Showing posts with label NAFTA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label NAFTA. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 25, 2008

A cozy agreement

As I suspected from the outset, Canada in cahoots with US over trust tax.

The fraudulent notion of tax leakage would never “go down” in the US, since they still have a vigilant press and endless legislative checks and balances that prevent such conspiracy theories from ever being enacted into legislation, see Writing and Enacting Tax Legislation

Meanwhile we learn of this cozy agreement:



NAFTA Safety Valve Comes to the Rescue
Embassy, June 25th, 2008

By Luke Eric Peterson

Lately, the North American Free Trade Agreement has seemed like the electrified third rail of North American politics.

We've seen sparks flying over proposals for a so-called NAFTA Super-Highway as well as a media firestorm over a leaked diplomatic memo that cast doubt on Barack Obama's true feelings about the NAFTA.

Yet the U.S. and Canadian governments have managed to reach across the border and come to an agreement on one thorny NAFTA dilemma: In a little-noticed exchange of diplomatic letters this past April, the two governments have agreed that Americans investing in Canadian income trusts are not entitled to sue Canada for "expropriating" those investments.

This diplomatic accord comes in the aftermath of the 2006 decision by the Harper government to slap a tax on many types of income trusts. You'll recall that that move drew howls of outrage from Bay Street, as well as from foreigners who had long sunk money into these lightly-taxed investment vehicles.

One pair of Chicago-based investors went so far as to announce last year that they would sue Canada under NAFTA for the "massive destruction" inflicted on their personal stock portfolios. The couple, Marvin and Elaine Gottlieb, have set up a website to encourage other similarly-affected U.S. investors to join them in a class-action type lawsuit against the Government of Canada.

However, that lawsuit suffered a set-back in late April when the governments of Canada and the United States quietly agreed—in a formal exchange of letters—that the taxation of income trusts does not amount to an "expropriation" for which U.S. investors need be compensated under NAFTA. In reaching such an agreement, the two sides effectively vetoed any bid by U.S. investors to sue Canada for expropriating their income trust holdings.

What exactly constitutes an "expropriation" under NAFTA has long been a contentious question. Although the NAFTA provides strong legal protections to businesspersons and companies investing in another North American country, the extent of such protections remains unclear.

If a NAFTA government were to nationalize an industry—say the oil or steel sector—the trade-pact obliges the government to compensate affected foreign-owners. But what happens when a government introduces new regulations or tax measures which impose a heavy new financial burden on foreign-owned businesses, without going so far as to confiscate or nationalize those businesses?

The question may seem academic until you consider that the answer will determine when the public could be on the hook for writing hefty compensation cheques to affected foreigners.

In the income trust spat, the Gottliebs alone are threatening to sue for $6.5 million in losses; thousands of other claimants could join the Chicago couple in suing Canada for hundreds of millions.

Ultimately, it falls to panels of arbitrators to determine whether a given government law or policy is so destructive that it amounts to an expropriation. But with the NAFTA itself offering little guidance as to how to resolve such expropriation cases, arbitrators can find themselves in the same position as U.S. Supreme Court Justice Potter Stewart, who famously wrote that he might not know how to define "obscenity", but he knew it when he saw it.

For anxious governments not eager to leave things up to the discretion of arbitrators, the NAFTA does contain a little-noticed safety valve. If a foreign investor has a beef with tax policy—as opposed to other types of government policies—NAFTA governments can confer amongst themselves and determine whether the tax in question crosses the line. Arbitrators are then obliged to respect any such joint-determinations.

And that's exactly what happened recently when U.S. and Canadian officials got together to agree that the new tax on income trusts—while certainly having a financial impact on trust owners—cannot be likened to an "expropriation".

While the decision by Canada and the U.S. strikes a fatal blow to any NAFTA expropriation claim mounted against the income trust tax, U.S. investors remain free to argue that the tax violated other NAFTA protections.

In fact, in documents filed last year, the Gottliebs also accused Canada of unfairly discriminating against U.S. investors—who held unusually large stakes in the energy income trust sector. It remains open for them, and other U.S. citizens, to continue with their lawsuit against Canada and seek compensation for suffering discrimination and unfair treatment.

For the moment, however, the Gottliebs have not signalled whether they plan to press forward with their claim—and if other U.S. citizens will join them in any such fight. If they do, they will join a lengthening queue of U.S. investors suing Canada under NAFTA for various forms of alleged wrongdoing.

While economists continue to debate how effective the North American trade pact has been in generating trade and employment, the NAFTA is clearly creating a lot of work for lawyers.

Luke Eric Peterson is a columnist for Embassy. He is also the editor of the electronic news service, Investment Arbitration Reporter,

editor@embassymag.ca

Related:
Marvin and Elaine Gottlieb explain why they are launching a NAFTA action against the Harper government

Americans Take on Canadian Prime Minister over Income Trust Injustice - Diane Francis

Thursday, November 1, 2007

Marvin and Elaine Gottlieb explain why they are launching a NAFTA action against the Harper government

A press conference and interview with Marvin and Elaine Gottlieb, American income trust investors, and their legal advisors.

The Gottlieb's launched a Notice of Intent to submit a Claim to Arbitration against NAFTA (North American Free Trade Agreement).
Source: The Turner Report



Related:
NAFTA related articles in CAITI-ONLINE-MEDIA
The Gottlieb's NAFTA Trust Claims website

Tuesday, October 30, 2007

Americans Take on Canadian Prime Minister over Income Trust Injustice - Diane Francis

A Chicago couple is opening up a Pandora’s Box of litigation against Prime Minister Stephen Harper under the North American Free Trade Agreement because he reneged on a promise not to tax income trusts. Marvin and Elaine Gottlieb today filed under Chapter 11 of NAFTA, a little-used provision which is designed to remedy financial damages caused by any of the treaty’s three signator governments against citizens of the other two. It’s been used rarely and bypasses the regular court system, deferring to a tribunal of experts. The tribunal is comprised of one appointee from the accused government, one from the country in which the victims live and a third agreed to by both. They hear evidence and render a verdict that cannot be appealed.

Canada Disappoints

“I’ve done a lot of business in Canada and with Canadians and I’m disappointed the government would do this,” said Mr. Gottlieb in an interview today before his press conference in Ottawa. “What better promise than the Prime Minister of a country who said he had reviewed the issue and was not going to tax trusts. Then a year ago he did. We relied on that pledge to expand our investments and so did a lot of people.”

The Flip Flop

Harper’s flip flop, cobbled together over a weekend last year for no reason then poorly marketed by Finance Minister Jim Flaherty, wiped $35 billion in value off income trusts. It led to the takeover of 46 trusts by foreigners and private equity buyers.

Here’s where this legal action gets interesting:

  • Canadians cannot sue their own government for damaging them, but a Canadian who also holds Mexican and/or
  • U.S. citizenship is entitled to file an action under Chapter 11, irrespective of where they live. “Dual nationals and landed immigrants, who were damaged, can get involved even if they are residents of Canada,” said Mr. Gottlieb.
For information as to what the case is about and who qualifies please look at website, naftatrustclaims.com

Who Can Sue


In general, those who can sue under Chapter 11 are:
  • Canadians with dual citizenship
  • Landed immigrants in Canada with Mexican or U.S. citizenship.
  • Mexican citizens not living in Canada
  • American citizens not living in Canada
The last Chapter 11 case was waged by the Loewen Group, a Canadian funeral home chain. The company was bankrupted after an ignorant Mississippi jury awarded US$600 million in punitive damages to a local funeral home operator even though he was only suing for US$2 million in a contract breach case. Founder Ray Loewen of Vancouver made a Chapter 11 claim but lost after several years.

Most recently was a case involving B.C. lumber giant Canfor Corp., which sued over the unfair softwood lumber tariffs and quotas imposed by a U.S. federal agency over the years. This case was launched by an American against the Canadian system. Mr. Gottlieb, a successful retired businessman, began investing in Canada pretty heavily beginning in 2000, mostly in the energy trust sector.

He increased his investments as a direct result of the Prime Minister’s promise to leave income trusts alone in the last election. He is suing for $6.5 million in damages and doing what he can to help others get their day in court too.

“This is not about politics or politicians,” he said in an interview this morning before his press conference in Ottawa. “We are not concerned about them, but the ground rules on NAFTA is what we’re asking for. NAFTA treaty rules. Not politics.”

Why Chapter 11

Chapter 11 was written into NAFTA, ironically, mostly amid concern about Mexico and its corruption and past proclivity to expropriate assets or discriminate against foreigners.

But the high-handed behaviour of the Canadian government vis a vis income trusts is more egregious than anything the Mexicans have done.

“It’s a question of ethics. NAFTA is the only avenue we have,” he said. “We’re talking about a broken commitment by a Prime Minister.”

“We will be attempting to attract other American investors who found themselves in a similar disadvantage as a result of a government decision. This is about fair and equitable treatment,” he said.

After the announcement about income trusts, Mr. Gottlieb started a letter writing campaign, with others, to convince the Tories to reconsider their decision.

“I contacted other government organizations and got stock answers, don’t bother me anymore was the attitude,” he said. “We learned that NAFTA might be the opportunity for an individual in the U.S. to bring this attention to the public.”

“These hearings may also bring sunlight to the project. There were no reasons for the action and only generalities,” he said. “A NAFTA tribunal will show who was right and who was wrong.”

“There has also been serious damage to the energy sector, in particular,” he said. “This is very important to Canadians.”

Source: Americans Take on Canadian Prime Minister over Income Trust Injustice - The Financial Post

Attention U.S. Investors in Canadian Income and Royalty Trusts

I am very pleased to make you aware of a significant development and an exciting legal opportunity for all US members of CAITI and all US investors in income trusts. The Gottliebs are seeking as their remedy to this legal matter brought under NAFTA ,a grandfathering of the energy trusts. Such a remedy will be to the benefit of all trust investors. Please support this major new initiative undertaken by Marvin and Elaine Gottlieb of Chicago , who I am proud to say are members and early supporters of CAITI.

Please visit http://naftatrustclaims.com/

Brent Fullard
President and CEO
Canadian Association of Income Trust Investors
www.caiti.info/

416 486-2224
647 505-2224 (cell)

Note: A link to naftaclaims is located in the upper right menu of this website.

Income trust fall-out: American couple the first to launch NAFTA challenge against Government of Canada for eliminating income trusts; inviting others

OTTAWA, Oct. 30 /CNW Telbec/ - Marvin and Elaine Gottlieb are taking on Prime Minister Stephen Harper, Finance Minister Jim Flaherty and the Canadian government for the Halloween 2006 broken promise on the elimination of income trusts. The Chicago couple are the first Americans to file a Notice of Intent to Submit a Claim to Arbitration under the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA). The couple are among the thousands of US investors who lost a total of $5 billion dollars in the fall-out from the Conservative Government's decision last year to effectively tax income trusts in the energy sector out
of existence.

"The Halloween 2006 income trust decision by the Government of Canada has had a massive financial impact on thousands of investors in Canada and the U.S. and we believe that it breached Canada's NAFTA obligations", said Marvin Gottlieb. "Because of this decision, more than $30 billion has been lost by individual investors in Canada and more than $5 billion has been lost by energy trust investors, including Elaine and me, in the United States.

"Based on Stephen Harper's very public promise, thousands of individuals and grandparents like us invested our hard earned money in income trusts and energy trusts. This is not just a nightmare on Bay Street. It's a nightmare on Wall Street."

For further information:
Susan Smith
Bluesky Strategy Group
C: (613)371-0624
susan@blueskystrategygroup.com
Source: CNW

Related:
Chicago couple seeks NAFTA arbitration of income trust taxation policy

Monday, October 29, 2007

Halloween income trust fiasco one year later...Midwest American family the first to take on the Canadian government under NAFTA

OTTAWA, Oct. 29 /CNW Telbec/ - Marvin and Elaine Gottlieb's Halloween nightmare with the Conservative government's decision to tax Canadian income trusts in the energy sector is far from over. Now it may be the Conservative government experiencing a Halloween surprise.

The Chicago couple will be in Ottawa tomorrow, Tuesday, October 30, 2007 to give notice of a challenge under NAFTA Chapter 11 against the Government of Canada. Their claim is based on the fall-out of Finance Minister Jim Flaherty's surprise Halloween 2006 decision to eliminate income trusts on the heels of the Conservative government's pledge to leave them alone.

Mr. and Mrs. Gottlieb will hold a news conference at 10:30 am in Room 130-S, Centre Block, Parliament Hill, Ottawa.

ALL MEDIA ARE INVITED TO ATTEND

DATE: Tuesday, October, 30, 2007
TIME: 10:30 am
PLACE: Room 130-S, Centre Block, Parliament Hill, Ottawa

For further information: or interview requests please contact:
Susan Smith
Bluesky Strategy Group
C: (613) 371-0624
susan@blueskystrategygroup.com
Source: CNW Group


Who is Marvin Gottlieb?

Marvin Gottlieb has been active in international corporate affairs for 35 years. In 1965, he founded M. Gottlieb Associates, Inc. (MGA), an international manufacturers’ representative company that specializes in matching world-class technologies with the needs of its Fortune 500 clients. He has been a limited partner of Trident Capital (a venture capital fund) since its inception in 1992. Headquartered in Chicago, IL, MGA had offices in Indiana, Michigan, Mexico, Singapore, Hong Kong, London, Portugal, Japan, and Yugoslavia.

He has also served as a consultant to IBM, and advisor to General Motors, Ford, and Zenith Electronics on global procurement issues. He traveled extensively in the Far East and Australia with top officials of the Defense Department, under the Reagan administration, on trips concerning acquisition and procurement. Recently, Mr. Gottlieb visited Cuba as a member of a fact-finding tour sponsored by the Center of International Policy.

As a leader in the field of electronics manufacturing, he helped to establish and then served as co-chairman of the IEEE (Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers) Spring Conference from 1960-1985. This major annual conference focuses on innovations in electronic engineering and manufacturing technologies.

An active member of the Chicago Council on Global Affairs, Mr. Gottlieb is a founding member of the Chairman’s Circle. Marvin is currently an adviser to the Hiroshima Gateway Peace Project. He recently stepped down as a member of the Board of Directors of the Juvenile Diabetes Foundation of Chicago, on which he served for the past 10 years. He founded a family foundation that supports medical research in juvenile diabetes, breast cancer and several major cultural organizations in Chicago. He is a member of the International Map Collectors Society.

Marvin is also the President of Howland International, a UK-based Corporation, which is actively involved in energy issues, and oil reserves. He is currently interested in new approaches for oil exploration, production and alternative sources of energy. He is an active member of the Association for the Study of Peak Oil and the Canadian Association of Income Trust Investors. Marvin and his wife, Elaine divide their time between Glencoe, Illinois, Palm Beach, Florida and Cedar Grove, Wisconsin. They enjoy travel, golf and spending time with their four granddaughters.

Source: marvingottlieb.com