Trust Estate
New Rules, Swiss Trusts And Beneficial Ownership Under Microscope
![New Rules, Swiss Trusts And Beneficial Ownership Under Microscope](https://wealthbriefing.com/cms/images/app/Swiss%20Alps/Interlakennight.jpg)
This publication was the exclusive media partner at last month's annual STEP conference for the Switzerland and Liechtenstein industry. The event, held in Interlaken, ranged over topics such as new regulations on Swiss financial services, beneficial ownership rules, family governance, and economic "substance".
Switzerland’s prospects of a home-grown trusts law, controversies
over beneficial ownership and the new regulatory landscape were
among the topics aired at a recent conference among trust and
estate planning practitioners in Interlaken, Switzerland.
The Swiss & Liechtenstein STEP Federation Alpine Conference was
told about industry changes around the world, including those
playing out in Switzerland – still the world’s largest single
offshore jurisdiction – and the neighbouring small principality
of Liechtenstein.
As ever, a strong theme running through the two-day conference
was how pressure for more transparency on people’s financial
affairs clashed with the legitimate need for privacy. As an
example, a panel discussion on the European Union’s Fifth
Anti-Money Laundering Directive left delegates wondering how
disclosures over art purchases could fit with a need to prevent
owners being targeted by thieves. In recent years, the unfolding
of the Common Reporting Standard and calls for public registers
for beneficial ownership of trusts and companies prompted similar
worries.
The gold sponsor of the event was Industrie-und Finanzkontor, a
Liechtenstein-based trust company with a specific tradition and
expertise in the long-term and multi-generational preservation of
wealth, family values and businesses, and bronze sponsors were
Lenz & Staehelin, the Swiss law firm, and Stonehage Fleming, the
multi-family office. WealthBriefing was the media
partner for the conference, and The Beehive Partnership was the
conference organiser. Conference partners were: Cadell;
Butterfield Trust (Switzerland); Swiss Life Global Solutions;
Schroder & Co Bank; Swisspartners; Schellenberg Wittmer; Swiss
Association of Trust Companies; Döhle; Acumum Advisory; Alliance
Trust Company of Nevada; Family Office Advisory; and Thatcher
Mackenzie.
Regulatory squeeze
HSH Prince Michael of Liechtenstein, executive chairman of
Industrie-und Finanzkontor, spoke directly to
WealthBriefing on the sidelines of the conference,
stressing a theme that he also voiced during his panel session:
the danger of rising regulations squeezing out smaller players
from the industry. Negative and zero interest rates harm savings
and pension funds and furthermore do not allow banks to improve
their equity capital. “In general, people are going out of the
financial markets. They buy into real estate, venture capital,
private equity as well as gold and art,” he said.
Prince Michael is outspoken in defence of financial privacy and
is concernced with the reasons why financial privacy and property
rights are under attack. “One needs to be outspoken about the
consequences,” he said. “However, organisations with a weak
management and weak products rather prefer to preserve the status
quo and thus like regulations because it hobbles competition," he
continued.
Conference sessions
After a welcome to delegates by Andrew McCallum, managing
director, Rhone Trustees (Switzerland) SA and chairman of Swiss &
Liechtenstein STEP Federation, delegates were given a fast tour
around the kind of cultural changes affecting the working world
by Dame Inga Beale, former chief executive of Lloyds of
London.
Trustee regulation
At the first panel discussion, the panellists considered the
present state of play on how trustees are regulated in
Switzerland, and some recent regulatory developments. Panellists
were Professor Rashid Bahar, partner, Baer & Karrer and
professor, University of Geneva; Leonard Vijverberg, senior
associate, Lenz & Staehelin; and Philippe de Salis, head of
fiduciary, Switzerland, Stonehage Fleming.
One discussion theme was focused on the exemptions in rules for
professional trustees that arise when there are “family ties”, as
in the case with private trust companies and dedicated trust
companies. Panellists talked about how authorities are seeking to
clarify the requirements of trustees and other interested
parties, such as minimum levels of experience.
One issue discussed by Professor Bahar was what happens to
trustees of a company that is founded under laws of a non-Swiss
country but which is actually run in the Alpine state. Such an
entity is subject to licensing requirements but as things stand,
cannot be licensed. That said, foreign trustees that are not
operating in or from Switzerland are not subject to these
licensing requirements.
Panellists discussed the steps practitioners need to take to get
licensed and the respective roles of FINMA, Switzerland’s
national regulator, and “supervisory organisations” with the
powers to oversee a particular activity. Ultimately, the rules
for trustee licences are set by FINMA, the conference delegates
heard, and FINMA uses a risk-based approach in its work. There
remains work to be done in working out which supervisory
organisations industry players must affiliate with, and indeed
which supervisory organisations shall receive FINMA approval.
Second panel
The second panel looked at issues of trustee regulation
worldwide, drawing on experiences in jurisdictions such as the
Bahamas and Liechtenstein. Speakers on this panel were Paul
Davis, partner, Higgs & Johnson, Bahamas; HSH Prince Michael of
Liechtenstein, executive chairman, Industrie-und Finanzkontor;
and Marcus Leese, partner, Ogier.
Davis, for example, pointed out how the Bahamas, a jurisdiction
with common law trust structures, foundations and other entities,
has plenty of tools in the box that clients might want to use.
Swiss trust clients, for example, have been able to use
Bahamas-based laws for certain purposes. He noted that one risk
at a time of pressure for beneficial ownership disclosure was the
risk of client data becoming vulnerable to hackers.
Prince Michael, who as this publication knows has been a vocal
defender of financial privacy and the importance of private
property, talked about updates and recent changes in
Liechtenstein laws, which he said were not particularly dramatic.
He reiterated a concern that as regulations become more excessive
and duplicating, the costs of running trusts goes up. This also
includes a social aspect: due to the increased costs caused by
regulations, the long-term protection of wealth can only be
achieved for larger fortunes. This penalises especially smaller
and medium-sized fortunes, which, however, are very important to
the economy and society too. The protection of larger and smaller
fortunes is equally important and regulations should be
streamlined to be effective and affordable.
A concern about public registers of beneficial ownership, Prince
Michael said, is that they could fuel envy about wealth rather
than really push back against money laundering.
Davis agreed that the cost issue is a serious one for the trusts
sector. Legislation such as the US FATCA rules and others are
passing more costs on to clients. “There is a smaller number of
fiduciary structures and minimums are going up,” he
said.
Ogier’s Lees agreed, drawing on his experience in jurisdictions
such as Guernsey, that the cost of business is rising. “Smaller
families are no longer a part of the environment [for business]
that we see. This pushes smaller structures to jurisdictions that
are no longer regulated,” he said.
Asked if there will be a pause or event pushback to the rising
volume of regulation, Davis said that is unlikely. “It would be
naïve to think we are done now.” More positively, there is
evidence that the market for protecting and transferring wealth
is getting larger rather than smaller.
Third panel
The third panel discussed economic “substance” – which relates to
the steps that providers of entities such as trusts and companies
must have to show that they are in involved in actual
commercial/economic activity and not just an empty shell for tax
or some other purpose. Speakers in this panel were Herbert
Bischof, managing partner, BDO (Liechtenstein); Paul Davis,
partner at Higgs & Johnson, Bahamas; Professor Dr Pierre-Marie
Glauser, professor, University of Lausanne and partner, Obserson
Abels; and David Cooney, partner, Charles Russell
Speechlys.
Glauser pointed out that Switzerland has never had a “substance”
requirement for offshore structures. Instead, it has operated the
test of whether an entity has “effective” management and whether
it is possible to “pierce the corporate veil” of a structure so
that people can see where the commercial activity lies. “It is
not about `substance’ itself but where day-to-day management goes
on.”
Bischof said that Liechtenstein has a “relevant activities” test
and that entities that don’t prove substance can be hit with
criminal penalties. So far there hasn’t been any jurisprudence or
tests of the substance issue in Liechtenstein because it is still
a new concept.
Davis explored issues around the “substance”, such as whether an
organisation engages in income-generating activity. In the
Bahamas, for example, an entity which is able to benefit from
status in local law must engage in income-generating activity
there.
Professor Glauser noted that with trusts in Switzerland, settlors
usually created them when they (settlors) lived outside the
country, as a pre-immigration structure before relocating to
Switzerland, for tax optimisation.
Fourth panel
Attention shifted to the major topic of beneficial ownership of
companies and trusts. Issues that arose include new Swiss
anti-money laundering duties for trust and company service
providers and AML laws’ requirements to identify beneficial
owners. The panel also touched on how jurisdictions such as the
Isle of Man, Jersey and Guernsey have moved on beneficial
ownership registers for companies. Panellists were Stephanie
Auferil, founding partner, Arkwood; Lars Schlichting, partner,
Kellerhals Carrard; and Filippo Noseda, partner, Mishcon de Reya
and visiting professor, King’s College.
Panellists noted that the European Union’s Fifth Anti-Money
Laundering Directive became law on 10 January. Schlichting, who
asked about the Swiss situation, said he had seen no indication –
yet – that Switzerland intends to set up a beneficial ownership
public register for companies as is the case in the EU. “We are
in a small corner and we’ve been quiet,” he said.
Auferil, talking about French legal issues and France’s
Constitutional Court ruling that pushed back at demands for
public disclosure, noted that only authorities deemed competent
can get access to beneficial ownership information, such as
people who can demonstrate a legitimate reason, filed with a
judge, why they should have it.
It was noted by panellists that some jurisdictions, such as
Liechtenstein, have created the condition that to count as a
beneficial owner of a company, a person must actually have
control of a company if their identity is be disclosed via a
register. Noseda said it was important to differentiate between
companies and trusts in terms of beneficial ownership: people who
own companies attend annual meetings, are paid dividends and vote
on agenda items, whereas a beneficial owner (beneficiary) of a
trust might be a child, for example.
Another issue for beneficial ownership advocates is that the EU,
for example, has a right to privacy – which potentially conflicts
with demands for total transparency. “I am stunned that no-one
has brought this before the courts yet,” Noseda said.
Fifth panel
The final panel for the first day, following a short outline of
12 “Do’s and Don’ts” regarding tax and matters concerning trusts
and standalone companies, was about European Union issues.
Speakers on this panel were Jean-Blaise Eckert, partner, Lenz &
Staehelin; Sabine Monauni, Ambassador of Liechtenstein to the EU;
and Professor Dr Michael Wohlgemuth, research officer, Foundation
for Governance and Public Law.
The final panel discussion of the first day examined European
Union issues, including Switzerland’s relations with the bloc,
and, of course, the aftermath of the UK Brexit vote. Panellists
for this segment of the conference were Jean-Blaise Eckert,
partner, Lenz & Staehelin; Sabine Monauni, Ambassador of
Liechtenstein to the EU, and Professor Dr Michael Wohlgemuth,
research officer, Foundation for Economic Governance and Public
Law.
Second day
The first panel of the day centred around family governance
issues. Panellists were Kecia Barkawi, founder and CEO of
VALUEworks; Dina Casparis, independent lawyer, advisor and
novelist; Etienne D’Arenberg, partner, Mirabaud & Cie; and
Nichlolas Jacob, partner, Forsters LLP.
D’Arenberg said that a lot of inheritors need to have training
sessions and gatherings to work through financial issues,
including understanding concepts and ideas. (With some young
adults this might not be such a challenge if they are studying
law, finance, accounting or similar subjects in college.) Another
big question for family members is whether they have enough
people in their lives whose advice they can trust, he
said.
Barkawi gave the example of a family that asked her firm to run a
programme to prepare their offspring to be responsible about
wealth, as they would at some point have to get involved in
running an operating company. To address this, a philanthropic
project was created to get them accustomed to understanding
budgets, planning and understanding outcomes.
Casparis noted that US and German families often became rich
through industry, so there was a tried and tested family
governance tradition that arose from that. In Switzerland, this
was less the case, so discussing governance and money issues has
not been as easy. A challenge for advisors is how they can
connect with next-gen inheritors without going behind clients’
backs, Casparis said.
One topic raised was how families should balance the need for
their offspring to be treated fairly and whether this meant
equality: not all young people are equally qualified or motivated
to run an inherited business, which meant that sub-dividing
assets could be challenging.
Second panel
The second panel of the day addressed art assets and the
challenges of buying, selling and holding art at a time of
heightened focus on money laundering rules.
Speakers at this event were Sandrine Giroud, partner at Lalive;
Michelle Stroube, legal assistant, at Mishcon de Reya; and
Willem-Joost De Gier, co-founder, Cadell.
Stroube kicked off the panel discussion by laying out the need
for intermediaries, buyers and sellers of art to be clear about
its provenance, authenticity, the sources of wealth to buy art,
tax, legal title and logistics. And under the latest EU
anti-money laundering directive, taking effect in January,
artworks worth more than €10,000 are subject to tests and
regulatory requirements to prevent money being laundered.
The question arose of how many bidders in auctions for artworks
are anonymous and what is going to happen if beneficial ownership
disclosure means they can no longer keep their names private?
“That information is going to get more and more public,” Stroube
said.
Giroud noted that the global art market is worth around $60
billion and cited evidence, such as studies from Deloitte and Art
Tactic, showing how high net worth investors have become keener
on investing in art in recent years. This has fuelled turnover in
the art market and the need to keep it compliant. She mentioned
ventures such as the Responsible Art Market Initiative, put
together by industry practitioners, to weed out problems and keep
the market honest. De Gier noted that the fine art market is now
very sophisticated and professional, and no longer amateurish.
One factor, he said, is that the market can be driven by emotion,
which can create its own challenges for avoiding problems.
Third panel
The third panel examined investing in real estate abroad.
Participants were Liam Bailey, global head of research, Knight
Frank; Dr Alon Kaplan, advocate and notary, Alon Kaplan Law; and
Edward Reed, partner, Macfarlanes LLP.
Bailey said that investors have to expect a period of lower
returns after some strong figures; adding that the UK market
post-Brexit was “interesting” because of the slippage of
sterling, and the dissipation of some of the uncertainties about
its departure from the bloc. Meanwhile, the market continued to
be shaped by highly mobile capital flows. “That’s not going
away.”
Dr Kaplan spoke specifically about Israel’s real estate market
and of how a country that was founded in 1948 had gone from a
population of about 400,000 to more than 9 million amid waves of
immigration by Jewish people from around the world. He set out
the various tax incentives, including a 10-year tax “holiday” -
designed to draw in financial inflows - which immigrants can
apply for.
Reed discussed the rise in the UK of Unexplained Wealth Orders
and how this applied in a few recent cases to holders of
property. He noted that UWOs applied to people suspected but not
necessarily convicted of serious criminal offences (a fact that
has raised some worries about due process of law).
Fourth panel
The world of foundations was aired in the next panel, with
discussion about the differences between trusts – creatures of
the common law – and foundations (continental civil law), and the
jurisdictions which are known for being friendly to foundations.
Panellists were Christopher Jolk, partner at BMH Avocats; Paolo
Panico, chairman, Private Trustees SA, Luxmebourg & Advocate,
Paolo Panico’s Law Chambers; Dr Natalie Peter, partner, Blum &
Grob Attorneys at Law; and Dr Johanna Niegel, senior client
advisor, Allgemeines Treuunternehem, committee member of Verein
STEP.
Fifth panel
This publication wrapped up its coverage of the conference by
hearing panellists talk about the prospect of trust law taking
shape in Switzerland, enabling a domestically-driven industry
(foreign trusts are already recognised in the country, which is
not a common law country).
Panellists for this discussion were Professor Dr Francesco A
Schurr, professor of Law, University of Innsbruck; Professor Dr
Luc Thévenoz, Professor, University of Geneva, director, Centre
for Banking and Financial Law; and David Wilson, partner,
Schellenberg Wittmer.
The participants talked about how there are motions in the Swiss
parliament to call for a Swiss trusts law. A key theme, the panel
heard, was to be clear about the duties of trustees and
beneficiaries. There will be a public consultation on the issue
probably in the fourth quarter of this year and then the matter
will go to parliament. With respect to the taxation of such Swiss
trusts, Wilson noted that Swiss federalism sets limits to what
the federal law can impose on the individual cantons of the
country.
To close the event, a “great debate” about trust and estate
industry issues was held, featuring Nicholas Jacob, partner at
Forsters LLP; Fabianne de Vos Burchart, counsel, Charles Russell
Speechlys; Professor Dr Dominique Jakob, Professor of Private Law
and director of the Center for Foundation Law at the University
of Zurich; and Professor Dr Luc Thevenoz, Professor, University
of Geneva, director, Centre for Banking and Financial Law.