Buyers of luxury Manhattan real estate, whose purchases are often shielded by limited liability corporations, will be thrust into the spotlight come March, when new federal disclosure requirements take effect.
But the new order doesnât necessarily signal the end of anonymous buyers â should they find they have the appetite for financial gymnastics.
âIf youâre looking to hide money, youâll find a way to do it,â said Jonathan Adelsberg of law firm Herrick, Feinstein, who emphasized that many buyers who want to shield their purchase arenât committing fraud. âThe irony is, if youâre engaging in money laundering, and things are really un-kosher, you donât care about the provision of a contract,â he said.
In an effort to uncover illicit funds being laundered through luxury New York real estate, the U.S. Treasury said Jan. 14 that it would start tracking cash purchases in Manhattan made through shell companies. The order, which takes effect in March, applies to deals $3 million and up and requires title insurance companies to hand over the buyerâs identity to government regulators.
Though itâs hard to pinpoint exactly how many such deals take place each year, the use of LLCs â both legal and illicit â has proliferated the cityâs residential sales market. And many of those buyers may want to preserve their privacy, despite the new order.
Attorney Terrence Oved, a founding partner at Oved & Oved, said there are ways to navigate the requirements and âstill be within the letter of the law.â
Adelsberg said ironically, developers typically vet super high-end buyers even before those buyers walk into the condominiumâs sales office. âYou donât just walk in. The last thing a [developer]Â wants to do is find themselves in a dispute with a buyer who doesnât have the financial wherewithal to close.â
According to attorney Ed Mermelstein, a founding partner of Rheem Bell & Mermelstein LLP, the order doesnât have much weight, other than to possibly scare off foreign investors. âEveryone is asking the same questions: How do you get around this?â he said, adding that the current order doesnât carry much weight.
âIf youâre looking to prevent money laundering, you donât implement something for six months. You donât limit it to markets. And make it permanent,â said Mermelstein. âDonât allow people to think, âIn August we can go back to business.’â
Here are seven strategies shy buyers are likely to employ come March, according to a variety of experts The Real Deal interviewed:
1. Use a straw buyer Theoretically, a buyer can have a ânominee agreementâ with their chauffeur, whereby the chauffeur is the named owner of an LLC that is buying a high-priced condo. Once the transaction is complete, the buyer can purchase the LLC â not the actual condo â from the chauffeur. The transaction would not be on the books.
2. Set up a trust, partnership or other non-LLC While all members of an LLC must be identified, other legal entities only need to disclose owners who hold more than 25 percent ownership. If a shell company with 100 shares is divided equally among 10 people, therefore, they all remain anonymous.
3. Pay with a wire transfer Regulators are only scrutinizing buyers who pay with cash or a certified bank check. Pay with a wire transfer, and you avoid this order. However, tight banking regulations will require identification as part of âKnow Your Customerâ regulations.
4. Forgo title insurance Whatâs a $1 million lawsuit when youâve just spent $50 million on a white-glove condominium? Industry execs said itâs rare â but buyers could forgo title insurance altogether.
5. Wait six months The order takes effect March 1 and currently is due to expire August 27. So a jumpy buyer could simply wait six months to make a purchase. (If said buyer wants to gamble that the program wonât be extended, they could schedule a closing for August 28.)
6. Buy commercial File this under âobvious,â but the current order is limited to residential purchases in Manhattan above $3 million. Commercial purchases are excluded, so buyers can still purchase investment properties in relative anonymity.
7. Buy in Brooklyn There may not be as many trophy condos on the market in Kings County, but the Treasury Departmentâs order excludes this borough, so enterprising buyers could cross the river. And the Feds arenât scrutinizing deals under $3 million. How do those $2.9 million condos look now?
Source: The Real Deal