Shell Company
What a shell company is, legitimate vs. illicit uses, and why shell companies present KYB challenges.
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
| Feature | Shell Company Pattern |
|---|---|
| Operations | None or minimal |
| Employees | None or very few |
| Physical presence | Registered agent address only |
| Assets | May hold cash or other entities |
| Purpose | Hold 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:
| Challenge | KYB Response |
|---|---|
| No operating footprint | Verify purpose and source of funds |
| Nominee directors | Identify true beneficial owners |
| Complex structures | Map full ownership chain |
| Opaque jurisdictions | Apply enhanced due diligence |
The Corporate Transparency Act specifically targets shell company opacity by requiring beneficial ownership disclosure.
Related: UBO | Money Laundering | CTA