Uses of Panama Foundations
Panama Private Interest Foundations may be established for the benefit of
a person or persons, a family, or a specific social purpose.
In general, Panama Private Interest Foundations are used by people who wish
to control and maintain ownership of foreign corporations, however, they do
not wish to own their corporations themselves directly, due to the Controlled
Foreign Corporation (CFC) rules in their home countries. Several highly taxed
countries such as the UK, Canada, USA, Australia, New Zealand, France, Italy,
Spain, etc. have CFC rules which require that their citizens submit declarations
(reports) to the appropriate tax authorities, in which they declare that they
are the shareholders of such foreign corporations.
Instead of holding the corporations’ shares in their personal name or
in bearer form, they establish a Private Interest Foundation in Panama that
holds or owns the shares of their foreign corporation(s), thus avoiding the
CFC reporting rules. Hence, the advantage of using the Foundation as a shareholder
for their corporation is to remove ownership from one’s personal name
(or through a Bearer Share arrangement), and transfer ownership to the name
of a foreign entity which does not have owners, rather has privately appointed
beneficiaries, which are anonymous. In this way, there is no question as to
who owns the company, since the company’s shares are issued to the Foundations’ name.
Another advantage of utilizing the Foundation as a shareholder applies in
the following scenario: In many cases, when opening corporate bank accounts
or investment accounts, the financial institutions require that you reveal
the beneficial owners of the corporation. Through the Foundation ownership
strategy, one can state that the Foundation is the owner of the corporation.
Again, the objective is to remove ownership from their personal name, to the
name of a foreign entity whose ownership is anonymous.
The Panama Foundation provides additional advantages other than just ownership.
For example, the Panama Foundation can be useful in transferring funds offshore
or receiving funds from offshore. In some cases, people use Panama Foundations
as vehicles for these purposes. Some people donate their funds to their Panama
Foundations and later use the Foundation to give educational or special grants
to their children, grandchildren, or any one else they choose. The advantage
in this case, is to avoid fiscal regulations surrounding donations, where
some governments impose “gift taxes” and exhaustive reporting
requirements.
In general, Private Interest Foundations may not engage in habitual profit-making
commercial activities as a corporation can. Nevertheless, they may carry out
commercial activities from time to time, as long as the profits of those activities
are used for the objectives of the foundation. For example, a Private Interest
Foundation may engage in banking or investment activities, such as investing
in bank time deposits (Certificates of Deposit – CD’s), stocks,
bonds, mutual funds, options, money markets, etc. so long as the proceeds
from these investment activities are for the benefit of the beneficiaries
of the Foundation.
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