Trust Estate
As World Demands Transparency, US Trusts Sector Remains Haven Of Privacy
A handful of states in the US are setting the pace as trusts jurisdictions, enjoying benefits, including a respect for a degree of financial privacy that is under attack in other parts of the world. This publication talked to two players in the field.
There are 50 states to the US and yet out of this group, only a
few of them are known for their trust laws, with Delaware king
of the hill – so much so that Swiss bankers talk about it through
gritted teeth. But as any observer of markets knows, staying in
front is a constant battle.
Jurisdictions such as Delaware and “challenger trust states” of
New Hampshire, Nevada, South Dakota and Alaska are important
parts of the wealth management ecosphere. While reliable data is
hard to pin down, there are an estimated $500 billion of assets
in New Hampshire-chartered trust companies alone, according
to a local wealth management house, Perspecta Trust.
Which surely means the total runs to trillions across the US,
although exact industry figures are difficult to quantify, as
they are gathered by a mix of institutions such as the IRS and
Federal Deposit Insurance Corp rather than held in a single data
source. In Delaware, the oldest of the “trust jurisdictions”
- its modern trust law dates back to 1903 - the asset
size is likely to be far higher than New Hampshire’s, with
non-Delaware sourced trust business generating more than $1.1
billion in annual revenues for the state’s financial
organizations (source: Max Schanzenbach, Professor of Law,
Northwestern University School of Law, May 2011).
Back in 1903, when Wilmington Trust
was founded by the DuPont family of prominent industrialists,
Delaware’s trusts sector - with structures such as Directed
Trusts, and later entities such as Perpetual Trusts and
Third-Party Trusts - took off. An infrastructure, including
that of a strong local courts system, has evolved. What the
present-day trusts sector of the US is perhaps an example of is
the strength of clustering of expertise, married to innovation in
certain types of states.
Trusts, as a feature of the Common Law system inherited from the
UK, are a well-known feature of the wealth management toolkit,
although today face
pressures such as from governments trying to get their hands
on more data to chase down alleged tax evaders. But the US
appears to have gotten itself into an interesting, even enviable,
position. While jurisdictions such as Switzerland have seen their
bank secrecy laws crumble, the US - which is not a signatory
to the global Common Reporting Standard regime on information
sharing - ironically now stands as a country where financial
privacy is relatively robust. That is not to say that have not
been moves to crack down on perceived abuses, however. (See a report
here.) To
see other international controversies, see here.
Rising awareness
“Delaware trusts are a big part of our business. Many of such
trusts are created by people living abroad. There is going to be
a higher profile of Delaware trusts outside the US,” Richard
(“Dick”) Nenno, senior trust counsel and managing director in
Wilmington Trust’s Wealth Advisory, told this publication
recently. Nenno is in fact releasing the updated edition of his
book, Delaware Trusts, this year, and is sometimes
dubbed the “dean of Delaware trust and estate law”.
“There’s more confidentiality in the US via Delaware than there
is abroad,” Nenno said. The US is seen as a stable jurisdiction
in legal and economic terms, with plenty of opportunities for
investors. With taxes rising in some parts of the country, such
as in New York City (income taxes), use of Delaware trusts can
mitigate some of the effect, Nenno said.
With an estimated $30 trillion due to transfer from the aging
Baby Boomer generation to offspring over coming years, the need
for trusts and other robust structures is only going to be more
important, Nenno said.
People from around the world are taking note of US trusts and not
all of the commentary about trust laws is particularly friendly.
In these pages more than a year ago, Philippe Braillard, emeritus
professor at the University of
Geneva, Switzerland, wrote of how Swiss financial
professionals, who have seen bank secrecy erode and who have lost
business, regard places such as Delaware as enjoying privacy
protections arguably more robust than their own. Academic studies
on international financial centers increasingly cite states such
as Delaware as privacy-friendly places.
News in and around the trusts sector remains busy. Nenno’s own
firm, Wilmington Trust, a few weeks ago announced two senior
appointments, with the promotion of Matthew Panarese to president
of the Mid-Atlantic Region and elevation of Sharon L Klein to
president of the firm’s Tri-State Region, which includes Greater
New York, Connecticut, Long Island, and Northern New Jersey
markets.
The Granite State
Up in New Hampshire, Perspecta Trust argues that the state is
making big strides as a jurisdiction, bringing in a law as
recently as 2004, with South Dakota doing so in 1983, Nevada in
1999 and Alaska in 1997. Since a change to New Hampshire law in
2006 (Trust Modernization Act), state-chartered trust company
assets have been on a tear, rising from around $100 billion to
$500 billion, Scott Baker, president of Perspecta Trust, told
FWR.
“Competition with other states has been extremely helpful to
consumers as statutes are becoming more refined and
user-friendly over time,” Baker said. New Hampshire isn’t
just winning business from other parts of the country but from
abroad too, with clients from Europe, Asia and South
America, he said.
One, perhaps obvious question is that if trust business is a
great revenue-generator for a state – a point not likely to be
lost on politicians – why aren’t more states in the US rolling
out trust law innovations? Why haven’t California or Texas had a
crack at the market, for example?
Part of the problem is sheer inertia, Baker said. Also, smaller
states such as New Hampshire (smaller in population size anyway)
can be politically more nimble: it is easier to get trust laws
amended, he said. “It is not that Massachusetts or New York want
to lose trust business, they of course don’t….they can’t really
make changes as easily as New Hampshire or some other
attractive tax jurisdictions and just can’t get it done,” he
said. There are a number of stakeholders in more populated states
where changes/innovations to trust law might be more
controversial or demanding of the legislative schedule, he
said.
To some degree, as Perspecta’s Baker and Wilmington Trust’s Nenno
say, the states have the ability to be regional hubs for trust
business.
Another issue affecting the ability of trust jurisdictions is the
availability of skilled employees: the specialized kind of
skillsets required are not always easy to find and the more
remote jurisdictions have more difficulty attracting skilled
staff, Baker said.
In such an environment, innovation is a constant feature as
jurisdictions work to keep their competitive edge. At the
University
of Delaware, for example, the Alfred Lerner College of
Business and Economics has brought out a Minor in Trust
Management program specifically aimed at those seeking to build
skills in the sector.
Whether the handful of states remain in charge of the market in a
century’s time is anyone’s guess. The benefits of specialization
- identified by Adam Smith in his Wealth of Nations
around 250 years ago - continue to be powerful forces for the
North American wealth management industry.