RT.com
07 Jul 2025, 22:21 GMT+10
Risks of wider financial fallout now threaten Liechtenstein's status as a global wealth hub, according to a report
Liechtenstein is scrambling to contain a crisis triggered by Western sanctions on Russia that has left hundreds of trust funds in legal limbo, the Financial Times reported on Monday.
At the center of the crisis are so-called 'zombie' trusts; funds that are legally recognized but remain frozen after fiduciaries (asset managers acting on others' behalf) and board directors resigned en masse to avoid falling foul of US restrictions.
"We are talking about multibillion-dollar floating zombie trusts. And there is no solution yet. I have never seen anything like it," said a Vaduz-based lawyer whose clients include several of the frozen entities.
The Alpine microstate - a key hub for Europe's ultra-wealthy, long prized for its favorable tax and legal frameworks - adopted EU sanctions against Moscow following the escalation of the Ukraine conflict in 2022. However, US measures imposed in 2024 on Liechtenstein-based entities linked to Russian nationals have pushed the principality's vast trust industry into turmoil.
Trusts hold anything from $5 million in cash to yachts, planes, family offices, and luxury real estate. According to the report, many of the affected assets belong to non-sanctioned Russians living in France, Italy, or the UAE.
Last year, Washington warned Liechtenstein and other European states it could impose secondary sanctions on institutions working with certain Russian clients - even if they're not individually sanctioned.
In September 2024 Liechtenstein's financial regulator advised that cutting ties with exposed clients was "the only appropriate" way to mitigate legal and reputational risk. At least 350 entities are currently in limbo, with 85 of them orphaned. Officials and legal experts warn as many as 800 trusts could ultimately be affected.
The government has launched an emergency task force to tackle the problem, the FT wrote. Justice official Martin Alge confirmed the search for new board members and liquidators is ongoing but difficult.
Another concern, lawyers warn, is potential pressure from Moscow. "There is a risk from the US but also from Russia now... an unprecedented and unparalleled risk from the other side that is equally powerful," said Johannes Gasser, partner at Gasser Partner. Moscow has condemned the "illegal" Western sanctions, warning of tit-for-tat measures and saying Western states are damaging their own economies.
Bankers and lawyers say the crisis could spill into Liechtenstein's broader financial sector - including major banks - and threaten the country's standing as a trusted global wealth hub, known for its legal protections and insulation from geopolitical fallout.
"This is starting to be problematic for the Liechtenstein financial center," warned MP Thomas Vogt.
Get a daily dose of Irish Sun news through our daily email, its complimentary and keeps you fully up to date with world and business news as well.
Publish news of your business, community or sports group, personnel appointments, major event and more by submitting a news release to Irish Sun.
More InformationOMAHA, Nebraska: With Congress considering cuts totaling around US$1 trillion to Medicaid over the next decade, concerns are rising...
ROME, Italy: Quick thinking by emergency responders helped prevent greater devastation after a gas station explosion in southeastern...
WASHINGTON, D.C.: President Donald Trump is drawing praise from his core supporters after halting key arms shipments to Ukraine, a...
MOSCOW, Russia: This week, Russia became the first country to officially recognize the Taliban as the government of Afghanistan since...
CAIRO, Egypt: This week, both Hamas and Israel shared their views ahead of expected peace talks about a new U.S.-backed ceasefire plan....
WASHINGTON, D.C.: The Trump administration has made public a visa decision that would usually be kept private. It did this to send...
ROME, Italy: Quick thinking by emergency responders helped prevent greater devastation after a gas station explosion in southeastern...
WASHINGTON, D.C.: President Donald Trump is drawing praise from his core supporters after halting key arms shipments to Ukraine, a...
DUBLIN, Ireland: The High Court has heard that some parents of children with special needs may be forced to give up their jobs to care...
LONDON, U.K.: An unrelenting heatwave sweeping across Europe has pushed early summer temperatures to historic highs, triggering deadly...
DUBLIN, Ireland: Tánaiste Simon Harris has called on the United States to use every hour to reach a zero-for-zero tariff agreement...
DUBLIN, Ireland: A blind woman from Dublin says she was hurt while getting off a bus because the driver refused to pull in close to...