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Click the trading widget in Gate Square content, complete a transaction, and take home 50 GT, Position Experience Vouchers, or exclusive Spring Festival merchandise.
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Enter Gate Square daily and click any trading pair or trading card within the content to complete a transaction. The top 10 users by trading volume will win GT, Gate merchandise boxes, position experience vouchers, and more.
The top prize: 50 GT.
: Dividing large sums into smaller deposits below reporting thresholds across multiple banks to evade scrutiny.
Using financial institutions: Laundering through banks or non-bank financial institutions, especially when suspects open multiple accounts under false identities for transferring and hiding illicit funds.
Front accounts: Criminals often open accounts under unaware third parties or in foreign countries to transfer funds, employing “muling” strategies (multiple small deposits and withdrawals), making detection harder.
Foreign currency accounts: Using multiple small deposits domestically, then withdrawing foreign currency abroad, known as “muling.”
Cash-intensive industry methods
Using cash-intensive businesses: Casinos, entertainment venues, bars, jewelry stores, etc., to declare criminal proceeds as legitimate income through false transactions.
Casino chip exchange: Converting illicit funds into chips, then handing them to launderers. The launderer exchanges chips back into cash (with about 5% fee), claiming winnings, avoiding direct serial number tracking of cash.
Traveler’s checks: Customs do not limit the amount carried; transferring checks via endorsement to third parties, then cashing them at banks, eventually returning to the original issuer.
Gift cards: Exploiting the high liquidity but difficulty in cashing out, selling gift cards to company employee benefit agencies, and ultimately transferring them to third parties, with the original holder retrieving nearly equivalent cash.
Asset purchase methods
Direct asset purchases: Buying real estate, high-value vehicles, antiques, artworks, securities, etc., then reselling to deposit cash into banks, gradually converting into legitimate funds.
Straw buyers: Using third parties to buy property at 50-70% of market value with cash, then quickly reselling (e.g., pre-sale properties before handover), earning 50%-100% profit.
Antiques, jewelry, collectibles: Buying low and selling high through legitimate transactions, depositing funds into designated accounts. Usually involves purchasing unmarked items like artifacts, stamps, or vintage instruments, then falsely claiming they are personal collections for sale.
Private transactions of high-value items: Buying luxury cars, private jets, jewelry, and reselling for cash.
Securities and insurance methods
Using securities industry: Due to large transaction volumes and complex financial instruments, global capital markets provide excellent cover for laundering. Many crimes involve stocks, bonds, futures, etc.
Using bearer bonds or futures: Nominally anonymous financial instruments that facilitate concealment of true ownership.
Using insurance: Purchasing high-value policies and then claiming refunds or surrendering policies to return funds to criminals, disguising the true source of income.
Trade and corporate methods
False import/export: Overstating import prices or understating export prices, forging trade documents, to transfer illicit funds across borders.
Shell companies: Registering fake companies to conduct virtual transactions, turning criminal income into legitimate business revenue through fabricated performance.
Cross-border transaction fraud: Common in industries without physical goods. Inflating transaction amounts to transfer money to foreign accounts, then splitting funds or paying inflated prices for ordinary goods to foreign accounts, simulating legitimate payments.
Capital movement of multinational corporations: In finance, banking, or insurance sectors, large cash movements across borders.
Methods used by officials and businessmen
“Pulling first, laundering later”: Corrupt officials accumulate money while in office, then start businesses or companies. They often do not “wash” their money immediately but claim to have “made a fortune” to justify their illicit gains.
“Pulling and laundering simultaneously”: Officials use power to amass wealth, while relatives open entertainment venues, restaurants, or businesses. Opaque relationships make laundering easier.
“Pulling and laundering together”: Government officials or state enterprise leaders establish private companies but delegate management, controlling the funds. They transfer black money into their own accounts or profit through normal taxation.
Fake loans: Common in bribery or corruption. The payer holds promissory notes or checks issued by the recipient, claiming a loan relationship if investigated. After the heat subsides, when no clear consideration exists, they transfer or cash the notes or checks.
Cross-border and financial center methods
Offshore transfer: The most common laundering method. Includes non-trade methods (paying for education, insurance, commissions, etc., to buy foreign exchange), trade methods (overstated import, understated export, paying commissions to foreign traders for rebates), shell companies investing abroad (setting up offshore shells and using authority to transfer illicit proceeds as investments).
Underground banking transfers: As in the Yu Hua case, 12 billion RMB was moved via underground banks linked to financial officials, with personnel transporting cash to underground banks, then notifying Hong Kong partners to pay foreign exchange to related Hong Kong companies.
Offshore financial centers and secrecy havens: Some countries and regions allow anonymous companies or have excessive confidentiality measures on assets, making it easy to hide the true source of illicit income.
Bribing financial regulators: Usually drug trafficking groups bribe high-level officials to relax scrutiny of fund settlements. In the 2001 Hong Kong ICAC bust of the largest cross-border laundering syndicate, laundering amounted to HKD 50 billion. Criminals opened accounts at BOC Group’s Po Sang Bank, bribed a senior manager to transfer black money via regular transfers instead of remittances, moving funds into different accounts in Hong Kong and overseas.
Internet and new technology methods
Internet laundering: Transferring illicit funds via online banking, sometimes even “whitening” black money through online gambling.
Cryptocurrency laundering: With the rise of digital assets, cryptocurrencies, due to their decentralization and anonymity, have become new laundering tools, drawing increasing regulatory attention.
Direct transport: Using private jets or individuals with customs exemptions to move money abroad, often in $100 bills.
Foundations and charity methods
Other covert methods
Underground currency exchange: Common in disreputable jewelry stores. Besides illegal currency exchange, cash can be converted into foreign bearer or endorsed checks for deposit into foreign accounts.
Counterfeit currency or fake banknotes: Laundering through multiple small transactions, vending machines, or coin exchange machines to turn counterfeit into real money. Criminal groups involved in drug or arms trafficking transfer illicit funds to others.
Combating money laundering: global regulatory trends
As laundering methods evolve, global financial regulators are strengthening anti-money laundering measures. From strict customer due diligence (KYC), real-time monitoring of suspicious transactions, to regulation of emerging payment tools, countries are building more comprehensive anti-laundering systems.
The digital age makes laundering more covert but also enables more precise regulation. Blockchain’s transparency offers new tools for tracking illegal fund flows, and real-name requirements for cryptocurrency exchanges are gradually advancing. It is foreseeable that future efforts to combat money laundering will become more powerful and scientific.
Understanding the three major stages and various techniques of money laundering is essential not only for legal professionals and financial practitioners but also for society at large to enhance financial security awareness. Everyone should recognize that preventing money laundering is not only the responsibility of regulators but a shared societal duty.