Jeff Thomas | Jan 28th 2025, 5:29:55 pm
For most people, the term “investment” means the purchase of something, because it is anticipated to rise in value in the future. However, there is another category of investment, generally referred to as “retention of wealth” that does not adhere to this definition. Although investments in this category may well rise in value over time, their principle purpose is not profit. Their purpose is to assure that if other investments fail, the investor will still have a portion of his wealth to fall back on.
For most people, the term “investment” means the purchase of something, because it is anticipated to rise in value in the future. However, there is another category of investment, generally referred to as “retention of wealth” that does not adhere to this definition. Although investments in this category may well rise in value over time, their principle purpose is not profit. Their purpose is to assure that if other investments fail, the investor will still have a portion of his wealth to fall back on.
Generally, during good economic times, investors are inclined to be somewhat uninterested in this category. However, when bad economic times are on the horizon, retention of wealth becomes (or should become) far more significant in importance.
The world has never seen a time like the present one. In most every facet of the economy, personal wealth is threatened. In many countries, there is the threat of greater taxation, devaluation of currencies, collapses in markets and even outright confiscation of bank accounts.
Consequently, those who are paying attention and being honest with themselves are seeking ways to assure that, if the powers that be exert their power to (quite literally) rob their citizens, those citizens need to determine the safest havens for their wealth that they possibly can ... and need to do so before the wolf arrives at the door.
Those of us who have been predicting the coming economic debacle for many years have, not surprisingly, spent much of that time researching and identifying such opportunities and divesting ourselves of investments whose days may well be numbered.
Basic Truth #1: Precious metals and real estate will become the last safe investments for the retention of wealth
At some point in the Great Unravelling, we will reach the point that virtually the only “safe” investments will be precious metals and real estate. (It should be stressed that even these are not guaranteed, but they are, and will be, the last bastions. They are the Alamo.)
Although there were a small number of people professing this Basic Truth prior to 2008, very few people were listening. But this is less so today. Today, more and more people are realising that, soon, the jig will be up, particularly if they live in the EU or US, where some, if not all of the threats listed above are virtually certain to occur in the foreseeable future. As a result, there is growing interest in the ownership of precious metals and real estate.
Basic Truth #2: Precious metals and real estate ownership are only safe if they are located outside of an endangered jurisdiction
For many people, it goes very much against the grain to own anything outside of the country in which they live. (The average American in Los Angeles would sooner own property in Miami Florida, some 2500 miles away, than to own property in Tijuana, Mexico, just over the border.) Yet, if the threat to your wealth is your own government, it is essential to remove it from the country in which you live. The reason is that, as long as it remains in the country in which you are a citizen, the more likely it is that your government will regulate it, tax it, cause it to lose its value through inflation or hyperinflation and/or simply confiscate it.
It is far more difficult for your government to destroy your wealth if you have expatriated it, as your government does not have free control over the laws and government of the country where you have invested. It would be harder for your government to force the repatriation of your precious metals and downright impossible for it to demand that your overseas real estate be shipped to your home country.
Therefore, when choosing a jurisdiction in which to invest in precious metals and/or real estate, in order to maximise safety, the investor would choose a country that:
A) Is not likely to be a candidate for major decline in the coming economic collapse
B) Is not likely to cave in to the demands of countries that are likely to soon collapse
C) Has laws that impose as little as possible on foreign-owned investments
This last item is critical. The safest countries are those that do not tend to fall prey to dictatorships, or dramatic changes in laws. The ideal countries are the ones that impose the least interference in your ownership of your investment.
This leads to:
Basic Truth #3: The ideal jurisdiction in which to own property is one which does not tax your property.
This final principle is understood, at present, by only a handful of investors. A country that imposes income tax, capital gains tax, etc., may very well, in hard times, suddenly decide to tax precious metals ownership. Likewise, a country that imposes property tax may very well raise that tax suddenly in pressing times. Indeed, it may choose to claim that the investor has not paid his most recent tax bill (regardless of whether or not this is true) to justify the confiscation of his property.
Many governments of the world are now hopelessly in debt and on the verge of economic collapse. As their leaders become more desperate, they will resort to more desperate measures. In the next few years, we shall see the leaders of the most “respected” countries throw out the rule book and resort to a final grab of their citizens’ wealth.
It is important to recognise that the word “wealth” does not only refer to those whose net worth is in the seven-figure range and above. If your wealth is $5000, that amount might be better protected by the purchase of a few one-ounce gold coins. If it is $50,000, it might be better protected by the purchase of a house lot. Those who need to protect $500,000 or more might wish to create a portfolio of gold, silver, house lots and built property.
Regardless of the amount of your wealth, the principles remain the same.
As to what countries in the world the reader might consider, ten nations in the world have no income tax – The Bahamas, Bahrain, Bermuda, Brunei, the Cayman Islands, Kuwait, Qatar, Oman, Saudi Arabia, and the UAE.
There are seventeen nations that have no property tax – Bahrain, The Cayman Islands, The Cook Islands, Dominica, Fiji, Hong Kong, Israel, Kuwait, Liechtenstein, Malta, Monaco, New Zealand, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Turks & Caicos and the UAE.
Once having decided to invest wealth in a safer jurisdiction, the investor might also consider which of the above countries might additionally provide him with an increased value. Still, the primary goal in Retention of Wealth is to save it from the negative effects that may soon be caused by governments.
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