Offshore
Offshore Centres Look Back, Forward In Uncertain Times

We talk to industry figures in various IFCs in Europe to ask how international pressures and the global pandemic have shaped business and strategy.
  Since the pandemic broke out at the start of 2020, it has upended
  how financial services operate, hastening the use of digital
  technology to cope with cancelled flights and enforced remote
  working. And one select group involved in all this turmoil is the
  world’s club of international financial centres.
  
  Islands and mini-states have been havens of stability, often
  enjoying high vaccination rates that have won plaudits from the
  locals. (The UAE and Malta, to give two cases, both achieved high
  rates.) On the flipside, the charms of an island or Alpine
  village can fade if one cannot leave it for months to see family,
  friends and important business contacts. HNW individuals who
  planned on using an offshore hub as a place to stay for a few
  weeks in the sun must hunker down for a whole year or
  more. 
  
  As the crisis dragged on, many IFCs kept heads below the parapet,
  although from time to time news broke of how well, or not, they
  were ranked for business, clean money laundering records, and the
  like. In its annual report on global wealth, Boston
  Consultant Group said that in 2020, rankings of “leading
  cross-border” centres were, in descending order of size of money:
  Switzerland, Hong Kong, Singapore, the US, the Channel Islands
  and Isle of Man, the United Arab Emirates, the UK mainland,
  Luxembourg, Monaco, and Liechtenstein. In 2025, BCG predicts the
  following ranking: Hong Kong, Switzerland, Singapore, the US, the
  UAE, the Channel Islands and Isle of Man, the UK mainland,
  Luxembourg, Monaco, and Liechtenstein. As of 2020,
  Switzerland had $2.4 trillion of wealth.
  
  Pandemic or no pandemic, pressures on IFCs to behave hasn’t gone
  away, although it should be noted that 
  worries about intra-government data exchange haven’t faded
  either, given issues such as cybersecurity attacks on government
  revenue departments. The tax and regulatory climate for
  offshore centres isn't getting easier. An overwhelming majority
  (97 per cent) of private wealth professionals think that
  governments are stepping up efforts to tax offshore wealth and
  plug the economic hole caused by the global pandemic. According
  to research by Intertrust Group published in April, more than
  half (56 per cent) think that this is an “extremely likely"
  scenario. And yesterday, the 
  International Consortium of Investigative Journalists
  published another large trove of 
  data leaks affecting multiple offshore locations. 
  
  Furthermore, the impact of the pandemic has coincided with
  Brexit, and further afield, from G20 calls for a minimum global
  corporation tax rate of 15 per cent. Jurisdictions such as
  Jersey, Guernsey and the Isle of Man have had to figure out the
  often uncertain task of how to exploit the situation without
  falling foul of bigger neighbours. In another twist, Mainland
  China’s crackdown on Hong Kong, the former UK colony, has
  prompted wealthy Hong Kongers to relocate their assets and
  families. Places such as Switzerland, the UK and Dubai, among
  others, stand to benefit.
  
  As far as this news organisation can tell, a number of IFCs
  appear to be setting the pace, judging by how they have managed
  to keep off “blacklists” or “greylists” of jurisdictions deemed
  to be slow, poor or both in complying with tax information
  exchange, AML controls and other behaviours. 
  Some jurisdictions appear to have come out of the pandemic in
  good shape, showing good governance and responsiveness, Andrew
  Morriss, professor, Bush School of Government & Public Service
  and School of Law, Texas A&M University, told this
  publication. General competence is very important and valued
  by the industry. “These places are like `hotels for money’,”
  Morriss said, noting that when one stays in a smart hotel, staff
  pay attention to small details, which makes guests confident that
  the bigger details will also be handled well.
  
  One IFC that appears to have quite a “halo” is Jersey, the Crown
  Dependency. It isn’t on the FATF list of countries deemed as
  having AML deficiencies; it is no longer on the “Primary Concern”
  list of the US State Department. There aren’t any sanctions
  against it. Jersey isn’t on the EU’s list of non-cooperative
  jurisdictions for tax purposes.
  
  Other places have not done so well. Malta, for example, has been
  put on the 
  FATF “greylist” for AML purposes, a fact that this EU member
  state and ex-British colony must address quickly. Cyprus, to give
  another case, has mothballed its “golden visa” regime.
  
  Some – but not all – IFCs’ promoters appear to want to go on
  roadshows, such as the case with Malta and the Isle of Man, along
  with Jersey and Luxembourg. In the case of Switzerland, the
  nation does not have a sort of promotional "finance Switzerland,"
  although policymakers in Berne have been talking to their peers
  in London, for example, to bolster financial links. 
  
  The state of play
  This news service spoke to a number of groups to take the
  temperature.
  
  “Travel restrictions have had a positive impact on movement to
  the Isle of Man,” Janine Cubbon, head of Private Wealth, Suntera,
  at its Isle of Man office, said. “It’s refocused decision-making
  to be more about ‘where do I want to be based if travel is
  restricted?’”
  
  “The Isle of Man has seen increased global recognition as
  somewhere people want to live as a result. Lifestyle, security,
  quality health and education, a strong economy, a strong sense of
  social responsibility and supportive local infrastructure all
  play their part. The rollout of a swift vaccination programme to
  ensure the island’s borders can open and accommodate freedom of
  travel for the masses has also been key,” Cubbon said. 
  
  Paul Hunter, group head of family office services, Crestbridge,
  was asked how the IFC value proposition holds up in today’s
  world. 
  
  “Generally, clients actively seek stability and certainty, and
  we’ve been seeing that now for some years, in the aftermath of
  the global financial crisis, Brexit and now the pandemic. For
  some years, though, we’ve had a focus on the US as a growth
  market for our family office services business. It’s a
  strategically important growth market not only because of the
  impact of the pandemic but because of the long-term rate of
  growth in certain regional markets within the US, the
  increasingly global nature of the US private client landscape,
  and the prevalence of an industry that is still growing in
  maturity in terms of its cross-border, non-domestic
  capabilities,” Hunter said. 
  
  “It’s why we’ve bolstered our footprint in the US over recent
  years and why we launched a joint venture with Willow Street to
  create Crestbridge Fiduciary in 2020. The unsettled political and
  economic landscape in the US over recent years has certainly
  enabled us to introduce internationally-dynamic families in the
  US to solutions across our own network, as part of their search
  for certainty and peace of mind, and we fully expect that trend
  to continue.”
   
  Daniel Channing, a Jersey-based colleague of Hunter at Crestbridge in its family
  offices business, was asked what IFCs must do to stay
  relevant.
  
  “Top of the list has to be a commitment to service quality. If an
  IFC can demonstrate high standards of service and a workforce
  that is driven to achieving client-focused work, then that really
  is the differentiator in a world where clients are increasingly
  seeking quality,” Channing said. 
  
  “Stemming from that, ready access to a deep pool of specialist
  knowledge is really important. Families are in our experience
  moving into increasingly niche, new areas, and exploring new
  markets, and being able to service that need is vital. ESG and
  sustainable finance, or digital assets are cases in point.
  Clients will increasingly look at an IFC’s capabilities,
  aspirations and vision in areas such as these. 
  
  “Third, a tried and tested regulatory and legislative environment
  is critical. IFCs that can show that they have case law that has
  been tested in practice, and seeing an IFC’s commitment to
  maintaining a strong regulatory framework will give clients
  confidence in its maturity helping them to navigate an
  increasingly complex web of international regulation, reporting
  requirements and disclosure,” he continued.  
  
  “Fourth, digital acumen. All research points to the fact that the
  next gen is going to be immersed in a digital first environment,
  and IFCs that support them need to show that they are aligned
  with that - from digital adoption and digital infrastructure, to
  digital innovation and fintech development, all these things add
  up to create a digital-first environment that is going to
  resonate with clients in the long-term. 
  
  “And finally, choice of structures. Having an armoury of
  structures that have a track record of delivering on client
  objectives is key, as clients become increasingly focused on
  specific investment or life outcomes from their wealth planning –
  whether that’s asset protection, generating returns, legacy
  planning, making philanthropic donations or establishing
  impact-focused schemes, having a range of robust, familiar,
  tested structures will become more and more important,” he
  said. 
  
  Deidree Bain, managing director, Bahamas office at Suntera, said: "There is a
  huge variance in how IFCs have been affected. Smaller
  jurisdictions have seen an influx in new residents who have a
  perception that these smaller countries have managed the pandemic
  well in comparison to some larger cities. Large cities and
  population centres look very different from their pre-COVID
  days.”
  
  Certain places appear to be doing well, at least according to
  anecdotal reports. Hawksford, a provider of
  corporate, private client and funds services, said people across
  the world have asked about moving businesses to Jersey.
  
  “It is a very exciting time for us in Jersey,” said David
  Carswell, Hawksford director and head of Corporate Services in
  Jersey. “Jersey is a highly reputable, well-regulated
  jurisdiction. In the past, some may have felt this worked against
  us but with a growing number of traditional financial centres
  being added to grey lists and watch lists, attention is turning
  to Jersey as a trustworthy destination for businesses. 
Professor Morriss, quoted above, said some jurisdictions haven't handled the pandemic and its restrictions particularly well, raising questions about governance more generally.
Referring to the Cayman Islands and certain other Caribbean centres, Morriss noted that their strict, and long quarantine requirements as of the time of writing were a blow to their status as convenient cross-border locations. “It has rather killed the 'we are one hour from Miami’ point," he said.
In the Cayman Islands, fully vaccinated travellers who arrive at the IFC on or after 22 September and who produce a vaccine document must be quaranteed for seven days with a negative day eight exit quarantine PCR test.
If certain offshore centres remain closed or impose tight controls, it is going to drive business elsewhere, professor Morriss said.
The use of Zoom and other platforms, and greater use of such digital channels, is going to change the kind of “sales pitches” that offshore centres use to encourage business. In the past, they have often promoted the tourist/lifestyle angles, but that is less potent if it is harder to physically get to such places, he continued.
“Faced with a crisis, most of these places [IFCs] haven not given noticeably smarter responses to it than the UK or US,” professor Morriss said. “These places in the past have sold us on the line of being smart regulators….but the pandemic has made you question it for some jurisdictions.”