Going Long Finding Elusive Gold in This Market

January 26th, 2009

by the editors of BIG GOLD, Casey Research

At this writing, gold is still 15% off its peak, at least in U.S. dollars. Yet at the same time, the metal is cruising at or near all-time highs against a host of other currencies, including the Swiss franc, British pound, Canadian dollar, Australian dollar, and Indian rupee.

That currency disparity means buyers around the world are prepared to pay much more for gold, relative to their own currencies, than is reflected in the New York spot market, which prices gold in dollars.

Demand for gold bullion coins in particular is running so high that there were severe shortages in 2008. Dealers’ shelves emptied, mints either rationed their output or stopped producing entirely, and premiums over the spot price rose dramatically. All of which implies that the metal’s bull market is far from over. Yet taking advantage of the trend becomes problematic if you can’t get what you want.

Sure, you can buy as much paper gold as you like, through the SPDR Gold Trust ETF (NYSE.GLD), which is bullion-backed and will be sensitive to an advancing price. But what if you simply want physical metal and want it in quantity – say, a hundred ounces?

Well, you could buy 100 coins. If you could find them. Or you could buy a single 100-ounce bar.

Take heed: if you are buying in 100-ounce, 400-ounce or 1-kilo sizes, you want a good delivery bar, one that carries a hallmark from a recognized refiner. And buy only from a source you have a good reason to trust. The gold trade has been replete with con artists since ancient metalworkers began hammering on the shiny stuff and found they could increase their profit margins by adding in a little silver, copper, or even lead. With 100 ounces going for upwards of US$85,000, caution is in order.

Once you’re ready to commit to a 100-ounce buy, the next logical question is: Is there any way to avoid the big premiums and acquire what you want at spot? The answer, fortunately, is yes. You can elect to play with the big boys and get your 100-ounce bar on the COMEX, where the bullion banks and giant funds do their trading.

Playin’ the COMEX

The COMEX is primarily a paper market, with speculators going long or short on contracts for future delivery. 99.9% of those contracts get settled in cash and are closed out before the delivery date arrives, with participants pocketing profits or taking their lumps. Very little physical gold changes hands through COMEX trading.

But some does, because every participant who goes long has the right to pay in full and insist on actual delivery. And every participant who goes short has the right to deliver the goods and get paid. Those trades represent the other 0.1% of the contracts.

The Casey COMEX User’s Manual

First, get a little more acquainted with the topic. Log on to the COMEX gold section at (http://www.nymex.com/gol_pre_agree.aspx) and have a look around.

Pay close attention to the Current Session Overview. It gives you a real-time picture of trading, with the various delivery months displayed, along with the price per ounce being bid. (With gold, the months further out nearly always have higher prices, a situation known in the commodities trade as contango. The opposite, when near-term prices exceed those down the road, is called backwardation, and for gold it’s extremely rare.)

If you decide to proceed with the idea of buying on the COMEX, you have to open an account with a futures broker. To do that, you’ll need to answer some questions about your financial status and then make a deposit. We spoke with an agent at Lind-Waldock in Chicago, one of the oldest and most active futures brokers, to learn about their requirements.

First, at Lind-Waldock, you must have a yearly income and net worth of at least $25,000 and $50,000, respectively; anyone who can afford a hundred ounces of gold will surely qualify. Then you must deposit a minimum of $5,000 with the broker. Finally, you choose from among several levels of service, which affects the amount of commission you’ll pay.

Once the futures account is in place, you’re set to go.

Let’s say the bid price three months out is $850/oz., and you like gold at that price. You call your broker and place an order at $850, for one gold contract (which represents a single 100-oz. bar of good delivery metal). As with bidding on a stock, you may not get what you want if the market is heading up and runs away from your price. The alternative is to place a market order, trusting that it gets filled at close to your target price, but that can be risky in a fast-moving market.

Let’s assume you get your contract and lock up what you’ll pay for the gold, most of which will be due at expiration. What next? There are two possibilities. You can just deposit the full cost of the gold, sit back, and enjoy the wait for your prize. Or you can deposit the minimum amount required (the minimum “margin”), which varies and is set at the exchange’s discretion. For a single gold contract at the moment, it’s $5,800, or about 7% of the contract’s value.

That’s how the speculators play the market, putting up as little front money as possible. For you, that won’t be a problem if the price of gold rises, since the broker will be crediting a matching amount of cash to your account on a daily basis. But you have to be careful if the price of gold falls, because the broker will then charge your account for a matching amount of money day by day – and to keep the balance from going below the minimum margin requirement, he’ll send you a margin call, insisting that you deposit more cash. If you fail to do so, the broker will enter a sale order for you, and you’ll be out of the market.

Changes in the value of a futures contract, with their attendant shifting cash requirements, are of critical importance to traders who are simply playing with paper. Since you’re only interested in acquiring a physical gold bar, the fluctuations shouldn’t affect you. Just make sure you have enough money in your account that you’re not inadvertently sold out.

Then, on the settlement date, your account will be charged for an amount equal to the settlement price multiplied by the exact weight of the particular bar that’s been assigned to you (a “100-oz.” COMEX good delivery bar can actually vary in weight between 95 and 105 ounces). This is when everything gets squared up.

Taking Delivery

If you keep your position open until delivery, the COMEX will hand your broker a warehouse receipt with the details of your specific bar (hallmark, serial number, and weight to one-thousandth of an ounce). The broker can either hold the receipt in your account or mail it to you. (If you take possession of a warehouse receipt, be aware that it’s an irreplaceable bearer instrument. Don’t lose it!)

Your bar will be sitting in the vault of one of the four designated COMEX depositories, all of which are in or near New York City. If you want to bring the bar home, you’ll have to pick it up at the depository or arrange for third-party delivery. If you intend to hold it until gold reaches a certain price and then sell, your best bet is probably to leave the bar in the COMEX depository and leave the receipt with your broker.

We called Scotia Mocatta, which operates one of the COMEX-designated vaults, and were quoted a storage fee of $15/month per bar. If, however, you want the bar in your hands, you’ll have to pay a $150 delivery fee to get the bar released by the depository. Then you’re responsible for retrieving it, which could be a problem.

Unless you want to put the bar in your suitcase and fly home with it, you’ll have to have it delivered. You can’t ship a gold bar via the U.S. mail, FedEx or UPS; you have to hire an armored car service, such as Brinks.

Shipping costs depend, of course, on how far your gold will travel from the City. VIA MAT International (USA) gave us a ballpark figure of $150 to transport one gold bar from New York to California – a heckuva lot cheaper than airfare, and you get to keep your shoes on.

One final note: armored carriers won’t deliver to a house address. You would have to arrange to receive the shipment at a business, which could be an additional worry if neither you nor a trusted friend owns one. Or you could have it delivered to your bank and slide it into a safe deposit box, provided you don’t mind the bank’s employees knowing what you’re doing.

Will You Need an Assay?

If you leave your gold bar in the COMEX depository, it will be easier to sell. You just go through the above procedure in reverse, going short a contract instead of buying one.

However, if you take physical delivery and later wish to sell through the COMEX (or through a private dealer), you will need to have the bar reassayed. A prospective buyer of such a costly item must be certain that it was genuine to begin with and hasn’t been tampered with while in your possession.

The COMEX provides a list of approved assayers on its website. The one we contacted, Ledoux and Co., quoted us $300 per bar for the service.

And that’s all you need to know to get gold wholesale.

When it comes to anything gold, the BIG GOLD experts have the inside scoop on it… an invaluable service, especially in times like these, with gold serving as a crisis hedge. For just 22 cents a day, you’ll learn everything you need to know about gold, the physical metal, as well as the safest stocks of major gold producers, royalty companies, the best gold ETFs, and much more. Learn more about our 3-month, risk-free trial subscription with 100% money-back guarantee.

Estate Tax Planning

January 20th, 2009

Estate Tax Planning & Living Wills

We like to think of a will not in terms of you are leaving the earth, but what you are leaving on the earth for those you care about. Improperly done estate succession planning can cost the survivors over fifty percent of the estate. Most people come to us and say, “What do I need to do so that my estate is prepared for my death?”

What is a Living Will?

A Living Will is a legal document that instructs health-care providers about the wishes of a person regarding medical procedures should they become incapacitated. Advanced medical directives are the legal mechanisms to assure that the patient’s wishes are carried out in the final days of their life.

This document can be very general or very specific. They can include directives such as these: transfusions of blood and blood products, cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR), diagnostic tests, dialysis, administration of drugs, tissue and organ donation, use of a respirator and surgery.

Many people want to do the online or “do it yourself “(DIY) Living Will. Our opinion is that this document should be given great attention and care and should be a piece of the puzzle in an estate plan.

Each state has different laws about this power of attorney, however federal law ensures that patients admitted to hospitals, nursing homes and the like through the Patient Self-Determination Act (PSDA), have the right to be informed and prepared with medical directives.

States have different names for medical directives and the rights of the patient may vary as well.

Health Care Proxy – This is a legal document in which an individual designates another person to make health care decisions if he or she is rendered incapable of making their wishes known. The health care proxy has, in essence, the same rights to request or refuse treatment that the individual would have if capable of making and communicating decisions.

Durable Power of Attorney – This is another type of advance directive. Individuals may draft legal documents providing power of attorney to others in the case of incapacitating medical condition. The durable power of attorney allows an individual to make bank transactions, sign Social Security checks, apply for disability, or simply write checks to pay the utility bill while an individual is medically incapacitated.

For married couples, wills should continue traditional unified credit planning, whereby the exemption amount of the first spouse to die is placed in a “credit shelter” trust for the benefit of the surviving spouse. This allows the couple to shelter two exemption amounts from estate tax rather than only one after both spouses have died.

This advice is subject to the following caveats: In a second marriage, it is usually common for the unified credit disposition to favor your children with the balance of the estate passing to the spouse.

In order to avoid a disproportionate allocation of assets to the children, the will could provide for a ceiling on the amount passing to them. Alternatively, the will could leave in the executor’s hands the decision about how the assets would be divided among the children after paying the estate tax. The will could provide for a disposition of the entire residue to a Qualified Terminable Interest Property (QTIP) marital trust, which gives the executor discretion to decide that some of the property passing to the QTIP trust should instead pass to the children. Though this approach has the advantage of being flexible, it may be difficult to find an executor willing to exercise this authority.

If your will leaves a full estate tax exemption to a credit shelter trust, the estate may be subject to state estate taxes if the exemption from the state estate tax is lower than the exemption from federal tax. You should then consider leaving an amount equal to the lower of the state estate tax exemption and the federal estate tax exemption to the credit shelter trust.

Get a Free, No Cost Estate Tax Planning conslutation from certified estate tax planning professionals today! Or call us Toll Free (888) 916-7070

The balance of the estate could be left to a QTIP marital trust. This produces a zero state estate tax. Moreover, if the will is correctly drawn, the executor can be given discretion to move money from the QTIP trust back into the credit shelter trust at the time of the decedent’s death in order to bring the size of the credit shelter trust up to an amount equal to the federal estate tax exemption, provided that the state estate tax is paid

Estate Tax Planning

Wealth Building Is All About Scheduling According To Inspiration

December 17th, 2008

“Hold to a schedule.” say the experts, and you will succeed. There is no shortage of advice and systems designed to help you make the best use of your time. However, time isn’t the most critical factor in this fast moving world.

Last week, at an offshore wealth creation and personal security get together, I found a very interesting book about how to invest offshore in the free markets.  I was just about finished when I saw something that caused me to have one of those moments that, as the famous mathematician Archimedes said, was my “Eureka” moment.

It was a tiny passage about how those who actually succeed in this life don’t plan their work rigidly relying on time, they work when they are inspired. This made me so happy as I had been doing it along, I just wasn’t 100% aware of it. Quite frequently this ended up conflicting with my efforts to be organized. Now that I’m aware of this, I can harness it better.

Any person has different moods, good ones and worse times. Different ones are refreshed and workaholics on Monday mornings, while others are not yet in full work mode after the weekend. This is the reason we made machines. They are totally efficient. But we humans are the most successful mammals in the world because of our creativity. And creativity depends totally on inspiration. Inspiration is defined as: ‘breathing new life into something.’

We really should take care of our creativity, that way we can determine the best way to invest money. Our creativity is at its most powerful when we are relaxed and healthy. This efficient state of mind is best found by being in control of our lives – not to be forgotten are the benefits of a good exercise regiment and a healthy diet. Remember: if you are serious about wealth creation, then obviously you need to be in a creative mood… and this requires inspiration.

So the bottom line is: don’t sweat it and stay healthy. When you feel inspired to do something, do it. It doesn’t matter if it’s the middle of the night, or what else you have to do. When you are excited about an idea you will be successful. Leave your deadlines with enough flexibility to allow for your last minute inspirations.

The same principle can also be applied when you don’t feel like doing something. Don’t force the task… because it probably wouldn’t work anyway. If you don’t feel like working, stop doing it for now. Clear your mind with a new project – a change is as good as a rest, they say.

So now you know the real secret of the super rich for scheduling their time. Instead of scheduling tasks by time and date, do things when you feel suitably inspired. And instead of using those business productivity tools designed to help you make more use of your time, take time to open your mind to new inspirations. Creating Wealth will come much easier that way.

The 21st Century Way to Protect Your Assets

December 17th, 2008

By James Buchanan

We are all looking for a recession survival guide. You have worked hard for a long time and have grown your wealth but are you exposed (or worried about your possible exposure) to possible lawsuits, malpractice cases, nervous creditors or vengeful ex-spouses? If so, then a deferred variable annuity or Liechtenstein annuity might be for you, enabling you to take advantage of some of the strongest asset protection laws in the world. Deferred variable annuities were originally developed in Switzerland (by Swiss life insurance companies) and were known as Swiss Annuities. This form of annuity has now been further perfected to provide even more options by life insurance companies in Liechtenstein.

How Does It Work?

A deferred variable annuity is the best way to invest money, view it as a simple holding structure via which and investor is able to invest in a wide range of products such as shares, bonds, mutual funds or hedge funds to name a few. Virtually any investment can be held within the annuity so long as its value can be determined, including more exotic investments such as real estate, exchange traded funds or shares in the investor’s own private company.

Deferred variable annuities are insurance policies issued by a life insurance company and the assets of that policy are managed by a Swiss private bank. A deferred annuity is thus a contract in which the insurance company agrees to make a series of payments (for a fixed period or for life) in exchange for a single premium or lump sum investment. As the annuity is a deferred annuity, this means that the payments are deferred until sometime in the future, which is determined by the investor.

The first step for an investor is to take out a contract/policy with a life insurance company in Liechtenstein. The insurance company then opens an account with a Swiss private bank who then receives the policy from the insurance company. Legally the investor is the client of the insurance company and the insurance company is a client of the bank. The bank will manage the investor’s account as per their direction/strategy.

The value of the policy is the value of the underlying assets placed with the bank on the investor’s behalf. Legal entities (companies and trusts) and natural persons can be the policy owner or designated as beneficiaries. The life insured must of course be a natural person.

Benefits

Iron Clad Asset Protection

When an investor (the policy owner) purchases an insurance policy in Liechtenstein and irrevocably nominates a beneficiary (other than the owner) or nominates a spouse/descendant as revocable beneficiaries, the policy cannot be included in the owner’s estate for bankruptcy as it is no longer considered the owner’s asset.
Should the policy owner become bankrupt, ownership of the policy is, by law, transferred to the revocable beneficiaries automatically (provided they are spouse or descendants) or to the irrevocably nominated beneficiary. Liechtenstein also recognises unmarried partners in same sex couples. Hence, in bankruptcy the policy (and its underlying assets) is fully protected because only the beneficiaries, being the new owners, can give instructions to the insurance company. The original policy owner no longer has legal authority to redeem the policy.
There are also anti-duress provisions within Liechtenstein law that provide protection if a policy owner is forced by a court to revoke a beneficiary designation or cancel a policy. If the insurance company receives a letter/request from a policy owner revoking the beneficiary designation or cancelling a policy to comply with an order from a foreign court, the insurance company may come to the conclusion that the instructions do not express the owner’s true intent as they were coerced by legal process. Under the law, the insurance company cannot follow the owner’s instructions.
Should the insurance company become bankrupt (which has never happened in Liechtenstein in over 150 years, unlike Australia) the insurance policies assets cannot be used to meet the insurance company’s financial obligations. The policy assets are segregated from the insurance company’s for the specific purpose of funding the insurance policy.
Please also note that the asset protection benefits are not available in criminal cases.

How Soon Are You Protected?

Liechtenstein has a law for fraudulent conveyance (defined as illegally transferring property to another party in order to defer, hinder or defraud creditors), which refers to the idea of purchasing an insurance policy before problems arise. That means: plan early. If no debt collection proceedings are issued against you (the policy owner) within one year of purchasing a policy or naming a beneficiary then the policy will be fully protected. That is, your assets will be safe if you are solvent when you purchase a policy or name a beneficiary.

Privacy Protection

Liechtenstein has had specific asset protection laws since 1926. The insurance secrecy laws are comparable with banking secrecy laws in Switzerland. That is, no information is provided to any third party (natural person or legal entity). Insurance companies are forbidden to disclose any information on the policies they issue to investigators without a court order or other legal process being brought before a Liechtenstein court (and being successful).

Diverse Investment Options

With a deferred variable annuity the range of investments available is virtually unlimited. The insurance policy can be opened in Australian dollars and all investments can be made in Australia if desired. But the policy can do so much more because it can invest in any tradeable instrument, anywhere in the world, as long as an accurate value can be determined. This means that you can purchase shares, managed funds, hedge funds, etc. More exotic investments are also possible, such as shares in your own company, property and sometimes even artwork or collectible cars. The policy investments can also be in any currency you wish (Australian Dollar, US Dollar, Euro, Pound, Swiss Franc, Peso, Rupiah, etc) which can spread investment risk or provide greater potential for a return through currency appreciation.
Liquidity is also important when making investments. With a deferred variable annuity, money can be added or withdrawn with a few days notice. It is even possible to borrow against the value of the deferred variable annuity. Also, should the entire capital within the policy be required, for example due to a change in financial circumstances, the deferred variable annuity can be cashed in and the funds returned to the investor very quickly (however, there could be tax implications in doing this).

Estate Planning

A properly structured deferred variable annuity is separated from a policy owner’s estate. Upon death, payment will be made to the beneficiaries as per the policy owner’s instructions after presentation of a death certificate. As the policy is not part of the estate, its proceeds cannot be used to meet any outstanding liabilities and there is no probate period or last will and testament required – it is merely paid out in either a lump sum or as annuity payments or a mixture of both.

Conclusion

While there are several asset protection strategies in use in Australia at present, such as purchasing property in a spouse’s name, using a family trust or investment company and even setting up a blind trust, there is a downside to them. Even though they all offer varying levels of asset protection, there is still the possibility that the structures can be seen through and voided in the case of legal action and all protection benefits would be lost. Also, full asset protection can take 5 – 7 years before it is available. With a deferred variable annuity from Liechtenstein, full protection is available after 12 months and the structure is bullet proof.

Should you have any questions, Forward Life is more than happy to answer them for you and to discuss how a deferred variable annuity can protect your assets either on its own or by complimenting your existing strategies. Remember, you have earned it and built it so now it is time to protect it so that it remains yours.

Global Solutions – services in Andorra

July 2nd, 2008

 

Global Solutions is a firm based in the Principality of Andorra offering independent Wealth Advisory and Management services for international persons, families and businesses (banking, residence, formation of corporations and family foundations…)

 

Why go Global?

 

       Diversification and avoidance of risk

       Flexibility

       Currency diversification

       Privacy and personal safety

       Asset Protection

       Tax Mitigation

       Higher Yields

       Family Office

       International Trading

       International Investment and Financing

       Professional Services (know-how, consulting)

       Intellectual property

       Ship management and yacht ownership

       E-commerce

       Unbiased multi-jurisdictional advice

       Detailed analysis of clients’ requirements

       Recommend optimal jurisdictions and structures

       One convenient point of contact

       Long term relationship

 

For further information, contact Peter Macfarlane at www.petermacfarlane.net or info@buildwealthoffshore.com

Making use of Private Banking services

July 2nd, 2008

Although private banking is not a simple business, there is a very simple model to keep in mind: “keeping rich people happy”. The definition of private banking varies but is generally understood as investment management offered on a personal basis by a bank to an individual with disposable wealth of more than, let’s say, $1,000,000.

Private banks were originally so called because they were owned by wealthy private individuals. Under Swiss law these bankers were personally liable for the obligations of the bank. If a bank failed, bankruptcy was not an option. It was disgrace and jail. As a result, no old line private banks ever failed.

With globalization and the need to serve customers abroad, almost all the old ‘private banks’ have now been bought out and are subsidiaries of bigger international banks. Though, if you have the cash and the desire, there are a few true private banks remaining. Some of them are so discreet that they don’t even have a nameplate outside their offices. All of them should offer an online savings account so you can access your funds remotely from any location on the globe. They also offer killer online bank account rates.

Anyone can get a personal private banker assigned in an elite private bank with about €300,000 opening deposit. When we say walk in, you will of course need an introduction, identification and references.

Private banks offer all kinds of accounts, from simple cheque and deposit accounts to complicated commodity and swap operations, and even – yes – investments in sub-prime mortgage-backed securities.

Private bankers normally prefer to be approached and considered as objective financial advisers or family confidants rather than as an investment salesman when starting a business. They are wealth managers, accustomed to dealing with the wealthy, and their services don’t come cheap.

Consequently private banks may


not be the most effective choice for a reasonably sophisticated a monthly basis, then private banking is just what you need. You can expect and demand above-average returns and an extremely high level of personal service.

For a complete list of private banks or to find the one best suited to your needs, contact Peter Macfarlane at www.petermacfarlane.net or info@buildwealthoffshore.com

Where and What is Offshore?

July 2nd, 2008

 

Nobody quite seems to agree on where the word “offshore” first came from – but it most likely developed in the UK. The Channel Islands (Jersey and Guernsey) went into the finance business soon after the end of the Second World War. Their unusual constitutional status gave them independence in all domestic affairs, including taxation and banking regulation. It didn’t take them long to realise that they could offer a safe, tax-free haven for moderately wealthy, middle class Brits who were being persecuted by successive Labour governments, desperate to pay off the debts of the Second World War.

During the 1970s, Labour governments in the United Kingdom raised taxes as high as 95% and restricted export of currency. Whilst the super rich had always looked to Switzerland, the Channel Islands provided a convenient, close, English-speaking alternative for overtaxed Brits looking to move more modest wealth “offshore.”

During the 1980s and the 1990s, dozens of Caribbean island nations renounced their status as colonies and broke away from Britain (and to a lesser extent France). On becoming independent sovereign nation states, they, too, saw financial services as a way to quick profits. Within easy reach of North America, they focused more on the US and Canadian markets, offering “no questions asked” banking services for those wishing to hide cash. We’ve all seen the movies about so called “Samsonite banking.”

Although leftist or populist politicians sometimes still try to tar the image of offshore islands with the brush of money-laundering, organized crime and tax evasion, the fact is that these economies today are generally prosperous and well regulated international financial centres that contribute in a meaningful and beneficial way to oiling the works of global commerce.

Today most offshore centres prefer to be known as

 

international financial centres, avoiding the “offshore” or “tax haven” appellations which they believe have negative connotations. While that may be true, the word “offshore” lives on. At The Q Wealth Report we don’t want to give in to political correctness and we happen to like the word “offshore.” It’s become part of the English language and we see no reason to change it. Most people know what we mean when we say “offshore banking” and people understand something specific… unlike “international finance” which could mean almost anything!

Anyway, getting back to our theme, although the word “offshore” was originally coined because of the small island nations involved in the business, today it has become generally accepted as meaning any place outside your home country. For example, to Brits the USA is offshore, and vice versa. Landlocked Switzerland, Liechtenstein and Andorra don’t have any sea shore at all, but they very much fit into our modern definition of offshore banking.

Peter Macfarlane

Banking Expert

info@buildwealthoffshore.com

 

Welcome to my Offshore World: from the desk of Peter Macfarlane

July 2nd, 2008

It’s a great pleasure to welcome you to the fascinating world of offshore banking. It’s something I work with day in, day out. Quite frankly I am passionate about it.

No doubt offshore has an emotional side. We’ve all seen the movies. Offshore banking conjures up images of touching down in light planes on remote islands rimmed by crystal clear blue seas and white sand beaches, or of driving high up into the mountains around hairpin bends. I’ve certainly tried both, and my career has taken me to some interesting places. But most offshore banking these days is done in far less romantic places like London, Zurich or New York.

Another important emotional factor is what people around us think. There are those who suggest that taking advantage of other legal systems is somehow wrong. Personally I believe the opposite. I believe governments are parasites. That said, of course we must respect and operate within the laws of where we choose to live. After all, if we don’t like them, we can leave – right?

My goal in transmitting my knowledge about the offshore world 

 

is to provide a purely practical roadmap for taking those first steps offshore – dipping your toes in the water. This is the how and the why and the who.

One theme I hear frequently these days is that “tax haven jurisdictions will die out.” When? Exactly when all the Big Brother, high-tax countries embrace the basic human rights of freedom and privacy, and lower their corporate and income taxes to nil, or close to it. Or when nation states as we know them cease to become the norm. I know which I think will happen first, but that’s the theme for a future article!

Despite the political and economic pressures exerted by EU, US and some of the notorious international organizations like OECD and FATF, the leading offshore financial centres have lived through, adjusted, improved and are now doing better than ever. Maybe because so many people and businesses worldwide have voted with their wallets and have chosen to do business offshore.

I do look forward to hearing from you and to helping you in your planning and choices.

Peter Macfarlane

info@buildwealthoffshore.com

Look to Andorra for safe private banking

July 2nd, 2008

Private Banking, Offshore Investment and Asset Protection is aimed at investors seeking a safe haven for their assets during turbulent times. Banca Privada d’Andorra is a traditional European private bank specializing in wealth management. The bank is based in the Principality of Andorra and has total assets of 1.2 billion euros. It also has subsidiaries in Uruguay and Luxembourg as well as in Mexico. Besides a full range of retail banking services (checking accounts, credit cards, internet banking etc) it offers a range of attractive services for the sophisticated international investor, including its own investment funds and access to third party products, precious metals investments etc, and even a fund investing in fine wines. Accounts may be maintained in all major currencies (USD, Euro, Canadian dollar, sterling, etc.) plus many emerging market currencies. Services also include the use of international asset protection, estate planning and legal tax minimization structures such as holding companies and family foundations, and tax implications of personal residency and citizenship. 

Contact us at info@buildwealthoffshore.com or at www.petermacfarlane.net to enquire further.

Other services that are important to consider

July 2nd, 2008

International asset protection, estate planning and legal tax minimization structures such as holding companies and family foundations, and tax implications of personal residency and citizenship are concerns of every individual or corporation. Private banking, offshore investment and asset protection are all services that our international banking expert, Peter Macfarlane specializes in.