Offshore company for trading

cabum

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Hi everybody!

I've got the next question. I'm considering opening an offshore company (Seychelles or Panama maybe). Then I'm going to open an account with IB and trade US stocks and options on stocks on behalf of that company.
Am I going to have any problems with IRS? Cause this countries are tax free for income obtained in other countries. Or I would need to pay taxes in US since income is obtained in US?
Thanks
 
Cabum,
I'm not familiar with the tax law in your country, but the comment already made is widely applicable. I'm not active in the area of tax law anymore so please understand I am not touting for business when I suggest your course of action should be to pay a fairly nominal fee to a tax specialist in your own country to advise you on this matter. I think in the longrun you will find any such expense more than repaid.
By the way there are many multinational groups active in tax advice and if you pick one of them you will probably find they can also hook you up in-country with an associate office to assist with getting the offshore company in place. That's important as the setting up of such a company is a minefield with plenty of 'traps' for the unwary to fall into.
 
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Caburn, you can setup a company and trading account in a place like Panama with a full house brokerage house which allows you to trade US and most markets around the globe on their platform. Since you are Panama based there´s no tax under Panama law on capital appr. on investments.

Panama Brokerage
 
Hi guys just wanted to share with you that I have used Companies Express to incorporate companies. Very fast, very polite and great service.

Thanks
Tom
 
Good For You Tom. If you ever want a best choice of online trading platforms for your company, give the team at investorseurope a buzz.

Cheers
Pierre B.
 
According to Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) filings, Citigroup Inc. has a whopping 17 Panamanian subsidiaries, while American International Group, Morgan Stanley and American Express each have one.

Many of the top 100 federal contractors also have Panamanian subsidiaries: BearingPoint, Caterpillar, Dell, EDS, Fluor, General Mills, International Shipholding, Johnson & Johnson, Kraft Foods, Mantech International, McDermott International [a U.S. corporation which reincorporated as a Panamanian firm], Merck, PepsiCo, and Proctor & Gamble. Others top U.S. corporations with subsidiaries in Panama include Altria, Cisco, Ingram, News Corporation, Pfizer, and Sunoco.
Panama has over 350,000 foreign-registered companies (i.e. mostly subsidiaries of foreign multinationals), all of which face low to no taxes and regulation. This high rate of foreign incorporation – the country is reportedly second only to Hong Kong
 
St Kitts is a nil tax haven - no income / corporation or capital gains tax
St. Kitts, recently signed an agreement with the OECD Global Forum Working Group on Effective Exchange of Information (“the Working Group”). The Agreement represents the standard of effective exchange of information for the purposes of the OECD’s initiative on harmful tax practices.
ST. Kitt´s has signed information exchange agreements in 2009 with: New Zealand, Netherlands Antilles, Aruba, Denmark and The Netherlands.
Automatic exchange of information (also called routine exchange by some countries) involves the systematic and periodic transmission of “bulk” taxpayer information by the source country to the residence country concerning various categories of income (e.g. dividends, interest, royalties, salaries, pensions, etc).
Recent bilateral agreements, 2009 (by date of signature)

Ecuador has no intentions of signing any tax treaties with the tax cops. Other countries who are not signing are as follows: Russian Federation, Venezuela, Bolivia, Brazil, Cuba, Saudi Arabia, Oman, Abu Dabi, Qatar, Ukraine, Lithuania, Nigeria, North Korea, Iraq, Iran, Suriname. Ghana, Egypt, Jordan, Jamaica, Lebanon, Syria, Libya, North Korea, Yemen, Oman, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Romania, Bulgaria, Uzbekistan, Kazahkstan, Georgia, Azerbaljan, Turkmenistan, Peru, Paraguay, Thailand, Indonesia, Vietnam, and many African under developed nations. In only 5 countries the tax authorities do not have access to suspicious transaction reports.

Panama is not signing anything. Panama is one of the very few countries in the world that has never signed any sort of tax treaty. No TIEA, no double taxation, no tax treaty of any sort. In Panama all tax offenses are civil including tax fraud. When one country requests information relating to a crime, there is a principle applied called dual criminality. Dual criminality means that the crime in question must be a crime in both countries. The dual criminality provisions provide safeguards to prevent abuses. Since Panama has no crimes pertaining to taxes this is not an issue in Panama.
 
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once you moved money into UK you have to pay tax. the other question who is going to know about it if you bring a suitcase with cash.

however considering new technologies and social pressure... if you are pumping loads of cash every year sooner or later it will resurface - you will buy a house too big or a car is too flashy and some friends of yours will report you to authorities.

then you will run across the borders with the suitcase and eventually die caught by snow storm in Iceland or eaten by crocs in a swamp or killed by a romanian drug dealer

:cool:
 
once you moved money into UK you have to pay tax. the other question who is going to know about it if you bring a suitcase with cash.

however considering new technologies and social pressure... if you are pumping loads of cash every year sooner or later it will resurface - you will buy a house too big or a car is too flashy and some friends of yours will report you to authorities.

then you will run across the borders with the suitcase and eventually die caught by snow storm in Iceland or eaten by crocs in a swamp or killed by a romanian drug dealer

:cool:

Better to burn out than to fade away though eh? ;)
 
If you're going to make stacks of money with your trading, just move to Bermuda for 5 years or 10 years or something. Then move back. You pay your Bermudan tax and that's it. It's not like the HMRC will tax you retrospectively for having loads of dosh.
 
I am just wondering who still comes to this thread/forum that has made a sea change for tax reasons
 
Hi,
I also would also be interested to see if their is someone who has made leap into tax free haven.

Thanks
 
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