In August 2012,
when isolating one of the various reasons for the latest housing
bubble, we suggested that a primary catalyst for the price surge in the
ultra-luxury housing segment and the seemingly endless supply of "all
cash" buyers (standing at an unprecedented 60% of all buyers lately as reported by Goldman) is a very simple one: crime.
Or rather, the use of US real estate as a means to launder illegal
offshore-procured money. We also identified the one key permissive
feature which allowed this: the National Association of Realtors'
exemption from Anti-Money Laundering provisions. In other words, all a
foreign oligarch - who may or may not have used chemical weapons in
their past: all depends on how recently they took their picture with the
Secretary of State - had to do to buy a $47 million Florida house, was
to get the actual cash to the US. Well good thing there are private
jets whose cargo is never checked. It appears that a year later this
too hypothesis has been proven. Earlier today the Post reported that
"U.S. authorities announced Tuesday that they are seeking forfeiture of
pricey Manhattan real estate linked to a fraud they say was uncovered
by a whistleblowing Russian lawyer before he died behind bars. A
civil forfeiture complaint filed against the assets of a Cyprus-based
real estate corporation and other holding companies alleges that some
of the proceeds from the $230 million tax fraud in Russia were
laundered through the purchase of four luxury condominiums located in a
Wall Street doorman building and two commercial spaces in prime
locations in midtown and Chelsea." (more)
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