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A Singapore born lawyer practising in Perth for the last 30 years with an interest in social and ethnic justice. Father of 2 boys aged 23 and 21 and a lovely wife who is a soul mate.
Buddha's words
Friday, May 29, 2015
Wednesday, May 20, 2015
More announcements regarding the Significant Investor Visa and the Premium Investor Visa
Summary
of the announcement made by the Dept of Immigration and Border Protection (DIBP)
on the Significant Investment Visa (SIV) and the Premium Investor Visa (PIV)
The DIBP has made an announcement on 15 May 2015
regarding the complying investment framework for the SIV and the PIV.
1.
Elements
that apply to all investments for the SIV and the PIV
· The
funds must be unencumbered and lawfully acquired;
· Investors
are required to reinvest funds within 30 days of withdrawing them from a
complying investment or cancelling the investment in order for the investment
to continue to be complying;
· Direct
investment into residential real estate is excluded and indirect exposure
through investment vehicles is to be restricted to less than 10 % of a
vehicle’s net assets; and
· Exclude
“loan back” arrangements where the investment is used as collateral by
investors.
2.
Complying
investment framework that only apples to the SIV
There
are two mandatory investment components and one balancing investment component:
- At least $500,000 in eligible Australian venture capital or growth private equity fund(s) investing in start-up and small private companies. The Government expects to increase this to $1 million for new applications within two years as the market responds;
- At least $1.5 million in an eligible managed fund(s) or Listed Investment Companies (LICs) that invest in emerging companies listed on the Australian Securities Exchange (ASX); and
The balancing component:
- A ‘balancing investment’ of up to $3 million in managed fund(s) or LICs that invest in a combination of eligible assets that include other ASX listed companies, eligible corporate bonds or notes, annuities and real property (subject to the 10 per cent limit on residential real estate).
What
about the PIV requirements?
It is still very much a work in
progress as far as the government is concerned.
They have decided the following will
apply at least:
· There
are no mandatory complying investment
components with which the PIV must comply;
· The
Austrade will take the role to nominate the PIV applicant. Austrade will assess
the nomination application against the criteria based on entrepreneurial skill
or talent and ongoing benefit to Australia and character/ integrity check. the PIV can only be applied for by invitation
of Australian government.
· It
is not clear how Austrade will headhunt or invite the PIV applicant?
What
must the PIV invest in?
On the first reading, it seems the PIV can invest in the following areas as complying investment:
(a) Australian
securities exchange listed assets;
(b) Australian
government or semi-government bonds or notes(NB: the SIV is not allowed to
invest in Australian government bonds under the new framework);
(c) Corporate
bonds or notes issued by an Australian exchange listed entity
(d) Australian
proprietary limited companies;
(e) Real
property in Australia excluding residential property (NB: the SIV is allowed to
indirectly invest in residential property with no more than $500,000);
(f) Deferred
annuities issued by Australian registered life companies; and
(g) S&T
government approved philanthropic donation.
There is no indication yet from Austrade as to what
percentage of the fund the PIV must invest in the above mentioned areas.
So we wait a bit more to see the process will develop.
Saturday, May 9, 2015
6th Year in the CEO Sleepout
Dear friends
Yes, it is that time of the year again. I am sleeping out as a homeless lawyer for the 6th year in the CEO Sleepout event.
This year, Lily Chen, another lawyer and Perth City Councillor together with Leona Gu, JP and CEO of GTL Group will be joining me in the sleepout.
I also managed to persuade Yuli Zheng, my son's badminton coach and former world champion to take part with Matt Posa, owner of Murdoch Pines Driving Range.
I welcome them to the experience of sleeping out as a homeless person like some 20,000 WA residents.
It will be cold and wet. They will both learn what it is like to be homeless.
I particularly enjoy this short video which highlights how easy it is to become homeless.
If you wish to sponsor me, please put in a tax deductible donation at:
Raymond Tan
Yes, it is that time of the year again. I am sleeping out as a homeless lawyer for the 6th year in the CEO Sleepout event.
This year, Lily Chen, another lawyer and Perth City Councillor together with Leona Gu, JP and CEO of GTL Group will be joining me in the sleepout.
I also managed to persuade Yuli Zheng, my son's badminton coach and former world champion to take part with Matt Posa, owner of Murdoch Pines Driving Range.
I welcome them to the experience of sleeping out as a homeless person like some 20,000 WA residents.
It will be cold and wet. They will both learn what it is like to be homeless.
I particularly enjoy this short video which highlights how easy it is to become homeless.
Have a look at:
If you wish to sponsor me, please put in a tax deductible donation at:
Thanks for your generosity.
Raymond Tan
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