Quote from jksn922:
Their proposing this internationally on "U.S. Citizens" that trade from other countries. They can't touch citizens of other countries that don't have this tax. This is why I've been exploring the whole citizenship thing with Canada, as they wouldn't be able to impose this tax on a U.S. citizen that was able to obtain citizenship in another country, and they traded from there.
Quote from zdreg:
people will just repeat the same incorrect thing over and over. the tax will be collected by the american ecn and exchanges. it has nothing to do with your nationality or where u trade from.
Quote from zdreg:
people will just repeat the same incorrect thing over and over. the tax will be collected by the american ecn and exchanges. it has nothing to do with your nationality or where u trade from.
Expatriation tax: http://www.irs.gov/businesses/small/international/article/0,,id=97245,00.htmlQuote from PlusMinus:
The IRS can go after an ex-citizen for 10 years after they denounced their citizenship? WTF? Wouldn't that depend highly on the laws and opinions of the person's new country? It's one thing if you owed taxes for years prior to your having denounced your citizenship, but for the period after? On what basis?
Quote from RedDuke:
If this tax ever sees the light of the day in US and Europe, there still will be few places, in the world that will not abide by it, and the business will shift there. Places like SGX, HKFE, KSE or DME will reap huge rewards.
Our solution will be to open offshore corporate account (this does not cost too much these days) and trade via this entity on exchanges that do not support this tax. There is no way the whole world unanimously will sign off on this stupid thing.
This law, if it ever happens, will have many loopholes, and unless all you have is 5K account, there will be ways to go around it.