Vanuatu Hybrid Company (an
Offshore IBC or IC Limited
by Shares & Guarantee)
We would like
to introduce to you this
fascinating concept for use
by residents of countries
that are not allowed to
control foreign business
corporations. These
countries include Australia,
New Zealand and some other
British Commonwealth
countries. With a Hybrid the
user does not have an
offshore asset, only a
liability! That is the key
point.
The term
"Hybrid Company" describes a
company that is limited both
by shares and by guarantee.
Thus a Hybrid Company has
two classes of members -
Shareholders and Guarantee
Members. The term
“Shareholder” is familiar
and well understood.
The term “Guarantee Member”
is less common, although
sporting clubs or societies
may be structured as
companies limited by
guarantee and thus having
Guarantee Members.
A Guarantee
Member is elected into
membership of the company by
the directors on condition
that the member undertakes
to contribute to the debts
of the company up to a
certain specified maximum
amount - typically US$500 or
less. Thus a Guarantee
Member holds a contingent
liability - an obligation,
in contrast with a
shareholder who holds an
asset - the shares.
The rights
and obligations of each
class of membership may be
laid down in the Articles of
Association of the company.
Alternatively they may be
set out by the directors in
board meetings if there is a
desire to keep the terms and
conditions of membership
confidential. The
rights and obligations that
attach to each class of
membership can be drafted to
suit virtually any
requirement.
Particularly
persons resident in civil
law countries that do not
recognize trusts, or where
even professionals are not
familiar with the British
Trust concept, often use
hybrid companies as quasi
trusts.
As with
trusts, hybrid structures
may be useful for asset
protection, tax planning
(including estate tax
planning), confidentiality
and avoiding forced heir
ship rules.
When used as
a quasi trust, the hybrid
company is typically
structured with the Shares
each carrying one vote but
having no rights to
dividends and no
participation in the capital
or income of the company in
any way. The Guarantee
Members have no voting
rights but participate fully
in the income and capital of
the company. Thus control of
the Company legally rests
with the Shareholders, but
all benefits flow to the
Guarantee Members. The
shares are then issued to
professional managers, who
act rather like ‘quasi
trustees’ – having legal
ownership of the Company and
its assets but unable to
receive financial benefit
from holding the shares. All
of the financial benefits
flow to the Guarantee
Members, placing them in a
position rather like the
beneficiaries of a typical
trust. A Guarantee Member’s
interest may be extinguished
on death to eliminate
succession problems, remove
any probate requirements and
therefore may eliminate any
inheritance tax/estate duty
implications.
The income
tax statutes of many onshore
countries, and in particular
any related anti-avoidance
provisions, often seek to
tax undistributed or untaxed
profits of low tax paying
companies as if they had
been received by the
shareholders. The different
legislations approach this
goal in different ways but
there is often a focus on
the percentage of shares
held.
Alternatively, the
legislation may focus on the
control of the company, even
if control is achieved
otherwise than through the
ownership of shares.
However, in the organization
of a typical Hybrid Company
as set out above the
Guarantee Members do not own
shares nor have control.
Professional managers act as
shareholders and have legal
control of the Company.
This may mean that the
typical anti-avoidance
legislation is ineffective
in taxing profits rolled up
within a hybrid structure.
Additionally, such a
structure may not bring
about any reporting
requirement for the
Guarantee Members so, on a
practical level, unwanted
attention from onshore
revenue authorities is
avoided.
A Hybrid
Company may also provide a
means of overcoming
difficulties caused by
Exchange Controls. Although
a Guarantee Member would
normally be issued with a
membership certificate, this
is not a share, a stock or a
security. Since most
Exchange Control regulations
refer to securities, the
holding of a Guarantee
Membership may not require
Exchange Control approval.
Guarantee
Companies
A guarantee
company is a company which
is limited only by guarantee
and therefore has no
shareholders only Guarantee
Members. The comments made
above about the Guarantee
Members of a hybrid company
apply equally to this type
of structure so the
guarantee company can be
used for similar purposes.
However, the Hybrid Company
may have an advantage in
that it may be beneficial to
be able to point to the fact
that control rests with a
third party (i.e. the
shareholders).
In a
guarantee company the
Guarantee Members, rather
than shareholders, would
hold the voting rights and
therefore the control.
Thus the members may not so
easily be able to sidestep
the anti-avoidance
legislation and Exchange
Control regulations of some
of the onshore countries.
Be sure to
ask about our company bank
account services also,
however it should be noted
that we use an independent
agent to open all bank
accounts.