| Restructuring
your finances offshore is an important step towards personal liberty
and financial privacy. However, it is of utmost importance that you
do your due diligence prior to sending your hard earned money offshore.
Unfortunately, the offshore legal and financial world is full of shady
banks, trust companies, law firms, and a wide host of unscrupulous
financial consultants that are foaming at the mouth to scam you from
your life savings. By following our 7 cardinal rules of offshore,
you should be able to stay out of trouble.
Seven
Cardinal Rules of Offshore
Rule
# 1: Don't put all of your eggs in one basket. When going
offshore for the first time, be cautious and initially transfer
only a small portion of your overall wealth. If that small portion
amounts to a sizeable sum of money, then open a few accounts at
separate banks or brokerage firms, to diversify among several financial
institutions.
Rule
# 2: Don't put your money in Offshore Trust Companies.
Today's offshore trust companies offer essentially the same services
as banks - some even provide you with debit cards, checkbooks, internet
access and investment trading. However, trust companies are not
banks! In most reputable offshore jurisdictions, banks are regulated
by a specific banking authority established for the purpose of monitoring
and regulating banks credit policies, investments, liquidity, etc.
Offshore trust companies are not regulated the way banks are, so
they basically have a license to steal! Essentially, when you put
your money into a trust company, you are signing away your rights
to your own money. If the trust company goes bankrupt, you can kiss
your hard earned money goodbye.
Rule
# 3: Don't put your money in jurisdictions where banking
laws are not enforced. When selecting an offshore bank, it is important
that the bank be located in a jurisdiction where the government
has good banking laws in place, and they are enforced by a competent
authority. Otherwise, the bank will have the freedom to embezzle
all of the depositors funds and get away with it. Panama and Switzerland,
for example, have excellent banking laws, and competent authorities
that enforce those laws. However, there are a handful of other jurisdictions
that we cannot say the same for.
Rule
# 4: Don't put your money in extremely small private banks.
In many offshore jurisdictions, one can obtain an offshore banking
license for as little as US$100,000, including capitalization. There
are dozens of small start-up offshore internet banks offering their
services on the web - stay away from them! Make sure that the bank
has been around for at least 5 years, and the bank holds deposits
of at least US$300 million. Be sure to ask who the banks independent
auditors are, and make sure they are reputable. Also, every reputable
bank publicly provides published consolidated financial statements
- ask for them to verify the banks financial stability.
Rule
# 5: Don't allow lawyers, consultants, or nominee directors
to sign on your accounts. When opening offshore accounts, it is
important to have complete signatory control, or to only allow TRUSTED
individuals to sign on your accounts. Many offshore firms secretly
appoint their nominee directors as signatories when they assist
you in opening your corporate accounts, which enables them to deduct
their annual fees, management fees, etc. Beware, because most of
them will also throw in a secret " annual account management
fee", which is normally about 3% or more of your funds! Ask
for full disclosure of fees prior to establishing your offshore
structure and/or accounts. If you want the extra privacy of having
a lawyer, consultant, or nominee sign on your account, be sure there
is a signed account management agreement or fiduciary agreement
to document the responsibilities of each party.
Rule
# 6: Always ask for references. When dealing with law firms,
financial consultants, or any other offshore organization, be sure
to ask for professional commercial references, and verify them.
If their references are not known, reputable organizations, then
they are not worth considering as references. You must be 100% confident
that your law firm or financial consultant is reputable, otherwise,
they can potentially perpetrate your financial accounts after you
have funded them.
Rule
# 7: Take caution in using your offshore accounts. It is
important to use caution, and basic common sense when using your
offshore accounts. Think of your offshore accounts as a "nest
egg" for that rainy day - as a back up in case you get sued
or divorced, etc.. Don't use your offshore accounts as you do your
personal domestic accounts. For example, don't use your offshore
debit card or checkbook to pay your personal bills (phone, cable,
electric, etc.).
For
questions or information regarding any please email: info@panama-foundation.com
, or call our offices at ++(507) 236.7069
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