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Wealth Creation, Asset Protection, and Offshore Banking advice center |
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Filed Under (Uncategorized) by editor on 15-04-2010
Issue 54 of The Q Wealth Report, the leading privately-published newsletter on freedom, wealth, asset protection and privacy is now available online. Members may download their copies here: Current Issue 54 of Q Wealth Report You will need to be logged in as a member to access this file. If you are not yet a member, check out our list of membership benefits.
Here’s a sneak preview of some of the highlights in issue 54:
- Opportunities Abound: introduction by Dr Richard Cawte
- Private Placement Insurance Policies – a review of this rather boring but extremely functional offshore tax planning and asset protection tool. Discover how you can use PPLIs to your advantage.
- Credible evidence that chipping people increases Cancer Risk
- Mediterranean Mix’n'Match: Detailed article on the use of Cyprus offshore companies and offshore banks – an onshore/offshore combination that makes a very attractive privacy and tax planning tool for Americans and Europeans alike. Includes practical examples. Cyprus banks offer multi currency accounts.
- Interconnectedness: Richard Cawte explores the feeling world we live in… and how to act on intuition and inspiration to achieve balance, poise and achievement in your personal and business lives.
- Green Technology: Investing in the Future – with an offshore element of course
- Peter Macfarlane’s detailed review of the dire implications of the HIRE Act. Peter predicts economic isolation of the United States and presents detailed advice to protect yourself, your loved ones and your assets from the devaluation of the dollar.
- Full details of the June Q Advantage Seminar and a preview of our September Strategies for Success event.
We hope you enjoy Q Wealth Report!
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Filed Under (Uncategorized) by editor on 03-03-2010
Ignorance is bliss – until problems occur…
The first reports of shooting came just before midnight. Within minutes, heavy explosions, muffled by the distance, echoed through the steel and glass canyons of the capital. Then the noise died down.
At the second-floor window of a room in the Marriott Hotel, this reporter and two others were listening for more sounds of fighting when they saw a man wearing a black ski mask and camouflage pants and carrying an automatic assault rifle running across a patio area outside.
The reporters crouched to the floor, but the gunman spotted them. ‘Out! Out!’ He Shouted
”Out! Out!” he shouted, aiming his AK-47 assault rifle.
Which Marriott Hotel is the New York Times talking about here? Kabul? Baghdad? No, Panama, just a little over twenty years ago. You can read the full article here.
In the gilded lobby of the luxury hotel, Panama City’s finest, seven other gunmen had herded together about 80 guests and staff members. They were forced to lie face down with their arms outstretched.
”Who’s American?” several of the gunmen shouted at once. ”Americans over there.” The gunmen pushed a group of 11 into an adjacent section of the lobby.
You know we at Q Wealth are pretty positive on Panama. Many times I’ve been in that lobby for meetings with clients. But the point is, you have to be prepared. Recent geopolitical events over relatively insignificant territories have highlighted the risk and instability of the world we live in.
Who would have thought just a month or two ago of territorial disputes involving the Netherlands, the United Kingdom and Argentina having a major effect on the global economy and politics? Surely, these are relatively stable countries, not be compared with Afghanistan or Iraq?
Yet our memories are short. Back in 1982 nearly 1000 lives were lost in the Falklands War. And, seemingly all of a sudden, tensions are heating up again in the region. Unsurprisingly, it has something to do with oil.
Venezuela, meanwhile, has had territorial ambitions over the Netherlands Antilles off its coast for years. And, as money launderer turned bank compliance officer Kenneth Rijock points out in this article, Hugo Chavez has just recently directly threatened the status of the Dutch Caribbean possessions of Aruba, Bonaire and Curacao, as well as the United States Commonwealth of Puerto Rico. The Netherlands is in no position to defend these islands and there is the added potential flashpoint that comes from the fact that US military aircraft are based in these islands.
The Libyan government, meanwhile, has recently banned entry into their country of all nationals of Schengen countries (most of the European Union, excluding UK and Ireland). Just like that. I didn’t even see it on the mainstream news. It’s something Canada does from time to time as well. Most recently with just 48 hours’ notice they suddenly started demanding visas from Mexicans and Czechs. Those who already had flights booked were left to solve the problem themselves.
The fact is that disputes like these, that can only really be described as silly, can pop up almost anywhere at any time. They could turn out to be just what politicians on all sides need to rally popular support and distract the slumbering masses from the real serious problems.
The most important lesson is the need for geographic diversification. This kind of thing happens all the time and it could affect you or your assets. You shouldn’t keep all your assets in one place. You should get a second passport. You also need to keep your finger on the pulse and follow serious news sources that cover geopolitical matters. Stratfor is good, or for quick reading check out Sovereign Man.
Lots of Americans are buying land in Argentina at the moment. Now I’m not saying the following is likely, but neither is it so far-fetched…. What if a new Falklands War breaks out and the US steps in on the British side? How will the US and Britain being at war with Argentina affect investments, freedom to travel, and most importantly security of those expats?
“What if” is something people need to be asking themselves a lot these days. We live in a very unstable world. There is no 100% security. Little, insignificant disputes between politicians can spill over into making life hell for ordinary people. And then there are the relationships between China, the USA, and Russia…
In real estate, people talk about the three factors: location, location, and location. In offshore and asset protection planning, I talk about the same three factors. Diversification, diversification and diversification. Never keep all your assets in the same place, the same currencies or the same asset form.
Things change fast. Back in 1989, Miami was a safe place for Latin Americans to keep money. Now it isn’t. Panama has taken over that role and is stable.
Once again, the lesson is: be prepared. There is no 100% security anywhere. If you and your assets are mobile and ready with flags of convenience like offshore IBCs/corporations, foreign multi currency bank accounts, and second passports, you will be safer if severe crisis hits. And be sure to subscribe to Q Wealth Report where we write about such matters and – even more importantly – solutions, detailed plans and strategies. If you are not yet a subscriber and want to see the package of benefits you are missing out on, click here.
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Legendary Swiss market pundit Marc Faber recently advised a group of high flying investment managers to ‘buy farmland and gold,’ reports the Times of London.
Dr Marc Faber is an interesting and often controversial commentator. His greatest claim to fame is having advised investors to pull out of the stock market a week before the 1987 crash. Now his belief, he reportedly told an assembled group of pension and sovereign wealth fund members in Tokyo the US is going to go bankrupt. The best way to achieve international asset protection and diversification is to buy physical gold and farmland, he believes.
So who is Dr Marc Faber? Dr Faber moved to Hong Kong in 1973 and – although he still keeps an office there – he resides in Chiang Mai, Thailand, along with a number of our subscribers and friends. As well as having penned several books, Faber has his own monthly investment newsletter The Gloom Boom & Doom Report. Faber has been long term bearish about the American economy for a number of years and continues to be so.
According to Wikipedia, he concluded his June 2008 newsletter with the following:
The federal government is sending each of us a $600 rebate. If we spend that money at Wal-Mart, the money goes to China. If we spend it on gasoline it goes to the Arabs. If we buy a computer it will go to India. If we purchase fruit and vegetables it will go to Mexico, Honduras and Guatemala. If we purchase a good car it will go to Germany. If we purchase useless crap it will go to Taiwan and none of it will help the American economy. The only way to keep that money here at home is to spend it on prostitutes and beer, since these are the only products still produced in US. I’ve been doing my part.
The reporting in the Times also offers insight into Faber’s way of thinking:
His investment advice, which was the first keynote speech of CLSA’s annual investment forum in Tokyo, included a suggestion that fund managers buy houses in the countryside because it was more likely that violence, biological attack and other acts of a “dirty war” would happen in cities.
He also said that they should consider holding part of their wealth in the form of precious metals “because they can be carried”.
One London-based hedge fund manager described Mr Faber’s address as “excellent, chilling stuff: good at putting you off lunch, but not something I can tell clients asking me about quarterly returns at the end of March”.
Needless to say, we agree with Dr Faber’s predictions. We have been telling people for several years to get out of the financial system by buying physical gold, as well as diversifying with multi-currency offshore bank accounts.
We also recommend purchase of productive and useful real estate, as opposed to real estate held for speculation. Farmland in countries like Paraguay, Uruguay and Brazil, for example, has proven to be an excellent investment over the past few years, but will only show its true value in the future. Our planned Paraguay Citizenship and Real Estate Investment Tour has been delayed somewhat due to pressure of work, but we are still planning to go ahead with it, now probably in early May. Anyone interested in coming along is more than welcome to contact us.
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Filed Under (Uncategorized) by editor on 09-01-2010
Following is an edited version of our Press Release announcing the new 2010 edition of our ever popular Practical Offshore Banking Guide which is now available….
While the days of James Bond-style numbered Swiss bank accounts may be over, the world of discreet private banking and offshore wealth management is growing apace as financial uncertainty continues to make people seek safe havens.
Despite highly-publicized government crackdowns on tax evasion around the world during the past year, spearheaded by the G20-OECD “anti tax haven” blacklisting and the US attack on UPS after defection of Bradley Birkenfeld, more billions are headed for offshore banks and tax havens than ever before – with good reason, and it’s all completely legal. That is the conclusion of the new Practical Offshore Banking Guide 2010, advising high net worth individuals and entrepreneurs on offshore banking and asset protection, that is released today. In it you will find information on nine of the best offshore banks.
In the 2010 update of his annual Q Wealth Practical Offshore Banking Guide, offshore banking expert Peter Macfarlane points out that tax evasion is far from the only factor encouraging smart individuals to go offshore. “There are more good reasons than ever to go offshore. Taxes are certainly a factor, but many people these days are motivated by deeper feelings – they just don’t trust the system any more,” said Macfarlane today. “Basically, they are demanding full control of their own money. The human right to privacy is definitely part of the equation. Why should an individual´s finances be an open book?”
“Bank failures and bailouts are on everybody’s minds, and rational individuals are looking to open accounts at conservative and respectable banks, in countries that respect the rule of law and private property, that do not have this toxic exposure. Clients seek to protect their assets not just against the perceived injustice of many lawsuits, but more fundamentally against a decline in the value of the dollar and other major currencies like the euro and pound. Expecting the imminent devaluation or collapse of the dollar, they are diversifying into better-backed currencies, and of course into precious metals like gold and silver – something made easy by offshore multi-currency bank accounts,” comments Macfarlane, adding: “We’ve all heard about the risks of keeping eggs in the same basket.”
The Practical Offshore Guide 2010 includes special sections for US and European Union citizens, explains information exchange in detail, and proffers practical advice on choosing, opening and operating an offshore bank account.
The Practical Offshore Banking Guide 2010 is published FREE for readers of The Q Wealth Report, a privately-published newsletter covering to offshore banking, asset protection and wealth management. The Q Wealth Report was established in England in 1996 and has a global readership. Englishman Peter Macfarlane, 38, is joint editor, besides running his own professional practice in Panama City, Panama and being a regular speaker at offshore events. Further bio on Peter Macfarlane is here. The free Secrets of the Super Rich course edited by Peter Macfarlane and others is available here.
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