Strategy
France-Based US Expats Get New Wealth Offering

The firm will offer wealth planning, investment management and reporting services to its clients.
London &
Capital, the wealth manager with a special focus on serving
expat Americans and clients with links to the US, has launched a
service for US expats in France.
Targeted at the estimated 100,000 Americans who live and work in
France, the firm will advise clients on local French and US
tax regulations as well as giving tailored investment advice on
how to put financial ideas into action. The service covers
how domestic US and European assets are managed, such
as retirement accounts. London & Capital will offer wealth
planning, investment management and reporting services to its
clients.
“Americans living and working in France, particularly high net
worth Individuals, are facing an increasingly complex tangle of
regulatory and reporting requirements,” said Adam Myers,
associate at London & Capital. “Over nearly three decades, London
& Capital has gained a reputation as the wealth manager of choice
for Americans living and working in the UK, and we are delighted
to formally extend our offer to those residing in France. This
will build on our existing presence in the country, where our
specialism in working with US expats has been sought out by a
number of new clients.
Myers added: “For American investors in France, it is essential
that any portfolio is constructed with a global, currency-aware
investment strategy, consolidated with investments elsewhere in
the world, and administered in a way that is optimised for both
French and US tax codes and reporting. Our US family office team
work hand in hand with our investment desk to create bespoke
investment portfolios for each client, based on strategic global
asset allocation and implemented within the appropriate
investments and wrappers to meet their long-term objectives.”
London & Capital is an independently-owned wealth and asset
manager. Established in 1986, it has £2.8 billion ($3.6
billion) of assets under management, as at June 2018. It is
one of a handful of businesses that make a virtue of serving
expat US citizens and Green Card holders, many of whom have faced
an uphill struggle to get financial services abroad in recent
years. The US extra-territorial tax rules that have kicked
in have encouraged some foreign banks, such as Deutsche Bank and
HSBC, to cease providing US expats with accounts. As a result,
their predicament has encouraged groups such as American
Citizens Abroad to lobby for reform
of the US worldwide tax regime.