Luxury London homes still used to launder illicit funds, says report

Credit offers

Luxury London homes are an “attractive method to launder illicit funds”, a government report has said as the National Crime Agency steps up its McMafia-style “dirty money” investigations into suspect funds flooding into the country.

The national risk assessment of money laundering and terrorist financing 2020 has upgraded the risk level for the sector, saying: “Corrupt foreign elites continue to be attracted to the UK property market, especially in London, to disguise their corruption proceeds.”

The report, put together by the Treasury and the Home Office, said law enforcement agencies had seen increased overseas buyers and cash flows into the UK property market. “The high amounts of money that can be moved in one transaction and the appreciation in value, along with the enhanced lifestyle, makes them very attractive to criminals,” the report said.

Expensive London homes, known in the industry as super prime properties, have long been popular with overseas buyers, including those who have wished to conceal their identities and source of their wealth.

The National Crime Agency has expanded its use of unexplained wealth orders to freeze several multimillion pound homes in the capital while it investigates how the money used to buy them was obtained. In one case, a £50m home overlooking Hyde Park was seized from a Pakistani tycoon.

“Money-laundering cases involving the ownership of property by overseas individuals and companies are inherently complex, and their greater occurrence has increased investigative resource constraints,” the report said. “This coupled with a greater understanding of abuse in the sector has led to an increased risk score.”

  More than half of UK households fear losing savings in Covid crisis

Estate agents had their risk upgraded from low to medium and there were signs that some in the market for high-end homes were failing to comply with rules.

Half of the estate agents advertising properties for sale at £5m failed to registered with HM Revenue and Customs for anti-money-laundering supervision in 2019 or had failed to pay their annual fees for this. Even among firms that had registered, HMRC found not all had sufficient training in place for staff.

Apply for a credit card

The Treasury report, which is a regular review of the risks associated with financial transactions, said the use of complex systems of shell companies registered overseas in secrecy jurisdictions obscured ownership and made it hard to find out where the money really came from.

The number of suspicious activity reports, a signal of concern about a transaction, that estate agents filed increased by 21% between 2017 and 2018 to 861, the report said.

Jerry Walters, the managing director of FCS Compliance, an anti-money-laundering business owned by the property firm LonRes, said the report was “pretty damning but not wholly surprising”.

Walters, who has more than 25 years’ experience in financial fraud investigations and crime enforcement, said: “From our own experience, all too often agents have unwittingly failed to comply with their anti-money-laundering obligations. And it’s not just agents but anyone who has a role to play in the property conveyancing process, which includes the legal sector, must take responsibility too.

“AML rulings are not just guidance but, in fact, criminal legislation, which carry a high price for those who fail to comply.”

  Christmas trees: how the costs of real, fake and potted stack up

Sign up to the daily Business Today email or follow Guardian Business on Twitter at @BusinessDesk

The report cited figures from the campaign group Transparency International, which estimated that more than £5bn of UK property had been acquired with suspicious wealth over the past decade. Walters said the figure was “almost certainly on the conservative side”.

Transparency International said that to tackle the problems raised in the report, the government should prioritise legislation to reveal the real owners of overseas companies that own UK property, a measure it committed to in 2016, and reform company law.

Steve Goodrich, the senior research manager of Transparency International UK, said: “We’ve known for years that secretive offshore companies have been used to move dirty money into high-end homes here, so it’s high time this threat was recognised properly. Ministers should heed the Treasury’s analysis and legislate for greater transparency over the property market as a matter of priority.”