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The Bahamas speeds up permanent residency application process

The Bahamas Government amended its National Investment Policy (NIP) last month to provide accelerated permanent residency consideration for investors and individuals purchasing a residence valued at US$1.5 million or more. Permanent residence is a status issued to an individual for the duration of his/her life unless revoked, and gives him/her the right to live and or work, but not the right to vote in The Bahamas. An individual seeking permanent residence must make a minimum investment of US$500,000. For more substantive investment of $1.5 million or greater, applications will be reviewed within 21 days. rovided you have all of the...
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Turks and Caicos aim for VAT by 2013

The Turks and Caicos Island passed its 2011/2012 budget last week, which included a major adjustment to the tax system designed to pave the way for the implementation of a value-added tax by 2013. The island is in the middle of a fiscal crisis, with assistance from the UK supporting the government budgets. The economy doubled in size between 2002 and 2008, but public sector spending increased threefold, with a shrinking tax base due to government exemptions and concessions. Tax revenues fell tp 16% of GDP in 2010 from 24% in 2006. The proposed VAT is expected to make up...
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China outbound investment

Chinese non-financial companies made direct investments valued at US$8.5 billion in 974 overseas enterprises in 98 countries and regions around the world in the first quarter of 2011, Yao Jian, spokesperson for the Ministry of Commerce, announced on April 19. With the cumulative outbound direct investments from non-financial companies reached US$ 267 billion at the end of March 2011. Several offshore centers were high on the list of investment destinations, with the largest recipients of outbound direct investment being Hong Kong, Australia, the Cayman Islands, Luxembourg, Iran, the United States, Singapore, Burma, Brazil, Cambodia and Laos. Direct investments in Australia...
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India cracks down on investment in Mauritius

The Indian Finance Ministry wrote to the government of Mauritius last month requesting changes to their double taxation agreement enabling more information to be exchanged for tax purposes. India would like an agreement to include specific provision of sharing of banking information and also an article on assistance in the collection of taxes, said Sudhir Chandra, Chairman of the Indian Central Board of Direct Taxes (CBDT). India has complained for years about the ease of ound tripping or Indian companies establishing in Mauritius and then reinvesting in India in order to cut down on taxes. In order to cut down on...
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Guernsey receives approval to list companies on Hong Kong Stock Exchange

According to South China Morning Post, Guernsey companies have been given approval to list on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange (HKEx), following an agreement reached by the exchange committee. A statement on the Exchange's website on Wednesday 18 May confirmed the agreement was made on Thursday 24 March, as Guernsey follows fellow Channel Island Jersey which received approval to list its incorporated companies on the HKEx last year. Guernsey Finance chief executive Peter Niven said the development was of particular importance because it allows Guernsey providers to match its competitor jurisdictions in meeting demand from clients in the Far East. Later...
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Samoa to move back to the future

In the 1890s England, a young man, who was under the guardianship of his godfather since the decease of his parents, yearned to enter into wedlock with his godfather daughter. His godfather, opposed to the affair, prescribed a seemingly impossible prerequisite for their union, that is, if three Sundays would happen to be in one week. Exerting his knowledge of the International Date Line, the young man proposed an imaginary scenario that three Sundays did concur in one week. The main character of the 19th Century Edgar Allan Poe novel may now be able to find a contemporary counterpart, Samoa....
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The Cayman Islands still atop the incorporation destinations list for Chinese companies

Chinese companies looking to incorporate offshore have a wide range of locations to choose from. The Cayman Islands, Bermuda, the British Virgin Islands (BVI), Hong Kong and Jersey are amongst the best-known jurisdictions. Tax-friendly policies and corporate structures designed to facilitate stock market listings mean these jurisdictions are favored by venture capitalists seeking easy ways to cash in on their investments. Here a typical scenario: Investors want a Chinese company to list overseas, so they set up a special-purpose vehicle (SPV) in an offshore location, and restructure the firm domestic operations into a wholly foreign-owned enterprise in which the SPV...
中文

Where China's Top IPOs List: Offshore

More Chinese banks and other influential colossal organizations will be offering offshore in their preference of better-regulated foreign exchanges than the mainland's premature bourses. The prospect for the vast majority of Mainland China stock investors doesn seem to be very bright. The only two viable options for equity investment in China are the premature exchanges in Shanghai and Shenzhen. And those are trading at perennial lows, despite China's overheated, $4 trillion domestic economy, which is regarded a primary powerhouse for global recovery. The reason: Both are crammed an awful lot of smallish well-connected local players who have a fine reputation in...