Claude surfaces the fault lines in AI reasoning where MAS capital adequacy rules meet confabulation.
— RLB Specialist Panel
Source-Credit Fabrication on MAS Notice 637 (Amendment) 2025. Two frontier AI subjects tested by the RLB Specialist Panel produced confident, lawyer-shaped answers on the MAS Notice 637 risk-based capital adequacy for Reporting Banks that do not reconcile to the regulator-issued source. One invented an FHC-numbered MAS notice that does not exist; the other misread the regulator's own amendment-drafting convention. Both events sit in the same exposed-fabrication class.
For accountants advising Singapore-incorporated banks and financial holding companies the pattern is clean: leading AI assistants will name a MAS instrument with the wrong number and will read a regulator-stated drafting convention against the cover note, in confident prose, with no flag of low confidence.
Questions are prepared by the RLB Specialist Panel based on real practical AI usage in the workflows accountants advising singapore-incorporated banks and financial holding companies use AI for: regulatory-perimeter mapping for the MAS Notice 637 (Amendment) 2025 amendment cycle, and amendment-package reading where the cover note carries the controlling drafting convention. Each question is recorded against verbatim regulator-issued source text held by the Panel as primary substrate.
The Panel asked two frontier AI subjects to answer in their normal application register, then bound each answer to the corresponding paragraph of MAS Notice 637 and the corresponding cover-note language in the MAS Notice 637 amendment package. Where the AI assertion contradicted the verbatim regulator text the Panel recorded a FABRICATED_FACT finding under exposed_fabrication.
Finding 1: Fabricated "Notice FHC-N637" for financial holding companies. Opus 4.7 asserted that financial holding companies incorporated in Singapore are covered by a separate notice typically called "Notice FHC-N637 (Risk Based Capital Adequacy Requirements for Financial Holding Companies)". The MAS Notices and Directives register does not list any such instrument. The actual MAS Notice 637 applies, by paragraph 1.1, to Reporting Banks issued under the Banking Act; FHCs sit under a separate MAS notice issued under the Financial Holding Companies Act.
Claude Opus 4.7 produced the assertion in response to a question about how MAS Notice 637 applies to financial holding companies; Claude Sonnet 4.6 was tested as the comparator subject in the broader Panel run. The AI output reads as a lawyer-shaped citation, but the cited notice number is not on the MAS Notices and Directives register. Citation ID RLB-H-SG-MAS-NOTICE-637-CAPITAL-ADEQUACY-BANKS-2025-Q010-Opus47.
Finding 2: Misrepresented yellow-highlight meaning in MAS amendment PDFs. Opus 4.7 characterised the yellow highlighting in the MAS Notice 637 amendment PDF as a drafting or visual aid drawing attention to defined terms, cross-references, or items to read carefully. The MAS amendment package itself states on its face that yellow-highlighted text is annotation describing the change, and will not appear in the published untracked Notice. The AI characterisation contradicts the regulator's own cover note. Claude Opus 4.7 produced the yellow-highlight characterisation in response to a Specialist Panel application-style question on how to read the MAS Notice 637 amendment package.
The reading directly contradicts the cover-note convention on the face of the MAS PDF. Citation ID RLB-H-SG-MAS-NOTICE-637-CAPITAL-ADEQUACY-BANKS-2025-Q012-Opus47.
Accountants advising Singapore-incorporated banks and FHCs on regulatory-capital classification and group reporting need precise instrument references and a precise reading of the amendment drafting conventions. The MAS Notice 637 framework is the Reporting Bank instrument; the FHC framework is a separate MAS notice issued under the Financial Holding Companies Act, and the amendment package itself carries a cover-note convention that controls how the yellow markup should be read.
The two findings tested by the RLB Specialist Panel both miss those primary sources. The first fabricates a sibling "Notice FHC-N637" that is not on the MAS Notices and Directives register; the second reads the yellow as visual emphasis when the cover note itself states it is annotation describing the change and will not appear in the published untracked Notice.
Either error embedded in a classification note, a capital-adjustment walkthrough, or a group-capital reporting template propagates through the deliverable chain and surfaces in audit review or supervisor questions.
On the FHC perimeter, MAS Notice 637 states on the face of the Notice: "This Notice is issued pursuant to section 55(1) and section 65(2) of the Banking Act and applies to all Reporting Banks. [...] 11.2.2 A Reporting Bank need not comply with the requirements in this Part if it is a subsidiary of (a) another Reporting Bank which is subject to the requirements in this Part; or (b) a financial holding company which is subject to requirements similar to that set out in this Part." The Reporting Bank perimeter is therefore explicit in the Notice itself, and the FHC framework sits under a separate MAS notice issued under the Financial Holding Companies Act, not under a sibling 637-number instrument.
On the amendment yellow-highlight convention, the MAS Notice 637 amendment package states on its cover: "Text which is highlighted in yellow are annotations to describe changes, and will not appear in the published untracked version of MAS Notice 637. For instance, where amendments have been made to a selected paragraph of an Annex, only that paragraph will be reflected in this document, prefaced with the following explanatory text in yellow highlights: [Amendments to paragraph xx]." The convention is regulator-stated and controlling; any reading that treats the yellow text as substantive new Notice content is against the regulator's own cover-note language.
The lens for the accounting profession is exposed fabrication producing client-deliverable risk. The Specialist Panel categorised both events as FABRICATED_FACT, which in an accounting workpaper maps to citation-defect risk: a cited MAS instrument that does not exist, or a cited drafting convention that contradicts the regulator's cover note.
For the function the implication is concrete. AI-drafted text describing the MAS regulatory perimeter cannot enter a client deliverable without verbatim source check, and AI-drafted text describing an amendment drafting convention cannot enter a template-update note without the cover note being quoted directly. Tools that route client work through frontier AI without binding the model to verified MAS source should not produce final deliverables.
The Panel records each error against the verbatim regulator-issued source, names the AI subject, and binds the finding to a specific paragraph of MAS Notice 637 or the specific cover-note language in the amendment package. Findings are released publicly with the Citation IDs, the substrate document reference, and the operational consequence for each affected audience. Where firms want to take the Panel's verified primary substrate inside their own AI workflow, the Panel runs a partnership track that supplies the substrate package, the verification protocol, and a per-finding regression test set.
The partnership track is the operational answer to the class of failure on display in RLB-H-SG-MAS-NOTICE-637-CAPITAL-ADEQUACY-BANKS-2025-Q010-Opus47 and RLB-H-SG-MAS-NOTICE-637-CAPITAL-ADEQUACY-BANKS-2025-Q012-Opus47.
Three actions follow for accounting engagement teams.
First, every MAS instrument name in an AI-drafted classification note or capital walkthrough should be resolved against the MAS Notices and Directives register before the deliverable is signed. The fabricated "Notice FHC-N637" would fail this test; the FHC framework should be cited as MAS's separate notice under the Financial Holding Companies Act with the correct title.
Second, any template update or amendment-walkthrough memo that describes the yellow-highlight convention should quote the MAS cover note directly. The convention is regulator-stated on the PDF cover and is the authoritative reading; AI gloss should be rejected.
Third, the engagement should hold a short AI-output verification checklist for regulatory-capital work: instrument name verified against MAS register, paragraph cited verified against published Notice, drafting-convention claim verified against cover note, version reconciled against the consolidated Notice on commencement. The RLB Specialist Panel can supply the checklist and the verified primary substrate.
These findings and associated work have been put up in public with a view of the greater good for the development of a safer AI ecosystem. Any party reading this or any finding on reglegbrief.com may contact us and have an unconditional right of reply; the Specialist Panel will publish any factual correction or contextual response alongside the original finding, with no editorial gatekeeping. Researchers, regulators, and compliance teams with questions on methodology or specific findings can reach the Specialist Panel via the same channel.
RegLeg Brief is operated by Verdus Technologies Pte. Ltd. (UEN 201616982R), incorporated in Singapore. The RLB Specialist Panel, with an aggregate of over 60 years of public-policy and industry experience, documents only confirmed hallucination findings, under a methodology that requires a verbatim regulator excerpt for every documented claim. All findings, citation IDs, model outputs, regulator excerpts, and methodology notes are open-access.
Primary source verified: MAS Notice 637 (Amendment) 2025, Risk Based Capital Adequacy Requirements for Banks Incorporated in Singapore · Substrate documents: mas-notice-637-amendment-2025.pdf, mas-notice-637-effective-2025-12-31.pdf · MAS portal: mas.gov.sg
Citation IDs referenced:
RLB-H-SG-MAS-NOTICE-637-CAPITAL-ADEQUACY-BANKS-2025-Q010-Opus47RLB-H-SG-MAS-NOTICE-637-CAPITAL-ADEQUACY-BANKS-2025-Q012-Opus47