Why Gold Has Always Attracted Financial Crime

Gold possesses characteristics that make it uniquely attractive for both legitimate trade
and illicit financial activity.
It is portable, universally valued, easily convertible, and historically trusted as a store of
wealth. These same characteristics that make gold an enduring financial asset also create
opportunities for misuse within global financial systems.
International regulatory bodies such as the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) have
repeatedly highlighted the precious metals trade as a sector vulnerable to money
laundering and illicit financial flows.
The risks emerge across several points in the supply chain.

  1. Source Obscurity
    Gold often originates from complex supply chains that may involve:
  • artisanal mining operations
  • small-scale producers
  • intermediary aggregators
  • regional exporters
    Documentation standards across these stages vary widely. In some jurisdictions, gold can
    move across borders through informal trade routes before entering formal refining
    networks.
    When businesses purchase gold without fully understanding the upstream supply chain,
    they may unknowingly expose themselves to risks linked to illegal mining, smuggling, or
    proceeds of crime.
  1. Trade-Based Money Laundering
    Gold trading transactions frequently involve:
  • cross-border shipments
  • high-value invoices
  • multiple intermediaries
  • pricing variations depending on purity and refining costs
    These characteristics can be exploited through trade-based money laundering techniques
    such as:
  • over or under-invoicing
  • circular trading structures
  • falsified shipment documentation
  • misrepresentation of origin
    Without strong verification systems, these risks can pass unnoticed through otherwise
    legitimate transactions.
  1. Integration with the Financial System
    Once gold enters the formal refining and trading ecosystem, it often becomes integrated
    into global financial markets.
    Refined gold bars can be sold internationally, held in vaults, traded through exchanges, or
    used as collateral in financial transactions.
    This means that weaknesses in early-stage due diligence can ultimately allow illicit funds
    to enter regulated financial systems through the gold supply chain.
    For banks and regulators, this makes the precious metals trade a critical point of
    oversight.

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