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Which jurisdiction should I open or purchase a bank in?

Helkins

Member Plus
Jun 3, 2020
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Hello

I have been lurking the forum for quite a while now and want to move towards setting up my own bank, which jurisdiction would you say is best, most reputable and cheapest to get the banking license in? I'm running a decent size payment services and crypto on-ramp off-ramp operations for couple years now, want to scale it up.

Was looking initially at Comoros but with all the confusion whether it's fake or not I don't want to be taking a gamble.

Thank you
 
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Hello

I have been lurking the forum for quite a while now and want to move towards setting up my own bank, which jurisdiction would you say is best, most reputable and cheapest to get the banking license in? I'm running a decent size payment services and crypto on-ramp off-ramp operations for couple years now, want to scale it up.

Was looking initially at Comoros but with all the confusion whether it's fake or not I don't want to be taking a gamble.

Thank you
Why? -> how do you plan to make money with banking?
Where is you market? Doubt you will attract much deposit in EU with some exotic island licence.
 
April 1st was on Tuesday...

I have been lurking the forum for quite a while now and want to move towards setting up my own bank, which jurisdiction would you say is best, most reputable and cheapest to get the banking license in?
EU. Minimum share capital for a standard bank license is just five million EUR. One—two million if you go for a special bank license where available (such as Lithuania). As long as your business plan is reasonable, they often won't ask for a higher amount than the 5 or 1-2 million EUR figure.

It's hard to beat. Most other good and reputable places have higher minimums, ranging from 2x to 1000x the EU requirement.

On paper, places like Cayman Islands and BVI, which are quite reputable while being notorious tax havens, have requirements of 1 million or less. But when you approach the regulator and discuss licensing, the easy days are over and they expect to see capital similar to EU/UK/US if you plan to run a traditional banking model.

After that you're left with Dominica, Saint Lucia, and so on. Quite sure you can still get a license for under a million there for international/non-resident banking activities.
 
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Why? -> how do you plan to make money with banking?
Where is you market? Doubt you will attract much deposit in EU with some exotic island licence.
The bank is just a part of a larger business model. I have facilities with large German and UK bank that help me with onramp and offramp for customers. All in all we're looking to solve the issue of crypto-fiat-crypto conversions, ease of onramping and timeframe for cross border settlements, replacement for banking instruments. As one of our solutions we're already helping clients process payments from South America to China at low cost and 1/8th the speed of a traditional banks there.

Our main markets are South America, MENA and APAC with few large customers in EU.
 
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April 1st was on Tuesday...


EU. Minimum share capital for a standard bank license is just five million EUR. One—two million if you go for a special bank license where available (such as Lithuania). As long as your business plan is reasonable, they often won't ask for a higher amount than the 5 or 1-2 million EUR figure.

It's hard to beat. Most other good and reputable places have higher minimums, ranging from 2x to 1000x the EU requirement.

On paper, places like Cayman Islands and BVI, which are quite reputable while being notorious tax havens, have requirements of 1 million or less. But when you approach the regulator and discuss licensing, the easy days are over and they expect to see capital similar to EU/UK/US if you plan to run a traditional banking model.

After that you're left with Dominica, Saint Lucia, and so on. Quite sure you can still get a license for under a million there for international/non-resident banking activities.
Thank you for the input, I was looking at Lithuania, the issue I have with EU is compliance hurdles and timeframes for set up or transfer of ownership from any existing entity. Are any of the places in the Caribbean actually still issuing licenses? My personal preference would probably lay in St. Lucia but I'm unaware of the current situation there. Dominica I've heard they've stopped issuing new licenses and the government became a banana republic corruption cascade in regards to licensing.