International Business Companies
An IBC is a corporation that
is incorporated (formed) in a zero tax or low tax jurisdiction and is
typically authorized to do business anywhere in the world except its
home country (i.e., an IBC formed in St Vincent and the Grenadines may
do business anywhere in the world except St. Vincent and the
Grenadines). Just as with U.S. corporations, the same person may act as
the shareholder, director, officer of the company. As long as the
Company has only one shareholder, one person may act for the company. If
the Company has more than one shareholder then a minimum of two
directors is needed.
An IBC (also known as "International Business
Company" or "International Business Corporation") is a legal entity,
usually a Corporation or Limited Liability Company, formed outside of
one's country of residence.
The dictionary.com definition of
international is, "Of, relating to, or involving two or more nations."
(In this instance, you live in one nation and your IBC is created in
another.)
A business is, of course is, "A commercial enterprise or establishment."
A company is "A business enterprise; a firm."
Alternatively,
a corporation is "A body that is granted a charter recognizing it as a
separate legal entity having its own rights, privileges, and liabilities
distinct from those of its members."
So, when you create an IBC
you are creating an entity that has been granted a charter by a foreign
government to conduct a commercial enterprise. You have created a legal
foreign "person" who you control. You can open a bank account in the
name of your IBC in a foreign country. Your international business
company can receive income. Your international business corporation can
operate a business. There are a number of countries in the world that
have greater financial privacy laws than the US, Canada, UK, Australia,
China and other lawsuit-prone or high-tax, jurisdictions.
With the
advent of the Internet, a business location is really not nearly as
significant as it has been traditionally. The location may now be no
more digital data that can be accessed from an Internet server located
anywhere in the world.
Therefore, creating an IBC allows one to
operate a business or hold existing funds securely and privately, off of
the "radar screen" of your legal enemies.
We have all heard the
stories of attorneys who have their own full-time private investigators.
They are hired by many law firms to track down assets of people who
have lost legal battles. They are also hired to uncover the assets of
potential legal targets. It is said that if they know your name and a
little bit about you, they can find every account in the United States
on which you are the signatory. They can even find your bank balances
down to the penny.
I have seen this happen and I have to say, the speed in which the investigator can find assets even amazed me.
Attorneys
use this information to decide whether or not to accept a case. If
assets cannot be located, it would be likely an attorney would not
accept the case - especially on a contingent-fee basis.
This is
where the International Business Company comes in. The IBC allows you to
hold assets out of your name in a safe, secure financial centre. At the
same time, the IBC also allows you to retain 100% control of your IBC's
assets. When an attorney hires a private investigator to locate assets,
it is extremely unlikely that they will be discovered. Keep in mind, in
the offshore jurisdictions we typically utilize, there is no social
security number or social insurance number required in order to open an
IBC bank account. It is a crime for a banker to reveal your association
with a bank account to an individual outside of the bank. Your ownership
of an IBC is not recorded in any public record.
There are
countries with IBC laws that take privacy very seriously. The asset
protection provisions in some countries are extremely strong. Many of
these countries are island nations that have become financially strong
by offering a safe-haven in which to store one's money.
One of the
strongest IBC asset protection laws found in on the Island of St
Vincent. St Vincent is located in the Caribbean Sea and is about a 35
mins. flight East of Barbados.
The St Vincent and the Grenadines
IBC laws offer substantial privacy of ownership. The St Vincent and the
Grenadines Limited Liability Company (LLC) law provides an additional
barrier. There are provisions in St Vincent and the Grenadines LLC law
to protect LLC assets from being seized in a lawsuit if the registered
office of the bank holding the assets is registered in Switzerland.
Corporations have stockholders. LLC's Registered in St Vincent and the
Grenadines with the Swiss Trust Bank are effectively judgment proof.
St
Vincent and the Grenadines IBC law makes it extremely difficult to
establish who a director or principal of a company is since the Swiss
Trust Bank has to abide by the Swiss Banking code and deny the existence
of the company, its directors and who its customers are. Therefore,
assets such as offshore bank accounts can be protected from judgment
creditors in two ways:
1. Privacy because St Vincent and the Grenadines IBC law protects the owner of the LLC from being revealed.
2.
Asset protection, because St Vincent and the Grenadines IBC law
protects the assets within the LLC from being associated with a member
of the LLC.
Therefore, the bank account for your St Vincent and
the Grenadines LLC can be protected from being taken away from you in
the event of a personal lawsuit. Many people use IBCs to operate
businesses such as online pharmacies, Internet gaming sites, etc.,
protect assets from lawsuits and provide for tax-free revenue for
residents of countries that do not tax worldwide income.
Offshore Company Formation, What is Offshore Company Formation?
Posted by CB Blogger
Blog, Updated at: 12:17 PM
