Nearly 100 foundations have been registered in Guernsey in the five years since the island’s foundations law came into effect.
They were introduced in January 2013 as a new solution for private wealth clients seeking more directional power over assets compared to traditional trust structures. They have been established in civil law countries for many years.
Among the new foundations, ones set up for estate planning for South American families involving endowments of £25million and £3.2billion respectively, and another is a trustee for the trusts of a significant English landed estate.
They were overseen by law firm Collas Crill.
Their group partner in the trusts and foundations team, Angela Calnan (pictured), said: “Most of those that we have been involved with have been for ‘super structures’ and, in my experience, Guernsey foundations are not being used for ‘cookie cutter’, volume business.”
“The Guernsey foundation has the advantage of being a very flexible structure which lends itself well to bespoke estate planning mandates while also benefitting from the robust legal and regulatory environment here which clients are actively seeking out.”
Dominic Wheatley, chief executive of Guernsey Finance, said: “Guernsey has significant expertise in servicing structures for protecting and preserving private family wealth, and the foundation has provided another alternative. The Guernsey legislation also provides some aspects that differentiate the Guernsey foundation from others in the marketplace, and this has proved valuable.”
These distinctions to the Guernsey foundations law include a separate legal personality, which helps to clarify appropriate tax treatment for the founder, confidentiality, and different treatment for beneficiaries being enfranchised or disenfranchised.