It is ironic that in a week when the helpless US Treasury Secretary
Tim Geithner pens a letter complaining about
presumed unfair treatment of US alternative investment funds in the EU the US passes a law (
'Foreign Tax Compliance Act') that forces all non-US financial institutions to
report their dealings with US citizens. Against the background of a dysfunctional Congress and an administration that is spending money like a drunken sailor this desperate measure should not come as a surprise. The underlying philosophy is that a citizens' money really belongs to the state and it is up to the
politicians to spend it. We do not expect the authorities to give a clear '
Njet' to this effort to extend the reach of US legislation one step further into other sovereign countries but it will do nothing to make it any easier for the US to fund its deficit in the future. Already some institutions have decided not to have any financial dealings in or with the US and as the next step may well be that the USA tries to help themselves to the wealth of non-US citizens we would advise investors to sponsor fund managers that take precautions for that eventuality.
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