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IMPORTANT
WARNING:
The contents of this article and the attached
report have been compiled in good faith by Investorsoffshore.com
to provide assistance to investors, but do not
constitute investment advice or recommendations.
Investors should not rely upon the information
given in order to choose types or routes of investment
but should make their own independent enquiries
before making choices. Investorsoffshore.com has
taken reasonable care in researching and presenting
the information herein but makes no representations
as to its accuracy and accepts no liability for
actions taken or not taken as a result.
Under this particular heading of equity
investment we will deal with direct, personal investment into publicly-quoted
equities, other than through conventional stock exchanges, whether from
an onshore or offshore base, and whether by an individual, or through
a corporate vehicle or a trust. We will cover direct equity purchase through
a dealer, spread betting, contracts for differences, and hedge funds insofar
as they specialize in very directed equity investment.
There are other routes for direct equity
investment, of course: a private banker may well advise and supervise
equity investment; investment or mutual funds invest in equities more
often than not; and pension arrangements are often based on equity investment.
See the other InvestorsOffshore special features for relevant details.
Choosing an Investment Base
The first decision any direct equity investor
ought to make is where to base her trading. Probably, few investors actively
consider this question until it's already too late, and the tax damage
has been done. That's understandable if investment begins with a few thousand
dollars or equivalent, almost as a hobby, and gradually builds up. The
investment range we are dealing with here is bigger (from $100,000 to
$5m) and forethought is essential if more than $100,000 is to be put into
equities.
The decision where to base equity trading
or investment does not necessarily have to follow a general decision about
a personal investment base, and the different tax profile of equity investment
may require that it doesn't. Thus, low-yielding Internet stocks held for
the long-term are a capital gains tax problem, not an income problem,
whereas money-market investment is the reverse.
There is a vast range of individual situations,
and this section will concentrate on finding and buying investments, rather
than on location. See the investorsoffshore.com
DIY investment selector for investment guidance based on specific
residential and investor profiles.
The Benefits of Offshore Equity Investment
This is not the place for a survey of
the development of equity markets, or their current prospects, which are
well covered in many types of publication, but it is worth focussing on
the virtues of emerging and offshore listings, at least for those individuals
who can make use of them. Equity investment used to mean investment in
one's local stock market, to the more or less complete exclusion of foreign
stocks. There were good reasons for this:
- Capital controls prevented or complicated
the purchase and sale of international securities;
- Absence of double tax treaties resulted
in double taxation of dividends and sometimes even sale proceeds;
- Research on foreign equities was poor
or completely absent;
- Brokerages did not offer foreign stocks,
or charged very high commission rates on their purchase;
- Currency risk was not easy to lay
off.
All of these factors have more or less
disappeared, except to a degree the last one, and it is far easier nowadays
to hedge a foreign exchange exposure if one needs to.
It has traditionally not been all that
easy to buy foreign equities, but this has changed somewhat, although
not initially thanks to the established stock exchanges and their parochial
dealers. Perhaps it is unfair to blame the dealers, because they are hamstrung
by regulation in the same way as are other types of financial provider
and intermediary. Most countries employ the concept of 'recognised exchanges',
whereby stocks listed on a foreign exchange can be sold provided that
the foreign exchange in question has a regulatory regime that is up to
international standards.
As is also the case with private banking
and fund management, this means that share dealing in high-tax (= highly
regulated) countries tends to be constrained by regulation, and excludes
shares offered on unrecognised exchanges. The high level of regulation
needed to become 'recognised' inevitably tends to increase costs both
for listed companies and for dealers. Partly for this reason (but mostly
because the growth of the mutual fund sector created demand for tax-efficient
listing regimes) offshore jurisdictions began to open stock exchanges.
This was the situation when the Internet
began to make it possible for an electronic dealing network to bypass
national regulatory regimes altogether, and rapid growth took place in
electronic share-dealing networks which offer freedom from stamp duty
(still applied at 0.5% in the UK, for instance) and access to a very wide
range of international securities.
It is impossible at this stage to tell
where this process will end. At present, most share offerings are made
through geographically-fixed exchanges, but it may happen in the future
that this trade moves elsewhere. Certainly, recent years have seen dramatic
growth in issuance of various specialized types of equity in such markets
as the CISX (Channel Islands Stock Exchange), and in the issuance of emerging
markets stocks in such places as Hong Kong.
The Taxation of Offshore Equity Investment
An important consequence of the nation-state-based
model of share trading was that countries could and did apply withholding
taxes to dividend payments without hurting their exchanges. Most shareholders
were nationals, and could offset withholding tax against their total tax
liabilities. Foreign buyers mostly lived in other high-tax areas, and
double tax treaties offered them an equivalent tax credit on foreign dividends.
Mostly, withholding tax rates in high-tax countries vary between 15% and
30%.
Almost universally, offshore jurisdictions
with stock exchanges exempt non-residents from withholding taxes on dividends,
thus encouraging companies to list. www.lowtax.net
contains full details of the withholding tax regime in all 40 offshore
jurisdictions covered (within each jurisdiction, in the section Offshore
Legal and Tax Regime). As liquidity develops outside the 'legacy' exchanges,
so companies and their shareholders are likely to want to transact their
business away from withholding taxes, leading to an explosion in offshore
corporate listings.
All this to explain why investment into
companies listed offshore may be a major component of future corporate
financing, and can be used now to a limited extent by investors who have
the ability to take in gross dividends without incurring further taxation.
How To Make Emerging Market And Offshore Equity Investments
Anyone can buy equities from anywhere,
but if there is to be an offshore dimension, then there are two components
that can be optimised: dealing costs, and taxation.
Dealing costs are a combination of trading
fees, stamp duty, and making sure that one gets best execution.
Nothing in life is simple, and these three
factors interact with each other. It seems obvious to avoid London stamp
duty, but if execution is 1% better in London on average, then the stamp
is saved back twice over. The situation is volatile, and no direct advice
can be offered here, other than to stress that an investor should consider
all three factors before deciding how to deal.
On the surface, it seems that one of the
brokerages offering Internet service may be the best route - but delays,
crashes and other obstacles often get in the way.
In order to optimise taxation, it is necessary
either to have residence in a low-tax area, or, for a high-tax resident,
to have an offshore structure that distances income and capital gains
from the investor's domestic tax regime. Either way, the ownership of
equity assets is going to be offshore, and the main question is, where
to base it?
The choice of an offshore jurisdiction
is in itself a difficult, and to some extent a circular task. You will
not find it easy to distinguish between the merits of different offshore
jurisdictions, or the facilities they offer, until you have got to know
them quite well. This is the point at which you might think that an onshore
adviser in your own home country can help you - and it may be so, but
remember that only a very skilled, knowledgeable and above all, objective,
adviser is going to be useful. Such a person is hard to find.
www.lowtax.net
is designed to help people who do not have access to the perfect adviser
we just described. www.lowtax.net
is not an investment adviser, and is no substitute for professional advice,
which is an absolute necessity for anyone planning a move offshore. But
the www.lowtax.net
site does contain a wealth of information about 40 offshore jurisdictions,
which is designed to help you to make a preliminary choice of one or a
few offshore jurisdictions suited to your circumstances, which you can
then explore in depth.
The choice of an offshore or low-tax jurisdiction
as a base needs to be guided mostly by your own particular circumstances,
but if investments are to be made into companies (or funds) listed offshore,
or if an offshore brokerage is to be used, then these aspects need to
be borne in mind when making a choice.
Purely as a factual guide, here is a list
(in alphabetical order!) of those offshore jurisdictions with stock exchanges
and, in the case of those that belong to IOSCO, you may want to assume,
a fairly high level of sophistication in terms of investor protection.
Bahamas
Bermuda (BISX)
Cayman Islands (CSX)
Cyprus
Dubai (DIFC)
Guernsey (CISX)
Hong Kong (HKSE)
Ireland (ISE)
Luxembourg
Malta
Mauritius
Switzerland
www.lowtax.net
has information on the stock exchanges and the regulatory regime for each
of the above jurisdictions.
Many emerging markets have their own stock
exchanges as well, of course, but these can be treacherous and it may
often be best for a non-expert to invest in even high-profile emerging
markets such as the BRIC countries (Brazil, Russia, India and China) through
specialized funds, or at least with plenty of expert advice, as offered
by the private wealth departments of major banks.
Spread
betting
This flexible technique for speculating on financial markets and sporting
events has grown in popularity hugely in recent years, and has spread
(sorry!) far beyond its original UK base to become a popular investment
technique in many countries world-wide. Many spread-betting operators
are well-capitalized and regulated gaming companies, often themselves
publicly listed and sometimes based offshore. Obviously a prospective
spread-bettor should carry out due diligence on a firm before using it.
Many firms allow both online and telephone betting.
Although the services, markets, and events that the client can access
through each bookmaker may vary, all spread betting is based on the same
principle. Basically, the bookmaker makes a prediction as to the result
of a future event in the form of high and low estimates (the difference
between these two figures is called the spread, or the difference between
the price the bookmaker will sell to you, and the price he will buy from
you), and if you think the result will be higher than their spread, you
'buy' at the top end, whereas if you predict that the result will be lower,
you 'sell' at the low end. Having decided whether you are going to bet
down or up from the spread, you must then decide how much money you are
prepared to risk per point of the bet. For example, if the spread quoted
was 6000-6012 on the FTSE 100 index, a GBP1 a point bet would make GBP1
in profit for every point that the FTSE exceeded the upper figure at the
expiry of the bet (and sadly, it works in exactly the same way for losses).
Theoretically,
spread bets can be placed on any event for which
there can be an upper or lower limit, but in practice
the majority of bookmakers providing spread betting
services tend to limit themselves to sporting
and political events and financial markets. This,
however, is not much of a limitation, as there
are a wide variety of options open to clients
in these areas. For example, one leading spread
betting enterprise allows bets on stock indices,
share prices, currencies, interest rates, commodities,
and options, while its sporting arm allows customers
to place bets on such diverse events as soccer,
horse racing, rugby, cricket, golf, tennis, American
football, motor racing (deep breath
), greyhound
racing, snooker, and boxing.
Most
specialist bookmakers providing a spread betting
service will offer both deposit and credit accounts,
but in either case, you will need to be aware
of the Notional Trading Requirement. (Yes, it
is as dull as it sounds, but you need to know
about it, so don't skip this bit. Here goes
)
The NTR is the minimum amount of money required
by the bookmaker to open a new position, and is
a risk figure applied to each market that the
bookmaker quotes, and it is what they see as a
fair reflection of the potential daily volatility
of that market. The figure varies from market
to market, but if, for example, you wanted to
bet GBP5 per point on the FTSE futures market,
the NTR could be 300 times your stake, which would
make the minimum deposit required to run that
position GBP1,500.
Spread betting is appealing to ever greater numbers
of investors for several reasons, not least of
which is the absence of capital gains tax on profits
(unlike conventional share trading, where CGT
applies to trading gains in many countries), and
the lack of stamp duty on transactions (most interesting
in the UK; strictly speaking, the transaction
is a bet, rather than an investment. Hence the
name.)
However,
by its very nature spread betting is more risky
than traditional, fixed odds betting, or conventional
domestic investment, where participants are usually
a little more protected. If you judge wrong, you
are likely to lose a great deal, and any losses
made on a spread bet cannot be offset against
capital gains on ordinary investments.
Spread betting, to conclude, is not suitable for long-term investment,
or for placing your hopes, dreams, and life savings in, but can potentially
be very profitable in the short term. The rules regarding residential
restrictions do not seem to set in stone as yet, perhaps due to the removal
of geographical restrictions facilitated by the Internet. However, every
organisation offering spread betting recommends that their customers should
examine the taxation laws of their country of residence before making
any decision, so it may well be worth seeking professional advice.
Contracts for Difference
(CFDs)
On
a more international note, some bookmakers also
offer Contracts for Difference (sometimes known
as Margined Equity Contracts), which are a type
of equity derivative designed to give active traders
extra leverage in their share trading. At the
moment, most brokers do not offer a CFD service,
but CFDs are rapidly becoming popular both in
the UK and internationally as a mechanism for
large but short term speculation, so this may
well change.
Institutions
and qualifying private investors can use a CFD
to go 'long' or 'short' of a share (as with spread
betting), and positions are taken on margin -
typically, only 20% of the contract value has
to be maintained in the CFD account. This allows
users to establish much larger positions than
would usually be possible, and in effect, the
investor is able to speculate with much more money
than he actually has by borrowing from his broker,
and using the shares he has bought as collateral.
If
the share price moves in the investor's favour,
the CFD provider is obliged to pay margin each
day to him/her, but conversely, if the share price
moves against the investor, he/she will then have
to pay 'variation margin' to the broker. For example:
Say you were to decide to take a long position
on 10,000 ICI shares at a quoted price of 500p
(it must be firmly stated here that this is a
fictitious example, as opposed to a recommendation).
This is the equivalent to a GBP50,000 exposure,
on which a GBP10,000 initial deposit is payable.
If the shares rise to 550p in the next 3 days,
you should receive GBP5,000 from your CFD provider,
minus whatever interest charges are payable. If
you then decide to close the CFD on the fourth
day, when the price quoted is 555p, you should
have made a total profit (before dealing commission
and interest charges) of GBP5500. At the moment,
there is no stamp duty payable on this type of
transaction, as there is no physical stock transaction,
but profits made on CFDs are liable for Capital
Gains Tax.
Sounds good, doesn't it? But although it is possible to get rich quickly
trading Contracts for Differences, because of the highly margined nature
of this type of transaction, it is also possible to get poor quickly -
if the share price goes against you, the margin payments (which have to
be paid in cash) can prove crippling. CFD trading is not for novices,
and regulatory authorities insist that investors only trade in this way
if they have experience of both equity and margin trading. The high minimum
deposit is also (deliberately) prohibitive, and most CFD providers will
only do business with investors who can prove substantial liquid assets.
Minimum transaction sizes can sometimes be as high as GBP25,000. In conclusion,
then, CFDs may be the most economical option for large, short-term trades,
executed by qualified investors, but should probably be avoided by the
newer investor.
Hedge Funds
Hedge
funds, in the popularly accepted sense, are investment
partnerships that invest in a variety of securities
and seek above average returns through active
portfolio management. Hedge funds are generally
not regulated by any of the domestic securities
regulatory bodies, and therefore do not raise
funds via public offerings, and are not allowed
to engage in general solicitation or advertising.
Although hedge funds have long been popular in the US, all-encompassing
regulation in the European Union has meant that their marketing has been
severely restricted in many EU member states until recently, which have
each had to repackage the funds in different ways, in order to make them
palatable to regulators. However, recent agreements reached by the Council
of Economics and Finance Ministers should eventually lead to a situation
in which an investment product approved in one member state may be marketed
anywhere in the EU, and where the range of approved products may be substantially
extended to include hedge funds. This would give a tremendous boost to
the funds' popularity in Europe.
The EU's UCITS III legislation has already allowed the development of
a new range of compliant hedge funds, often dubbed hedge-lite.
More than 200 hedge fund offerings now comply with UCITS III guidelines,
according to Hedge Fund Research Inc (HFR). According to HFR, this number
has grown rapidly in the last 18-24 months, before which time few hedge
funds offered UCITS III products to investors. Total hedge fund assets
under management in UCITS III-compliant funds now exceed USD35bn, a figure
that is likely to continue to grow in the near future.
Undertakings for Collective Investment in Transferable Securities, or
UCITS, are a set of EU directives that allow investment funds to distribute
throughout the EU on the basis of a single authorization from one member
state; UCITS III is the latest iteration of these directives. Despite
the focus on EU investors, UCITS III compliant offering are not limited
to EU-located or domiciled hedge fund firms; in fact, firms across all
regions have created investment vehicles which are complaint with the
UCITS III standards. In some cases, firms are receiving UCITS III approval
for existing fund vehicles, while in other cases, firms are launching
new products which conform to UCITS III guidance.
“As the structural requirements of institutional investors continue
to shape the landscape of the industry, funds conforming to UCITS III
guidance have generated a significant amount of interest,” said
Ken Heinz, President of Hedge Fund Research, Inc.
“UCITS III constitutes a compelling and tractable set of guidelines
which serve to greatly enhance product transparency, cross-border distribution,
and risk control, while at the same time providing an attractive alternative
to other regulatory proposals under consideration by various financial
authorities globally," Heinz observed.
It used to be the case that hedge fund investments were only available
to high-net-worth individuals able to stump up USD1m or more; this may
still be true of some types of fund, but UCITS funds are often available
to institutional investors with a minimum investment of GBP30,000 and
to retail investors with a stake as low as GBP7,000. These numbers are
fairly typical of the more accessible types of hedge fund which have been
launched since the hedge fund sector met its high noon in 2008 and early
2009, with asset values tumbling as markets crumpled and investors fled
the rigid, unfriendly structures which seemed to benefit only their managers.
The regulatory framework provides a degree of reassurance to investors
that fund managers wish to tempt back into the alternative investment
markets after the shocks of the economic crisis, and yet they are exempt
from the scope of the European Commission's controversial draft Alternative
Investment Fund Manager directive. In addition, as far as the UK is concerned,
the reduced rate of capital gains tax has worked to the detriment of offshore
hedge funds, which do not qualify for capital gains tax treatment in contrast
to UCITS onshore funds.
There are more hedge fund strategies available than it is possible to
shake a substantially sized stick at, but for an equity investor the most
interesting strategies would be :
- Sector investing: This is where the manager focuses on specific
industry sectors with favourable growth prospects, such as health or
technology
- Investment in emerging markets: Fairly self-explanatory really;
this is when a hedge fund manager invests in debt and equity securities
in countries with less well-developed financial markets which have strong
prospects for rapid growth.
- Long/short equity investing: This strategy focuses on long
and short investing in equities which a fund manager feels are under-
or overvalued at a particular time. These investments may be focussed
on one particular sector, or diversified across several industries.
So now you know. As previously mentioned, due to their unregulated and
potentially risky nature, hedge funds are not allowed to advertise to
individual investors (at least not onshore), and therefore, are usually
offered to limited numbers of affluent investors and institutional clients,
who are subject to a lock-up period of at least a year before they can
make withdrawals from the fund. It used to be the case that only those
with very substantial net worth would be considered for hedge fund investment
partnerships, and although the minimum deposit required for some funds
is lower than it was (due to their rise in popularity in recent years),
it is usually still quite steep, and consequently, direct hedge fund investment
should really only be considered by those with substantial liquid assets
that they can easily do without for a year or more.
Whichever way you choose to approach hedge fund investing, you should
do some due diligence of your own, both before you get involved, and through
the duration of your involvement with the fund. Below are some of the
basic issues you will need to look at before investing in a hedge fund,
or fund of hedge funds (although this is by no means comprehensive, so
if you are thinking of investing in this way, professional advice is a
must):
The
Fund
-
Volatility:
Look at the fund's monthly (or weekly) volatility,
as well as its annual or quarterly returns,
checking whether the annual return was generated
fairly evenly through the entire year, or whether
it was generated by large gains in one or two
specific periods
- Breadth:
Check whether the manager turned in an even
result on all issues, or whether one lucky trade
accounted for the majority of the gains made
in a particular period.
- Repetition:
Is the investment process easily repeatable,
or was the fund's good performance caused by
an isolated incident in the period under examination?
- Strategy
specific risk: Examine which strategies
are commonly used by the particular fund manager
in question, and look at the risks inherent
in these strategies. Look at the risk management
philosophy within the fund, and examine the
precautions taken against currency exposure,
interest rate exposure, technical and other
problems, and marauding elephants. (Just kidding
with the last one, although a fund manager that
does have a contingency plan in the event of
elephant attack is probably one to whom you
can entrust your money!)
- Leverage:
Look at the fund's rationale for leverage, ascertaining
the leverage caps, the average leverage used,
and whether leverage has ever been revoked for
any reason.
The People
-
Background: Look at the general background of
the fund, including the division of responsibility
amongst the principals, its formation and structure,
fund terms and relationships, and possible conflicts
of interest.
-
Manager profile: Look into the background, qualifications,
and employment history of the fund manager,
and obtain references and current investor testimonials.
-
Reporting: Ascertain who the custodian of the
fund's assets is, and who the prime broker is.
(An important point to remember is that a cheque,
or wire transfer of funds should never go directly
to the fund itself, but should always be sent
to the prime broker, or custodial bank.)
-
Administration: Find out whether the manager
uses a third party administrator to calculate
monthly returns, and ask for background on the
fund, their calculation and verification methods,
where their data comes from, and what procedures
they have in place for monitoring that the terms
of the fund's offering are being upheld.
-
Audits: Every fund should be audited annually,
and if the fund is new, they should have an
auditor under contract for the end of the first
year. Check how experienced the auditors of
your preferred hedge fund are at performing
this type of audit, and contact them to obtain
background knowledge of the fund and its manager.
-
Other investors: Finally, ask for information
about the profile of the other investors; are
they mostly individual, or institutional investors?
Onshore or offshore investors? Look at their
average net worth, if you can, and also the
extent of diversification in their portfolios.
By now, of course, you may be wondering if you
can be bothered with all that, and contemplating
making yourself a nice cup of tea. That, of course,
is also an option. Although hedge fund due diligence
seems like a lot of work, it is worth remembering
that if you are planning to invest in a fund of
funds, a lot of this work (although not all) will
be done for you. And if you are going it alone,
chances are that you will not see this background
research as a chore, because you are likely to
be investing substantial amounts of money. Conventional
mutual funds require somewhat less effort, because
their more regulated nature means that some of
the issues pertinent to hedge funds do not apply
to them. However, lack of regulation (one of the
reasons why this research has to be so comprehensive)
is one of the factors which makes hedge funds
so potentially profitable
Here we get to the bottom line - if you are a wealthy investor with a
fair tolerance for risk, and a desire to see your investments hedged against
market volatility, hedge fund investment may be the way to go. If you
have all of the above, but a slightly smaller liquid net worth, then you
may want to consider investing in a fund of hedge funds, or some other
similar vehicle. And if you want to know what's on TV tonight, and whether
you can have your cup of tea yet, you may have come to the wrong place
!
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