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Shell Company

What a shell company is, legitimate vs. illicit uses, and why shell companies present KYB challenges.

2 min read

A shell company is a legal entity that has no significant assets or operations but exists for a specific purpose—sometimes legitimate, sometimes not.

Characteristics

FeatureShell Company Pattern
OperationsNone or minimal
EmployeesNone or very few
Physical presenceRegistered agent address only
AssetsMay hold cash or other entities
PurposeHold assets, facilitate transactions

Legitimate Uses

  • Holding companies: Owning subsidiaries or assets
  • Special purpose vehicles (SPVs): Financing, real estate transactions
  • Pre-operational entities: Companies formed before launching business
  • Asset protection: Legal liability isolation

Illicit Uses

Shell companies are frequently used for:

  • Money laundering: Layering funds through opaque entities
  • Tax evasion: Hiding income in low-transparency jurisdictions
  • Sanctions evasion: Obscuring true ownership to evade OFAC restrictions
  • Fraud: Creating false appearance of legitimate business
  • Corruption: Receiving bribe payments

Shell Companies and KYB

Shell companies present significant KYB challenges:

ChallengeKYB Response
No operating footprintVerify purpose and source of funds
Nominee directorsIdentify true beneficial owners
Complex structuresMap full ownership chain
Opaque jurisdictionsApply enhanced due diligence

The Corporate Transparency Act specifically targets shell company opacity by requiring beneficial ownership disclosure.


Related: UBO | Money Laundering | CTA