Misstated recommendation count, fabricated consultation respondents, and scoping drift on the CPMI October 2024 final report on FPS interlinking governance. Two frontier AI models tested by the RegLeg Brief Specialist Panel produced confident, citable answers across six distinct questions on the October 2024 CPMI final report on linking fast payment systems across borders that the regulator's own primary text in publication d223 directly contradicts. The audit covers the count and scope of the report's oversight recommendations, the named list of public consultation respondents in Annex 1, and the distinction between the interim publication d219 and the final publication d223.
For Company Secretaries working CPMI FPS interlinking governance matters, the failure pattern is operationally consequential. The audit tested six questions designed by the RLB Specialist Panel to mirror how lawyers, compliance officers, risk officers, operations leads, and board secretariats at FPS operators, hub entities, payment institutions, and banks actually use AI on this practice area: board packs and committee memoranda on FPS interlinking governance, secretariat notes on oversight expectations, written resolutions on cross-border payment interlinking arrangements, and minute records of board deliberation on the report. Each question is bound to verbatim regulator-issued primary substrate.
Across the six findings the AI subjects committed, in board-style and analyst-style deliverables, to approximately ten oversight recommendations (against the seven set out in d223 Section 5.2), to consultation-respondent lists of fifteen to twenty named organisations (against the seven specific respondents recorded in d223 Annex 1), and to a scoping treatment that places the single access point gateway model inside the report's recommendations (against d223 Section 2.2, which records that the single access point is not the focus of the report).
The findings are operationally consequential for legal teams, compliance teams, risk teams, operations teams, and board secretariats at payment institutions, banks, hub entities, and FPS operators whose practice touches the October 2024 CPMI final report. A board-level briefing memo that records the report as setting out approximately ten recommendations conflates the interim d219's ten considerations with the final d223's seven recommendations and embeds that confusion into the board's understanding of the oversight regime. A legal opinion that scopes a single access point arrangement inside the d223 recommendation set creates a falsifiable regulatory-interpretation error in a partner-level deliverable.
An analyst report that lists fifteen to twenty named consultation respondents (including fabricated organisation names) attributes positions and counts to stakeholders that the regulator's Annex 1 does not record.
The audit's six findings are published with immutable RLB Citation IDs. Representative entries include RLB-H-INT-BIS-CPMI-CPMI-FPS-INTERLINKING-GOVERNANCE-2024-Q001-Opus47, RLB-H-INT-BIS-CPMI-CPMI-FPS-INTERLINKING-GOVERNANCE-2024-Q002-Sonnet46, RLB-H-INT-BIS-CPMI-CPMI-FPS-INTERLINKING-GOVERNANCE-2024-Q003-Opus47, RLB-H-INT-BIS-CPMI-CPMI-FPS-INTERLINKING-GOVERNANCE-2024-Q006-Opus47. The full audit is published at the CPMI FPS Interlinking Governance 2024 hub on RegLegBrief.com.
This is the consolidated view of findings. Click the Citation IDs or 'see details →' on any item for the full details for each finding.
For Company secretaries to FPS operators and hub entities, the AI's commitment to approximately ten oversight recommendations rather than the seven set out in CPMI d223 Section 5.2 lands directly in board agenda items, committee briefing notes, director circulars on regulatory developments, and minute records of cross-border payments oversight discussions. The wrong number anchors the team's planning on a fabricated compliance surface, drives over-implementation work against considerations carried over from the interim d219, and creates downstream inconsistencies between the team's d223 position and the recommendation set the regulator actually issued.
The risk concentrates in board-agenda briefing notes and director-facing summaries of CPMI publications relevant to FPS interlinking governance, where the count is a verifiable fact that supervisors, counterparties, and internal QC reviewers will check against the source.
For Company secretaries to FPS operators and hub entities, the AI's commitment to approximately ten oversight recommendations rather than the seven set out in CPMI d223 Section 5.2 lands directly in board agenda items, committee briefing notes, director circulars on regulatory developments, and minute records of cross-border payments oversight discussions. The wrong number anchors the team's planning on a fabricated compliance surface, drives over-implementation work against considerations carried over from the interim d219, and creates downstream inconsistencies between the team's d223 position and the recommendation set the regulator actually issued.
The risk concentrates in board-agenda briefing notes and director-facing summaries of CPMI publications relevant to FPS interlinking governance, where the count is a verifiable fact that supervisors, counterparties, and internal QC reviewers will check against the source.
For Company secretaries to FPS operators and hub entities, the AI's commitment that the report's recommendations cover the single access point gateway model lands in board agenda items, committee briefing notes, director circulars on regulatory developments, and minute records of cross-border payments oversight discussions as a falsifiable scoping statement. CPMI d223 Section 2.2 and the Graph 2 caption record that the single access point and common platform models are not the focus of the report and are discussed only to a limited extent.
The AI's framing pulls an out-of-scope model inside the recommendation set, distorting the team's view of which arrangements the framework actually binds and exposing board-agenda briefing notes and director-facing summaries of CPMI publications relevant to FPS interlinking governance to a regulatory interpretation error that surfaces under supervisory review or counterparty challenge.
For Company secretaries to FPS operators and hub entities, the AI's commitment to approximately ten oversight recommendations rather than the seven set out in CPMI d223 Section 5.2 lands directly in board agenda items, committee briefing notes, director circulars on regulatory developments, and minute records of cross-border payments oversight discussions. The wrong number anchors the team's planning on a fabricated compliance surface, drives over-implementation work against considerations carried over from the interim d219, and creates downstream inconsistencies between the team's d223 position and the recommendation set the regulator actually issued.
The risk concentrates in board-agenda briefing notes and director-facing summaries of CPMI publications relevant to FPS interlinking governance, where the count is a verifiable fact that supervisors, counterparties, and internal QC reviewers will check against the source.
Every finding on this page compares an AI subject's account of the rule against the regulator's verbatim text from the regulator's own portal. Both are linked. Each delta, its root causes, and impact analysis are documented and published with immutable Citation IDs.