|
F.A.Q.
- Trusts
Topics
'Asset
Protection' Trusts
Reasons
and Uses of Asset Protection via a Foreign Trust
Functionality and Structure
of an Offshore Trust
Belize Asset Protection
Trusts
Laws Surrounding Foreign
Trusts
'Asset
Protection' Trusts
What
is a Trust?
A legal device that allows title to, and possession of, property
to be held, used, and/or managed by one person, the trustee,
for the benefit of another different person or group, the
beneficiaries.
A trust
is one of the most flexible existing financial mechanisms,
able to handle almost any purpose. Its concept is based on
the separation of legal ownership of the Trust assets (which
rests with the Trustees) from the beneficial ownership (which
rests with the beneficiaries). It has been specially designed
to achieve the best asset protection.
It is
common knowledge that the wealthy have been using Trusts for
many years. A Trust was the best way to maintain that wealth,
and to secure their families' future, free from excessive
taxation and security against frivolous lawsuits. Since the
onset of this regrettable explosion in the litigation arena,
many people have tried to secure their assets by using a Trust.
Today, due to the information superhighway, more and more
people are finding out that an Offshore Trust can be established
by professionals without the inherent high cost.
TOP
What
are the main uses of a Trust?
A trust can avoid probate and inheritance
taxes; invest in all kinds of securities, real estate, cash,
futures, bonds, and stocks; hold title of any real or personal
property, business interests, insurance policies, home, boat,
and car; pay support in marriage, to elderly, children, medical,
toward educational expenses, etc.
TOP
What
types of Trusts are there?
There are several types of trusts, but
the most familiar are:
1. Family Trust - used to maintain a families' wealth via
investments
2. Charitable Trust - used for donation purposes
3. Testamentary Trust - used to distribute assets after ones
passing
These are still all viable uses and have their tax benefits.
TOP
Reasons
and Uses of Asset Protection via a Foreign Trust
What
Reasons are there that individuals would want to place their
assets in Foreign Jurisdiction based Trusts?
1. Economic diversification;
2. Achievement of a "Low Profile" of anonymity with
respect to wealth;
3. Avoidance of forced dispositions;
4. Premarital planning;
5. Preservation of entitlements (e.g., Medicare and Medicaid);
6. Marital property planning (e.g., establishing a vehicle
for partitioning community property, spousal gifts);
7. Tax Planning (e.g., establishing a vehicle for exemption
equivalent trusts and generation-skipping transfer tax exemption
trusts);
8. Planning for the contingency of changing one's domicile
or citizenship;
9. Participation in investments not otherwise available to
U.S. investors;
10. Preplanning in anticipation of currency controls or restrictions
on ownership of bullion; and
11. Liability protection, tax planning, or strategic advantage
in the context of an active trade or business offshore.
TOP
What
Key Benefits come from the use of Foreign Trusts?
1 . To
hold and/or manage an offshore corporation engaged in international
activities.
2. Holding assets obtained by international corporations
engaged in multinational trading. Stocks, bonds, and cash
investment products gained during international operations
may be held in offshore trusts without being subject to taxes.
3. Protection
of property and other assets from personal and corporate gain.
In general, having property and assets transferred to a Trust
can protect such assets from legal and political actions that
may be taken against the owner. Transferring legal ownership
to the Trustee(s) is the most direct form of asset protection
and essentially transfers ownership of the assets to the Trustee(s).
4. Protection of wealth when living in unstable areas.
Expatriates
who settle in a region that is politically unstable or where
there is a risk that a government will expropriate assets
or impose exchange controls can protect their wealth by placing
it in a more stable jurisdiction.
5. Preserving family wealth. Trusts can be used like
a Will to arrange for business ownership, investments, or
other wealth to be passed on and distributed to one's inheritors
without inheritance taxes. Trusts may avoid complicated court
procedures relating to probate and inheritance laws in the
Settlor's country of domicile. They can also be easier to
administrate than wills; are less vulnerable and less likely
to be challenged through legal contests than wills (especially
if operative for several years); can beat the charge of mental
incompetance so often used against wills written late in life;
and assure the assets will be used by the beneficiaries in
the way intended.
6. Facilitation of tax planning. A Discretionary Trust
can be useful in reducing taxation of gifts or bequests. The
Trust is under the control of a legal ownership of the Trustees
and neither the Settlor nor the Beneficiaries can be said
to have any taxable ownership of the trust. The Trust Deed
need not show the names of Beneficiaries. These may only be
specified in a Letter of Wishes that is private. The Trustees
have absolute discretion as to whom the Beneficiaries are,
how much is appointed to each, and when and how any distribution
may take place.
This can be useful for...
...those who cannot hold assets themselves (eg, minors and
those bankrupt); and
...those
wanting to minimize taxation by means of divesting themselves
of income or assets in favor of the Trustee, who may be located
in a low or no tax jurisdiction.
7. Trusts are confidential and flexible. Since assets
are held in the Trustees' name, Settlors enjoy complete privacy
as to the nature of hteir investments and to whom they are
giving benefits. The Trust Document is not a public document
and is handled with absolute confidentialtiy. Trusts can be
created or changed quickly at any time.
8. Trusts are private arrangements. Trusts need not
be registered with any tax authority and are a private agreement
between the concerned parties. There is also no legal requirement
to file the accounts of a trust or have them audited by an
independant auditor.
TOP
Functionality
and Structure of an Offshore Trust
What
are the main characteristics of a Trust?
Having its origin in English Common
Law, a Trust is an agreement that allows separation of legal
and beneficial ownership amongst a number of individuals.
These individuals are the Settlor who transfer legal
ownership (title) of the assets to a Trustee who holds
and administers the assets solely for the Beneficiay of
the Trust in accordance with instructions from the Settlor
as specified in the Written Trust Document.
TOP
Who
is the Settlor of a Trust?
Sometimes also referred to as the Creator
or Grantor of the Trust, the Settlor is simply the individual
or entity who created or settled the Trust by donating property
or other assets to be managed and administered by a trustee
but from which all benefits and profits would go to a beneficiary.
TOP
Who
is the Trust Protector?
In jurisdictions that allow the appointment
of such, this person provides general oversight of trust operatins
to ensure its objectives are met and the law is followed.
Usually the settlor has the right to name the protector and
may even assume that position himself, but the majority legal
view is that a settlor should not also serve as trust protector.
A
protector does not manage the trust but in some cases can
veto or require trustee actions, such as the distribution
of income and assets. Often the protector also has the right
to replace the foreign trustee with another nominee, with
or without cause.
TOP
How
does one transfer Assets to a Trust?
Depending on the particular assets to
be transferred, this can be done in one of the following ways:
1. Funds can be sent by wire transfers, cashier's checks,
postal money orders, or can be delivered in cash personally,
which is not necessarilty advisable.
2. Securities,
Stocks, Bonds, etc. can be transferred with
a phone call to your broker.
3. Personal Property can be transferred by a bill of sale.
4. Automobiles can be transferred by adding the name of your
trust to the title through the Department of Motor Vehicles'
registration. In order to avoid the transfer tax, once you
receive your title, you should go back and remove your name.
This may vary from state to state.
5. Real Estate is normally conveyed as a "quit claim"
deed. This removes you as the owner, but you are still obligated
to pay the note or taxes, but this can be paid by the Trustee.
In most cases, it is recommended that assets such as your
home be maintained in your name while there is an outstanding
debt so that you don't lose the tax benefits. Some people
choose to refinance or pull the equity out of their assets
so they can transfer the funds to their trust.
6. Personal Income can be transferred a number of ways. Thus,
exact methods can be given for the specific transfer on a
need to know basis. You can discuss this with your Trustee
once your trust is established.
TOP
Belize
Asset Protection Trusts
Why
should I choose a Belize Trust?
In privacy aware jurisdictions like
Belize, there is no requirement to register the trust with
the government, and the terms of the trust agreement and the
beneficiaries are protected against desclosure. The terms
are also not available in public records. Moreover,
the Trustees are not allowed to disclose information about
the trust unless a local court order requires it.
Belize
does not impose taxes of any kind on the Settlor, the Beneficiaries,
nor on the income or capital gains earned by the trust.
A
Social Security Number is not required and there are no reporting
requirements whatsoever. So, there is no requirement for the
Trustee to file trust accounts with the local tax authority
thus further preserving the confidentiality of the trust's
activities. This enables the Settlor to keep his or her financail
affairs in complete confidentiality and his or her property
safe from claims, judgments, or bankruptcy proceedings. Taxes
from any other country cannot be imposed on earnings or assets
of non-domestic, irrevocable descretionary Belize trusts.
Depending
on the residence for tax purposes of the Settlor and the Beneficiaries,
it is often possible to make distributions of capital or income
from the Trust completely free of tax. In this case, many
reporting requirements would either be eliminated or vested
in the Trustees....
Belize trusts are specially designed to effectively protect
the Settlor's assets from attack by erstwhile creditors, thereby
preserving the Settlor's assets for the enjoyment of the Settlor
and his or her selected Beneficiaries.
TOP
What
is the main advantage of non-public registration in Belize?
This creates privacy for the Settlor
so that the Trust's activities and the identity of the beneficiaries
are fully protected.
TOP
Laws
Surrounding Foreign Trusts
What
if the Settlor or Grantor wants to name him or herself the
Protector of the Trust as well?
To
protect the trust, when
a Settlor serves as trust Protector, the trust must have an
anti-duress clause requiring the offshore trustee to
ignore any orders from the Protector issued "under duress,"
as they would be when issued pursuant to a domestic court
order.
TOP
What
powers and to what degree does U.S. Court have over persons
holding foreign trusts?
A
U.S. court does have theoretical enforcement powers, including
ordering a U.S. person to repatriate any offshore funds or
assets under a threat of a finding of civil contempt and possible
fines. But even that possibility is negated by a properly
established offshore trust with an anti-duress clause in its
declaration. The clause permits a U.S. trust settlor to claim
truthfully that he or she is legally unable to comply with
the U.S. court's demand since the foreign trustee and/or court
will not honor the U.S. court's orders or the trust creator's
wishes under such circumstances.
As
to possible contempt rulings against a domestic settlor of
a foreign trust, the U.S. Supreme Court has twice held that
a U.S. person cannot be held in contempt by a court for failure
or inability to do what is not within his power to do, unless
he created that impossibility himself.
TOP
For a breakdown
of all costs, please visit http://www.1offshorebanksource.com/international_business_company_rates.htm.
|