Emerging Markets
India's Economy, Markets In Uncertain Age - How UHNW Individuals Handle It

The author looks at India, its economy, markets and how UHNW individuals in the country and connected to it are protecting assets the in current environment.
The author of this article considers an economy that is likely to garner more attention in coming years for a variety of reasons: India. The writer here is Michael Powell, client director at Hawksford.
The editors of this publication are pleased to share these views and invite responses. The usual editorial disclaimers apply. Email tom.burroughes@wealthbriefing.com or jackie.bennion@clearviewpublishing.com
By 2028 the total private wealth held by the Indian community will be around $23 trillion (Rs1,590 lakh crore), estimates the Brand Equity India Report. This will be more than double the total wealth expected to be held by individuals in the UK and Germany. However, the country is facing a number of well documented challenges including changes to wealth tax in India. Following the team’s most recent trip to Mumbai, Hawksford’s India team explore the push and pull factors at play for the Indian UHNWI and relevant options for international structuring, namely in Jersey and Singapore, during this age of uncertainty.
Country specific concerns
Fiscal pressures in India are mounting and among the wealthy
there are increasing concerns as to what the future holds for
them. While India has experienced sustained economic growth for
decades, the tide is changing. A recent report by Khaitan & Co
(1) referenced the potential for the widening of wealth tax in
India as a means of reversing the economic slowdown. This could
lead to increased foreign investments into jurisdictions with
more favourable tax laws. BVI, Singapore and the Netherlands are
regions reported to have benefited from India overseas investment
in the second half of the noughties. It is within this context
that many families have members who are happy to leave the
country to enable a portion of the family wealth to be
legitimately retained outside the country.
The increasingly international Indian family
Many wealthy Indian families are very global in nature, be it in
terms of businesses and assets that they own or the residence and
citizenship status of members of these families. Jersey and
Singapore- based structures are increasingly needed to
accommodate Indian family requirements when the family members
are spread across the globe.
The complex statutory residence test in India could mean that an NRI is considered to be an Indian resident should he or she have a high percentage of assets remaining in India despite being a tax resident in the jurisdiction where they are now domiciled. These complex matters require long-term specialist thinking, and will benefit from trustees with genuine international experience, working together with the family advisory team.
According to Study International, Indian students tend to make up the second-largest group of international students in major English-speaking host countries such as the US, Australia and Canada. (2) The UK’s recent policy change allowing international students two years of post-study work visits could be another trigger event: will for example more of the next generation of Indian families become future tax residents of the UK?
There are of course instances of other family members wishing to return to India and in this case again, similar planning opportunities may also exist.
Trust Jersey for the UHNW Indian family
Decisions to set up trusts and other structures outside India
will not be taken lightly by international Indian UHNWI families.
However, this cultural dynamic is changing as wealth levels,
national volatility and international complexity are becoming
stronger drivers in demand.
Having an offshore trust structure in place, in a reputable IFC such as Jersey, is a stable option for portfolio diversification, asset protection and trust family office management for the international client. Here are some explanations of why Jersey works:
• Resolving intergenerational issues
To ignore the younger generation is a risky strategy, threatening
future disharmony, or worse still, acrimonious litigation,
somewhere down the line. Working with international Indian
families and their local advisors, we’ve found ways to navigate
this including well-planned and graduated involvement for new
family members into trust structures, sensible and regular levels
of communication, encouraging all involved to be party to the
agreement of family protocols, and where appropriate planned
involvement with family companies and business
matters/assets.
• Asset protection and estate planning
Trusts and foundations have been in existence for hundreds of
years and it is in many ways gratifying to see that the tax
imperative is frequently only cited as the third or fourth reason
for creating a new trust structure. They have stood the test of
time because they still adapt to achieve the same underlying
objectives in a changing environment.
Why would any client not wish to take all legitimate steps to protect what they have worked hard to accumulate, or preserve, or to capitalise on that which someone else has worked hard to accumulate on their behalf?
• Jersey for the international family
With the ability to manage structures with an increasingly
international beneficial class, including the US, the UK and the
Middle East, Jersey provides an opportunity for clients wishing
to structure their assets before they leave India or prior to
returning home.
• Retention of control
There are a multiplicity of ways in which control can be retained
to manage dynamic tension between a prospective settlor’s
understandable desire to retain as much control as possible, and
an overarching objective to protect assets. These include
reserved power trusts, Private Trust Companies (PTCs), protectors
and protectorship committees, family directors on boards and more
informally, letters of wishes which sit alongside the practical
ways in which an eye can be kept on trust assets, including
viewing only facilities in relation to investment portfolios and
banking deposits.
• Costs
Not surprisingly, this tends to feature high on the list of
priorities for HNWI international Indian families. Trustees have
a responsibility to explain why trusts offer value for money.
Good governance is key to ensuring structures will withstand
future attack. This is achieved through Jersey’s experienced
professionals and longstanding credentials in financial
regulation.
Footnotes:
1,
https://cms.khaitanco.com/sites/default/files/2020-02/Direct%20Tax%20Proposals.pdf
2,
https://www.studyinternational.com/news/how-the-indian-international-student-body-is-changing/
Sources:
1,
https://international-adviser.com/indian-names-stand-out-in-latest-uk-rich-list/)
2, https://www.khaitanco.com/thought-leaderships
About the author
Michael Powell is a personal advisor and trustee with over 30
years’ experience of working with families, young entrepreneurs
and the inherited wealthy. Powell has extensive expertise in
establishing, administering and advising clients on a wide range
of specialist structures that include managed trust companies,
private trust companies, family office services and UK tax
planning. He specialises in advising families on their often
complex situations and is routinely involved in seeking to
resolve contentious trust situations. He has also implemented
solutions for the young aspirant wealthy and those with
charitable and philanthropic objectives across an increasingly
international client base, and travels regularly to India for
work with high net worth non-resident Indian families.
About Hawksford
Hawksford has provided wealth structuring solutions for private
clients and family offices for over 60 years. It has a dedicated
India team, and is able to assist the international India
community with protection and planning for their wealth from
Jersey and Singapore.