An offshore hedge fund is a structure used by hedge fund managers to attract offshore investors. The main reason for investing in offshore hedge funds is nearly always to take advantage of minimal or zero taxation in the place where the fund is registered and remove liability for taxes in the place where the investor is living; a lawful strategy usually referred to as ‘tax efficiency’, or even ‘tax avoidance’ (but not ‘tax evasion,’ which is illegal).
Basically, a hedge fund is where individual investors pool their money for investment by a fund manager paid to eliminate risk and maximize profits. Benefits to the investors, aside from zero tax on profits, include asset and wealth security, access to international trading and investment opportunities, a high level of privacy in dealings, and the ability to conduct business entirely electronically, no matter where you are based.
Hedge funds are practically always established in low or zero tax jurisdictions – which is how they don’t have to pay domestic corporate taxes. But offshore hedge fund investors are usually liable for taxes in their country of residence on the income they receive from the fund.
The Cayman Islands is considered the most popular offshore jurisdiction in the world, and
Cayman Islands hedge funds, the leader in offshore hedge funds. More than 10,000 offshore hedge funds are currently registered with the Cayman Islands Monetary Authority (CIMA).
Stamp duties, licencing fees and import duties make up the bulk of the Cayman Islands’ government revenue, not direct taxation. So putting your money to work in a jurisdiction where there is no income tax, corporate tax, capital gains, or inheritance taxes is a good ‘hedge’ bet.
A limited liability company or limited partnership easily set up by Cayman corporate services providers is the usual method of setting up an offshore fund. Investors putting money into a fund structured as a limited liability company receive shares corresponding to their investment level, redeemable according to the company’s articles of association.
A limited liability company or limited partnership easily set up by
Cayman corporate services providers is the usual method of setting up an offshore fund. Investors putting money into a fund structured as a limited liability company receive shares corresponding to their investment level, redeemable according to the company’s articles of association.