Legal Structures for Latin American Startups (2021)
Posted by walterbell 4 days ago
Comments
Comment by dfajgljsldkjag 4 days ago
Comment by LunaSea 4 days ago
Comment by cpursley 4 days ago
Comment by LunaSea 4 days ago
You mean besides opening a company in said jurisdiction? They took advantage of said jurisdiction by incorporating there and then had to pay taxes for it. Seems pretty straight forward.
Comment by robocat 3 days ago
It is quite possible that it was tax neutral for them personally.
Cayman Islands has other costs and risks - depending upon your context.
Comment by dlcarrier 4 days ago
Comment by walterbell 4 days ago
This editorial on Delaware corporations? https://a16z.com/were-leaving-delaware-and-we-think-you-shou...
Another view, https://handbooks.clerky.com/startup-incorporation/where
Delaware is widely regarded as having strong protections against personal liability for corporations. Some advisors say Nevada has better protection against personal liability. This is arguably true, but the differences are very unlikely to be relevant to founders trying to build a legitimate business. Some people have also observed that Nevada has an adverse selection problem in that their unusually strong protections attract bad actors. As a result, it's possible that if you incorporate in Nevada, you'll be inviting closer scrutiny.Comment by dzink 4 days ago
Comment by laurencerowe 4 days ago
What's the evidence for this? I've run a UK company, albeit a decade or more ago. Fees are negligible. There's a £34 annual filing fee. You might choose to pay accountants to prepare and file your accounts for you, but presumably if you were to do so you would do the same in the Caymans.
Comment by robocat 3 days ago
AFAIK getting accounts completed and filed is expensive in Caymans.
Professional costs in the Cayman Islands are hideously expensive (from my extremely limited experience).
Additionally, FYI, a Cayman Islands company needs a local Cayman Island director which costs thousands per annum.