Company: CRESW
Filing Date: 2025-10-24
Form Type: 20-F
Source: 0001654954-25-012195
Chunk: 38

Company: CRESUD INC
Filing Date: 2025-10-24
Form: 20-F
Item: Item 10
Chunk 38
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 UIF Resolution No. 48/2024 was published in the Official Gazette. Through this resolution, the UIF establishes the minimum requirements for the identification, evaluation, monitoring, management, and mitigation of the risks of money laundering, terrorist financing, and the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction, that lawyers must adopt and apply when, on behalf of and/or for their clients, they prepare or conduct transactions in the following activities:

(i) purchase and/or sale of real estate, where the amount involved exceeds 700 minimum wages; (ii) management of assets and/or other assets where the amount involved exceeds 150 minimum wages; (iii) management of bank accounts, savings, and/or securities where the amount involved exceeds 50 minimum wages; (iv) organization of contributions for the creation, operation, or administration of legal entities or other legal structures; and (v) creation, operation, or administration of legal entities or other legal structures, and the purchase and sale of businesses and/or interests in legal entities or other legal structures.

On March 25, 2024, UIF Resolution No. 49/2024 was also published in the Official Gazette. This resolution establishes the minimum requirements for the identification, evaluation, monitoring, management, and mitigation of the risks of money laundering, terrorist financing, and the financing of the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction that virtual asset service providers must adopt and apply to manage, in accordance with their policies, procedures, and controls, the risk of being used by third parties for criminal purposes of money laundering, terrorist financing and the financing of the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction.

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On March 26, 2024, Resolution No. 56/2024 was published in the Official Gazette, replacing the definition of “Suspicious Transactions” with “Suspicious Facts or Transactions" and revising the definition of “Unusual Transactions.” In this context, “Suspicious Facts or Transactions” will be understood as “those attempted or carried out that cause suspicion or reasonable grounds to suspect that the assets involved come from or are linked to a criminal offense, or are related to terrorist financing, or the financing of the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction, or that, having previously been identified as unusual, after analysis and evaluation by the obligated entity, their unusual nature cannot be justified.” “Unusual Transactions” will be understood as those “transactions, attempted or carried out, whether isolated or repeated, regardless of the amount, that lack economic and/or legal justification, and/or do not align with the client’s risk level or