electric said:
electric said:
Quite a few. As I am doing my research and investigation into my options... I'm asking slightly different questions to try and get a complete picture of how things work. My fear is that I will pull the trigger on a structure that later turns out to burn me because I didn't ask the right question... I'm a big fan of getting as much info *before* I make a final decision that I'll have to live with for many years (and could potentially wind up costing me a fortune or worse).
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I'm sorry if I sounded harsh, but it sounds like your last couple of threads have been identical.
electric said:
electric said:
I've been really struggling to find out any information about the new rules that are coming up. All the different offshore service provider's I've spoken with say they have no knowledge of this upcoming change. 🙁
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http://www.cr.gov.hk/en/publications/docs/ec5-2012-annex-e.pdf
CR - New Companies Ordinance - Overview
Hong Kong
electric said:
electric said:
About 90% of my customers are North American and 10% are EU. May I ask what you recommend for a jurisdiction to get a merchant account?
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Usually I'd say Cyprus if you're an offshore company, but that is obviously a horrible idea right now.
🙂
I have set up merchant accounts with banks in UK, Ireland, Germany, Netherlands, Mauritius, and Latvia using Maltese and Gibraltar companies for websites facing Europe and USA. These companies pay between 0 and 10% corporate tax and process significant volumes per month. I see very few declines due to banks finding the merchant bank suspicious/too risky or being out of region.
I avoid banking or really anything US-related other than accepting customers there. Canadian banks are years behind European banks when it comes to merchant services, from what I have seen and heard.
So my recommendation would be something along those lines. Maltese and Gibraltar companies can be anonymous if structured correctly. This can make the merchant account opening process more tedious and you usually have to accept a rolling reserve, at least until the bank trusts you enough.
electric said:
electric said:
(A big part of the reason I thought HK would be good for the company and bank account is because then I can use PayPal to accept payments. I have a lot of customers that pay with PayPal, and it's a decent backup to the merchant account, too... just in case.)
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I know of some offshore companies that set up payment processing companies in PayPal-friendly countries only to accept PayPal payments on behalf of the offshore company. I'm not sure if PayPal likes - or even allows - this structure, though. Another option is to use 2CheckOut, but they are expensive.