TradFi players turn to crypto for money laundering – Chainalysis 

Well, crypto criminals are not the only people trying to hide their illegal fund movements across blockchains. Chainalysis, an analytics company, has suggested that traditional money launderers outside the crypto industry may also be transferring their illegal funds on-chain.

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Chainalysis’s most recent report on crypto money laundering, published this week, shows a thriving space of on-chain money transfers that are not necessarily illegal but exhibit the characteristics of transactions that would peak suspicion from financial institutions.

Crypto becomes a haven for money launderers

Traditional money launderers are beginning to use crypto networks to build “large-scale money laundering infrastructure” to clean cash that did not originate in crypto. Money laundering is the process of hiding the origins of money earned through criminal actions so that the funds can be used without calling attention to their illegal source. 

Often, this money obtained through criminal activities such as drug trafficking or terrorist financing appears lawful. Money laundering typically involves three stages: placement, layering, and integration. Placement is the first stage in which illegal money enters the financial system. 

Layering entails passing money through a sequence of financial transactions to hide its origin. Finally, integration is the act of returning money to the economy while making it look like it came from a legitimate source.

Chainalysis has gained popularity for detecting blockchain crypto frauds, thefts, and ransomware assaults. According to the firm’s CEO, most on-chain investigators will not be surprised that this type of activity has been a potential source of trouble for years.

Source: Chainalysis

The July research is Chainalysis’ first attempt to demonstrate how widespread the trend is across the blockchain. The company discovered that the orders were larger than the known unlawful transaction base.

When Chainalysis analyzed all transfers submitted to exchanges in 2024, it discovered a flood of transactions priced just below $10,000, at which point further know-your-customer restrictions apply.

Our investigators take many things into consideration when they’re determining whether something is suspicious, and this would be one thing – but definitely not enough […] This is trying to advance the conversation about how we in crypto think about compliance techniques to mirror what was developed in traditional banking.

Kim Grauer 

Note that just because a crypto transaction to an exchange is $1 less than the $10,000 threshold does not make it illegal. However, banks and money service businesses in the traditional financial sector have long used similar algorithms to detect illegal activities.


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