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- Discretionary Accounts
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- If you have something on the order of $100,000 to
- invest (depending on the bank, more at most of them),
- you might consider a discretionary account with a Swiss
- bank. The bank will manage the investment for you,
- according to criteria you define. The investment will
- move among markets and currencies and instruments,
- according to the bank's best judgment.
- For this sort of operation, you should consider
- Geneva's private banks, rather than the large
- nationwide Swiss banks. Most of these banks require a
- $250,000 minimum investment. Remember that most of the
- smaller Swiss banks (except for Baer and Vontobel,
- which are listed on the Swiss stock market) do not
- publish their balance sheets. Many of them will not
- accept business without an introduction. This is not a
- matter for a first-time overseas investor to undertake
- with only a book as a guide.
- The leading Swiss private banks are Pictet,
- Lombard Odier, and Hentsch in Geneva. (Hentsch will
- take an account with $100,000, but the others probably
- will not.) They do not welcome walk-in clients. Two
- other private banks are a bit more accessible.
- Gutzailler, because it is a Eurobond issuer, and
- Vontobel, because it does corporate finance. It is
- possible to use a corporate banking relationship as a
- doorway to private banking services at these banks,
- which is why they are included in the listings at the
- end of this chapter.
- Swiss banks have developed the gold storage
- business into a fine art. Although the days of sales
- tax-free gold buying in Switzerland are over, the fee
- for storing your gold in Switzerland is still quite
- low. The minimum for having a Swiss bank store your
- money is one kilogram (2.2 pounds) or 30 gold coins. It
- is perfectly legal for Americans to buy and store gold
- outside the United States. You do not have to declare
- to any authorities that you own gold abroad in any
- amount. However, you should declare for U.S. taxes any
- capital gain from a sale of gold.
- Despite these options, most foreigners in
- Switzerland have simple bank accounts. Most of these
- are not numbered accounts, but ordinary name accounts.
- The minimums for ordinary accounts (which vary by bank)
- are much lower. You can arrange for your bank to keep
- your statements for you or send them in a plain
- envelope once a year. You can work out a code with your
- bank to be sure that, when you call, the person on the
- other end of the telephone actually is you. Most common
- is to give your mother's maiden name.
- The largest banks operate throughout the country.
- Private banks are concentrated in Geneva because most
- of their clients historically were French.
- Many Swiss bankers (and even bank employees at the
- bottom of the totem pole, such as tellers and
- switchboard operators) speak English. They also speak
- German, French, and Italian as a matter of course and
- frequently speak other languages as well, such as
- Spanish.
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- Still the safest wealth protection haven
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- Based on liquidity ratio (a function of how easily
- a bank can cover its outstanding obligations by selling
- off its assets), the following banks are the safest in
- Switzerland, and perhaps the world.
- These banks will open accounts for new clients
- only if they are known to the bank or are recommended
- by an advisor or correspondent with whom the bank is
- familiar.
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- Banque Financiere De La Cite
- Banque Lausannoise de Portefeuilles
- BFZ Bankfinanz
- Cambio Valorenbank
- Dreyfus Sohne & Cie
- Ferrier Lullin & Cie SA
- FIBI Bank (Switzerland) Ltd.
- Guyerzeller Bank
- PBZ Privatbank Zurich
- Ruegg Bank Zurich
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