Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category
U.S. Persons Foreign Assets and Entities Reporting for the FATCA, FBAR and BE-10 Forms Due in June (Part II) | Kluwer International Tax Blog
Posted by William Byrnes on June 17, 2015
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U.S. Persons Foreign Assets and Entities Reporting for the FATCA, FBAR and BE-10 Forms Due in June
Posted by William Byrnes on June 15, 2015
Three significant filing deadlines fall in June, one today and two more on the last day of the month.
(1) The 15 June FATCA Form 8938 filing deadline (with the income tax return) with the IRS for a U.S. person who lives abroad and has specified foreign assets of at least $50,000 on the last day of the tax year or at least $75,000 at any time during the tax year.
(2) The 30 June FBAR filing deadline with FINCEN for a U.S. person that has a financial interest in, or signature authority over, a foreign financial account whereby the aggregate value of all the persons foreign financial accounts exceeds $10,000 during the calendar year.
(3) The 30 June BE-10 form filing deadline with the Department of Commerce, Bureau of Economic Analysis, for a U.S. person who is a first time BE-10 filer and had a direct or indirect ownership or control of at least 10 percent of the voting stock of an incorporated foreign business enterprise, or an equivalent interest in an unincorporated foreign business enterprise at any time during the U.S. person’s 2014 fiscal year.
read the discussion at Kluwer International Tax Blog
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FinCEN releases new FBAR filing procedure !!!
Posted by William Byrnes on May 12, 2015
See the complete post at http://lawprofessors.typepad.com/intfinlaw/2015/05/fincen-provides-additional-e-filing-method-for-fbar-individual-filers.html
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How Do Tax Rates Effect Innovation and Inventors ? Empirical evidence provides an answer!
Posted by William Byrnes on May 4, 2015
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International Financial Crimes News
Posted by William Byrnes on April 24, 2015
| $4 billion in CFTC Fines for LIBOR and Euribor Manipulation: Deutsche Bank, Rabo, Citibank, RBS, JP Morgan, UBS, Barclays, HSBC
With this Order, the CFTC has now imposed penalties of nearly $2.7 billion on six financial institutions and two interdealer brokers for LIBOR, Euribor, and other interest rate benchmark abuses. In addition, for similar misconduct relating to foreign exchange benchmarks, the CFTC recently imposed $1.4 billion on five financial institutions, for a total of over $4.1 billion in penalties in the CFTC’s enforcement program focused on ensuring the integrity of global financial benchmarks. The fine imposed on Deutsche Bank represents the largest fine in the CFTC’s history. |
| Deutsche Bank’s Pleads Guilty, Pay $2.519 billion in Penalties & Disgorgement, for Manipulating LIBOR
Together with approximately $1.744 billion in regulatory penalties and disgorgement—$800 million as a result of a Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) action, $600 million as a result of a New York Department of Financial Services (DFS) action, and $344 million as a result of a U.K. Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) action—the Justice Department’s criminal penalties bring the total amount of penalties to approximately $2.519 billion.
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| FinCEN Issues Quarterly Update of SAR Stats
The Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN) has issued the SAR Stats quarterly update, which provides information on Suspicious Activity Reports (SARs) filed through March 31, 2015. The updated statistics can be viewed at http://www.fincen.gov/news_room/rp/sar_by_number.html. Quarterly Update (April 2015) Depository Institutions…
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Financial Law Headlines
Posted by William Byrnes on April 16, 2015
| Former New York Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver’s Headaches Mount as Son-in-Law Indicted in Ponzi Scheme
Marcello Trebitsch, son-in-law of former New York Assembly speaker Sheldon Silver, was arrested on wire fraud and securities charges stemming from his alleged scheme to defraud multiple investors of approximately $7 million through a fraudulent investment scheme that he allegedly perpetrated for at least five years.
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| The Lehman Brothers Bankruptcy B: Risk Limits and Stress Tests
Investment banks are in the business of taking calculated risks. Risk management infrastructure facilitates the safe pursuit of profits and the balancing of associated risks.
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The answer is – it’s a close call. Both will probably, at the current very weak exchange rate, come in around US$6 billion (20 billion reais). Reuters reports that the tax fraud at the Ministry of Finance may be worth…
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| Organized Cybercrime Ring Member Sentenced to 150 Months in Prison for Selling Stolen and Counterfeit Credit Cards
Jermaine Smith, aka “SirCharlie57,” aka “Fairbusinessman,”, of the identity theft and credit card fraud ring known as “Carder.su” was sentenced today to 150 months in federal prison for selling stolen and counterfeit credit cards over the Internet. He was further ordered to pay $50.8 million in restitution.
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| Texas A&M Hires Nine Highly Published Law Faculty
Texas A&M announced the addition of nine new faculty beginning in the fall of 2015. “Hiring these new faculty is part of our effort to reduce our student-faculty ratio, which will improve the quality of your classroom experience. ” states…
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These are the 10 least tax-friendly states for retirees | LifeHealthPro
Posted by William Byrnes on April 13, 2015
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Calculating an Individual Shared Responsibility Payment
Posted by William Byrnes on March 11, 2015
The individual shared responsibility provision in the Affordable Care Act calls for you and your dependents to have qualifying health care coverage for each month of the year, qualify for a health coverage exemption, or make an Individual Shared Responsibility Payment when filing your federal income tax return.
In general, the annual payment amount is the greater of a percentage of your household income or a flat dollar amount, but is capped at the national average premium for a bronze level health plan available through the Marketplace. You will owe 1/12th of the annual payment for each month you or your dependents don’t have either coverage or an exemption.
If you must make a payment, you can use the worksheets located in the instructions to Form 8965, Health Coverage Exemptions, to figure the shared responsibility payment amount due.
Tax Facts on Individuals & Small Business
Due to a number of recent changes in the law, taxpayers are currently facing many questions connected to important issues such as healthcare, home office use, capital gains, investments, and whether an individual is considered an employee or a contractor. Financial advisors are continually looking for competitive information to help them provide the best answers for their clients and to obtain new clients. National Underwriter’s Tax Facts series is the only resource written specifically for the financial advisor and producer providing fast, clear, and authoritative answers to pressing questions, and it does so in the convenient, timesaving, Q&A format for which Tax Facts has been famous over 50 years.
Anyone interested can try Tax Facts Online risk-free for 30 days, with a 100% guarantee of complete satisfaction. Call 1-800-543-0874.
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IRS’s Top Ten Identity Theft Prosecutions
Posted by William Byrnes on March 10, 2015
International Financial Law Prof Blog.
Continuing its enforcement push against refund fraud and identity theft, the Internal Revenue Service announced this week (IR 2015-
37) the Top Ten Identity Theft Prosecutions for Fiscal Year 2014 (FY14). The ongoing efforts to bring identity thieves to justice remains a significant priority as part of the IRS’s comprehensive identity theft strategy focusing on preventing, detecting and resolving identity theft cases as soon as possible.
Statistical Information
In fiscal year 2014, the IRS initiated 1,063 identity theft related investigations. Criminal Investigation enforcement efforts resulted in 748 sentencings as compared to 438 in FY 2013, an increase of 75 percent. The incarceration rate rose 7.1 percent to 87.7 percent. The courts also imposed more jail time in 2014, with the average months of those being sentenced rising to 43 months as compared to 38 months in FY 2013. The longest sentence was 27 years.
Enforcement Efforts
During FY 2014, Criminal Investigation dedicated significant time and resources to bringing down identity thieves attempting to defraud the federal government.
The nationwide Law Enforcement Assistance Program provides for the disclosure of federal tax return information associated with the accounts of known and suspected victims of identity theft with the express written consent of those victims. There are now more than 755 state/local law enforcement agencies from 47 states participating. Since the start of the program, more than 6,776 requests were received from state and local law enforcement agencies.
The Identity Theft Clearinghouse (ITC) continues to develop and refer identity theft refund fraud schemes to CI Field Offices for investigation. Since its inception in FY 2012, it has received over 7,600 individual identity theft leads. These leads involved approximately 1.47 million returns with over $6.8 billion in refunds claimed.
CI continues to be the lead agency that investigates identity theft and is actively involved in more than 78 multi-regional task forces or working groups including state, local and federal law enforcement agencies solely focusing on identity theft. CI has one of the highest conviction rates in all of federal law enforcement — at 93.4% — and is the only federal law enforcement agency with jurisdiction over federal tax crimes. CI is routinely called upon to be the lead financial investigative agency on a wide variety of financial crimes including international tax evasion, identity theft and transnational organized crime.
“Identity theft is a crime that carries significant consequences, and these cases send a warning to criminals,” said Richard Weber, Chief, IRS-Criminal Investigation. “Our top 10 cases represent the seriousness of these crimes and the magnitude of the consequences that will be faced by those who victimize honest taxpayers and steal from hard-working Americans.”
Top Ten Identity Theft Cases
read about the top 10 at International Financial Law Prof Blog.
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International Financial Law Blog headlines
Posted by William Byrnes on March 3, 2015
| FATF Action on Terrorist Finance
The ISIL phenomenon shows a new type of terrorist organisation with unique funding streams that are crucial to its activities; cutting off this financing is therefore critically important.
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| Three Swiss bankers face U.S. obstruction charges in tax case and soon extradition
Roger Keller, a onetime client adviser in Zurich at Wegelin & Co, was one of three bankers at the now-defunct Swiss private bank charged in a 2012 indictment in New York federal court for helping U.S. taxpayers hide more than $1.2 billion in assets.
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| Anti Trust Division 2014 Total in Criminal Fines Collected
The Department of Justice collected $1.861 billion in criminal fines and penalties resulting from Antitrust Division prosecutions in the fiscal year that ended on Sept. 30, 2014. The Department of Justice collected $1.861 billion in criminal fines and penalties resulting…
85th Country Signs Up For Global FATCA (Automatic Tax Information Exchange) The Seychelles became the 85th signatory of the Multilateral Convention on Mutual Administrative Assistance in Tax Matters.
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TJSL Hosted Moscow State University Professors and Students | Thomas Jefferson School of Law
Posted by William Byrnes on February 13, 2015
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Tax Season: Ready, Set, Go !
Posted by William Byrnes on January 16, 2015
IRS Starts 2015 Tax Season; Free File Opens Today,
IRS YouTube Videos:
- Help for Taxpayers: English /ASL
- When Will I Get My Refund: English / Spanish
- Welcome to Free File: English
- IRS Tax Payment Options: English / Spanish
- Do I Have To File A Tax Return: English / Spanish
The nation’s 2015 tax filing season begins today and a growing array of online services is available to assist taxpayers. Understanding the Affordable Care Act and how this impacts a taxpayer will be a popular feature this year.
Taxpayers have until Wednesday, April 15, 2015 to file their 2014 tax returns and pay any tax due. The IRS expects to receive about 150 million individual income tax returns this year. Like each of the past three years, more than four out of five returns are expected to be filed electronically.
The IRS Free File program, available at IRS.gov, will open Friday for taxpayers, and the IRS will begin accepting and processing all tax returns on Tuesday, Jan. 20.
This year’s return will include new questions to incorporate provisions of the Affordable Care Act (or ACA). The majority of taxpayers – more than three out of four – will simply need to check a box to verify they have health insurance coverage. For the minority of taxpayers who will have to do more, www.IRS.gov/aca features useful information and tips regarding the premium tax credit, the individual shared responsibility requirement and other tax features of the ACA.
“Our employees will be working hard again this season to help the nation’s taxpayers,” IRS Commissioner John Koskinen said. “We encourage people to use the tools and information available on IRS.gov, particularly given the long wait times we anticipate on our phone lines. As always, taxpayers can benefit by filing electronically.”
Koskinen announced that taxpayers can begin preparing their returns using the Free File system on Friday, Jan. 16. Available only at IRS.gov, Free File offers two filing options:
• Brand-name software, offered by IRS’ commercial partners to about 100 million individuals and families with incomes of $60,000 or less; or
• Online fillable forms, the electronic version of IRS paper forms available to taxpayers at all income levels and especially useful to people comfortable with filling out their own returns.
E-file, when combined with direct deposit, is the fastest way to get a refund. More than three out of four refund recipients now choose direct deposit. People who e-file make fewer mistakes, and it costs nothing for those who choose Free File. In all, 14 software companies will be participating in this year’s Free File program.
Taxpayers who purchase their own software can also choose e-file, and most paid tax preparers are now required to file their clients’ returns electronically. In addition to Free File, commercial software companies also are currently available for taxpayer use.
The IRS will begin accepting and processing all returns – whether e-file, Free File or paper tax returns — on Jan. 20.
Like last year, the IRS expects to issue more than nine out of 10 refunds within 21 days. Again, the fastest way to get a refund is to e-file and choose direct deposit. It takes longer to process paper returns, it will likely take an additional week or more to process paper returns meaning that those refunds are expected to be issued in seven weeks or more.
Health Care Basics
The Affordable Care Act requires that a taxpayer and each member of their family either has qualifying health insurance coverage for each month of the year, qualifies for an exemption , or makes an individual shared responsibility payment when filing their federal income tax return. Some moderate-income taxpayers may also qualify for financial assistance to help cover the cost of health insurance purchased through the Health Insurance Marketplace. Taxpayers will fall into one or more of the following categories:
• Check the box. Most taxpayers will simply check a box on their tax return to indicate that each member of their family had qualifying health coverage for the whole year. No further action is required.
Qualifying health insurance coverage includes coverage under most, but not all, types of health care coverage plans. Taxpayers can use the chart on IRS.gov/aca to find out if their insurance counts as qualifying coverage.
• Exemptions. Taxpayers may be eligible to claim an exemption from the requirement to have coverage. Eligible taxpayers need to complete the new IRS Form 8965, Health Coverage Exemptions, and attach it to their tax return. Taxpayers must apply for some exemptions through the Health Insurance Marketplace. However, most of the exemptions are easily obtained from the IRS when filing a return.
• Individual Shared Responsibility Payment. Taxpayers who do not have qualifying coverage or an exemption for each month of the year will need to make an individual shared responsibility payment with their return for choosing not to purchase coverage. Examples and information about figuring the payment are available on the IRS Calculating the Payment page.
• Premium Tax Credit. Taxpayers who bought coverage through the Health Insurance Marketplace should receive Form 1095-A, Health Insurance Marketplace Statement, from the Marketplace by early February. This form should be saved because it has important information needed to complete a tax return.
If the Form 1095-A is not received by early February, contact the Marketplace where coverage was purchased. Do not contact the IRS because IRS telephone assistors will not have access to this information.
Taxpayers who benefited from advance payments of the premium tax credit must file a federal income tax return. These taxpayers need to reconcile those advance payments with the amount of premium tax credit they’re entitled to based on their actual income. As a result, some people may see a smaller or larger tax refund or tax liability than they were expecting. Use IRS Form 8962, Premium Tax Credit (PTC), to calculate the premium tax credit and reconcile the credit with any advance payments.
The IRS also reminded taxpayers that a trusted tax professional can also provide helpful information about the health care law. A number of tips about selecting a preparer and national tax professional groups is available on IRS.gov.
The IRS urges all taxpayers, especially those claiming the premium tax credit, to make sure they have all their year-end statements in hand before they file their return. This includes Forms W-2 from employers, Forms 1099 from banks and other payers, and, for those claiming the premium tax credit, and Form 1095-A from the Marketplace. Doing so will help avoid refund delays and the need to file an amended return later.
Tax Facts on Individuals & Small Business
Due to a number of recent changes in the law, taxpayers are currently facing many questions connected to important issues such as healthcare, home office use, capital gains, investments, and whether an individual is considered an employee or a contractor. Financial advisors are continually looking for competitive information to help them provide the best answers for their clients and to obtain new clients. National Underwriter’s Tax Facts series is the only resource written specifically for the financial advisor and producer providing fast, clear, and authoritative answers to pressing questions, and it does so in the convenient, timesaving, Q&A format for which Tax Facts is famous.
Anyone interested can try Tax Facts on Individuals & Small Business, risk-free for 30 days, with a 100% guarantee of complete satisfaction. For more information, please call 1-800-543-0874.
Posted in Taxation, Uncategorized | Leave a Comment »
Is Acquirer Responsible for FCPA Pre-Acquisition Conduct of Target Company?
Posted by William Byrnes on January 12, 2015
See International Financial Law Prof Blog.
Is Acquirer Responsible for FCPA Pre-Acquisition Conduct of Target Company?
full analysis at http://lawprofessors.typepad.com/intfinlaw/2015/01/is-acquirer-responsible-for-fcpa-pre-acquisition-conduct-of-target-company.html
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Paul Greenwood, former Islanders co-owner, sentenced to 10 years for billion dollar ponzi scheme
Posted by William Byrnes on December 9, 2014
read the full story on International Financial Law Prof Blog.
The U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) announced that Paul Greenwood operated a $1.3 billion investment scam where he and a co-Defendant misappropriated at least $554 million from commodity pool participants, was sentenced to 10 years in federal prison for charges related to his participation in the scam. Earlier, on July 28, 2010, Greenwood pled guilty to a six-count criminal indictment on the charges, including a commodities fraud charge in violation of the Commodity Exchange Act (CEA). read the full story on International Financial Law Prof Blog.
Posted in Uncategorized | 1 Comment »
Conference on the Russian Economy: Challenges, Goals, Achievements
Posted by William Byrnes on November 26, 2014
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SEC Investor Bulletin: Trading Suspensions
Posted by William Byrnes on October 13, 2014
The SEC’s Office of Investor Education and Advocacy is issuing this Investor Bulletin to help educate investors about the SEC’s rules and regulations related to trading suspensions. The federal securities laws generally allow the SEC to suspend trading in any stock for up to ten business days. This bulletin answers some of the typical questions we receive from investors about trading suspensions. A list of companies whose stock is currently subject to an SEC trading suspension, or which previously has been subject to an SEC trading suspension, may be found here.
Why would the SEC suspend trading in a stock?
The SEC may suspend trading in a stock when the Commission is of the opinion that a suspension is required to protect investors and the public interest. Circumstances that might lead the Commission to suspend trading include:
- A lack of current, accurate, or adequate information about the company, for example, when a company is not current in its filings of periodic reports;
- Questions about the accuracy of publicly available information, including in company press releases and reports, about the company’s current operational status, financial condition, or business transactions;
- Questions about trading in the stock, including trading by insiders, potential market manipulation, and the ability to clear and settle transactions in the stock.
Why couldn’t the SEC forewarn investors that it was about to suspend trading in a stock?
The SEC cannot announce that it’s working on a suspension. We conduct this work confidentially to maintain the effectiveness of any related investigation we may be conducting. Confidentiality also protects a company and its shareholders if the SEC ultimately decides not to issue a trading suspension. The SEC is mindful of the seriousness of suspensions, and carefully considers whether it is in the public interest and for the protection of investors to order a trading suspension.
What happens when the ten business day suspension period ends?
The SEC will not comment publicly on the status of a company when the ten-day suspension period ends because the company may still have serious legal problems. For instance, the SEC may continue to investigate a company to determine whether it has defrauded investors. The public would not know if the SEC is continuing its investigation unless the SEC publicly announces an enforcement action against the company.
Furthermore, when an SEC trading suspension ends, a broker-dealer generally may not solicit investors to buy or sell the previously-suspended over-the-counter (“OTC”) stock until certain requirements are met. Before soliciting quotations or resuming quotations in an OTC stock that has been subject to a trading suspension, a broker-dealer must file a Form 211 with the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (“FINRA”) representing that it has satisfied all applicable requirements, including those of Rule 15c2-11 and FINRA Rule 6432.
Among other things, Rule 15c2-11 requires broker-dealers to review and maintain certain documents and information about the company, including in certain cases:
- the company’s state of organization, business line, and names of certain control affiliates;
- the title and class of the securities outstanding; and
- the company’s most recent balance sheet and its profit and loss and retained earnings statement.
No broker-dealer may solicit or recommend that an investor buy an OTC stock that has been subject to a trading suspension unless and until FINRA has approved a Form 211 relating to the stock. If there are continuing regulatory concerns about the company, its disclosures, or other factors, such as a pending regulatory investigation, a Form 211 application may not be approved.
However, limited or “unsolicited” trading can occur in an OTC stock that has been subject to a trading suspension after the suspension ends but before a Form 211 is approved. This may allow investors to trade the stock when a broker or adviser has not solicited or recommended such a transaction. Even though such trading is allowed, it can be very risky for investors without current and reliable information about the company.
Will trading automatically resume after ten days?
It depends on the market where the stock trades. Different rules apply in different markets.
For stocks that quote in the OTC market (which includes stocks quoted on the Bulletin Board and OTC Link (f/k/a Pink Sheets)), quoting doesnot automatically resume when a ten-day suspension ends. Before OTC stock quoting can resume after a suspension period, SEC regulations require a broker-dealer to review specific information about the company in accordance with Exchange Act Rule 15c2-11 and FINRA Rule 6432. If a broker-dealer does not have confidence that a company’s financial statements are reasonably current and accurate in all material respects, especially in light of the questions that may have been raised by the SEC suspension action, then a broker-dealer may not publish a quote for the company’s stock. The OTC markets function through dealer systems where only broker-dealers may quote and facilitate trading in OTC stocks.
In contrast to stocks that trade in the OTC market, stocks that trade on an exchange resume trading as soon as an SEC suspension ends.
If the suspended stock resumes trading, why is it trading at a much lower price?
The trading suspension may raise serious questions and cast doubts about the company in the minds of investors. While some investors may be willing to buy the company’s stock, they will do so only at significantly lower prices.
Take precautions following an SEC trading suspension: check for reliable information.
Investors should be very cautious in considering an investment in a stock following a trading suspension. At the very least, investors should assure themselves that they have current and reliable information about a company before investing.
- Research the Company: Always research a company before buying its stock, especially following a trading suspension. Consider the company’s finances, organization, and business prospects. This type of information often is included in filings that a company makes with the SEC.
- Review the Company’s SEC Filings: This information is free and can be found on the Commission’s EDGAR filing system. Some companies are not required to file reports with the SEC. These are known as “non-reporting” companies. Investors should be aware of the risks of trading the stock of such companies, as there may not be current and accurate information that would allow investors to make an informed investment decision.
- Be Skeptical: Investors should always ask why someone provides them a “hot” tip. Investors should also do their own research and be aware that information from online blogs, social networking sites, and even a company’s own website may be inaccurate and sometimes intentionally misleading:
If current, reliable information about a company and its stock is not available, investors should consider seriously whether this may be a good investment.
Why would the SEC suspend trading of a stock when it knows that such action will hurt current shareholders?
The SEC suspends trading in a security when it is of the opinion that the suspension is required in the public interest and to protect investors. Because a suspension often causes a dramatic decline in the price of the security, the SEC suspends trading only when it believes that the public may be making investment decisions based on a lack of information, or false or misleading information. A suspension may prevent potential investors from being victimized by a fraud.
How can investors find out if the stock will trade again after a suspension?
Investors can contact the broker-dealer who sold you the stock or a broker-dealer who quoted the stock before the suspension. Ask the broker-dealer if it intends to resume publishing a quote in the company’s stock.
If there is no market to sell my security, what can investors do with their shares?
If there is no market to trade the shares, they may be worthless. Investors may want to contact their financial or tax advisers to determine how to treat such a loss on their tax returns.
What can investors do if the company acted wrongfully and they have lost money?
If investors want to get their money back, they will need to consider taking legal action on their own. The SEC cannot act as their lawyer. Investors must pursue all of their legal remedies themselves or with the assistance of legal counsel they engage themselves. For more information about how to protect your legal rights, including finding a lawyer who specializes in securities law, read our flyer, How the SEC Handles Your Complaint or Inquiry.
To learn how to file an arbitration action against a broker-dealer, investors can contact the Director of Arbitration at FINRA. FINRA also offers mediation as an option before going to arbitration.
Where can investors get information about trading suspensions?
Investors can find a list of companies whose stocks have been suspended by the SEC since October 1995 on our website.
Posted in Compliance, Uncategorized | Tagged: SEC, trading suspension | Leave a Comment »
Is FATCA failing? Here is my reply. (Haydon Perryman)
Posted by William Byrnes on October 2, 2014
FATCA & CRS Training. Advice. Consultancy.
Is FATCA failing? A reply.
This is a question that can be asked given that only 104K of FFIs had registered on the IRS Portal by September 24, 2014.
http://apps.irs.gov/app/fatcaFfiList/flu.jsf
When you compare 104K to the IRS estimate that between 400K and 600K need to register, 104K does indeed look small.
On the face of it that means there are a lot of Non Participating FFIs out there. A look at the regulations will tell us that withholding starts in 2014.
It is a fact that the regulations state that withholding starts in 2014. But let me ask a question: is that actually what happens in reality?
Withholding occurs on NP-FFI (Non Participating FFIs) and RAH (Recalcitrant Account Holders).
FATCA has been factored into on boarding. For those who doubt this, just try opening an account – you’ll soon find that there are questions in the onboarding process that address…
View original post 1,115 more words
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How to make FATCA even more complicated
Posted by William Byrnes on October 1, 2014
FATCA & CRS Training. Advice. Consultancy.
The September 2014 Award for making FATCA even more complicated goes to the US IRS.
This award is well deserved as with just a little effort this complication could have made been avoided.
The subject is one of country codes. A dry subject even at the best of times but the IRS have managed to make it quite interesting and also made it more difficult for practitioners.
A foreign financial institution (FFI) needs a GIIN. GIINs are provided by the IRS upon completion of registration on the IRS FATCA Portal.
The last three digits of the GIIN contain the ISO 3166 Code of the Country to which the FFI belongs for FATCA purposes.
ISO 3166 Codes are well established:
http://www.iso.org/iso/country_codes.htm
ISO 3166 Codes also make FATCA slightly easier to wield because the last three digits of the GIIN, in theory, tell you which IGA to apply (if applicable).
It is…
View original post 6,841 more words
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Four Things to Know about Net Investment Income Tax
Posted by William Byrnes on September 17, 2014
IRS Tax Tip 2014-48
Starting in 2013, some taxpayers may be subject to the Net Investment Income Tax. You may owe this tax if you have income from investments and your income for the year is more than certain limits. Here are four things from the IRS that you should know about this tax:
1. Net Investment Income Tax. The law requires a tax of 3.8 percent on the lesser of either your net investment income or the amount by which your modified adjusted gross income exceeds a threshold amount based on your filing status.
2. Net investment income. This amount generally includes income such as:
- interest
- dividends
- capital gains
- rental and royalty income
- non-qualified annuities
This list is not all-inclusive. Net investment income normally does not include wages and most self-employment income. It does not include unemployment compensation, Social Security benefits or alimony. Net investment income also does not include any gain on the sale of your main home that you exclude from your income.
After you add up your total investment income, you then subtract your deductions that are properly allocable to this income. The result is your net investment income. Refer to the instructions for Form 8960, Net Investment Income Tax for more on how to figure your net investment income or MAGI.
3. Income threshold amounts. You may owe the tax if you have net investment income and your modified adjusted gross income is more than the following amount for your filing status:
Filing Status Threshold Amount
Single or Head of household $200,000
Married filing jointly $250,000
Married filing separately $125,000
Qualifying widow(er) with a child $250,000
4. How to report. If you owe this tax, you must file Form 8960 with your federal tax return. If you had too little tax withheld or did not pay enoughestimated taxes, you may have to pay an estimated tax penalty.
Due to a number of recent changes in the law, taxpayers are currently facing many questions connected to important issues such as healthcare, home office use, capital gains, investments, and whether an individual is considered an employee or a contractor. Financial advisors are continually looking for updated tax information that can help them provide the right answers to the right people at the right time. This book provides fast, clear, and authoritative answers to pressing questions, and it does so in the convenient, timesaving, Q&A format for which Tax Facts is famous.
Anyone interested can try Tax Facts on Individuals & Small Business, risk-free for 30 days, with a 100% guarantee of complete satisfaction. For more information, please go to www.nationalunderwriter.com/TaxFactsIndividuals or call 1-800-543-0874.
Posted in Taxation, Uncategorized | Tagged: net investment income tax | Leave a Comment »
Court Grants US Extraterritorial Search of Emails
Posted by William Byrnes on September 17, 2014
Feds Pose Privacy Risk by Grabbing Overseas ISP E-mails
read the synopsis by the law firm of Pepper Hamilton LLP …
Warrant Issued Pursuant to the SCA
This matter began with an application by the United States for a “search and seizure warrant” targeting a specific @msn.com e-mail account provided by Microsoft, and used by a person who is the subject of a government narcotics investigation. Magistrate Judge James C. Francis IV issued the warrant, after which Microsoft undertook to locate the data associated with the account. Microsoft determined that there were two buckets of data related to the account, one stored in the United States and the other in Ireland.
The “noncontent” bucket consisted of information such as the sender and recipient e-mail addresses as well as date and time information. Microsoft stored this information in the United States, and produced it in response to the warrant. The “content” bucket of information included the substance of the e-mails and their subject lines. For this particular user, Microsoft stored this information at a data center operated by a Microsoft subsidiary in Dublin, Ireland. Microsoft did not produce this information and instead moved to quash the warrant to the extent that it required information from the Dublin data center. Notably, Microsoft began the practice of using foreign data centers in 2010 to address the problem of “latency” that occurred when the servers were too far away from the user. The Irish data center would typically serve users that live closer to Ireland than the United States.
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Follow Up on FATCA’s Soft GIIN Registration Numbers – or – Why Isn’t Every FFI Excited to Register WIth the IRS?
Posted by William Byrnes on September 4, 2014
free chapter download here —> http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2457671 Number of Pages in PDF File: 58
Think my response to Michael Deblis’ FATCA post may interest my readers – Michael’s article: https://taxconnections.com/taxblog/getting-it-right-on-fatca/#.VAgOLZRdXh6
The actual response to your previous Tax Connections post is that you “should” be correct. I have now lost three ‘should’ bets (July, Aug and Sept) as to the number of registrants.
My educated ‘guess’ back in March (I prefer to call it ‘analysis’ but I’ve been too far off to use that term) put the number of
GIIN registrants at close to 200,000 at this point. Moreover, I calculated with some precision, and understanding of the industry, that the UK would have 10,000 FFI GIINs registered, while France and Germany would each have 5,000.
In my defense, back in April and May I was still of the opinion that only 300,000 FFIs, by that FATCA definition (after exemptions by regulation and by IGA, after sponsored entities), would need to actually register. However, I have been later convinced, in talking with high level bank and financial institution compliance officers in charge of FATCA, that the number if certainly north of 500,000. How far North? There is much disagreement. I think that my discussions with Haydon Perryman of Streveus have been most enlightening for my sometimes myopic US goggles.
How many sponsored entities will there be? Will sponsored entities seek a GIIN anyway (I have heard that this may be the case)?
For countries without a USA DTA, will FFIs simply divest because collecting all the W8s / equivalents is costs more than the relative safety of the T-bill? Some investment professionals say the precipice of divestment is the quarter leading up to gross proceeds withholding. Others say that gross proceeds withholding is the real FFI registration deadline.
And anyway, with the probably adoption of the OECD’s Common Reporting Standards, whether it’s a W8 or an OECD equivalent, all institutions investing in the OECD (and likely BRIC) are going to be collecting tax information. Haydon Perryman sent me PwC’s interesting article on the friction of the US forms versus everyone else’s (well, at least the UK’s) http://www.pwc.com/en_US/us/tax-accounting-services/newsletters/global-information-reporting-withholding/assets/pwc-the-interaction-us-fatca-uk-cdot-poses-unique-challenges.pdf Until I see a Rev Proc blessing another form, it’s still a W8 world.
But along this argument, one potential for the foot dragging is that institutions are figuring out how to handle the back office complexities of collecting the required tax information for at least each country of investment/doing business in. It’s not that they are protesting FATCA. It’s just that FATCA is one piece of an increasingly complex data gathering, management and dissemination puzzle, along with the UK’s requirements and its tax forms (the UK we know about), and how many other countries? And the OECD.
On the other hand, in 2003 I wrote a 900 page report about this exact same FATCA type issue. Same horror stories except then it was called the European Union Tax Savings directive. While compliance for the EU states’ institutions, territories that were drug into it, and 3rd party states like Switzerland, may have been expensive, they survived. Capital flight from Switzerland and the Channel Islands to SIngapore was exactly as predicted. But the compliance was like a snowball rolling down a cliff. Most of the institutions came on-line only at the last moment.
Will October finally see the big jump? Probably not based on the decline of September’s results. But just looking at the UK for a moment, the UK professional associations set an internal suggested best practice deadline of October 25th for GIIN registration. So the November list – I expect to see the UK registration to be higher than the Cayman Islands. The UK Revenue stated, after the IGA was signed, that 75,000 UK entities were still impacted (and I read that as most requiring registration). Cut the 75,000 in half – so at least 30,000 for UK November seems reasonable.
China, Brazil? They’ll register in big numbers – on December 31st. I have read on other blogs that their institutions may roll their interest earning US investments into bonds or securities and hold out another year. Automatic financial information exchange has reached inevitability. So kicking and screaming they may come to the dinner table, but come they will.
free chapter download here —> http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2457671 Number of Pages in PDF File: 58
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Tax Information for Students Who Had a Summer Job
Posted by William Byrnes on September 3, 2014
In IRS Special Edition Tax Tip 2014-13, it discussed the tax issues of students who work summer jobs. Many students take a job in the summer after school lets out. The IRS provided eight tax tips for students who take a summer job.
1. The IRS stated that a student should not be surprised when an employer withholds taxes from the paycheck. But if the student is self-employed, then he or she may have to pay estimated taxes directly to the IRS on certain dates during the year. This is called a “pay-as-you-go” tax system.
2. As a new employee, a student must complete a Form W-4, Employee’s Withholding Allowance Certificate. An employer will use it to figure how much federal income tax to withhold from the paycheck. The IRS Withholding Calculator tool on IRS.gov can help a student fill out the form.
3. Keep in mind that all tip income is taxable. If a student receives tips, then the student must keep a daily log so that he or she can report them to the IRS. A student must report $20 or more in cash tips in any one month to the employer. All yearly tips must be reported on the tax return.
4. Money earned doing work for others is taxable. Some work may count as self-employment. This can include jobs like baby-sitting and lawn mowing. Keep good records of expenses related to this work. Some expenses may be deducted from the income on the tax return. A deduction may help lower the final tax due.
5. If a student is ROTC, then active duty pay, such as pay received for summer camp, is taxable. But the subsistence allowance while in advanced training is not taxable.
6. A student may not earn enough from a summer job to owe income tax. But an employer usually must withhold Social Security and Medicare taxes from any pay. If a student is self-employed, then the student must pay these directly to the IRS. Yet, these count toward coverage under the Social Security system.
7. If a student is a newspaper carrier or distributor, special rules apply. If certain conditions, then the student is considered self-employed. But if those conditions are not met and the student is under age 18, then the student is usually exempt from Social Security and Medicare taxes.
8. The student may not earn enough money from a summer job to be required to file a tax return. Even if that is true, the student will probably want to file. For example, if an employer withheld income tax from the paycheck, then the employee will need to file a return to receive a refund of those taxes. The student can prepare and e-file a tax return for free using IRS Free File.
Finally, see tax rules for students.
Due to a number of recent changes in the law, taxpayers are currently facing many questions connected to important issues such as healthcare, home office use, capital gains, investments, and whether an individual is considered an employee or a contractor. Financial advisors are continually looking for updated tax information that can help them provide the right answers to the right people at the right time. This book provides fast, clear, and authoritative answers to pressing questions, and it does so in the convenient, timesaving, Q&A format for which Tax Facts is famous.
Anyone interested can try Tax Facts on Individuals & Small Business, risk-free for 30 days, with a 100% guarantee of complete satisfaction. For more information, please go to www.nationalunderwriter.com/TaxFactsIndividuals or call 1-800-543-0874.
Posted in Taxation, Uncategorized | Tagged: student, tax return | Leave a Comment »
Tax Facts for Travel For Charities
Posted by William Byrnes on September 1, 2014
In the IRS Summertime Tax Tip 2014-06, it discussed the tax tips associated with travelling for a charity. The IRS directed the tax tips to taxpayers that plan to donate services to charity this summer, such as travel as part of the service.
The IRS disclosed five tax tips to assist with using the travel expenses to help lower taxes when filing the tax return for 2014.
1. A taxpayer cannot deduct the value of your services that is provided to charity. the taxpayer may be able to deduct some out-of-pocket costs paid to provide the services. This can include the cost of travel.
The out-of pocket costs must be:
• unreimbursed,
• directly connected with the services,
• expenses you had only because of the services you gave, and
• not personal, living or family expenses.
2. The volunteer work must be for a qualified charity. Most groups other than churches and governments must apply to the IRS to become qualified. Ask the group about its IRS status before donating services that include out-of-pocket expenses. The Select Check tool on IRS.gov can be used to check a charity’s IRS status.
3. Some types of travel do not qualify for a tax deduction. For example, a taxpayer cannot deduct costs if a significant part of the trip involves recreation or a vacation.
4. A taxpayer can deduct travel expenses if the work is real and substantial throughout the trip. But the expenses may not be deducted if the taxpayer only has nominal duties or does not have any duties for significant parts of the trip.
5. Deductible travel expenses may include:
• air, rail and bus transportation,
• car expenses,
• lodging costs,
• the cost of meals, and
• taxi or other transportation costs between the airport or station and your hotel.
Due to a number of recent changes in the law, taxpayers are currently facing many questions connected to important issues such as healthcare, home office use, capital gains, investments, and whether an individual is considered an employee or a contractor. Financial advisors are continually looking for updated tax information that can help them provide the right answers to the right people at the right time. This book provides fast, clear, and authoritative answers to pressing questions, and it does so in the convenient, timesaving, Q&A format for which Tax Facts is famous.
Anyone interested can try Tax Facts on Individuals & Small Business, risk-free for 30 days, with a 100% guarantee of complete satisfaction. For more information, please go to www.nationalunderwriter.com/TaxFactsIndividuals or call 1-800-543-0874.
Posted in Taxation, Uncategorized | Tagged: charity, Services, Tax deduction, travel | Leave a Comment »
HSBC hired 4,500 new compliance professionals (why aren’t law students preparing for AML careers?)
Posted by William Byrnes on August 26, 2014
Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a Comment »
weekend financial fraud reading
Posted by William Byrnes on August 23, 2014
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Gabriel Bitran, 69, of Newton, a former professor and associate dean of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (“MIT”) Sloan School of Business, and his son Marco Bitran, 39, of Brookline, a Harvard Business School graduate and money manager, were charged with conspiracy to commit securities fraud, wire fraud and obstruction of justice in connection with their hedge fund businesses, GMB Capital Management and GMB Capital Partners. Both Gabriel and Marco Bitran have agreed to plead guilty to the charge. |
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PricewaterhouseCoopers (“PwC”) Regulatory Advisory Services will be suspended for 24 months from accepting consulting engagements at financial institutions regulated by the New York State Department of Financial Services (NYDFS); make a $25 million payment to the State of New York; and implement a series of reforms after improperly altering a report submitted to regulators regarding sanctions and anti-money laundering compliance at Bank of Tokyo Mitsubishi (BTMU). |
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How Did a 21 Year Old, FAU Student Ponzi $10 million From Investors? Donald R. French was a 21 years old FAU student, living in Boca Raton in 2008 when he opened an LLC online “D3 Funds LP”. He moved to Rome, Italy but from 50 investors in Florida, Massachusetts, and Michigan, he… |
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Billionaire Found in Middle of Bribery Case Avoids U.S. Probe Alcoa Inc., the biggest U.S. aluminum producer, pleaded guilty to foreign bribery charges brought by the U.S. Justice Department. Alcoa also settled claims by the Securities and Exchange Commission and agreed to pay a $384 million fine — the fifth-largest such penalty ever. |
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FATCA lecture notes for Seminar B (W-8BEN intro, 2nd lecture)
Posted by William Byrnes on August 22, 2014
- We’ve covered a lot of ground, yet a long journey lies ahead…
Everyone will now have read Chapter 1 which is available for download at http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2457671
I think it appropriate to begin this week with a quote by Senator Russell Long (of Louisiana) who was Chairman of the Finance Committee in 1969. Senator Long, speaking of the Tax Reform Act of 1969 stated: “when the Finance Committee began public hearings on the Tax Reform Act of 1969 I referred to the bill as ‘368 pages of bewildering complexity.’ It is now 585 pages . . . . It takes complicated amendments to end complicated devices.”
Since the original 10 pages of the March 18, 2010 enactment of the Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act, which was as a Pay As You Go revenue raiser for the Hiring Incentives to Restore Employment Act, FATCA has consumed nearly 2,000 pages of regulations, corrections, notices, international agreement models and as of yesterday, 101 international agreements.
To cite some of the important regulatory milestones that will bring us current to July 10, after the HIRE Act was enacted in 2010, the 365 page Draft Regulations were released on Feb 8, 2012, but as Senator Long said “It takes complicated amendments to end complicated devices” the Final Regs released January 28, 2013 came in around 543 pages.
Over the next year, Notices and Corrections added up to another hundred pages, followed by the 565 page Coordinating Regs released Feb 20 of this year. On top of these, add the FFI agreement that was released Dec 26, 2013 but updated just 2 weeks ago on June 24.
This past March and April we saw the release of the new W-8s, Form 8966, Form 1042-S, and finally on June 25 the instructions for the BEN-E. Last, but not least, the IRS, much to its credit, managed to release the new QI agreement before the July 1 expiration of all the former QI agreements.
Last month withholding agents began the chapter 4 withholding of 30% on withholdable payments, such as interest earned on bank deposits, made to payees in 143 countries and their dependencies that do not have one of the 101 IGAs with the US as of today.
While the blog airwaves and commentators have in general been critical of the complexity of FATCA, sophisticated tax compliance officers from the financial industry are actually complementing the US Treasury for having listened to our stakeholder comments and concerns. The complexity within the FATCA regulations, in general, results from drafting exceptions and exemptions, for institutions and entities, from various diligence, reporting, and withholding obligations.
- Trust but Verify…
The United States is a self-reporting and assessment system whereby each year 150 million taxpayers fill in their 1040 with their worldwide income. It is reasonably estimated by various government sources that 10 million of these taxpayers have reporting obligations regarding either their foreign income and / or their foreign accounts. Unfortunately, less than 10% of Americans with international income or asset exposure are compliant with at least filing the dreaded, but very simple, FBAR form that requires reporting of signatory authority over accounts if the collective balance exceeds $10,000. Only approximately 800,000 FBARs were filed for 2012 for that group of potentially 10 million American taxpayers. With so little FBAR reporting, it’s no wonder that Congress and the IRS suspect that hundreds of billions of American’s foreign income goes unreported on the 1040 each year. Absent alternative information forms, the IRS does not have a scalable method to verify 1040 and select for audit the returns of potential tax evaders.
In the infamous words of Ronald Reagan, “Trust but Verify”, the US tax system is not just based upon self-reporting. The United States Congress has deputized financial institutions, and some businesses, to be information collectors, and verification auditors. We know this information collection as forms 1099, W8, W9, and the 1042-S. And we know the verification standards, such as by example “actual knowledge” and, requirements for “due diligence”.
- Bureau of Information Retrieval …
Each year, tens of millions of these forms are transmitted to the IRS with information about US and foreign taxpayers. Allow me briefly to introduce some salient metrics that have been collected by my research colleague, Haydon Perryman, who is Director of Compliance Solutions of Strevus”.
- We know that when QI was introduced only 20% of W8s were fit for purpose. We also know that 13 years after QI’s inception that only 35% of W8s are fit for purpose.
- We also know form interviews with large financial institutions that on average after a financial institution solicits a pre-existing customer for a new W8 it takes between 5 and 7 months for that W8 to be submitted, valid or otherwise.
When we apply these metrics to the customer base for whom we must reach out, – obtaining W8s or W9s (or their equivalent substitutes under an IGA), – validate those withholding certificates – and then we repeat this process in the 65% of the cases where the W8 submission was ‘invalid’, we can rapidly appreciate the size and scale of the challenge.
Moreover, the IRS estimates that 400,000 – 600,000 FFIs will register on its FATCA portal this portal, although my industry colleagues put the true figure around one million. Now imagine every FFI registrant approaching its customers and counter-parties for withholding certificates and other documentation. Industry estimates that there will be 900 million withholding certificates requiring validation for FATCA purposes.
- Analysis of GIIN Registrations
The July 1st GIIN list of financial institutions registrations is instructive in that it is indicative of certain compliance patterns that have emerged. Again, my colleague Haydon Perryman and myself have undertaken hours of in-depth research of the June and now the July GIIN registrations lists.
87,933 financial institutions and their branches registered from the 250 countries and their dependencies recognized by the IRS for FATCA purposes. Note that not ALL countries and dependencies are recognized by the IRS, such as Kosovo. And some jurisdictions, which are not recognized by the State Department, such as the State of Palestine, are recognized by the IRS.
Of the total 87,000 registered FFIs, 83,000 representing almost 95% are based in the 101 countries and jurisdictions that as of yesterday have an IGA. 48,000 FFIs registered from Model I IGA jurisdictions whereas approximately 15,000 of the FFIs registered as Model 2 reporting FFIs and branches. Note that these 15,000 Model 2 FFI registrations are impacted by the FFI Agreement changes of June 24, 2014. Most of the 4,000 FFIs from the remaining 143 countries and jurisdictions on the GIIN list registered probably either as Participating FFIs or branches.
While the exact number is unknown, based on the July GIIN list, industry and foreign government feedback, it is reasonable to estimate that half a million firms, funds, and other entities, such as trusts, will need to register. In its FATCA FAQs, the IRS has said that “At this time, the full FFI list is expected to be less than 500,000 records.”, thus implying that it would be close to half a million registrations. Therefore we can reasonably infer that less than 20% of the global FFIs are currently registered for FATCA. Moreover, all these non-registered FFIs in the 143 countries without an IGA must be treated as non-participating and withheld upon for FATCA by withholding agents.
Unfortunately, the compliance story is even worse when we consider how many of the 87,000 FFIs are members of an expanded affiliated group. 3,700 of the FFIs registered are parents of “expanded affiliated group” (“EAG”) that have registered the affiliated group members, which includes entities related by 50% and more ownership. What this slide and our data informs us is that while the large global institutions from the G5 have registered, the vast majority of smaller FFIs have not. Interestingly, Cayman Islands leads with 813 EAG parents, followed very far behind by the UK.
Of the 250 countries and jurisdictions with FFI registrations, almost 20% of the total registered FFIs are from the Cayman Islands firms, representing 14,207 registrations. Our research of the Cayman registrations shows a significant number of investment funds among that total.
The United Kingdom almost 7,000 FFIs are less than 10% of the 75,000 UK FFIs requiring registration as estimated by the United Kingdom Revenue. Note that the 75,000 figure was reduced from the UK government’s initial estimate of 300,000 after it reassessed self-certifying FFIs that are not required to registered, based upon the USA-UK IGA. The UK list is dominated by fund management firms and their various funds, private equity and the plethora of feeder funds investment trusts and quite a few trusts.
NAFTA has thus far been a large disappointment for Treasury with only 2,500 FFIs registered from Canada and 410 from Mexico. However, Canada and the US already automatically exchange information about bank interest, and the US-Canada IGA removed the registration of trusts as FFIs, so it is expected that Canadian FFIs will have registered and be in full compliance by the end of the year.
Brazil leads the BRIC countries with 2,362 FFI registered, followed by Russia at 729, India at 321 and the world’s 2nd largest economy China only has 213.
The European countries and financial centers have mixed registration results. France (2,422), Germany (2,894), Netherlands (2,280) and Ireland (2,007), Switzerland (4,279), Luxembourg (4,061), Austria (2,978), Guernsey (2,395), Jersey (1,618), Isle of Man (312), Lichtenstein (239), and Gibraltar (96).
Caribbean – BVI (2,373), Bahamas (6,146), Panama (484), Bermuda (1,579).
- GATCA
FATCA is the most important development for a globalized model of international exchange of tax information that will be made on an automatic basis. But its complexity and the high related costs of FATCA have been the source of important frictions and pressures at the highest level between the stakeholders concerned: the U.S. Treasury, the governments of all other countries, and the financial industry.
To briefly mention two frictions of local law that conflict with the FATCA regulations: firstly, many countries’ national data protection laws do not allow the transmittal of customer information without customer authorization, which is fundamental for FATCA to work, and secondly, some civil law countries do not allow a financial institution to unilaterally terminate certain customer relationships, which is required for recalcitrant account holders.
As a result of these difficulties, the U.S. Treasury issued the “Joint Statement from the United States, France, Germany, Italy, Spain and the United Kingdom regarding the intergovernmental approach to improving international tax compliance and implementing FATCA” known as the “G5 Joint Statement”. The Treasury issued this G5 Joint Statement on the same day of the release of the proposed FATCA regulations, February 8, 2012.
The G5 Joint Statement acknowledged the challenging character of implementation of certain FATCA regulations and resulted in the release on July 6, 2012 “Model Intergovernmental Agreement to Improve Tax Compliance and Implement FATCA”, referred to as an “IGA” model agreement, and specifically as “Model 1”. Basically, the model agreement allows FFIs in each of the jurisdictions to report U.S.-owned account information directly to their local tax authorities, using local reporting forms and systems, rather than the IRS, which in turn will automatically share that information with the IRS.
- Intergovernmental Agreements
This Model 1 IGA allows FFIs of those countries to be considered “deemed compliant”, will avoid the 30 percent withholding and, significant in addressing a substantial industry concern, will not be required to impose “passthru withholding” on non-U.S. source payments they make to other FFIs.
This first model has two versions: reciprocal and non-reciprocal. The reciprocal version includes a policy commitment from the U.S. to pursue regulations and support legislation permitting the U.S. to pass information relating to U.S. accounts held by residents of FATCA partners to other FATCA partners. The U.K. was the first country to sign a reciprocal Model 1 FATCA agreement on September 12, 2012. Mexico signed one shortly later on November 19, 2012 but the USA and Mexico reissued it on April 4, 2014 to take into account the regulatory and IGA modifications, and implementation extensions granted other countries.
The second model, known as Model 2, was originally released on November 15 of 2012 but has since been updated, most recently re-released June 6 of this year. This second model provides a framework whereby FFIs register with the IRS and either are exempted from FATCA or agree to share FATCA required information directly with the IRS. In turn, these FFIs are to be treated by withholding agents as complying with FATCA and will not be subject to 30 percent FATCA withholding on payments to them. In addition, these FFIs would not be required to impose “pass-thru withholding” on payments they make to other domestic registered or exempt FFIs or FFIs in jurisdictions that have entered into an IGA with the U.S.
The most important IGA advantage relevant for today is that a GIIN not required until Jan 1, 2015. Other advantages include Reporting of Tax Information to the Home Country Revenue instead of IRS, Replacement of “Substantial U.S. Owner” with the standard of “Controlling Persons”, which is an FATF anti money laundering standard, No Closing of and withholding upon Recalcitrant accounts and that Retirement Accounts are Deemed Compliant FFIs or are Exempt beneficial owners. And finally, most Favored Nation Clause that allows IGA partner countries to Cherry Pick from any advantages granted to another partner or through an amendment to the regulations, such as the 6 month extension granted to treat entity accounts as preexisting ones thus not subject to the stricter FATCA documentation standards.
TIEAs and information exchange articles of the double tax agreements are still relevant because Model 2 countries, by example, must agree to provide additional FATCA information to the IRS about recalcitrant accounts, based on tax information request by the normal channels, that the US IRS may mop up such information that has not been passed in the first instance directly by a financial institution.
- Common Reporting Standards
On February 13 of this year the OECD released the Standard for Automatic Exchange of Financial Account Information Common Reporting Standard, known by the two acronyms of CRS and GATCA for Globalized FATCA.
The CRS calls on jurisdictions to obtain information from their financial institutions and automatically exchange that information with other jurisdictions on an annual basis. It sets out the financial account information to be exchanged, the financial institutions that need to report, the different types of accounts and taxpayers covered, as well as common due diligence procedures to be followed by financial institutions.
Part I of the OECD report gives an overview of the standard whereas part II contains the text of the Model Competent Authority Agreement (CAA) and the Common Reporting and Due Diligence Standards (CRS) that together form the “standard”.
As of last week, 66 countries and major financial centers committed to early implementation of this automatic exchange of information between their jurisdictions. These early adopters includes all 34 OECD member countries, as well as countries such as the BRIC nations, Argentina, Colombia, Costa Rica, Indonesia, Latvia, Lithuania, Malaysia, Saudi Arabia, Singapore and South Africa. Thus, more than half the 121 Global Forum members have committed to early adoption of GATCA, with the remaining group expected to join by the end of the year after the publication of the detailed Commentary.
The OECD stated that it will deliver a detailed Commentary on GATCA, as well as technical solutions to implement the actual information exchanges, during the G20 finance ministers meeting in September 2014.
What are the main differences between the OECD’s CRS and the US’ FATCA?
The CRS consists of a fully reciprocal automatic exchange system but the US specificities have been removed. For instance, the CRS is based on residence and unlike FATCA does not refer to citizenship. Terms, concepts and approaches have been standardized allowing countries to use the system without having to negotiate individual IGAs.
Unlike FATCA the CRS does not provide for thresholds for pre-existing individual accounts, and it includes a residential address test derived from the EU tax savings directive. The CRS also provides for a simplified indicia search for such preexisting accounts. Finally, it has special rules dealing with certain investment entities where they are based in jurisdictions that do not participate in the automatic exchange under the standard.
The CRS is similar to FATCA in its broad application across three dimensions:
- The financial information to be reported with respect to reportable accounts includes all types of investment income (including interest, dividends, income from certain insurance contracts and other similar types of income) but also account balances and sales proceeds from financial assets.
- The financial institutions that are required to report under the CRS do not only include banks and custodians but also other financial institutions such as brokers, certain collective investment vehicles and certain insurance companies.
- Reportable accounts include accounts held by individuals and entities, which includes trusts and foundations, and the standard includes a requirement to look through passive entities to report on the individuals that ultimately control these entities.
UK Son Of FATCA
EU TSD.
(a) income from employment
(b) director’s fees
(c) life insurance products
(d) pensions
(e) ownership of and income from immovable property
Clients in the 170 countries and their dependencies that the US does not have a tax treaty already suffer chapter 3 withholding. So what is it in for them to comply with FATCA?
Because Chapter 3 has important exemptions to its withholding, such as portfolio interest and interest on bank accounts that chapter 4 does not. FATCA’s 30% will hurt the most when it applies to the gross proceeds of a bond, that is, including its return of the underlying debt, because so much of the world’s financial system depends on US debt such as treasuries as the safe reserve.
- W8-BEN
That brings us to the forms wherein we will start the discussion about the simple W-8BEN.
The Form W-8BEN has been split into two forms. The new 2014 Form W-8BEN is for use solely by foreign individuals, whereas the new Form W-8BEN-E is for use by entities for 2014 (revision date 2014) to provide US withholding agents.
Foreign individuals, such as non-resident aliens – that is NRAs, must use Form W-8BEN to document their foreign status and also to claim any applicable treaty benefits for chapter 3 purposes. A NRA (nonresident alien individual) is any individual who is not a citizen or resident alien of the United States.
The NRA should enter the country of nationality on line 2 of the form. If the NRA is a dual national, enter the country where the NRA is both a national and a resident at the time of completing the W-8BEN. If the NRA is not a resident in any country of nationality, then the NRA should type in the country where most recently resident.
However, if the individual is a dual national and one nationality is the United States, then the individual is NOT an NRA. The US national is always a US taxpayer. A US taxpayer must file a W-9 even if holding nationality in another jurisdiction.
Moreover, a foreign person who has a “green card” and not had it revoked or voluntarily turned it in, or a foreign person who meets the “substantial presence test” for the calendar year is a resident alien, that is, a US taxpayer. Resident aliens must also submit a W-9.
However, an alien who is a bona fide resident of one of the five US territories, being Puerto Rico, Guam, the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands, the U.S. Virgin Islands, or American Samoa, is considered an NRA, and thus should fill out a W-8BEN, not the W-9.
The NRA must give the Form W-8BEN to the withholding agent if the NRA is the beneficial owner of an amount subject to withholding, — or if the NRA is an account holder of an FFI — then to the FFI to document his/her status as a nonresident alien. Also, an NRA receiving payments from a payment settlement entity for credit card transactions and other third-party network transactions, such as paypal, must provide a Form W-8BEN. Finally, to avoid backup withholding by a broker of securities, an NRA will need to provide a W-8BEN.
Important to note – a sole member of a “disregarded” entity is considered the beneficial owner of income received by the disregarded entity, and thus the sole member must provide a W-8BEN. The sole member should inform the withholding agent if the account is in the name of a disregarded entity. The sole member includes his or her own name in line 1, but must include the name and account number of the disregarded entity on line 7 where it states “reference number”. However, if the disregarded entity is claiming treaty benefits as a hybrid entity, it must instead complete Form W-8BEN-E.
If the income or account is jointly owned by more than one person, the income or account can only be treated as owned by a foreign person if Forms W-8BEN or W-8BEN-E are provided by EVERY owner of the account. If the withholding agent or financial institution receives a Form W-9 from any of the joint owners, then the payment must be treated as made to a U.S. person and the account treated as a U.S. account.
In general the W-8BEN will remain valid until December 31st of the 3rd year after the date of the signature unless there is a change of circumstances. There are exceptions to the validity period that our last two speakers will bring up.
If any information on the Form W-8BEN becomes incorrect because of a change in circumstances, then the NRA must provide within 30 days of the change of circumstances the withholding agent, payer, or FFI with a new W-8BEN. By example, if an NRA has a change of address to an address in the United States, then this change is a change in circumstances that requires contacting the withholding agent or FFI within 30 days. Generally, a change of address within the same foreign country or to another foreign country is not a change in circumstances. However, if Form W-8BEN is used to claim treaty benefits of a country based on a residence in that country and the NRA changes address to outside that country, then it is a change in circumstances requiring notification within 30 days to the withholding agent or FFI.
On line 2, the NRA must enter the country of citizenship. If the NRA is a dual citizen, then the NRA must enter the country where the NRA is both A citizen and A resident at the time of completing the W-8BEN. If the NRA is not a resident in any country in which the NRA has citizenship, enter the country where the NRA was most recently a resident.
Line 3 requires the NRA’s permanent resident address in the country where the NRA claims to be a resident for purposes of that country’s income tax. If the Form W-8BEN is to be used for claiming a reduced rate of withholding under an income tax treaty, then the NRA must determine permanent residency in the manner required by that tax treaty. The NRA may not use the address of a financial institution, a post office box, or any of other type of mailing address.
If the NRA does not have a tax residence in any country, then his permanent residence is where the NRA normally resides.
If the country does not use street addresses, line 3 allows a descriptive address, such as “Manor House, Kensington Estate”.
Line 5 requires a taxpayer identification number, which is the US social security number (SSN), or if not eligible to receive a SSN which most NRA are not, then an individual taxpayer identification number (ITIN). To claim certain treaty benefits, either line 5 must be completed with an SSN or ITIN, or line 6 must include a foreign tax identification number (foreign TIN).
Individual Taxpayer Identification Numbers (ITINs) will expire if not used on a federal income tax return for five consecutive years, the Internal Revenue Service announced today. To give all interested parties time to adjust and allow the IRS to reprogram its systems, the IRS will not begin deactivating ITINs until 2016.
The new, more uniform policy applies to any ITIN, regardless of when it was issued. Only about a quarter of the 21 million ITINs issued since the program began in 1996 are being used on tax returns.
Under the new policy, an ITIN will expire for any taxpayer who fails to file a federal income tax return for five consecutive tax years. Any ITIN will remain in effect as long as a taxpayer continues to file U.S. tax returns. This includes ITINs issued after Jan. 1, 2013. These taxpayers will no longer face mandatory expiration of their ITINs and the need to reapply starting in 2018, as was the case under the old policy.
A taxpayer whose ITIN has been deactivated and needs to file a U.S. return can reapply using Form W-7. As with any ITIN application, original documents, such as passports, or copies of documents certified by the issuing agency must be submitted with the form.
Line 6 of Form W-8BEN requires a foreign tax identifying number (foreign TIN) issued by a foreign jurisdiction of residence when an NRA documents him or herself with respect to a financial account held at a U.S. office of a financial institution. However, if the foreign jurisdiction does not issue TINs or has not provided the NRA a TIN yet, then the NRA must enter a date of birth in line 8.
At this point let us turn to our client case studies…
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International Financial Law Professor headlines of Aug 22
Posted by William Byrnes on August 22, 2014
| Economic Financial Crimes Commission Recovers N5 Billion Oil Subsidy Fund
The Daily Times Nigeria reports, amazingly that an Oil Fraud is being prosecuted. “While underlining the importance the Commission places on transparency and corruption issues in the oil sector, Uwujaren noted that the Commission presently has a full fledged section… |
| Bank of America Pays $16.65 Billion for Financial Fraud – Total Exceeds $23 Billion
The DOJ has reached a $16.65 billion settlement with Bank of America Corporation – the largest civil settlement with a single entity in American history — to resolve federal and state claims against Bank of America and its former and current subsidiaries, including Countrywide Financial Corporation and Merrill Lynch. Total now over $23 billion. |
| Former Rabobank LIBOR Submitter Pleads Guilty in Scheme to Manipulate Yen LIBOR
The FBI in a press release discusses the guilty plea by Paul Robson, a citizen of the United Kingdom. According to the press release, “Paul Robson is the second employee at Rabobank, one of the world’s largest banks, to plead… |
| BOA’s Securities Fraud Settlement with SEC for shifting the risk for toxic waste losses to investors
The Securities and Exchange Commission today announced a settlement in which Bank of America admits that it failed to inform investors during the financial crisis about known uncertainties to future income from its exposure to repurchase claims on mortgage loans. |
| Credit Suisse Caught up in Espírito Santo Mess
According to numerous stories, it is reported that Credit Suisse helped sell billions of dollars of securities that were issued by offshore investment vehicles and then sold to retail customers of Portugal’s Banco Espírito Santo SA. According to the Wall… |
| Too Little Bank Reform
In a recent commentary in the Independent, “Bank of England’s Governor, Mark Carney (in his capacity as chairman of the Financial Stability Board), the Senior Supervisor’s Group reported: ‘Firms’ progress toward consistent, timely and accurate reporting of top counterparty exposures… |
| Standard Chartered Bank Pays $300 Million Penalty For Newest AML Failures, Suspends Dollar Clearing For Hong Kong ‘High Risk’ Clients
Under the order, SCB will suspend dollar clearing through its New York Branch for high-risk retail business clients at its SCB Hong Kong subsidiary; exit high-risk client relationships within certain business lines at its branches in the United Arab Emirates; not accept new dollar-clearing clients or accounts across its operations without prior approval from DFS; pay a $300 million penalty; as well as take other remedial steps. |
| Is it OK to Pick Up Stock Tips at Alcoholics Anonymous?
McGee breached duties of trust and confidence that he owed to a PHL Y senior executive (the “Insider”) – with whom he had a long-term relationship through Alcoholics Anonymous (“AA”) — by misappropriating material nonpublic information about the merger negotiations from the Insider. |
| How One “Sack Of S**t” Mortgage-Backed Security Came To Define The Financial Crisis
The history of SACO 2006-8, as told through court documents dating back more than six years, provides a view into how the mortgage-backed security industry was built up and spectacularly collapsed. For JPMorgan, it has become the mortgage-backed security from hell. |
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Standard Chartered Fined $300m For Lax Controls
Posted by William Byrnes on August 20, 2014
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International Financial Law Prof Blog breaks 20,000 views first month
Posted by William Byrnes on August 20, 2014
The International Financial Law Prof Blog, a member of Prof. Paul Caron’s Law Professor Blogs Network which is sponsored by Wolters Kluwer, is one month old!
And thanks to you, our reader, our posts and articles have attracted over 20,000 views.
Stay informed with our daily headlines by SUBSCRIBING to the auto-email in the top menu “SUBSCRIBE”
Warm regards William Byrnes, David Herzig, and Gary Heald
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today’s International Financial Law Prof Blog headlines
Posted by William Byrnes on August 18, 2014
- 2nd Rabobank Banker Pleads Guilty for Manipulating Yen Libor
- Money, Guns, Gambling and Meth – meet the real life Break Bad Gustavo Fring – Zhenli Ye Gon
- DOJ wants $9.4 million forfeiture of bonuses from SAC Capital’s convicted portfolio manager
- Whose Financing a Legislative Agenda? a research tool
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2nd Rabobank Banker Pleads Guilty for Manipulating Yen Libor A former Coöperatieve Centrale Raiffeisen-Boerenleenbank B.A. (Rabobank) Japanese Yen London InterBank Offered Rate (LIBOR) submitter pleaded guilty today for his role in a conspiracy to commit wire and bank fraud by manipulating Rabobank’s Yen LIBOR submissions to benefit trading positions. |
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Money, Guns, Gambling and Meth – meet the real life Break Bad Gustavo Fring – Zhenli Ye Gon I stumbled across a money laundering Reuters story about Casinos while working on Lexis’s Anti Money Laundering & Asset Forfeiture Guide due tonight. Realized, I had found a real life Gustavo Fring. Cash3 Legitimate pharmeceutical CEO in Mexico on the one hand, alleged meth manufacturer and distributor on the other. Lost US$125 million gambling in Vegas over two years, had another US$207 million in small bills seized from his home with a cache of automatic weapons. So I dug into it and excerpted the below from various government documents. |
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DOJ wants $9.4 million forfeiture of bonuses from SAC Capital’s convicted portfolio manager Former SAC Capital Advisors LP portfolio manager Mathew Martoma, convicted of orchestrating the most lucrative insider trading scheme in U.S. history, should be ordered to forfeit $9.4 million and required to pay a fine, U.S. prosecutors said. |
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Whose Financing a Legislative Agenda? a research tool The Sunlight Foundation is a nonpartisan nonprofit that advocates for open government globally and uses technology to make government more accountable to all. It has several databases that legislative researchers will find interesting. I point out three (with links) below: |
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daily article links
Posted by William Byrnes on August 16, 2014
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One Million Uses of SARs/CTRs via FINCEN Query in First Six Months of Year
In the first six months of 2014 alone, over 350 unique agencies, representing a broad cross section of federal, state, and local law enforcement and regulators operating nationwide, accessed BSA reporting via FinCEN Query. Thousands of agents, analysts, and investigative personnel from each of these agencies have conducted in excess of 1 million queries against the database during that period.
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FinCEN: Some Banks Banking Marijuana Dealers
As we reported earlier, there has been new guidance by FinCEN on banking marijuana dealers in legal states. In an article in the Denver Post, it is reported that “[m]ore than 100 banks nationally say they are working with legal…
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Petroleo Brasileiro in a $4.4 Billion Money Laundering Probe
Bloomberg reports that a $4.4 billion money-laundering probe linked to state-run Petroleo Brasileiro SA is spreading to financial institutions as prosecutors investigate whether they met compliance requirements. Court documents cite units of banks including New York-based Citigroup Inc., Madrid-based Banco…
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Jamie Dimon’s $13 Billion Secret
In a recent article in The Nation, “Dimon, the chairman and chief executive of the formidable JPMorgan Chase & Company, was telling anyone who would listen that it was unfair and unjust for federal and state prosecutors to blame him…
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Behind Collapse of Portugal’s Espirito Santo Empire
The Wall Street Journal reports on the Espirito Santo collapse. “[T]he heart of the affair lies a small Swiss financial company now called Eurofin Holding SA, which was set up 15 years ago largely to handle financial transactions for the…
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SEC Charges N.Y.-Based Linkbrokers Derivatives With Overcharging Customers in $18 Million Scheme
The Securities and Exchange Commission yesterday charged New York-based brokerage firm Linkbrokers Derivatives LLC for unlawfully taking secret profits of more than $18 million from customers by adding hidden markups and markdowns to their trades.
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RCS Capital buys San Diego based Girard, Cetera on way to reaching 10,000 advisors
Based in San Diego, California, Girard has over $10.0 billion of assets under administration and 250 producing financial advisors with an average annual production of approximately $210,000 per advisor.
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Consumer Financial Protection Bureau Issues Warning on Bitcoin
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) is now warning consumers of the risks of using virtual currency. “The Bureau’s Consumer Advisory notes that there are certain “associated risks” of using virtual currency – including hackers, costs, and scams – and…
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Canadian Banker Guilty of Investment Fraud
The British Columbia Securities Commission has convicted Victoria-area financial adviser David Michael Michaels of perpetrating a massive fraud that cost hundreds of investors a total of $65 million. According to CBC news, “[the commission] found Michaels guilty of improperly advising…
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Distance Education Workgroup September 18 – 20 Workshop and Best Practices Finalization
Posted by William Byrnes on August 11, 2014
Distance Education Workgroup September 18 – 20 Workshop and Best Practices Finalization
The Distance Education Work Group will meet at William Mitchell September 18 – 20 to complete a four year task consisting on hundreds of hours and input by more than 50 law schools from all tiers, and law publishers, of the Recommended Best Practices for Legal Education Leveraging Distance Learning Technologies. There will as year before some show and tell by law professors of newest legal education integrated technologies being leveraged for courses, some social time to build relationships across schools, and … completion of the Best Practices Recommendations.
The Work Group has been meeting thrice annually, AALS plus a Fall and Spring report drafting and discussion workshop, supplemented by best practice subgroups’ online discussions. About half the law schools have attended through a professor or Dean / Associate Dean, and approximately 50 from all tiers have provided continuous input for the drafting process.
Register to attend the workshop (there is no cost) at Event Brite: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/working-group-for-distance-learning-in-legal-education-fall-2014-meeting-registration-12051364957 or contact William Byrnes (williambyrnes@gmail.com)
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PwC formatted versions of NRA withholding (IRC Chapter 3) and FATCA (IRC Chapter 4) regulations: PwC #GATCA
Posted by William Byrnes on August 6, 2014
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Monday morning insurance and finance headline
Posted by William Byrnes on August 4, 2014
everything you need to know in 2 minutes
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An opinion from Haydon Perryman – War and Taxes
Posted by William Byrnes on August 3, 2014
FATCA & CRS Training. Advice. Consultancy.
An opinion – War and Tax
Without tax you can not have war. War is expensive. War is a rich country’s game.
As long as we deny developing nations the means to retain their own money by ignoring the systematic theft of their resources by corrupt leaders who misappropriate nation’s money to themselves and conceal their theft in offshore accounts, we also deny them the means to defend themselves and improve their lot. In the meantime, we, in developed countries, hear the urgent pleas for help from developing countries and answer them as soon as we want to (if indeed we want to help at all).
Of course, that is all rubbish right? Developing countries have proved their ability to fight amongst themselves just as much as have developed countries. But that is no problem because we in developed counties facilitate capital flight away from developing countries, thus keeping them…
View original post 1,257 more words
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Barrie McKenna, “PwC suggests a check to see if you are an ‘accidental American’” #GATCA
Posted by William Byrnes on July 30, 2014
FATCA & CRS Training. Advice. Consultancy.
Barrie McKenna, Globe & Mail 30 July 2014, p. B3 http://bit.ly/1tus1jA “A leading accounting firm is taking the unusual step of urging Canadians to double-check their citizenship status, warning there may still be thousands of accidental Americans in Canada oblivious to their U.S. tax obligations.” Only three comments so far. I made a comment, calling […]
via The Isaac Brock Society http://bit.ly/1n3Whth
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Guns & Money, Bribery, Money Laundering, Major Insolvencies, Drug Dealing … and the week has just begun
Posted by William Byrnes on July 30, 2014
Links to Articles –
Guns & Money – Smith & Wesson pays $2 million for bribery
Banco Espírito Santo’s former CEO arrested for Money Laundering & Tax Evasion as bank reports Portugal’s largest loss, Espirito Santo Financial Group seeks creditor protection
Guinea mining FCPA bribery investigation nets first jail sentence
Substantial money laundering penalties but not tax collection from OVDI disclosures
4th guilty plea in Indonesia bribery FCPA case
BOA settles alleged narco kingpin violations for $16 million
SunTrust Admits Issuing Mass Denials After Throwing Away Thousand of Customers Unopened Files
Lloyds Banking Group Will Pay $370 Million, Admits Criminal Wrongdoing
FTC seizes law firm assets, alleges $35 million fees bilked from distressed homeowners
Is FedEx a drug dealer? The $2.4 billion question
Analysis of the 88,000 Financial Firms on the IRS’ GIIN List for FATCA
Tax Inversions: The Basics
Lionel Messi to be Prosecuted for Alleged Tax Evasion of $5.4 million
Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged: Banco Espírito Santo, BOA, Bribery, Drug Dealing, FATCA, FCPA, FFI, Guns, Insolvencies, Lloyds, Money, Money Laundering, Smith Wesson, Sun Trust, Tax Evasion | Leave a Comment »
compliance jobs on upward trajectory after recent enforcement actions
Posted by William Byrnes on July 15, 2014
Read about Citi’s increase to 30,000 compliance positions by end of year, JP Morgan’s 30% compliance staffing increase and Bank of America’s doubling of audit staffing in last three years….
I’ve written several articles about compliance “whitewashing” on this blog (look under the tab compliance and money laundering). Compliance staffing at many banks has increased since the Patriot Act and renewed enforcement efforts against money laundering. More recently (in the past five years), financial institutions have been called out on dishonest activities with valuation of securities, on dishonest dealings with consumers (see my recent articles about the bank that simply threw away millions of customer mortgage workout files and sent mass mailing denials), on providing financial channels for a government involved in genocide…. I will not go though the entire list. These cases just stand out as particularly egregious. Compliance looked at, and was in some cases involved with, these transactions. So, throwing more staff into the cauldron does not quench the fire, nor, hopefully, will this mere fact satisfy the regulators.
By example, as a regulator, I would need to understand the educational foundation qualification that maps to the employment position. What degree in compliance does the new staff member have? Or is it that persons have been moved into compliance positions without the requisite underlying knowledge to execute the compliance role?
Market Watch at: http://blogs.marketwatch.com/thetell/2014/07/14/citi-will-have-almost-30000-employees-in-compliance-by-year-end/

Read about financial institutions / banks compliance department requirements in the 5,000 page treatise and compendium of LexisNexis’ Money Laundering, Asset Forfeiture and Recovery and Compliance: A Global Guide
Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged: AML, anti money laundering, citibank, Citigroup, Compliance | Leave a Comment »
3 Model 1B jurisdictions
Posted by William Byrnes on July 9, 2014
FATCA & CRS Training. Advice. Consultancy.
Thanks to Donna Nguyen-Comito who pointed out to me that the Bahamas is a Model 1B Country (not a 1A as I previously recorded).
There are now three IGA Model 1B jurisdictions that I am aware of:
- Bahamas
- Cayman Islands
- British Virgin Islands
Feel free to email me: haydon@haydonperryman.com
if you spot anything else I have missed.
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Errors on the IRS list of “Approved FFIs”?
Posted by William Byrnes on July 9, 2014
Another excellent analysis from Haydon Perryman. From a “glass is half full” perspective, it’s relatively few errors for a large list. At least, that we can be aware given the limited amount of information currently available.
Of course, when all the data starts to flow, a different story may emerge. Treasury has a daunting challenge not to alienate the public and Congress with false positive audit matches of foreign account information compared to self-reported FBARs, 8938’s, and 1040s. At least, tax audit advisors will be kept very, very busy by their international clientele from 2016 through 2018 while the 2015-2017 initial deluge of information exchanged makes it way through the matching system and then audit process.
FATCA & CRS Training. Advice. Consultancy.
Here is a list of potential errors on the IRS list of approved FFIs dated July 1, 2014:
GIIN | FINm | CountryNm | Error Type |
A5XSJ3.99999.SL.180 | RAWBANK Sarl | CONGO, DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC OF THE | Wrong ISO3166-1 (last 3 digits of the GIIN) s/b 178 |
DQANI4.00007.ME.999 | NLB Prishtina sh.a., Prishtina | OTHER | “Other” is not a legal jurisdiction |
D52QRM.99999.SL.999 | IFC Catalyst Fund /Japan/, LP | OTHER | “Other” is not a legal jurisdiction |
EMI585.99999.SL.999 | INTERNATIONAL BANK ECONOMIC CO-OPERATION | OTHER | “Other” is not a legal jurisdiction |
EUJ5WN.00007.ME.999 | GRAWE Kosova J.S.C. | OTHER | This may not be an error; GIIN ends in 999 but Kosovo has no ISO 3166-1 Code |
FTMA0U.00005.ME.178 | UBA Congo Brazzaville SA | CONGO | Wrong ISO3166-1 (last 3 digits of the GIIN) s/b 180 |
F505Q5.99999.SL.999 | IFC Catalyst Fund, LP | OTHER | “Other” is not a legal jurisdiction |
F8DB0C.00011.ME.180 | Banque Inter. de Credit | CONGO, DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC OF THE | Wrong ISO3166-1 (last 3 digits of the GIIN) s/b 178 |
GMPXWL.00013.ME.999 | SIGAL… |
View original post 500 more words
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A commentary on the IRS list (released June 2, 2014) of entities registered for FATCA on the IRS Portal
Posted by William Byrnes on July 9, 2014
This is an excellent analysis of the current FFI GIIN list that everyone should read!
FATCA & CRS Training. Advice. Consultancy.
Where to begin?
Perhaps the most revealing aspect of the list released by the IRS last night is those entities not on it. The IRS FAQs reveal that the IRS itself believes that the number of entities yet to register could be as high as 500,000. Many experts would put that number closer to 900,000.
Of the 77,353 entities who registered:
- 70,492 are covered by an IGA (either signed or agreed in substance)
- 586 are in the US or US Territories
- 6,275 are in Non IGA Countries
The 6,275 in Non IGA Countries represent only 8.1% of the total registered. One might draw the conclusion that as more countries enter into IGAs this will draw substantial numbers of entities in those jurisdictions to register on the portal. It does appear that a failure to sign an IGA would explain a lack of critical mass of registrants on the FATCA portal.
View original post 496 more words
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101 IGA Countries
Posted by William Byrnes on July 9, 2014
FATCA & CRS Training. Advice. Consultancy.
There are now 101 IGA Countries.
(My previous version had not included Kosovo. This was unintentional: Kosovo has no GIINs associated with it – probably because it has no ISO3166-1 code.)
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100 IGAs as of July 7, 2014
Posted by William Byrnes on July 7, 2014
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20 jurisdictions recognized by the US but not by FATCA
Posted by William Byrnes on July 2, 2014
FATCA & CRS Training. Advice. Consultancy.
Here is a list of “Dependencies and Areas of Special Sovereignty” recognized by the US http://www.state.gov/s/inr/rls/10543.htm#note5
that have not been recognized in the context of FATCA i.e. do not appear on the IRS list of Jurisdictions for the purposes of FATCA:
http://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/p5118a.pdf
| Akrotiri | UK dependency |
| Ashmore and Cartier Islands | Australian dependency |
| Baker Island | US dependency |
| Clipperton Island | French dependency |
| Coral Sea Islands | Australian dependency |
| Dhekelia | UK dependency |
| Howland Island | US dependency |
| Jan Mayen | Norway dependency |
| Jarvis Island | US dependency |
| Johnston Atoll | US dependency |
| Kingman Reef | US dependency |
| Midway Islands | US dependency |
| Navassa Island | US dependency |
| Palmyra Atoll | US dependency |
| Paracel Islands | |
| Spratly Islands | |
| Svalbard | Norway dependency |
| Wake Island | US dependency |
This amounts to 19 jurisdictions, 10 of which are non-US.
Moreover, the Sovereign State of Kosovo also does not appear on this list
http://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/p5118a.pdf
However, that is probably because Kosovo does not yet have a ISO 3166-1 Code.
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IRS list of IGA Countries revised last night
Posted by William Byrnes on June 24, 2014
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11 health insurance tax facts a taxpayer needs to know about
Posted by William Byrnes on June 24, 2014
Employers and those who advise them may have questions about what expenses qualify for deductions, which tax credits they can take advantage of, and what the new rules mean for grandfathered plans. Individuals may be wondering how HSA distributions are taxed, or whether benefits received under a personal health insurance policy are taxable.
1. Are premiums paid for personal health insurance deductible as medical expenses?
2. May an employer deduct as a business expense the cost of premiums paid for accident and health insurance for employees?
3. What credit is available for small employers for employee health insurance expenses?
4. Are benefits received under a personal health insurance policy taxable income?
5. How is employer-provided disability income coverage taxed?
6. How is personal disability income coverage taxed?
… William Byrnes and Robert Bloink have the well-researched answers you’re looking for on LifeHealthPro !
If you are interested in discussing the Master or Doctoral degree in the areas of financial planning, please contact me: profbyrnes@gmail.com to Google Hangout or Skype that I may take you on an “online tour”
Posted in Taxation, Uncategorized | Tagged: ACA, Health insurance, Obama Care, tax facts | Leave a Comment »
Big Law Ramps Up Hiring
Posted by William Byrnes on June 23, 2014
Wall Street Big Law Journalist Jennifer Smith unveils that big law is ramping up hiring again, with an average starting salary of $160,000 but grueling hours. Read her article and research here at the Wall Street Journal
Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged: big law, Employment, starting salary | Leave a Comment »
Updated FATCA GIIN List of FFI Registrations by Country and IGA
Posted by William Byrnes on June 16, 2014
Below is a selection of the 77,353 registered from 115 of the total 205 countries and jurisdictions on the June 2nd list. Of the total registered as of June, 70,811 FFIs (91.5%) registered from the 78 countries and jurisdictions that as of June 15th have an IGA. Thus, these 70,811 probably registered either as Deemed Compliant FFIs or as branches by the initial May 5th extended deadline.
Only 6,542 FFIs registered from the remaining 172 countries and jurisdictions either as Participating FFIs or branches. Withholding agents are finalizing systems to begin 30% withholding on the Non-Participating FFIs within these 172 non-IGA countries. Withholding on IGA jurisdiction non-compliant FFIs only begins January 1st.
- Afghanistan: 7
- Andorra: 33
- Anguilla: 70
- Antigua & Barbuda: 35
- Argentina: 269
- Armenia: 27 <– IGA
- Aruba: 13
- Australia: 1,864 <– IGA
- Austria: 2,978
- Azerbaijan: 16 <– IGA
- Bahamas: 610 <– IGA
- Barbados: 123 <– IGA
- Belgium: 249 <– IGA
- Belarus: 64
- Belize: 122
- Bermuda: 1,242
- Brazil: 2,258 <– IGA
- Bulgaria: 72
- BVI: 1,837 <– IGA
- Canada: 2,264 <– IGA
- Cayman Islands: 14,836 <– IGA
- China: 211
- Christmas Island: 1
- Colombia: 172 <– IGA
- Comoros Is.: 1
- Costa Rica: 122 <– IGA
- Cook Is.: 72
- Croatia: 50 <– IGA
- Curacao: 173 <– IGA
- Cyprus: 279 <– IGA
- Czech Republic: 92 <– IGA
- Denmark: 186 <– IGA
- Djibouti: 1
- Dominica: 17
- Dominican Republic: 67
- Ecuador: 22
- Egypt: 62
- Equatorial Guinea: 1
- Estonia: 26 <– IGA
- Falkland Islands: 1
- Finland: 466 <– IGA
- France: 2,290 <– IGA
- French Southern Territories: 1
- Georgia: 24 <– IGA
- Germany: 2,554 <– IGA
- Gibraltar: 96 <– IGA
- Greece: 91
- Greenland: 1
- Grenada: 31
- Guadeloupe: 1
- Guam: 3
- Guatemala: 75
- Guernsey: 2,395 <– IGA
- Honduras: 47 <– IGA
- Hong Kong: 1,539 <– IGA
- Hungary: 101 <– IGA
- Iceland: 5
- India: 246 <– IGA
- Indonesia: 307 <– IGA
- Ireland: 1,756 <– IGA
- Isle of Man: 312 <– IGA
- Israel: 321 <– IGA
- Italy: 456 <– IGA
- Jamaica: 41 <– IGA
- Japan: 3,251 <– IGA
- Jersey: 1,618 <– IGA
- North Korea: 4
- South Korea: 396
- Kuwait: 77
- Latvia: 40
- Lichtenstein: 239 <– IGA
- Lithuania: 21 ß IGA
- Luxembourg: 3,560 ß IGA
- Macao: 36
- Malta: 235 <– IGA
- Mauritius: 727 <– IGA
- Mexico: 418 <– IGA
- Monaco: 98
- Netherlands: 2,053 <– IGA
- New Zealand: 334 <– IGA
- Norway: 312 <– IGA
- Other: 22
- Panama: 450 <– IGA
- Paraguay: 17 <– IGA
- Peru: 164 <– IGA
- Poland: 164 <– IGA
- Portugal: 255 <– IGA
- Qatar: 46 <– IGA
- Romania: 109 <– IGA
- Russia: 514
- Saint Pierre & Miquelon: 1
- San Marino: 14
- Saudi Arabia: 17
- Seychelles: 37 <– IGA
- Singapore: 783 <– IGA
- South Africa: 317 <– IGA
- Spain: 1,187 <– IGA
- Slovakia: 54 <– IGA
- Slovenia: 20 <– IGA
- St Kitts & Nevis: 70 <– IGA
- St Lucia: 60 <– IGA
- St. Vincent and the Grenadines: 104 <– IGA
- Sweden: 312 <– IGA
- Switzerland: 4,040 <– IGA
- Taiwan: 408
- Turkey: 65 <– IGA
- Turkmenistan: 1 <-– IGA
- Turks & Caicos: 27 <– IGA
- Ukraine: 105
- United Arab Emirates: 135 <– IGA
- United Kingdom: 6,263 <– IGA
- USA: 562
- Uruguay: 131
- Venezuela: 29
- Wallis & Fortuna: 1
FFI Registration Among Model 1 IGAs and the Rest
Of a possible 250 countries and jurisdictions recognized by the US State Department and IRS (not including the 14 US dependencies for which FATCA withholding does not apply), 45 do not yet have an FFI registration. But of the 205 countries and jurisdictions with FFI registrations, 20% of the total registered FFIs are Cayman Islands firms (14,836) (see my article of June 8).
There is not one reliable number of how many financial entities in the world qualify as a financial institution requiring FATCA registration. The list of FFIs requiring registration includes, by example, trusts companies, certain trusts, life insurance companies, investment funds, banks. The IRS has said that “At this time, the full FFI list is expected to be less than 500,000 records.”
Some financial pundits are estimating as many as twice this figure. Yet it seems that the categories of ‘certified deemed compliant’ FFIs and exempt FFIs should soak up a number of small, local FFIs. Yet, the UK Revenue HMRC estimates 75,000 of its FFIs are impacted by FATCA (http://www.hmrc.gov.uk/fatca/itc-regs-2013.pdf – page 4) (down from 300,000 prior to the UK-USA IGA). If the UK, as one albeit important financial center, requires anything close to 75,000 FFI registrations, then the IRS figure of 500,000 FFI registrations is far too low. Note that the ‘500,000’ FFI figure, if it excludes the corresponding branch registrations in other jurisdictions, and if it excludes the five classifications of “Certified Deemed Compliant”, seems more realistic.
BRIC Registration
Brazil leads the BRIC countries with 2,258 FFI registered, followed by Russia (514), India (246) with China only having 211.
NAFTA Registrations
2,264 FFIs registered from Canada and Mexico at 418.
Major OECD Countries Registrations
The United Kingdom (6,263) Revenue has recently announced that it will not adopt the IRS issued six-month extension (until December 31, 2014) for entity accounts (see my articles of May 5th and 2nd). Thus, from July 1st, UK FFIs must document all personal and entity accounts under the requirements for “new” accounts as opposed as to “pre-existing” account due diligence procedures.
Australia (1,864), France (2,290), Germany (2,254), Ireland (1,756) and Netherlands (2,053).
European Financial Centers Registrations
Switzerland (4,040), Luxembourg (3,560), Austria (2,978), Lichtenstein (239). Guernsey (2,395), Jersey (1,618), Isle of Man (312) and Gibraltar (96).
Caribbean Financial Centers Registrations
BVI (1,837), Bahamas (610), Bermuda (1,242) and Panama (450).
State of Palestine Registrations
23 FFIs registered with the IRS, listed as from the State of Palestine. Primarily MENA banks and a branch of HSBC Middle East Bank. See June 8th article about this contentious issue.
North Korean Registrations
While North Korean remains a sanctioned country by OFAC (see http://www.treasury.gov/resource-center/sanctions/Programs/pages/nkorea.aspx) with a FINCEN AML update available at http://www.fincen.gov/statutes_regs/guidance/pdf/FIN-2013-A005.pdf, it had 4 FFI branches register.
“Other” Registrations
23 financial firms listed “other” as the country / jurisdiction. By example, Harneys Nevis by example should probably register under Nevis (or where it is incorporated, if not Nevis)? Why is the Austrian insurance group, Sigal Life UNIQA group Austria, registered under “Other”? Perhaps the July 1st list will have movement from “Other” to actual countries?
Interesting Research on the UK FFI List (by “Edelweiss” in the comments on this blog)
Edelweiss has posted his research on the UK’s 6.263 registered FFIs (under comments to another one of this blog’s articles). I think his research bears repeating in this article. By example, he reviewed the list by GIIN and determined that about 1% of the global sign-ups of the June 2nd GIIN list are affiliated with AXA SA, the French financial services firm.
He then compares the 6,263 entities registered from the UK with the HMRC estimate (pg. 4) of 75,000 impacted FFIs (down from 300,000 prior to the IGA), finding that less than 10% of UK FFIs registered for the June GIIN list. Either the HMRC estimated horribly wrong, or most UK FFIs are still undertaking initial FATCA preparation (relying on the October 25th registration deadline imposed by HRMC instead).
- The UK list is dominated by fund management firms and their various funds, private equity and the plethora of feeder funds investment trusts and quite a few trusts. Bridgepoint, a small UK private equity firm, has 72 entities (globally), while 3i, a similarly small UK private equity firm, has 45 entities (globally).
- There are quite a few entities that appear to have names suggesting they are part of a private equity holding company structure. I presume they have an affiliation with a US private equity shareholder. Globally, there are 26 mentions of “Bidco”, 157 of “Holdco”, 37 “Midco”, 44 “Topco”, 144 “Acquisition”, 156 “Mezzanine” (not exclusively private equity, also specialty finance like mezz funds).
- I found 321 instances of “LLP” and “265″ instances of partnership
- I found 16 “deceased” and 33 “will trust”
Three Questions raised by Edelweiss
- For some reason, the large UK retailers Marks and Spencer (a plc) and John Lewis (a co-operative) found it necessary to register. M&S offers a savings account (which presumably explains why) but John Lewis doesn’t. Could it be credit card related?
Response: A FFI is eligible to be classified as a “registered deemed-compliant” FFI (“RDCFFI”) if it completes a registration process with the IRS (See Lexis Guide to FATCA Compliance § 7.04) and either is a Reporting Model 1 FFI, or falls within one of six categories listed in Treasury Regulations Section 1.1471-5(f)(1)(i). These six categories include:
- local FFIs;
- nonreporting members of participating FFI groups;
- qualified collective investment vehicles;
- restricted funds;
- qualified credit card issuers; or
- sponsored investment entities and controlled foreign corporations.
Qualified Credit Card Issuers
A “qualified credit card issuer” is an entity that is an FFI solely because it is an issuer of credit cards that accepts deposits only when a customer makes a payment in excess of a balance due on the card and the overpayment is not immediately returned to the customer. …
- Also present is Alliance-Boots, the UK’s largest pharmacy. They have 16 entities in the UK and Ireland (under AB Acquisition and Alliance Boots) though I assume this is because they are part owned by KKR.
- I would be curious to get your take on why Nestle Suisse SA found it necessary to register as an FFI. Is this to avoid confiscation of 30% of principal and interest on the repayment of intercompany loans from a US subsidiary? Is it because it’s a finance subsidiary and they have US source income from bonds?
Practical Compliance Guide for FATCA
The LexisNexis® Guide to FATCA Compliance (2nd Edition) comprises 34 Chapters by 50 industry experts grouped in three parts: compliance program (Chapters 1–4), analysis of FATCA regulations (Chapters 5–16) and analysis of Intergovernmental Agreements (IGAs) and local law compliance challenges (Chapters 17–34), including intergovernmental agreements as well as the OECD’s TRACE initiative for global automatic information exchange protocols and systems. A free download of the first of the 34 chapters is available at http://www.lexisnexis.com/store/images/samples/9780769853734.pdf
Posted in FATCA, Uncategorized | Tagged: FATCA, FFI, GIIN, IGA | 1 Comment »
final deadline passes and only 70 IGAs in place
Posted by William Byrnes on June 3, 2014
The June 3rd deadline for FATCA FFI registration to be included on the July 1 GIIN list has come and now gone. In the past two weeks, only four additional IGAs have been added to the list (Turkey, Seychelles, UAE and Barbados) so that as of Tuesday June 3, 2014, only 70 FATCA IGAs have been signed or treated as if signed. These 70 include 29 signed Model 1s with another 34 treated as if signed, and 5 signed Model 2s with 2 treated as if signed. (Thank you to reader Alain Thielemans who alerted me to the two new IGAs published by Treasury today before I posted this story).
140 IGAs still left to be agreed by Treasury?
The USA recognizes 196 independent states in the world (the IRS recognizes Palestine as a State according to the 23 State of Palestine FFIs on the IRS FATCA list, otherwise the State Department only recognizes 195, at least according to its website), 67 dependencies of states, and has contacts with Taiwan. But not each of these 67 dependencies requires an IGA. 14 of these jurisdictions are dependencies of the United States for which the financial institutions are not included in the definition of “foreign financial institutions” subject to FATCA registration.
Approximately 16 dependencies of the remaining 53 have both local responsibility with regard to tax policy and more than de minimis US source income exposure, such as investments in US Treasuries, for the local authorities to seek an IGA. Such dependencies include by example Bermuda, Cayman Islands, and Hong Kong. Taiwan has its own peculiar status, claiming to represent the central government of greater China (the US of course recognizes Beijing). Other dependencies, like the French departments of French Guiana, Guadeloupe, Martinique, Mayotte and Reunion, do not have local responsibility for fiscal policy and thus are protected within the IGA of the parent-state. And a host of dependencies, such as Antarctica and various atolls, have no (current) global economic relevance.
Yet interestingly, even the British Indian Ocean Territory has a registered FATCA financial firm, albeit a Russian financial institution AK BARS Investments Corporation (see http://www.akbars.ru/en/about/). Falkland Islands even had a registration, a branch, as did Wallis and Futuna (a French Pacific territory).
Thus, 196 recognized states and 16 economically relevant, semi-autonomous dependencies form the pool of 212 states and jurisdictions that probably need an IGA. As of June 3rd, 70 have an IGA recognized by US Treasury, leaving 142 without. FFIs in the remaining 140 countries and jurisdictions that did not register by today will have 30% withheld for Title IV (FATCA) purpose by US withholding agents who are gearing up their software systems to begin this withholding for payments made from July 1st.
How many FFIs did not register for FATCA (yet)?
FATCA Portal registration remains open, but the formal IRS deadline for inclusion on the July 1st GIIN list of participating foreign financial institutions (“PFFI”) passed. See my previous article about the May 5th deadline and consequences of its passing that applied to all FFIs in the non-IGA states and jurisdictions.
Did all the FFIs that are in the 142 countries and jurisdictions that do not have an IGA register for a GIIN? Not even close since only 77,353 registered by the May 5 deadline to be included on the June 2nd GIIN list, and 20% of those were Cayman Islands firms (see my article yesterday breaking down the list).
There is not one reliable number of how many financial entities in the world qualify as a financial institution requiring FATCA registration. It is a range of as few as 80,000 entities that qualify as FFIs still need to register or complete registration for a GIIN, but it could be as many as 380,000 still need to register. The list of FFIs requiring registration includes by example trusts companies, investment funds, and banks. The IRS has said that “At this time, the full FFI list is expected to be less than 500,000 records.” If Cayman Islands is an indicator of a jurisdiction, then at 14,836 registered, the GIIN list will swell to the 500,000 figure by end of year.
BVI has 1,837 so far, 2.053 Netherlands financial firms registered, and nearly twice as many Swiss firms, 4,040, had GIINs. Liechtenstein only had 239 register. Of the BRIC countries, only 211 China firms were registered to date, 246 Indian ones, and 514 Russian ones, compared to 2,258 for Brazil.
It is possible that on July 1st an unregistered FFI is considered non-participating (NPFFI) for purposes of FATCA withholding, but by example, on August 1st its country agrees an IGA in substance that Treasury announces on its FATCA site and the NPFFI goes back to FFI non-withholding status because of the extension related to IGAs, at least until that final December 22 deadline mentioned in Announcement 2014-1. Model 1 IGA FFIs with a GIIN are classified as “Registered Deemed-Compliant Foreign Financial Institutions” (RDCFFI) on the new W8-BEN-E (see previous article) instead of as Participating Foreign Financial Institutions (PFFIs) pursuant to the regular FATCA FFI agreement and Model 2 IGA.
Is the June 3rd Deadline a Drop-Dead Deadline?
Yes and No. The IRS states the following on its FATCA Registration Portal: “the IRS believes it can ensure registering FFIs that their GIINs will be included on the July 1 IRS FFI List if their registrations are finalized by June 3, 2014.” (See Notice 2014-17, page 6: “FFIs that finalize their registrations after … June 3 may still be included on the … July 1 IRS FFI List; however, the IRS cannot provide assurance that this will be the case.”)
Yet, the IRS built in a 90 day safeguard for FFIs when a GIIN has been applied for but not yet received:
§1.1471-3(e)(3) Participating FFIs and registered deemed-compliant FFIs—(i) In general. … A payee whose registration with the IRS as a participating FFI or a registered deemed-compliant FFI is in process but has not yet received a GIIN may provide a withholding agent with a Form W-8 claiming the chapter 4 status it applied for and writing “applied for” in the box for the GIIN. In such case, the FFI will have 90 calendar days from the date of its claim to provide the withholding agent with its GIIN and the withholding agent will have 90 calendar days from the date it receives the GIIN to verify the accuracy of the GIIN against the published IRS FFI list before it has reason to know that the payee is not a participating FFI or registered deemed-compliant FFI. … (emphasis added)
Do FFIs in IGA countries have an extension until December 22 for FATCA Registration?
Financial institutions (FFIs) in the 68 IGA countries have an extension to register with the IRS in order to obtain a GIIN and thus appear on the IRS’ FATCA compliant list. FATCA 30% withholding for FFIs in these Model 1 IGA countries and jurisdictions only begins January 1, 2015.
See Reg. § 1.1471-3(d)(4)(iv)(A): § 1.1471-3(d)(4)(iv) Exceptions for payments to reporting Model 1 FFIs.— (A) For payments made prior to January 1, 2015, a withholding agent may treat the payee as a reporting Model 1 FFI if it receives a withholding certificate from the payee indicating that the payee is a reporting Model 1 FFI and the country in which the payee is a reporting Model 1 FFI, regardless of whether the certificate contains a GIIN for the payee.
The situation of the last list to be published for 2014 and, more importantly, the last date to register as a Model 1 FFI to ensure being included on that list, is somewhat fluid. In the past 18 months, the IRS has several times amended its deadlines and its timelines for GIIN registration. Thus, it is at least feasible that another registration or withholding start date extension is granted before the end of 2014 (obviously Treasury will vehemently deny any more extensions on the horizon, but last year it did not expect a government shut down and this year it extended the registration date by at least 10 days weeks before the deadline of April 25).
In its January 6, 2014 Announcement 2014-1 (IRB 2014-2), the IRS stated:
Thus, while reporting Model 1 FIs will be able to register and obtain GIINs on or after January 1, 2014, they will not need to register or obtain GIINs until on or about December 22, 2014, to ensure inclusion on the IRS FFI list by January 1, 2015. (emphasis added)
However, at least one IGA country is suggesting an earlier (perhaps more prudent) date than December 22, 2014 for GIIN registration in order to be included on the IRS’ last 2014 FATCA compliant list. The United Kingdom’s Law Society and Institute of Chartered Accountants in May 2014 published combined guidance to members stating:
To ensure that the registration has been processed in time for inclusion on that list the last practical date for registration is 25 October 2014.
The IRS will release its final 2014 list of FATCA compliant financial institutions (thus not subject to FATCA 30% withholding on January 1, 2015 and onward) most likely on Wednesday, December 31, 2014 (according to the United Kingdom guidance quoted above), albeit it seems just as reasonable for a Friday, January 2 list to be released. The 90 day safeguard mentioned above is also in place for the IGA deadlines.
Jurisdictions that have signed agreements:
Model 1 IGA – 29
- Australia (4-28-2014)
- Belgium (4-23-2014)
- Canada (2-5-2014)
- Cayman Islands (11-29-2013)
- Costa Rica (11-26-2013)
- Denmark (11-19-2012)
- Estonia (4-11-2014)
- Finland (3-5-2014)
- France (11-14-2013)
- Germany (5-31-2013)
- Gibraltar (5-8-2014)
- Guernsey (12-13-2013)
- Hungary (2-4-2014)
- Honduras (3-31-2014)
- Ireland (1-23-2013)
- Isle of Man (12-13-2013)
- Italy (1-10-2014)
- Jamaica (5-1-2014)
- Jersey (12-13-2013)
- Liechtenstein (5-19-2014) <– IGA officially signed, moved from list below
- Luxembourg (3-28-2014)
- Malta (12-16-2013)
- Mauritius (12-27-2013)
- Mexico (4-9-2014)
- Netherlands (12-18-2013)
- Norway (4-15-2013)
- Slovenia (6-2-2014) <– IGA officially signed, moved from list below
- Spain (5-14-2013)
- United Kingdom (9-12-2012)
Model 2 IGA – 5
Jurisdictions that have reached agreements in substance and have consented to being included on this list (beginning on the date indicated in parenthesis):
Model 1 IGA – 34
- Azerbaijan (5-16-2014)
- Bahamas (4-17-2014)
- Barbados (5-27-2014) <– new IGA agreed
- Brazil (4-2-2014)
- British Virgin Islands (4-2-2014)
- Bulgaria (4-23-2014)
- Colombia (4-23-2014)
- Croatia (4-2-2014)
- Curaçao (4-30-2014)
- Czech Republic (4-2-2014)
- Cyprus (4-22-2014)
- India (4-11-2014)
- Indonesia (5-4-2014)
- Israel (4-28-2014)
- Kosovo (4-2-2014)
- Kuwait (5-1-2014)
- Latvia (4-2-2014)
- Lithuania (4-2-2014)
- New Zealand (4-2-2014)
- Panama (5-1-2014)
- Peru (5-1-2014)
- Poland (4-2-2014)
- Portugal (4-2-2014)
- Qatar (4-2-2014)
- Romania (4-2-2014)
- Seychelles (5-28-2014) <– new IGA agreed
- Singapore (5-5-2014)
- Slovak Republic (4-11-2014)
- South Africa (4-2-2014)
- South Korea (4-2-2014)
- Sweden (4-24-2014)
- Turkey (6-3-2014) <– new IGA agreed
- Turks and Caicos Islands (5-12-2014)
- United Arab Emirates (5-23-2014) <– new IGA agreed
Model 2 IGA – 2
- Armenia (5-8-2014)
- Hong Kong (5-9-2014)
Practical Compliance Aspects of FATCA and GATCA
The LexisNexis® Guide to FATCA Compliance (2nd Edition) comprises 34 Chapters by 50 industry experts grouped in three parts: compliance program (Chapters 1–4), analysis of FATCA regulations (Chapters 5–16) and analysis of Intergovernmental Agreements (IGAs) and local law compliance challenges (Chapters 17–34), including intergovernmental agreements as well as the OECD’s TRACE initiative for global automatic information exchange protocols and systems. A free download of the first of the 34 chapters is available at http://www.lexisnexis.com/store/images/samples/9780769853734.pdf
Posted in FATCA, Uncategorized | Tagged: FATCA, IGA | 1 Comment »


