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Encyclopedia > Offshore investment
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Offshore investment is the keeping of money in a jurisdiction other than one's country of residence. Offshore jurisdictions are a commonly accepted solution to reducing excessive tax burdens levied in most countries to both large and small scale investors alike. Selected offshore domiciles are superficially viewed by some as havens used by to conceal or protect illegally acquired money from law enforcement in the investor's country. Although this may be the case, ligitimate investors also take advantage of higher rates of return or lower rates of tax on that return offered by operating via such domiciles. The advantage to this is that such operations are both legal and less costly than the solutions offered in the investor's country - or "onshore". Locations favoured by investors for low rates of tax are known as offshore financial centers or (sometimes) tax havens. Image File history File links Unbalanced_scales. ... An offshore company is one which does not conduct substantial business in its country of incorporation. ... A tax haven is a place where certain taxes are levied at a low rate or not at all. ...


Offshore solutions are accessible to anyone who can meet the minimum investment amount or pay the obligatory fees required to open such an entity.


Tax is the driving force behind 'offshore' activity. Due to offshore solutions investors are able to conduct investment activities in a profitable fashion. Often, taxes levied by an investor's home country are critical to the profitablitiy of any given investment. Using offshore domiciled special purpose vehicles an investor may reduce this burden allowing the investor to achieve greater profitability overall.


Another reason why 'offshore' investment is superior to 'onshore' investment is because it is less regulated, and the behavior of the offshore investment provider, whether he be a banker, fund manager, trustee or stock-broker, is freer than it could be in a more regulated environment.


Reasons for offshore investment: Invest redirects here. ...

  • Asset protection
  • Privacy

Forced heirship is a reference to the testamentary laws which limit the discretion of the testator to distribute assets under a will or codicil on death. ... The term hedge fund dates back to the first such fund founded by Alfred Winslow Jones in 1949. ... Whilst there is no precise definition of what amounts to an Offshore Financial Centre (or OFC), the term is usually meant to refer to low-tax, lightly regulated jurisdictions which specialise in providing the corporate and commercial infrastructure to facilitate the use of those jurisdictions for the formation of offshore... This article contrasts tax evasion, tax avoidance and tax mitigation. ... Money laundering is the practice of engaging in financial transactions in order to conceal the identity, source and destination of the money in question. ... This article contrasts tax evasion, tax avoidance, tax resistance and tax mitigation. ...

See also


  Results from FactBites:
 
Offshore investment - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (368 words)
Offshore investment is the keeping of money in a jurisdiction other than one's country of residence.
Investors may choose offshore investment to conceal or protect illegally acquired money from law enforcement in the investor's country; or take advantage of higher rates of return or lower rates of tax on that return than offered by the investor's country.
The first answer is because it is less regulated, and the behavior of the offshore investment provider, whether he be a banker, fund manager, trustee or stock-broker, is freer than it could be in a more regulated environment.
Offshore - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (253 words)
Offshore banking - relates to the banking industry in offshore centres.
Offshore investment - relates to the wider financial services industry in offshore centres.
Offshore funds specifically relates to collective investment in offshore centres.
  More results at FactBites »

 

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