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Wealth Creation, Asset Protection, and Offshore Private Banking advice center |
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Filed Under (Uncategorized) by editor on 23-09-2010
Numbered bank accounts don’t just exist in the movies. Discreet private banks are opening secret numbered bank accounts for their privacy-conscious wealthy clients more than ever before. Secret numbered accounts don’t just exist in Switzerland, but also in the best offshore banks in other European private banking havens including Austria, Singapore, Monaco and Andorra.
The main reason for this is probably recent high-profile data thefts by corrupt bank employees, hoping to turn a quick penny by turning over stolen data to foreign governments. A numbered bank account offers protection against the theft of data by corrupt bank employees. Although the holder’s identity is known to the bank, the files are kept in a safe using a paper based system accessible only to a few highly-trusted private bankers – typically the relationship manager and the branch manager. Anyone who may have access to the bank’s computer records only gets to see an account number – not a name.
Private bankers don’t, however, like to talk about these accounts!
“These accounts are subject to exactly the same duty of diligence as any other banking relationship,” UBS spokesman Dominique Gerster told swissinfo.ch. “We are obliged to know the origin of the funds and the identity of the beneficiary. If we receive a legal request, we can supply the authorities with information, just as we can for any other account,” he is reported as saying.
“We always know the identity of our clients, whether the account is a numbered one or not,” commented Jan Vonder Mühll, head of media relations at private bank Julius Bär in Zurich, in the same article.
“A colleague from another branch of our bank couldn’t discover the identity of a client who has an account with us,” an asset manager at the Ticino branch of a Swiss co-operative bank told the swissinfo reporter. “Foreigners are now going for numbered accounts as a precaution…”
Apparently, smaller banks, particularly the independent co-operatives such as Raiffeisen banks, and the state-owned Swiss Cantonal banks which are both seen as bastions of strength, are profiting from the huge capital outflows at big international Swiss banks like UBS and Credit Suisse. Depositors feel safer dealing with smaller, more personal banks that better reflect the Swiss banking traditions of yesteryear.
“There’s no doubt that given the attacks by the Italian government in particular, or to ensure that their details do not fall into the hands of some untrustworthy bank employee, our customers are becoming more and more demanding as far as confidentiality is concerned. And there is nothing better than a numbered account to respond to their expectations,” he explained.
Fortunately, the article also points out that it is not only for tax reasons that clients of private banks are looking for numbered accounts:
In cases of divorce, inheritance or even blackmail it gives the holder additional protection. If there is a court case, the plaintiff has to name the bank where he believes the funds in question are held before proceedings can go ahead. And that is a major advantage for potential victims of blackmail, such as politicians or celebrities.
Most bank orders pass through several hands within a bank and any bank slip normally includes the client’s name and address, but a numbered account avoids these risks.
Who can open a numbered bank account? Almost anyone with a private bank account in one of the European offshore banking centres can qualify for this type of account. Like anything else, it’s a service that costs money and the banks will charge extra for the additional administrative burden involved. But it’s not a service that is advertised in flashy brochures at the counter. It’s a matter of knowing who to ask.
More information on numbered bank accounts can be found in the Practical Offshore Banking Guide, available free to members of Q Wealth. Not yet a member? Click here to see what you are missing!
I usually refrain from commenting on market conditions. There are two reasons for this.
First, I not really a financial markets guy. I get very bored with all those charts, waves, theories and so on. That’s probably one reason why I stand out from all the self-professed analysts out there on the net. On the rare occasions I do open my mouth about the markets, it’s because I have something serious to say.
My job is nuts and bolts offshore structuring. I’m talking, as regular readers of this blog are well aware, about offshore banking, offshore investing, offshore asset protection and hedging against currency collapses. I like active businesses. I do run a private offshore investment vehicle, but it doesn’t get involved in traditional financial markets – only in what might be termed ‘alternative investments.’
In other words, I prefer to invest my money in sound businesses that I can actually see and exercise some influence over. Businesses where I have the CEO’s personal cellphone number. Since my modest little fund doesn’t handle multiple billions, I naturally invest in small businesses without stock market listings. I look for small, recession proof businesses in growth areas that will not be affected by short-term financial swings. This is only a hobby at the moment, but over the last few years it has turned into a very profitable one.
Second, I don’t believe the markets are free at all. And again, why complain about something I don’t have any control over? Much better to focus my limited time on something like writing or helping my clients protect their assets.
Sure I keep a little play money in my offshore brokerage account. And I surprise myself sometimes by how successful I am. Markets depend first on psychology, second on manipulations by governments and certain elite forces, and a distant third on actual fundamentals. Then, I remember that I subscribe to a few really good investment research newsletters that certainly make me money. (I’ve listed some of them before, but if anyone is specifically interested, let me know) But really I only put money in my brokerage account that I can afford to play with.
But if clients come to me seeking advice on financial markets, that is not my area. All I can do is refer them to one of my several trusted contacts in this area.
I must say, however, that last week was abnormally glued to the screen. I always knew gold would go up, and I’m sure it will go a lot higher yet. But it certainly seems like Joe Bloggs on the street has decided gold is a good buy at the moment. The mainstream media hype, which is all that is backing the fiat currencies of the world, must be failing if even average investors are turning to gold. Heck, gold is now even sold in vending machines in Europe!
This week saw the news that French bank Societe Generale had released a report that Ambrose Evans-Pritchard in the British Daily Telegraph dubbed the ‘Bear Case Report.’ This report advises the bank’s clients on how to prepare for the dollar tumbling much further, global equities crashing below March lows, property prices tumbling (remember that email I sent a week ago to QWR members about the coming commercial real estate crash?) and oil falling below $50 per barrel.
The only solution seems to be for governments to inflate their way out of the problem. But, as was once famously said, inflation is like being pregnant – you can’t opt to be a little bit pregnant!
This was before the news that Dubai World asked for a 6 month break, admitting that they can’t keep up payments any more. Bearing in mind that failure to honour debt obligations is a crime punishable by prison in Dubai, it must have taken some courage, desperation or both for them to own up to that.
Then there was that weird ‘technical difficulty’ on the London Stock Market, which halted trading for a few hours. Now I’m not a conspiracy theorist at all, but that really had me suspecting something.
Oh, and just to take our minds off economic woes, swine flu is conveniently back on the agenda – with a huge jump in deaths in Europe this week. Which of course don’t have anything to do with the wintry weather.
The BBC reported that maybe eating garlic could prevent swine flu. The price of garlic has jumped 300% in China, so expect a global increase to filter through soon. Evil speculators are to blame of course. Maybe those same guys who read the SocGen report, that suggested investing in farm commodities?
Fortunatelyas I write this over the weekend I can see the funny side of things. When faced with apparent disasters, my rule of thumb is “will this matter in five years time?” And although I firmly believe things are going to get a lot worse before they get better, let’s put things in perspective. A private offshore banker from a small Swiss bank (one of the cantonal banks) told me the other day that her grandparents had lived through a real economic crisis – when they didn’t have any food to eat in Europe after the Second World War. For most people hit by the recession, the real net impact is that they will be buying cheaper Christmas presents this year.
Well I’ve rambled on a lot, but what can we learn from last week? I don’t think anything that happened that will be remembered in five weeks, never mind five years. If you want a hedge against inflation, buy gold. Do not buy paper or digital gold as it is most likely a scam. Buy real, physical, solid gold. Want to know how to buy physical gold offshore? Click here.
But if you are willing to be more aggressive, these turbulent times are generating so many new opportunities it’s just incredible. I am truly excited and optimistic about what is going on now making people think about pressing the reset button. If you are not happy with your life as it is, or simply your investment portfolio as it is, the message is loud and clear: you can do something about it! Start with The Q Wealth Report, and join us in Cancun in March for an intensive long weekend course on building offshore wealth!
Filed Under (Uncategorized) by editor on 08-09-2009
Offshore hedge funds, mutual funds and so-called high yield investment programs could be next on the IRS hitlist. That’s the conclusion of a recent Wall Street Journal article. After the recent events with Swiss banking behemoth UBS, other large offshore banks and financial institutions are ‘low hanging fruit.’ What does this mean for you as an offshore investor? Peter Macfarlane explains below.
Alex Raskolnikov, a professor and offshore tax expert at Columbia University Law School quoted by the Journal, believes that the IRS and US Justice Department will try to identify tax evaders who invest with offshore hedge funds managed by offshore banks. This will play out as as part of the US government’s ongoing effort to have big foreign financial institutions, which are incorrectly regarded by many as the best offshore banks, to provide them with confidential information about Americans who open offshore bank accounts.
Legislation recently introduced in the US Senate by Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus would go beyond the existing FBAR (Foreign Bank Account Reporting) requirements, which are filed by taxpayers only on annual basis. It would require U.S. financial institutions to report to the IRS transfers of money into any foreign financial account in real time. The IRS would therefore automatically receive electronic information on new offshore bank accounts as soon as they were opened. Scary stuff, for sure! But that is exactly the purpose of it.
Until recently, US tax attorneys understood that FBAR requirements did not apply to interests in off-shore hedge funds. However in June of this year, according to the article, an IRS official stated that the term “financial interest” would include hedge funds that “function as mutual funds.”
Ironically, anecdotal evidence suggests that the majority of investors in offshore hedge funds are in turn US tax-exempt hedge funds such as charitable organizations and pension funds. However, while hedge funds were once the domain of sophisticated investors playing with millions, there is no doubt that many are now operating more like regular mutual funds.
Of course, it is by no means clear how this information on transfers of money into foreign bank accounts would help the IRS. Millions of international transactions clear in New York every day and surely few investors seeking confidentiality offshore would directly transfer money between accounts held in their own names.
How could investors avoid popping up on the IRS radar? Simple. By transacting business in currencies other than the US dollar. This will surely be an advantage rather than an inconvenience for most American offshore investors. The major motivation for going offshore these days is not tax at all, but rather protecting the value of assets against the terminal decline of the dollar and the collapse of the US financial system.
Many of the more private European banks are now actively trying to dissuade clients from transacting business in US dollars at all, preferring that their customer data doesn’t have to be sent to New York. For example, one private banker recently told me that when a client wants to transfer dollars to another bank, they typically fix a EUR-USD rate in advance with the other bank. The transaction settles in Euros, and then is converted back to dollars on arrival in the internal books of the beneficiary/receiving bank. Importantly, my banker prefers to absorb the additional costs of the spread, rather than expose clients to dollar transaction clearance in the US.
Gold is also emerging as a settlement currency for interbank transactions in the mainstream banking system. This is a pleasing novelty that I hadn’t expected to see. Whilst regular readers know I’m a big fan of holding physical gold bullion as opposed to paper or electronic gold liabilities, such liabilities are certainly useful for short term transactions.
Raiffeisen Zentralbank Austria, which with its Eastern European and Asian clients has one of the highest volumes of US dollar clearing outside the USA, has been pioneering this. Since earlier this year they have been offering regular bank accounts denominated in gold ounces, which have prompted a number of offshore banks to offer such services to their clients, using RZB as the correspondent and clearer. A number of banks are now offering gold as a regular currency option in the currency portfolio of their multi-currency bank accounts. Yes, that means you can actually send and receive SWIFT transfers denominated in gold, provided both the sending and receiving banks have appropriate correspondent accounts.
Of course, for many Americans – those most affected by this clampdown – opening bank accounts denominated in other major world currencies appears to be just a pipe dream. Very few American banks even offer Euro accounts. That’s a far cry from some of the banks we routinely refer clients to, which allow you to hold balances in more than thirty currencies conveniently managed under one account number. And then, there is the problem that many foreign banks simply refuse to work with US clients.
The fact is, however, that despite the government propoganda, opening an offshore bank account is a lot easier than you might think.
It is perfectly legal for Americans to hold as many offshore bank accounts as they wish. And there are still distinguished private banks in reputable tax havens that welcome American clients – especially those who don’t wish to do business in dollars. You will a special note for US Citizens (together with another special note for European Union Citizens) in Q Wealth’s Practical Offshore Banking Guide 2009. Best of all, it includes specific contact details of various banks and brokerage houses. In many cases you can use this information to open your account with no need for hiring an intermediary, and to open an account without even leaving home! You can download this 40-page manual absolutely free with your membership of Q Wealth.
If you are not signing up yet but are interested in hearing more about this topic, don’t hesitate to sign up instead for our Free Q Bytes e-mail newsletter, your weekly guide offering analysis of what’s going on in the offshore banking and asset protection world.
Filed Under (Uncategorized) by editor on 04-06-2009
The bailout of General Motors is another nail in the coffin of the US dollar. But still, most people haven’t even noticed the real ‘stealth’ devaluation being imposed by the United States government. And yet all of us, Americans or not, are affected by this in a big way, due to the dollar’s status as a reserve currency (and also due to China’s effective control of the dollar, that I have previously touched on…)
Is the dollar “collapsing” or merely “declining”? I believe it is collapsing, but some people might misunderstand this. The dollar is not just going to crash one day, or even one week. It’s an ongoing thing, that started many years ago but has substantially speeded up in the last five years or so (yes, even during the times when the US economy was supposedly booming, that too was based on scams by the financial services sector)
Geithner, Bernanke, Obama and the whole crew are involved in a constant battle to patch over the dollar collapse. Yet in spite of their attempts, the cracks have widened. The greenback continues its inexorable march downward. This week’s events at G.M. have accelerated the collapse a little more. And I believe that the collapse of the dollar will continue to accelerate with time. What will happen when it hits the bottom is anybody’s guess, but I certainly want to be well prepared when it happens. You should be too. And the Q Wealth website is about helping you do just that – protecting your assets from this stealth devaluation.
The US is not going to crash like Mexico did in 1995, or like Argentina and Brazil have done since with overnight currency devaluations. Neither will go bankrupt in one day like Iceland. The US government still has way too much influence and political power for that to happen. It’s a stealth devaluation because your portfolio will appear to be going higher. You will have more dollars. The stock market will be up. But in real terms, you are losing money faster than ever before. This is what some people have a hard time getting their head around – but it’s very important. The government will try to persuade you that things are going well, when really they are not. Bottom line? It’s a scam being perpetrated on you by government. If you care about protecting your assets and creating new wealth, you have to understand this.
So where can you actually put your money to protect against the stealth devaluation and collapse of the dollar? What about other currencies? Well, necessity dictates that we need to use currencies like dollars, euros and pounds to carry on business. And common investing sense dictates that you should diversify assets, so at least having a proportion of euros is better than having all dollars. It’s a start.
But unfortunately none of these currencies look good. Every other major central bank is participating in the very same scam, meaning that their currencies are equally doomed. So it would not be safe to assume that buying, say, euros, will give you any serious protection against the loss of your assets.
My number one mantra to clients is diversification, diversification and diversification. If you have a portfolio above six figures, it should be in different currencies, in different banks, on different continents. Opening overseas personal accounts, while having no tax consequences, can certainly help asset protection…the geographic diversification protects against the threat called government, while the mere fact that the assets are offshore significantly reduces the risk of you being sued in the first place, especially if you live in a litigious place like the USA or increasingly the UK.
Generally, private international banks are also a whole lot more flexible and service minded too. They offer Swiss-style wealth management banking facilities. For example, I noticed the other day that one of my European private offshore banks (not in Switzerland in this case) had quietly added gold ounces to the list of currencies I could hold in my multi-currency checking account. I guess that means I can even write cheques denominated in gold ounces, though I haven’t tried that yet. I see some of the larger European clearing banks like RAIFFEISEN ZENTRALBANK OESTERREICH AG in Austria are now maintaining gold correspondent accounts for their institutional clients. Interesting, huh?
Which are the best offshore banks for this kind of wealth management? For the answer to that question you need to be a member of The Q Wealth Report. Download the Practical Offshore Banking Guide (available instantly as soon as your payment is approved) and you will find ten of them for starters, with impartial comments on each… together with the form for a free e-mail consultation if you would like to discuss your individual circumstances with me directly.
Gold, probably is number one on my list of recommendations as a hedge against dollar decline. There are ways you should buy gold, and ways you shouldn’t. One way you should not invest in gold is by following typical mainstream advice and investing in ETFs, the most famous of which is GLD the SPDR Gold ETF. Ther are significant concerns about whether you could really get your gold out, or even your money back in dollars (which is not what you would want anyway at that stage) in the case of an economic meltdown.
For example, what do you think of this quote directly from the GLD prospectus?
The Trust’s gold may be subject to loss, damage, theft or restriction on access.
There is a risk that part or all of the Trust’s gold could be lost, damaged or stolen. Access to the Trust’s gold could also be restricted by natural events (such as an earthquake) or human actions (such as a terrorist attack). Any of these events may adversely affect the operations of the Trust and, consequently, an investment in the Shares.
The Trust may not have adequate sources of recovery if its gold is lost, damaged, stolen or destroyed and recovery may be limited, even in the event of fraud, to the market value of the gold at the time the fraud is discovered.
If you would like to know about better ways to invest in Gold offshore, you need my Gold Report – How to Buy and Hide Gold Bullion Offshore which is likewise available free of charge for immediate download to our paid up members.
Not a member yet? Sign up to Q Wealth Report here.
by Peter Macfarlane, Offshore Banking Consultant for the Q Wealth Report
One recurring question we hear almost every day in the wealth management business is “How Can I Open a Swiss Bank account?” Whilst a minority of those asking the question might really be candidates for Swiss private banking, the majority seem to have watched too many Bond movies! This article is a brief introduction to Swiss banking to help you decide which of these categories you fit into.
First of all let me point out that if you are looking for a secret bank account, there are places that are much more discreet, much more under the radar than Switzerland. You’ll find, for example, nine alternatives to Swiss banks which also have that “private banking feel” listed in the Practical Offshore Banking Guide 2009, which is available free to Q Wealth members. This instantly-downloadable pdf guide also explains the truth behind some of the services associated with Swiss banking like anonymous numbered bank accounts (yes, it is still possible to open numbered bank accounts legally as of 2009! – details in the guide)
But what if you have your heart set on a real Swiss account? Opening a bank account in Switzerland is in theory not too difficult – but like all banks anywhere in the world, Swiss banks do reserve the right to refuse customers. Needless to say the recent hoo-hah from the G20 and the OECD has not made it any easier to open Swiss bank accounts. All banks are scared of being accused of money laundering and this has made it much harder, especially for non Swiss residents, to open bank accounts.
Then, you need to choose a Swiss bank according your requirements. If you want traditional private banking service and a free lunch each time you visit your banker, expect to invest at least a million as your opening deposit. Some of these real Swiss private banks are so discreet they don’t even have signs outside their offices, let alone websites.
You can, however, open accounts at more run-of-the-mill Swiss banks with a very low opening deposit or minimum figure to open accounts. Swiss banks like Migros or Swissquote Bank (which is really more of a discount brokerage, E-Trade style) have no minimum opening deposits whatsoever and you can start the process all by yourself – no need to pay an intermediary. The disadvantage is that, well, there is no particular advantage if you see what I mean… this is not traditional Swiss banking at all! There is nothing private about these banks. Swissquote, for example, will require you to waive bank secrecy before you can even open account!
If you have a Swiss work permit and wish to open a local Swiss bank account, that changes things significantly. In order to pay your salary in, your employer will probably require that you have a bank account. But Swiss working papers make all the difference. Some of the documents you will need, according to expat website AngloInfo, are:
- Passport or identity card
- Recent utility bill (electricity is best)
- Residence permit
- A copy of your work contract
- Cross border workers from France or Germany, a copy of your permis frontalier (cross border work permit)
It is not necessary to make an appointment to open a current account, says Anglo Info. Opening an account can be done in a day and means of payments (like cash cards) will usually arrive within a week to ten days of the account being opened.
In general banks all over Switzerland are open from Monday to Friday from 08:30 to 16:30, and are closed at weekends and on public holidays.
You may, however, not need a Swiss bank account at all. Household bills and invoices are more commonly paid through the post office, with a so-called Bulletin de Versement (bill slip). Bill slips are attached to each bill that you receive by the post.
Below are some links to major Swiss retail banks. Remember these are not the same as Private Banks. If you are a non-resident looking to open a Swiss bank account, you need to be looking at Private Banks since they are the ones that accept non-resident business. To sign up for our free newsletter on Asset Protection and Private Offshore Banking, visit our Q Bytes page.
Major Swiss Banks
With all the fuss going on about Swiss banking right now, many people might have overlooked the fact that you can simply move to Switzerland and live virtually tax-free, legally, and without being subject to notoriously strict Swiss immigration controls. How? Through the Italian tax haven enclave of Campione d’Italia – a little part of Italy, with some very special personal tax concessions, that functions like a part of Swiss territory.
“The first pure haven I remember reading about was Campione D’Italia, a village sized city on the shores of Lake Lugano in Switzerland and the first person I ever heard write or talk about Campione was Harry Schultz, publisher of the Harry Schultz International Newsletter” writes Roger Gallo of Escape Artist. “Harry Schultz was the only one around at that time who was using the then uncommon word, ‘international’ when he spoke, and he was also the only one who was writing for an American audience who seemed to know all of the offshore secrets, and he knew scores of them. He was years ahead of almost everyone else in writing about asset protection and he was the first to write about offshore investing. Harry has been publishing his newsletter for 41 years and it still very much garners the respect of most of the current lineup of hotshot investment gurus.”
Campione d’Italia is a small Italian commune of 1.7 square kilometres located entirely within Switzerland, on the eastern shore of Lake Lugano at the foot of a beautiful mountain. There are approximately 3,000 inhabitants, about 1,000 of them foreigners. The official currency is the Swiss Franc, but the Euro is accepted as well. All banking is done through Swiss banks. A famous Casino generates substantial revenue, which is one of the reasons why the residents of Campione enjoy some very special tax concessions.
Campione’s tax advantages only apply to private persons resident in Campione, and not to companies domiciled or managed from there (except that there is no VAT in Campione, which I suppose is a big advantage for companies)
How can you obtain a residence permit in Campione? You must normally buy an apartment or a house – simply because there is very rarely the opportunity to rent. Currently, however, I know of an opportunity to obtain a residence permit by renting. A client of mine is privately renting one of the nicest fully furnished, ultra modern duplex apartments in Campione Switzerland for EUR 2900 per month. It is located on the only sand beach with palm trees that we know of, in Ticino (what my client calls the “Banana Belt of Switzerland”). The deal is you pay one year in advance and that includes the right to Swiss & EU residency. He’s also prepared to sell at EUR 365,000. For more information contact me via info@petermacfarlane.net and I’ll put you in touch.
To sum up some of the many advantages of being resident in Campione d’Italia:
* Political, social and economic stability
* First-class Swiss infrastructure
* Swiss Franc is the official currency
* Banking through Swiss banks with Swiss banking secrecy
* Attractive lifestyle in a quiet, clean environment
* Efficient and reliable public services
* Swiss postal services, telephone numbers and car registration plates
* Effectively resident in Switzerland – with E.U. residence permit
* No value added tax (VAT)
* Special income tax concessions, no inheritance or gift tax
Interested in reading more like this? Every quarter, The Q Wealth Report covers material related to living the good life in tax havens around the world, protecting your assets in first class private banks. Right now, our focus is on How to Buy and Hide Gold Offshore. We are also publishers of the Practical Offshore Banking Guide 2009. Learn more at The Q Wealth Report homepage, or sign up today for our free 5-day e-mail course: The Secrets of the Super Rich
by Peter Macfarlane for the Q Wealth Report
In the American media and press, a familiar news story is being rehashed – again! The IRS are trying to scare people away from perfectly legal asset protection and offshore banking strategies, by cashing in on publicity surrounding their recent coup against Swiss banking guant UBS. UBS have almost closed down their offshore private banking divisions in Geneva, Zurich and Lugano following IRS pressure.
“In the hush-hush world of Swiss banking, the unthinkable is happening: secrets are spilling into the open,” comments Lynnley Browning in the New York Times. “UBS, the largest bank in Switzerland, agreed on Wednesday to divulge the names of well-heeled Americans whom the authorities suspect of using offshore accounts at the bank to evade taxes.”
Reading beyond the headlines, however, the truth becomes clearer: “It is unclear how many of its clients’ names UBS will divulge. Federal prosecutors have been examining about 19,000 accounts at the bank, but UBS ultimately may disclose the identities of only a few hundred customers.”
This, dear reader, is what I wrote about here just a few days ago in my article Is Swiss or Offshore Banking Dead? No Way!
It’s pure hype, as the article continues quoting a known hater of all things offshore: “The Swiss are saying that this is the end of Swiss banking as they knew it,” said Jack Blum, an offshore tax specialist. “Nobody will trust the security of the Swiss bank account.”
Exactly as I predicted the other day – a few hundred, or more likely a few dozen, people who can be identified by the IRS as tax fraudsters for other reasons will have their banking details turned over to the IRS, in accordance with the treaties. Nothing new there. It is not the end of Swiss banking. It is just the IRS trying to get publicity to scare people away from offshore bank accounts.
The Swiss do, however, have another very significant problem at the moment, that you should take into account when considering Swiss banking. In an interview with Swiss daily newspaper Tagesanzeiger, a well-known economist has warned that Switzerland risks bankruptcy, if the recent market turmoil centering on Eastern Europe is not contained quickly. At issue are loans made in Swiss francs to Eastern European debtors – in other words, sub-prime mortgages in places like Hungary, where the property market has collapsed. The rapid growth in many countries of Eastern Europe was stimulated through loans in Swiss francs. Swiss banks and offshore institutions loaned the local banks francs, which passed the francs on to their borrowers. The loans were attractive because borrowers paid interest rates much lower than required for loans in local currency.
With many countries in the region falling into depression, currencies and asset prices are plunging. Therefore, debtors domiciled in Eastern Europe are increasingly expected to have difficulty with mounting foreign debt loads — and that spells trouble for Switzerland…. There’s a translation of the original article here.
If you are interested in learning more about protecting your assets through Swiss private offshore banking, and more attractive lower profile wealth management alternatives in Europe and elsewhere, Q Wealth Report brings you the answers. The Practical Offshore Banking Guide 2009 is a well-written and researched independent guide telling you in about 40 pages how to open your offshore bank account and – more importantly – how to keep it in good standing, and maintain a good relationship with your offshore banker.
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