Expatriation and Gold Prices
Mark Nestmann (August 11, 2011)
You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.
2 Responses to “Expatriation and Gold Prices”
Comments
Recent Posts
About the Author
Since 1990, Mark Nestmann has helped hundreds of clients seeking wealth preservation and international tax planning solutions. He is the author of many books and reports dealing with these subjects and a popular public speaker.
Beginning his career as an investigative journalist in 1983, Mark now serves as President of The Nestmann Group, Ltd., an international consultancy assisting individuals to achieve their wealth preservation goals. Mark divides his time between offices in Vienna, Austria and Phoenix, Arizona.
Archives
Search Our Site
Links
Categories
Recent Comments:
- James Woroble Jr: @82Allen I’m aware of a former Soviet bloc professor who was preparing to defect. He sold all...
- Ricardo: Why would a Latin American live in the Dutch Caribbean for 5 years to become an EU citizen, when in Spain it...
- ConfederateH: I expatriated in mid 2010 and had to proportionally calculate my foreign earned credit between by the...
- daniel attard: Although tax is a relatively new subject for me I can say with confidence, that I am impressed by your...
- Mark Nestmann: Brian, The agents only have the power to investigate, not to arrest. I don’t have any first-hand...
All Material on This Page ©2011 The Sovereign Society

August 11th, 2011 at 4:56 pm
Mark
I think that you have this wrong. I thought that pension programs like IRAs and 401ks were not subject to the expatriation tax but rather that the US withheld 30% of all future payouts. Am I missing something.
August 13th, 2011 at 12:02 am
[...] Expatriation and Gold PricesSovereign Society (blog)It was wondering how soon my own gold holdings would make me a “covered expatriate.” If this sounds like Greek to you, let me explain. Under the US Tax Code a covered expatriate is someone who may have to pay an exit tax upon giving up US citizenship … [...]