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Financial advisor David Kuenzi explains why changes to US tax legislation means that US expats should make their--even global--investments only through US institutions.If you are a US citizen or permanent resident and have been living and working outside the US and investing your savings through a non-US financial institution, you need to learn what a Passive Foreign Investment Company (PFIC) is very quickly.
Why? Because the passage of the Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act (FATCA) in 2010 is ushering in a new era of dramatically heightened enforcement of US laws regarding taxation of and reporting on investments held outside the country by US Citizens or permanent residents. There has already been much discussion about the new IRS Form 4938, which is now a required filing for Americans abroad with a total of more than USD 300,000 of financial assets held outside the country (for Americans resident in the US, the threshold is only USD 50,000). This Form requires not only the listing of assets held outside the US, but also specifically requires a box to be checked if the assets are PFICs.
What exactly are PFICs and do I own any?
The moniker "Passive Foreign Investment Companies" (PFICs) sounds like some exotic and highly-specialized investment, so many Americans automatically assume that they do not own any. For many of them, this conclusion would be a mistake whose consequences are about to become very significant.
PFICs are simply "pooled investments" registered outside of the United States. This includes almost all foreign mutual funds, hedge funds and many insurance products. It might even encompass your bank account if that account is a money-market fund rather than just a straight deposit account, because money market accounts are essentially short-maturity fixed-income mutual funds. Furthermore, PFIC rules generally apply to investments held inside foreign pension funds, unless those pension plans are recognized by the US as "qualified" under the terms of a double-taxation treaty between the US and the host country.

The problem with PFICs
Although too complex to be fully elaborated on here, the tax treatment of PFICs is extremely punitive compared to that of similar ‘pooled investments' that are incorporated in the US. For example, an American holder of a US incorporated mutual fund invested in European stocks pays the low long-term capital gains rate of 15% if the fund is held for more than one year. The same American investor who buys a nearly identical fund listed in the UK or in Switzerland (or any place outside the US) will find their investment subject to the PFIC taxation regime, which counts all income (including capital gains) as ordinary income and automatically taxes it at the top individual tax rate (35%). In some cases, the total tax on a PFIC investment may rise to well above 50%. Furthermore, capital losses cannot be carried forward or used to offset other capital gains.
The other major complicating factor of PFICs is the onerous task of simply complying with IRS reporting rules. Ownership is most common among expatriate Americans, many of whom employ accountants specializing in tax preparation for Americans abroad. But hiring an expatriate tax specialist does not guarantee that the proper PFIC-related filings are being made. Often, the client inadvertently fails to divulge (and the tax accountant fails to request) the necessary information on the client's mutual fund, hedge fund, or other financial holdings.
In other cases, if the client and the tax preparer have negotiated a fixed fee for tax preparation, the preparer may be reluctant to ask about possible PFICs because record keeping and preparation time for the complicated form 8621 (a required filing for each PFIC investment) requires an IRS-estimated 22 hours per year! Alternatively, Americans abroad could quickly run up a tax preparation bill of many thousands of dollars, no matter how much (or little) the underlying investments are worth or how well they have performed.

As far as US taxes goes, status as a dual national makes no difference. You are subject to US taxation exactly the same no matter how many passports you have. The Foreign Earned Income Exclusion only exempts from taxation "earned" income. This means salary, self-employment income, partnership income and some other kinds of income. It can never be used to reduce taxation of "investment income" such as dividends, capital gains and interest. Sincerely, David Kuenzi
[Edited by moderator. Please post (elaborate) questions on Ask the Expert or on our Forums. If you have questions for the Expatica staff, please contact us directly.]
I've been badly screwed by all these new laws. I've spent over 23 years in the UK and hadn't been aware of all these double taxation problems till last year. I consequently went native and invested like a Brit. Wound up having to amend several years' tax returns (had wrongly thought that investment/savings income was covered by foreign oncome exclusion)...owed a five figure sum of US taxes due to PFIC problems plus huge accounting fees. Not happy!
Why is it that in an early paragraph one speaks of an "IRS Form 4938", whereas in the next-to-last paragraph one speaks of IRS Form 8938?
Hi. Are you sure about the pension funds treatment as PFIC? If so, this is likely to be a huge problem for most expats, as there is no real option to invest in US based pension funds, and by dint of having local contracts, many are forced to participate. It is bad enough that these are double taxed, but if they are treated as PFIC on top, this will cause massive problems and cost, especially for those residing longer overseas. I guess this could be a good reason for dual citizens to finally consider their citizenship options.
As far as US taxes goes, status as a dual national makes no difference. You are subject to US taxation exactly the same no matter how many passports you have. The Foreign Earned Income Exclusion only exempts from taxation "earned" income. This means salary, self-employment income, partnership income and some other kinds of income. It can never be used to reduce taxation of "investment income" such as dividends, capital gains and interest. Sincerely, David Kuenzi
[Edited by moderator. Please post (elaborate) questions on Ask the Expert or on our Forums. If you have questions for the Expatica staff, please contact us directly.]
I've been badly screwed by all these new laws. I've spent over 23 years in the UK and hadn't been aware of all these double taxation problems till last year. I consequently went native and invested like a Brit. Wound up having to amend several years' tax returns (had wrongly thought that investment/savings income was covered by foreign oncome exclusion)...owed a five figure sum of US taxes due to PFIC problems plus huge accounting fees. Not happy!
Why is it that in an early paragraph one speaks of an "IRS Form 4938", whereas in the next-to-last paragraph one speaks of IRS Form 8938?
Hi. Are you sure about the pension funds treatment as PFIC? If so, this is likely to be a huge problem for most expats, as there is no real option to invest in US based pension funds, and by dint of having local contracts, many are forced to participate. It is bad enough that these are double taxed, but if they are treated as PFIC on top, this will cause massive problems and cost, especially for those residing longer overseas. I guess this could be a good reason for dual citizens to finally consider their citizenship options.
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