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2/5/2022

Treasury Releases Study on Illicit Finance in the High-Value Art Market | U.S. Department of the Treasury

U.S. DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Treasury Releases Study on Illicit Finance in the High-Value Art
Market
February 4, 2022

WASHINGTON – Today, the U.S. Department of the Treasury published a study on the
facilitation of money laundering and the financing of terrorism through the trade in works
of high-value art. This study examined art market participants and sectors of the high-value
art market that may present money laundering and terrorist financing risks to the U.S.
financial system, and identified e orts that government agencies, regulators, and market
participants could undertake to further mitigate the laundering of illicit proceeds through
the high-value art market in the United States. The study was mandated by Congress in the
Anti-Money Laundering Act of 2020.
Several qualities inherent to high-value art – the way it is bought and sold and certain market
participants – may make the high-value art market attractive for money laundering by
criminals. These include the high dollar value of transactions, transportability of goods, a
longstanding culture of privacy and use of intermediaries (e.g., shell companies and art
advisors), and the increasing use of high-value art as an investment class.
“As we tackle systemic challenges like corporate transparency and other loopholes that allow
criminals to abuse the US financial system, we will look at what else might be needed to
address money laundering risks specific to other industries, including the art industry,” said
Scott Rembrandt, Deputy Assistant Secretary for Strategic Policy in the O ice of Terrorist
Financing and Financial Crimes.
The study found that while there is some evidence of money laundering risk in the high-value
art market, there was limited evidence of terrorist financing risk. The participants most
vulnerable to money laundering in the art market are businesses that o er financial services,
such as art- collateralized loans, but are not subject to comprehensive anti-money
laundering /countering the financing of terrorism (AML/CFT) obligations. Asset-based lending
can be used to disguise the original source of funds and provide liquidity to criminals.
Entities which have lower levels of annual sales turnover (such as small galleries), and entities
that only occasionally transact high-value art (such as third-party online marketplaces,
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Treasury Releases Study on Illicit Finance in the High-Value Art Market | U.S. Department of the Treasury

museums, other non-profits) may present lower risk, while entities which have larger annual
sales turnover and regularly transact in high-value art in the ordinary course of business may
present a higher risk. Further, the emerging digital art market, such as the use of non-fungible
tokens (NFTs), may present new risks, depending on the structure and market incentives.
To address the identified risks, the study recommends consideration of several nonregulatory and regulatory options:
Encouraging the creation and enhancement of private sector information-sharing
programs to foster transparency among art market participants;
updating guidance and training for law enforcement, customs enforcement, and asset
recovery agencies;
using FinCEN recordkeeping authorities to support information collection and enhanced
due diligence; and
applying AML/CFT requirements (such as suspicious activity reporting and know-yourcustomer procedures) to certain art market participants and/or obligating them to create
and maintain AML/CFT
In considering these steps, Treasury will take into account how these measures could
mitigate identified money laundering risk, the potential burden on smaller art market
participants, privacy considerations, as well as progress on addressing systemic AML/CFT
issues, such as the abuse of shell companies. In developing the study, Treasury conducted
dozens of interviews with art market participants, such as auction houses, galleries, financial
institutions, art advisors, art subject matter experts across the U.S. government, international
partners that regulate or are regulating the art sector, and academic and non-governmental
organizations.
Treasuryʼs study on illicit finance risks in the high-value art market

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https://home.treasury.gov/news/press-releases/jy0588

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