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Trusts and Modern Wealth Management

Trusts and Modern Wealth Management

Trusts and Modern Wealth Management

Richard C. Nolan, University of York
Kelvin F. K. Low, City University of Hong Kong
Tang Hang Wu, Singapore Management University
May 2018
Hardback
9781107170490
£169.00
GBP
Hardback
USD
eBook

    Trust law has grown and developed over recent years through the continued ingenuity of practitioners and the provision of innovative new trust laws by offshore jurisdictions. The wealth managed through the medium of trust law has also changed in recent years, as increasingly it has come from the newly rich of Asia. This brings distinctive issues to the fore: the role of settlors, family members and trusted advisors in trust administration; the position of trustees in relation to instructions coming from such persons; and an increased desire for confidentiality in trust administration and the settlement of trust disputes. This collection focuses on trusts which are deliberately created to manage wealth and the concomitant issues such trusts raise in other areas of law. Essays from leading members of the judiciary, practitioners and academics explore these developments and their implications for the users of trust law and for society in general.

    • Aimed at an international audience working in trust law and equity
    • Covers many highly topical areas of practice and development in trust law
    • Fills a gap in the literature in its focus on trusts and wealth management

    Product details

    May 2018
    Hardback
    9781107170490
    608 pages
    235 × 158 × 35 mm
    0.94kg
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • Introduction Richard C. Nolan, Tang Hang Wu and Kelvin F. K. Low
    • Part I:
    • 1. The role of the courts today in the administration of trusts Launcelot Henderson
    • 2. 'Breaking bad': settlors' reserved powers Lusina Ho and Harold Hsiao-Wo Lee
    • 3. Trustees and third party powers Richard C. Nolan
    • 4. Trust arbitration clauses Matthew Conaglen
    • 5. Massively discretionary trusts Lionel Smith
    • 6. Trustees, fiduciaries and fetters David Pollard
    • Part II:
    • 7. Derivative actions on behalf of the trust: Beddoe orders for beneficiaries Tang Hang Wu
    • 8. The entitlements of objects as defining features of discretionary trusts Peter G. Turner
    • 9. The beneficiary's performance interest in a trust: AIB v. Redler and the march of the compensatory principle James Penner
    • 10. Compensatory remedies for breach of trust Paul S. Davies
    • 11. Tapping into trust assets for redistribution upon divorce in England and Wales Simone Wong
    • 12. The vulnerability of trusts in divorce Rebecca Lee
    • Part III:
    • 13. Mapping client sophistication: critical enquiry or unnecessary distraction? Christopher Hare and Travers Smith
    • 14. Misrepresentation and rescission Kelry Loi
    • 15. The alternative Australian Trusts Act (Cth) David Chaikin and Eve Brown
    • 16. Non-charitable purpose trusts: the missing right to forego enforcement Kelvin F. K. Low
    • 17. Trusts in civil law environments – can civil law jurisdictions such as Liechtenstein deal with core issues of trust law? Francesco A. Schurr
    • 18. High net worth trusts in the 21st Century: confiscatory taxes and duties? Tony Molloy, QC.
      Contributors
    • Richard C. Nolan, Tang Hang Wu, Kelvin F. K. Low, Launcelot Henderson, Lusina Ho, Harold Hsiao-Wo Lee, Matthew Conaglen, Lionel Smith, David Pollard, Peter G. Turner, James Penner, Paul S. Davies, Simone Wong, Rebecca Lee, Christopher Hare, Travers Smith, Kelry Loi, David Chaikin, Eve Brown, Francesco A. Schurr, Tony Molloy, QC