Wealthy Britons step up citizenship shopping to thwart Brexit
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[September 26, 2020]
By Sinead Cruise
LONDON (Reuters) - The number of British
entrepreneurs looking to "buy" citizenship from countries offering
visa-free access to the European Union has risen sharply, investment
migration firms say, as prospects of a post-Brexit trade deal between
Britain and the bloc darken.
Investment immigration firm Astons said it had seen a 50% and 30%
year-on-year increase in interest from clients seeking Cypriot or Greek
citizenship respectively this quarter, less than four months before UK
passport-holders are likely to lose their rights to freedom of movement
across the EU.
Henley & Partners also reported a rise in requests for advice on
investment migration applications to Malta, Portugal, Austria and
several Caribbean islands, which offer a range of residency rights,
visa-free travel to the EU and citizenship to investors in local
business or property.
Citizens of certain Caribbean sovereign states including St Lucia and St
Kitts & Nevis also enjoy preferred access to the EU, thanks to close
ties with EU members as a result of historic, diplomatic and modern
trade agreements.
"This isn't about tourists. This is the UK high net worth community that
have a constant need to travel to and spend significant time in the EU,"
said Henley & Partners director Paddy Blewer.
"This is investment migration as a volatility hedge and a component in a
high net worth portfolio value defence strategy," he said, adding that
volumes of client engagement were higher now than immediately after the
2016 Brexit vote.
Interest in additional citizenships is rising even as the European
Commission examines possible steps to curb EU states selling passports
and visas to wealthy foreigners, due to concerns it can help organised
crime groups.
Cypriot residency can be secured in two months with a 300,000 euro
($351,870) property purchase. Securing citizenship takes six months and
requires a minimum property investment of 2 million euros.
In December, Reuters reported that Cyprus government documents showed
several donors to Britain's ruling Conservative Party donors had sought
citizenship of the island since the 2016 Brexit referendum.
"Both Cypriot and Caribbean investments are proving very popular ...
primarily driven by high-net-worth individuals (HNWIs) from the UK who
have an eye on the future and life after Brexit," said Astons spokesman
Konstantin Kaminskiy.
CARIBBEAN DREAM
Henley & Partners said its volume of engagement with clients seeking
alternative citizenship or residence by investment climbed 40% in the
first quarter of 2020 versus Q1 2019, before flattening during the
COVID-19 lockdown in Q2.
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A handout picture shows Cap St. Georges Beach Resort in Paphos,
Cyprus, in this picture provided to Reuters on September 24, 2020.
ASTONS/Handout via REUTERS
But interest has rallied since July 1, with a 15% year-on-year
increase in engagement to Sept. 10, as the end of the Brexit
transition phase nears.
Henley & Partners' Blewer said clients were increasingly drawn to
Caribbean citizenship applications - which is likely to give them
better travel access to the EU than Britain - but which have a lower
minimum investment and a quicker approval process.
Saint Lucia citizenship, offering visa-free travel to 146 countries,
can be obtained in around four months for a minimum investment of
76,152 pounds, data supplied by Astons showed.
For less than 40,000 pounds more, investors can obtain citizenship
of St. Kitts & Nevis - and visa-free travel to 156 countries - in
around 60 days.
In contrast, Malta offers citizenship in exchange for around 1
million pounds of investment, but the process takes up to 14 months.
Portugal, meanwhile, typically processes investment migration
applications in three months but only grants EU residency to
investors and visa-fee travel to just 26 countries.
"With HNWIs, time is often more important than what is essentially a
small fluctuation in cost and many are looking to secure additional
citizenship as fast as possible in the pandemic landscape," Arthur
Sarkisian, managing director of Astons, said.
EU authorities are under pressure to clamp down on investment
migration programmes by member states.
Sven Giegold, a member of the European Parliament from Germany's
Green party, said these kind of citizenship sales "posed a serious
threat to EU security and the fight against corruption" in the bloc.
"EU passports and visas are not a commodity. Money must not be the
criterion for citizenship and residence rights in the EU," he said.
($1 = 0.8526 euros)
(Editing by Angus MacSwan and Timothy Heritage)
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