Why Belize Makes Sense
Custom-Made Banking Haven
Editor’s Note: I invited longtime friend Peter Zipper, with 30 years’ experience in the international banking industry and currently president of Cay Bank in Belize, to share insights into banking opportunities in that country. Read on for Peter’s thoughts…Belize is a custom-made banking haven.
With their Belize Act in 1981, the Brits built themselves a banking haven. They looked around at the top banking havens worldwide at the time and cherry-picked the best elements of the banking laws in each case. These elements were incorporated into the banking law for the about-to-become independent nation to be known as Belize.
Until that point, Belize had been British Honduras, a colony of the Crown.
The constitution for this new country was based on the Canadian constitution.
What Does This Mean?
That means boring. Boring politics, boring everything. Not much to rock anybody’s boat.
As a result, in the nearly three decades since, Belize has managed to remain largely under the radar. Ambergris Caye drew some attention as the setting for TV’s “Temptation Island.” Otherwise, other than from global divers and sun-seekers, Belize has been really successful at attracting very little attention.
I spent many of the first 27 years of my 30-year banking career in Europe, working with Swiss banks, for example. We Swiss bankers back then would turn up our noses at the mention of “Belize banking.” Bank in Belize? Who would give their money to a Belize banker, we wanted to know. Bankers in Belize can’t count, can they?
About four years ago, I retired from the Euro-bank where I’d been working. Retirement’s not so much fun, I realized after about two days. When I thought about returning to work, I considered not the opportunities in Europe, but those on this side of the world, in the Americas.
That’s looking like a smart move right now. In the time since I moved from the banking industry in Europe to the one in Belize, the global banking industry has been turned on its head.
Used to be, the mention of ‘banking’ brought places like Switzerland or Austria to mind. This paradigm has collapsed. Banking in Switzerland has collapsed.
Why Belize Is Your Best Offshore Banking Option Right Now
There are dozens of “banking havens” around the world. The truth is, though, that very few of them deserve the description right now. Belize is an exception. Belize is a true banking haven.
Why?… Two reasons…
First, bank secrecy. Belize maintains it. Anyone in the Belize banking industry who violates the country’s bank secrecy laws goes to jail for a minimum of 18 months. Trust me. You don’t want to spend 18 months in a Belize jail.
How has Belize managed to maintain its bank secrecy position while other better-known jurisdictions have all but abandoned the idea?
That’s it, precisely. Belize is little-known. Remember, this country has kept its head down. No one pays it any attention, and Belize is keen to keep it that way.
The second reason Belize stands out among the world’s bank havens right now is liquidity.
Current liquidity among banks around the world is less than 4% In fact, it’s just about 3.1%. That’s the average worldwide.
What's The Situation In Belize?
Banks in this country maintain liquidity rates of 24%. This standard is mandated by the Belize government. A quarter out of every dollar in a Belize bank must be liquid. If a bank falls below this level of liquidity, the government can take the keys and close the bank.
How did Belize bankers fare during the recent banking crisis? We sat back and smiled. We knew we didn’t have anything to worry about, and, in fact, not a single Belize bank has failed.
Belize banks maintain an extraordinarily high standard of liquidity, and they lend only 50% loan-to-value for mortgages. That’s how Belize banks stay healthy.
You can open a bank account at my bank in Belize with zero dollars. Why? Because we, like all Belize banks, are focused on attracting small- to medium-sized investors. We’re not going after mega-clients. Mega-clients attract attention. Remember, Belize is a low-key jurisdiction, happy to stay off the world’s radar.
That’s not to say we’re ready to open an account for any shyster who comes along. The days of sewage banking are over. The banks that threw off a stench in places like Panama and Belize, are gone. No more numbered accounts. We need your name and your address (not a P.O. Box).
And we’re going to ask you how you made the money you’re depositing. We need to know our clients. We need something to fill in the blank on the application form. This helps to protect fellow account-holders, as well as the bank.
Remember, Belize speaks English. So your account manager is an English-speaker. And Belize is in Mountain Time. You don’t have to get up at Midnight to have a conversation with your banker.
Americans and Canadians can open either a personal account or what’s called a structure account. This is the preferred option. It’s an account formed for you by someone else that’s not in your personal name but in the name of a structure–a trust, a company, or a foundation, for example.
Once you’re offshore, you want to do as little in your own name as possible. Put everything possible in the name of a structure.
You don’t have to come to Belize to open your account. In most jurisdictions, including Panama, you must appear in the bank in person to fill out the forms, sit through the interviews, and sign on the dotted line. Not so in Belize. You don’t ever have to step foot in the country if you don’t want to.
But I’d suggest you come have a look. You’ll find yourself in familiar company. This is where the Baby Boomers are headed. They’re coming our way in growing numbers. Walk down the street on Ambergris Caye, and you hear the music of the Boomers all around–the Beatles, the Rolling Stones, Janis Joplin…
These folks had a great time in the 1960s…then they became the most boring people on the planet. They made a lot of money…and now they’re looking to reclaim their lives. They’re finding their way, in retirement, to places like Belize…where they’re listening to their music again, growing their hair long again, and spending their days stoned again…
I’m joking about that last bit. But my point is that Belize has what a lot of people in North America are looking for at this point.
It’s also got the most appealing banking industry in the world right now.
Peter Zipper
One comment
Comments are closed.
October 25, 2013
Sounds like a great place to bank. I’m wondering, however, if a bank’s liquidity falls below 24% & the government closes the bank, do account holders get all of their deposits refunded? I’m currently applying to a bank there, not yours, and of course it’s not insured. I’s a little scary for US citizens used to FDIC insurance.