Relation to Operations, Personnel and Programs

4.1 Key Personnel Changes

There were no personnel changes at the senior management level during the first quarter of 2021–22.

4.2 Changes in Funding

Budget 2019 directed resources (up to $20.5 million over 5 years) to FINTRAC to strengthen Canada's anti-money laundering and anti-terrorist financing regime. The funding supports the following five initiatives: the implementation of legislation and regulations package 2; trade based money laundering (TBML) analysis; disclosing to Revenue Quebec and the Competition Bureau; strengthening FINTRAC compliance outreach and examinations; and expanding FINTRAC public-private partnership projects. FINTRAC's 2021–22 funding for these initiatives is $4.7 million (excluding $0.6 million in EBP). This is an increase of $0.4 million from 2020–21 authorities of $4.3 million (excluding $0.5 million in EBP).

FINTRAC received funding in an off-cycle funding announcement to contribute to the national strategy to combat human trafficking ($2.2 million over 5 years). 2021–22 funding for this initiative is $0.6 million (excluding $0.1 million in EBP). This level of funding is equal to the funding received in 2020–21.

The Economic and Fiscal Snapshot of July 8, 2020 announced funding for FINTRAC (up to $130.5 million over 5 years) for fighting financial crime, relocating FINTRAC's headquarters and modernizing the cross-border currency reporting framework. FINTRAC's 2021–22 funding for these initiatives is $22.4 million (excluding $1.3 million in EBP).

5. Approval by Senior Officials

Approved by:

Annette Ryan, Acting Director and CEO

Date: August 25, 2021

Jessica Kaluski, Acting Chief Financial Officer

Date: August 25, 2021


STATEMENT OF AUTHORITIES (unaudited) For the quarter ended June 30, 2021
(in thousands of dollars)
  Fiscal Year 2021–22 Fiscal Year 2020–21
Total available for use for the year ending March 31, 2022 Footnote 3 Used during the quarter ended June 30, 2021 Year-to-date used at quarter-end Total available for use for the year ending March 31, 2021 Footnote 4 Used during the quarter ended June 30, 2020 Year-to-date used at quarter-end
Budgetary authorities
Vote 1 – Program expenditures 77,201 11,700 11,700 38,392 9,909 9,909
Budgetary statutory authorities
Contributions to employee benefit plans 6,840 1,710 1,710 5,620 1,405 1,405
Total budgetary authorities 84,041 13,411 13,411 44,012 11,315 11,315
Non-budgetary authorities 0 0 0 0 0 0
Total authorities Footnote 5 $84,041 $13,411 $13,411 $44,012 $11,315 $11,315
DEPARTMENTAL BUDGETARY EXPENDITURES BY STANDARD OBJECT (unaudited)
For the quarter ended June 30, 2021

(in thousands of dollars)
Expenditures Fiscal Year 2021–22 Fiscal Year 2020–21
Planned expenditures for the year ending March 31, 2022Footnote 6 Expended during the quarter ended
 June 30, 2021
Year-to-date used at quarter-end Planned expenditures for the year ending March 31, 2021Footnote 7 Expended during the quarter ended
June 30, 2020
Year-to-date used at quarter-end
Personnel 53,060 11,777 11,777 43,595 10,485 10,485
Transportation & communications 1,701 12 12 1,278 15 15
Information 427 88 88 403 19 19
Professional & special services 17,525 755 755 3,647 210 210
Rentals 5,876 542 542 6,211 161 161
Repair & maintenance 826 21 21 275 45 45
Utilities, materials & supplies 380 48 48 390 85 85
Acquisition of land, buildings & works 1,229 0 0 0 0 0
Acquisition of machinery & equipment 2,978 165 165 972 291 291
Transfer payments 40 0 0 0 0 0
Other subsidiaries & payments 0 0 0 39 3 3
Total budgetary expenditures Footnote 8 $84,041 $13,411 $13,411 $56,809 $11,315 $11,315
Date Modified: