Real estate valuation in transition: In this publication, you can read why the “true value” is increasingly becoming the key to an effective anti-financial crime strategy.
The real estate sector has been in the special focus of supervisory authorities and investigative bodies for years. With the continuous tightening of the Money Laundering Act (AMLA), extended due diligence obligations and an increasingly active role of the Financial Intelligence Unit (FIU) also in the non-financial sector, the validation of transaction prices in the real estate sector is becoming increasingly important.
While real estate valuation has traditionally been used to collateralize loans, it is increasingly becoming a key pillar of an effective anti-financial crime (AFC) strategy. The “true value” of a property is more than a key figure, it is a reference value, control instrument and early warning system at the same time.
Price manipulation as a core mechanism of money laundering-relevant real estate transactions
Money laundering in the real estate sector is rarely spectacular, but systematic. It is not the object itself that is the instrument of action, but the transaction price. The manipulation of the value base makes it possible to transfer illegal funds into the legal economic cycle.
In practice, three central typologies can be distinguished:
- Over-pricing
A property is deliberately sold well above market value. The difference between the market value and the purchase price is used to place illegal funds in the financial system. The increased sales proceeds formally appear to be a legitimate inflow of wealth. - Under-pricing
The property is officially transferred below market value. The actual difference in value is offset outside of the documented cash flows. Later resale at real market value creates a seemingly legal increase in value. - Iterative transactions (flipping)
Multiple short-term resales without an economically comprehensible increase in value. The price rises gradually – without any substantial structural changes. The aim is to successively legitimize larger amounts of capital.
These patterns show that the plausibility of the purchase price is not a purely market economy issue, but a compliance indicator.
Valuation as the “First Line of Defense”
Quality-assured appraisals in accordance with recognised standards such as the Real Estate Valuation Ordinance (ImmoWertV), the Mortgage Lending Value Determination Ordinance (BelWertV) or the guidelines of the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors (RICS) provide objective reference values. These form the basis for reliable transaction monitoring in the real estate sector.
A professional valuation performs several AFC-relevant functions:
- Plausibility check of the economic logic
The analysis of the income value, multiplier and regional market environment shows whether a purchase price is economically comprehensible. Significant deviations from the market level, without factual justification due to location, use or property quality, represent a clear red flag indicator and should necessarily trigger enhanced due diligence. - Substance and investment assessment in the luxury segment
Especially in the high-price segment, construction measures are sometimes used to conceal capital flows. The expert examination shows whether investments actually increase value or merely serve to bring in considerable funds without a market-adequate equivalent. - Verification of cash flow data
As part of the valuation, rental contracts, space specifications and actual uses are checked. Deviations between documented rental income and actual occupancy can indicate fictitious tenancies or fictitious payment flows.
Real estate valuation thus becomes a structured reality check of economic assumptions.
Integration with the risk management framework
In order for the valuation to be fully effective, it must be systematically embedded in the internal control and compliance system.
A structured implementation approach includes, in particular:
- Risk-based valuation approach
In the case of complex shareholding structures, beneficial owners with a foreign connection or transactions in high-risk regions, a full appraisal should be prioritized over simplified desktop procedures. This increases resilience to regulators and internal audit units. - Definition of clear tolerance thresholds
Automated systems point out abnormalities, but the actual plausibility check is provided by the market and property expertise of the appraiser: Only through his expert eye can it be assessed whether a deviation is due to an error, special market conditions or property-specific characteristics. If the deviation exceeds a defined threshold (e.g. 15%), a mandatory compliance review process should be triggered. - Consistency check for project developments
The comparison between the construction quality determined by the expert and the invoiced construction costs serves to prevent invoice manipulation, hidden profit distributions or outflows of funds via bogus invoices.
The decisive factor is that the valuation must not end up as a static PDF in the loan file. It must be understood as a dynamic part of the KYC and monitoring process.
Strategic perspective for management and supervisory bodies
For management, management boards and supervisory boards, the integration of real estate valuation into the AFC strategy is not just a compliance issue, but an element of active risk management.
A superficial or erroneous valuation contains:
- economic risks due to miscalculations in the portfolio,
- regulatory exposure,
- potential criminal investigations on suspicion of reckless money laundering.
Professional assessment, on the other hand, creates transparency, traceability and documentation security – central factors in the dialogue with supervisors and audit bodies.
Conclusion
The “valuation gap”, i.e. the difference between economic reality and the declared transaction price, is not a purely market-driven phenomenon. It is a potential indicator of financial crime.
Those who consistently integrate real estate valuation into their risk management not only strengthen their compliance structure, but also protect assets, reputation and management responsibility in equal measure.
Our approach: dovetailing assessment and compliance
An effective prevention strategy in the real estate sector requires interdisciplinary competence at the interface of valuation, regulation and forensics.
Support services can include, among other things:
- Process audits to check the interfaces between evaluation, back-office and compliance,
- Forensic valuations for submission to regulators or law enforcement agencies, our property valuation team conducts tailor-made, market-experienced analyses and closely coordinates the results with compliance
- Training for purchasing and compliance teams to identify price-based money laundering indicators at an early stage.