Offshore
HSBC Says CEO Paid Tax After Setting Up Swiss Account, Keeping HK Residence - Report

On the eve of reporting its full-year 2014 and quarterly results, HSBC explained that its CEO paid tax after setting up his own Swiss account and retaining his legal residence in Hong Kong.
HSBC, which is due to
issue full-year and quarterly results for 2014 today, has said
that its chief executive, Stuart Gulliver, paid tax after setting
up his own Swiss account and retaining his legal residence in
Hong Kong, Bloomberg reported.
The bank responded to an article in the Guardian
newspaper yesterday and told the news service that Gulliver
opened the account in 1998 to hold bonus payments while working
in Hong Kong. He paid Hong Kong taxes on the bonuses there, and
since moving to the UK in 2003 has paid UK taxes on his earnings
globally, it said.
“Mr Gulliver voluntarily declared his Swiss account to UK tax
authorities for a number of years,” HSBC is quoted as having
said.
The last few weeks have seen the Hong Kong/London-listed banking
group hit by a media and political storm. A report by the
Washington DC-based International Consortium of Investigative
Journalists and a separate documentary by the BBC
Panorama programme described how the bank allegedly
helped tax evaders via its Swiss private bank. As far back as
2006-07, a large cache of data was stolen from the bank. A former
employee, Hervé Falciani, is on trial in Switzerland for the
theft, which is in breach of Swiss bank secrecy rules.
Prosecutors claim Falciani’s assertion of being a whistleblower
are bogus.
The Guardian said Gulliver was listed as the beneficial
owner of an account at HSBC Suisse in the name of Worcester
Equities Inc, a company registered in Panama. His bonuses were
paid through that entity until 2003, and the account had a
balance of $7.6 million in 2007, the newspaper said. While the
publication detailed the account and his continuing use of Hong
Kong as a residence, it didn’t accuse him of acting illegally.
(Editor's note: It is a mark of how the media feeding frenzy around HSBC and Switzerland now is that when a person such as Gulliver - who has moved around the world with his job - chooses to set up an offshore account, that it is almost automatically assumed by some that this is questionable. But it isn't. With executives travelling the world with their work, it makes perfect sense to keep their financial affairs in an established centre rather than constantly move their own accounts. This may shock some campaigners, but banking offshore isn't just, or is any more, about tax.)