Legal services:

Comprehensive legal solutions for contracts, disputes, and compliance. Our expert team ensures legal protection and strategic guidance for your business.

AML consulting:

Specialised AML consulting to develop and maintain robust anti-money laundering policies. We assess risks, offer ongoing support and provide tailored AML services.

Obtaining a crypto license:

We offer licensing and ongoing support for your crypto-business. We also offer licences in the most popular jurisdictions.

Registration of legal entities:

Efficient legal entity registration support. We manage documentation and interaction with the authorities, ensuring a seamless process for establishing your business.

Opening bank accounts:

We facilitate the opening of bank accounts through our extensive network of partners (European banks). Hassle-free process, tailored to your business needs.

COREDO TEAM

Nikita Veremeev
Nikita Veremeev
CEO
Pavel Kos
Pavel Kos
Head of the legal department
Grigorii Lutcenko
Grigorii Lutcenko
Head of AML department
Annet Abdurzakova
Annet Abdurzakova
Senior Customer Success Manager
Basang Ungunov
Basang Ungunov
Lawyer at Legal Department
Egor Pykalev
Egor Pykalev
AML consultant
Yulia Zhidikhanova
Yulia Zhidikhanova
Customer Success Associate
Diana Alchaeva
Diana Alchaeva
Customer Success Associate
Johann Schneider
Johann Schneider
Lawyer
Daniil Saprykin
Daniil Saprykin
Head of Customer Success Department

Our clients

COREDO’s clients are manufacturers, traders and financial companies, as well as wealthy clients from European and CIS countries.

Effective communication and fast project realisation guarantee satisfaction of our customers.

Exactly
Unitpay
Grispay
Newreality
Chicrypto
Xchanger
CONVERTIQ
Crypto Engine
Pion

Since 2016 I have been building COREDO as a platform where legal precision meets technological practice. During that time the COREDO team has implemented dozens of projects in the EU, the United Kingdom, Singapore, Dubai, the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Cyprus and Estonia: from company formation and obtaining financial licenses to AML consulting and implementing smart contracts into a client’s operating model. In this article I present a systematic view: when and how smart contracts operate as a legally meaningful infrastructure, how to reduce risks and achieve measurable ROI.

Our experience at COREDO has shown that “smart contracts for business” is not about fashion, but about managed automation of obligations in accordance with contract law and regulatory frameworks. I will examine legal statuses in key jurisdictions, issues of recognition in courts, the connection with AML/KYC and data protection, and provide guidance on designing “self-executing contracts” and the economics of implementation (TCO, CAPEX, OPEX and ROI metrics).

Smart contracts: legal reality

Illustration for the section «Smart contracts: legal reality» in the article «Smart contracts in the legal field – a legal agreement»

Smart contracts are code that automatically executes pre-defined terms of a transaction on a distributed ledger (DLT). In business practice I prefer the formulation “smart contract as a legal agreement,” because the legal force of smart contracts arises not from the code but from the parties’ mutual will and compliance with the applicable law, with the code serving as the execution infrastructure.
The core of the debate “code as law vs code and law” is that lex cryptographica, cryptographic law, does not repeal contract law but coexists with it. Blockchain and distributed ledgers are important in law as mechanisms for recording facts and ensuring performance, but the legal framework is set by rules: offer, acceptance, consideration, legal capacity and the permissibility of terms.
COREDO’s practice confirms: DLT and the legal force of records strengthen the evidentiary basis if the transaction architecture is subject to the chosen law and properly documented off-chain.

Smart contract vs traditional contract

A traditional contract relies on subsequent performance and, in dispute, on judicial enforcement. A smart contract, as an alternative mechanism for performance of obligations, is built into the mechanism: performance occurs automatically, and penalties can be embedded in the code logic (withholding, escrow, fines). At the same time legal risks of smart contracts include faulty code, incorrect oracle data and non-compliance with mandatory rules.
The solution developed at COREDO is to combine on-chain and off-chain legal mechanisms, where the code executes only those terms that are suitable for automation, and the rest remain in the contractual documentation.

International framework: EU, Asia, CIS

Illustration for the section 'International framework: EU, Asia, CIS' in the article 'Smart contracts in the legal field – a legal agreement'

The international framework covers the EU, Asia and the CIS countries, where approaches to regulating smart contracts differ significantly in terms of recognition, evidentiary value and liability. Below we will examine the key legal features and practical implications for each region, starting with the legal status of smart contracts in the EU.

Legal status of smart contracts in the EU

In the EU we rely on eIDAS and the electronic signature: a qualified electronic signature (QES) is equated with a handwritten signature. If parties need unconditional recognition of a signature for an off‑chain document, we recommend a QES — and anchoring the document’s hash on a blockchain to record transactions as evidence. MiCA and EU digital asset regulation shape the framework for tokens and service providers, affecting KYC/AML and disclosures.
DLT and the legal effect of records in the EU are supported by national acts (for example, pilot regimes for DLT market infrastructures). To recognize a smart contract as part of a transaction, we include in the master agreement provisions on the applicable law, arbitration and on‑chain addresses as identifiers of the parties. This reduces disputes about the ‘formality threshold’ and facilitates the admissibility of electronic evidence in court.

Legal status of smart contracts in Asia

Singapore, Hong Kong and the UAE (Dubai) promote a technology-neutral approach. In Singapore, MAS regulatory sandboxes accelerate testing of DLT solutions while complying with AML. In the DIFC/ADGM in the UAE, flexible regimes for digital assets operate, and courts recognize a wide range of electronic evidence.
In these jurisdictions, smart contracts and electronic signatures rely on general principles of contract law: the intention to be bound, certainty of terms, and the parties’ capacity to enter into transactions.

International regulation: UNCITRAL

UNCITRAL and model laws on digital contracts set the basis for equal legal force of electronic communications and traditional documents. In cross‑border projects I insist on conflict-of-law clauses and choice of applicable law, as well as a description of the procedure for international enforcement of decisions and recognition of blockchain operations.
This approach ensures predictability when working in supply chains and trade finance.

Legal force and recognition in court

Illustration for the section «Legal force and recognition in court» in the article «Smart contracts in the legal field – legal contract»

Understanding the legal force of electronic documents is important for minimizing risks and ensuring their applicability in legal practice. Below we will examine mechanisms of court recognition, enforcement of decisions, features of electronic evidence, and rules for secure storage that determine when digital data become fully admissible evidence.

Recognition of electronic evidence

Issues of recognition and enforcement of smart contracts in courts boil down to three things: validity of the agreement, coherence of code and text, and admissibility of evidence. To ensure “how to ensure proof of smart contract execution in court,” the COREDO team builds an evidence preservation framework and a data storage chain: notarized timestamps, call logging, version hashing, and storage of execution logs.
This increases the admissibility of electronic evidence in court and reduces the risk of losing digital traces.

On-chain and off-chain: mechanisms and arbitration

On-chain and off-chain legal mechanisms complement each other: the code executes payments, escrow, and time-locks, while the off-chain agreement covers force majeure in automated contracts, liability, and fault tolerance.
Smart contracts and arbitration: including arbitration clauses is critical — part of the dispute logic can be delegated to on-chain arbitration and dispute-resolution logic (for example, via multisig arbitrators), but the final decision is often better entrusted to institutional arbitration (LCIA, SIAC) to preserve the possibility of an enforceable award.

AML/KYC: data protection

Illustration for the section «AML/KYC: data protection» in the article «Smart contracts in the legal field – legal agreement»

AML/KYC processes, a key tool in identifying and managing risks, require strict adherence to international standards and compliance procedures. Reliable data protection ensures the traceability of operations and reduces the likelihood of leaks, which will form the basis for the discussion of risks, recommendations of FATF and traceability issues.

AML/KYC risks and FATF recommendations

Smart contracts and AML/KYC must be designed together with the provider’s policies. FATF recommendations on virtual assets and AML require counterparty identification and transaction monitoring. We integrate KYC solutions for smart contracts through identification providers and address whitelists.
We also use transaction traceability and forensic blockchain analysis to identify links to sanctioned entities or risk pools.
Regulation of digital assets and its impact on smart contracts is manifested in the licensing of VASP/PSP and the travel rule. COREDO’s practice confirms: early alignment of AML processes with contract logic saves months in licensing in the EU, the UK and Singapore.

GDPR data protection

Smart contracts and GDPR require caution with hard-to-delete data on the ledger. We apply privacy-by-design and compliance-by-design: personal data is stored off-chain with access control, and only pseudonymized hashes are written on-chain.
personal data protection in blockchain systems is achieved through access tokens, encryption and data minimization policies. Smart contracts and personal data protection are not a ban, but an engineering discipline.

Asset licensing and tokenization

Illustration for the section «Asset licensing and tokenization» in the article «Smart contracts in the legal field – legal contract»

Licensing in asset tokenization is a key factor determining the legality and commercial sustainability of projects in the digital rights market. In the following section we will examine in detail which licenses are required and how the MiCA framework shapes requirements for the issuance and circulation of tokens.

MiCA licenses

Financial licenses (crypto, banking, forex, payment services) determine how and which smart contracts can be used for the issuance, exchange and custody of tokens. MiCA and cryptocurrency regulation and their impact on smart contracts introduce requirements for the whitepaper, asset management and stablecoin reserves.
The COREDO team guides clients through a pre-licensing audit so that code and business processes comply with regulatory expectations.

Tokenization standards

Smart contracts and asset tokenization use standards ERC-20, ERC-721 and legal characteristics of tokens: transferability, property rights, corporate and consumer restrictions. Legal support for asset tokenization includes analysis of token classification (payment, utility, security), marketing regimes and cross-border offerings.

DAO Corporate Governance

Smart contracts and corporate governance enhance transparency: from the treasury to the enforcement of limits. DAO as a form of corporate structure and the legal challenges boil down to personal liability, taxes and recognition of legal personality.
In some jurisdictions legal models for DAOs and automated governance are recognized, but more often we create a “governing shell” (LLC/基金/Foundation) and register on-chain governance rules as internal regulations.
Multisignature (multisig) and distributed accountability allow managing the risks of unilateral control. For large treasuries we implement the fulfillment of obligations through multisig and escrow, and standardize roles and approval procedures.

Legally compliant smart contracts

Designing requires attention to detail: smart contracts must be legally compliant and drafted so that their execution conforms to legal norms. In the following sections we will review practical steps for drafting and bringing them in line with contract law requirements to minimize the risk of disputes and ensure the enforceability of the terms.

Formalize the contract under contract law

How to legally formalize a smart contract — rely on a master agreement where:

  • the parties are defined (legal entities and their on-chain addresses);
  • the smart contract is described as a legal agreement, its functions and limitations;
  • the role of standard clauses in smart contracts is established: governing law, forum, arbitration, notices, force majeure;
  • penalties and sanctions for breach of smart contracts and off-ramp procedures are provided;
  • escrow via smart contracts and conditional transfers, time-lock and conditions for deferred performance are described.
To address “how to ensure a smart contract complies with contract law”, we agree the offer/acceptance and consideration in an off-chain document, and make the code an annex with the hash and address.
Smart contracts in international trade require Incoterms clauses, payment currency, taxes and prohibitions on sanctioned supplies.
A template of a legal smart contract for commercial transactions in our practice is a package:
– Master Agreement with governing law and arbitration;
– Technical specification (description of the state machine, events, roles);
– Oracle and data source policy;
– Emergency shutdown and migration plan (upgrade path);
– Appendix with the hash of the source code and the deployment address.

Electronic signature: eIDAS and QES

Smart contracts and electronic signatures must interlock so as to express the parties’ intent. In the EU we anchor the signature of the contract text with a qualified electronic signature (QES), and in the smart contract itself we refer to identifiers of the signed document.
This reduces the risk of disputes about the validity of arbitrary addresses and strengthens the evidentiary value.

The role and liability of oracles

The role of oracles in legally significant smart contracts is critical because they translate the external world into an on-chain state. Oracle reliability and legal liability require: source audits, provider SLAs and insurance coverage.
Legal requirements for oracles and data providers include compliance with licensing (where applicable), transparency of methodologies and incident response procedures.

Reliability and security of technologies

The reliability of the technological platform and ensuring its security are not abstract tasks but mandatory conditions for the stable operation of systems and the preservation of users’ trust. This is achieved through formal verification, independent audits, and a clear allocation of responsibility among the participants in the process.

Formal verification and audit

Formal verification (formal verification) of smart contracts and formal verification methods reduce the likelihood of logical vulnerabilities. security audit of smart contracts and legal liability should be stipulated in the contract: scope of the audit, exceptions, responsibility of the developer and the client.
Secure development practices (secure coding) and code audit and compliance include static and dynamic analysis, threat modeling, and mandatory testing of emergency scenarios.
Smart contract vulnerabilities and legal consequences concern restitution, reputation, and possible regulatory liability.
The COREDO team recommends reserve funds and cyber risk insurance policies for critical protocols.

Upgradeability, versions and SLA

Upgradeable contracts and the legal consequences require special provisions: who and how initiates an upgrade, how the parties’ rights are preserved, which contract upgrade mechanisms (upgradeability patterns) are applied (proxy, beacons), and how the user is notified.
Version control and change management in smart contracts are recorded via release hashes and an approvals log.
SLA for decentralized applications formalizes availability, RPO/RTO, and the incident management procedure. Security policies and access management, as well as monitoring tools and incident response in DLT (on-chain monitoring, anomaly alerts, key management), are part of the mandatory operational procedures.

Integration and operational model

Integration of key systems: ERP/CRM and CLM is a prerequisite for building a transparent and manageable operational model where data and processes are aligned across departments. In the following points we will examine which standards and architectural solutions provide such synchronization and how this is reflected in daily operations.

ERP/CRM and CLM standards

How to integrate smart contracts with ERP and CLM — via data buses and events (webhooks) with guaranteed delivery and status mapping.

Integration with ERP/CRM and CLM automation allow linking contract law and the automated execution of terms to the deal lifecycle.
Contract lifecycle management (CLM) for smart contracts is complemented by “smart metadata”: versions, addresses, signing rights, deadlines. Smart contracts and document management standards rely on smart-contract interoperability standards (EIP/ERC), and in the corporate environment on APIs corresponding to ISO 20022/EDI where payments and logistics are involved.
This reduces friction between the legal and technical domains.

Operational limits and scalability

The scalability of blockchain solutions and business risks depend on throughput, TPS and the network’s operational constraints. Gas fees and their impact on the commercial model should be defined in the economics of the deal: who pays the fee, at what level of network load execution is permitted, and how transaction queues operate.
The COREDO team models worst-case scenarios to prevent execution from “sticking” due to infrastructure faults.

Economics of implementation

The economic aspects of implementation determine how viable and cost-effective the project will be in the long term. In this section we will examine key metrics, ROI and TCO, and discuss risk insurance mechanisms that help protect investments and reduce uncertainty.

ROI and TCO in risk insurance

The benefits and ROI from implementing smart contracts in a company appear in reduced operational errors, accelerated DSO/working capital turnover, and lower dispute costs. ROI metrics for smart contracts: cycle time from order to payment, frequency of claims, share of automated payments, savings on manual checks.
TCO and the economic model for implementing smart contracts account for TCO, CAPEX and OPEX when deploying DLT: development, audit, licensing, node hosting, monitoring, legal support, insurance. The risk assessment model and cyber risk insurance are included in the financial model taking business criticality into account.
Smart contracts and tax implications for companies require early involvement of tax advisors: classification of income, VAT/GST on tokenized services, taxation of token issuance and burning, transfer pricing in cross-jurisdictional flows.

COREDO case studies and best practices

In the supply chain, one European manufacturer implemented smart contracts in international trade for letters of credit with conditional transfer. We drafted arbitration provisions, implemented plausibility oracles for delivery statuses and multisig escrow for the supplier and the bank, which reduced collection time by 37%.
Practical cases: disputes, arbitration, enforcement, have shown that on-chain recording and pre-agreed SLAs speed up dispute resolution.
In an asset tokenization project in Estonia, the COREDO team developed an oracle policy, included upgradeability with upgrade locks during a dispute, and conducted a code audit and compliance according to the requirements of the virtual asset service provider license.
In Singapore we guided a client through the MAS regulatory sandbox, combining KYC solutions for smart contracts with forensic blockchain analysis for counterparty risk monitoring.
In corporate governance (Dubai) we designed a treasury DAO model for a legal wrapper in ADGM: multisig, distributed responsibility, version control and change management, as well as security policies and access management.
COREDO’s practice confirms: best practices for implementing smart contracts in corporations: it’s always cross-functional teams: lawyers, developers, risk management and finance at the same table.

Preparing a company for smart contracts

The first stage is process diagnostics: where automation of performance delivers the greatest benefit without violating the law. Next, standardization of model clauses for automated contracts: arbitration, force majeure, upgrades, sanctions, taxes.
Documenting requirements and SLA for smart contracts helps teams align and protects the budget.
I recommend a phased implementation plan:

  • legal map: applicable law, licenses, AML/KYC, GDPR;
  • architecture: on-chain/off-chain separation, oracles, evidence storage;
  • security: secure coding, audit, formal verification on critical components;
  • operations: monitoring, incidents, SLA, reserves and insurance;
  • integration: ERP/CRM, CLM, document management standards and interoperability.

Regulatory and judicial practice

Case law on matters involving smart contracts in the EU and Asia shows a growing willingness of courts to recognize electronic evidence and smart logic as part of a transaction. International guidelines on digital contracts from UNCITRAL support the equal legal force of electronic communications, which is important for cross-border enforcement.
On-chain arbitration is useful as an operational filter for disputes, but for international enforcement of decisions we provide for traditional arbitration with a clear exequatur procedure. With a sound architecture — recording transactions as evidence, evidence preservation, and a chain of custody for data — courts accept on-chain records as part of the evidentiary base.

COREDO turns technology into results

Smart contracts are not an end in themselves or a risky experiment. They are a way to make contract law and the automation of contract execution part of your processes with manageable risks and measurable economics.
The COREDO team has implemented integrations in the EU, the UK, Singapore, Dubai, the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Cyprus and Estonia, and our experience at COREDO has shown: sustainable results are achieved where legal engineering, security and licensing go hand in hand.
If it’s important to reduce TCO, increase ROI and gain predictability in international trade, tokenization or payments, use the approach: law first, architecture up front, security continuously.
My colleagues and I at COREDO are ready to handle legal entity registration, obtaining the required financial licenses, AML consulting, building on-chain/off-chain mechanics and supporting implementation through to operational resilience.

Since 2016 I, together with the COREDO team, have been guiding clients through the full cycle of international structuring: from company registration in key jurisdictions of the EU, the United Kingdom, Singapore and Dubai to obtaining financial licenses, AML consulting and subsequent support. Over the past years we have seen steady interest from entrepreneurs and funds in the Astana International Financial Centre (AIFC). The reasons are clear: English common law, transparent supervision by the Astana Financial Services Authority (AFSA), the flexible regulatory framework of the AIFC rulebook and tangible tax incentives in the AIFC for investors when residency and substance conditions are met.

In this article I have systematized COREDO’s practical experience and set out concrete steps on how to approach obtaining an AIFC investment license, registering funds and building a sustainable compliance model. The text is addressed to those who expect clear timelines, a controlled cost of the process and predictability of regulatory requirements – from fit and proper to IFRS reporting.

Why the AIFC

Illustration for the section ‘Why the AIFC’ in the article ‘AIFC Investment Licenses in Kazakhstan’

AIFC: a closed perimeter of English common law with its own court, the AIFC Court, and an independent regulator, AFSA. For financial services the AIFC rulebook applies: Conduct of Business, Prudential Rules, Collective Investment Schemes, AML/CFT and related guidance. COREDO’s practice confirms that for international groups it is a safe entry point to the Central Asian markets, as well as a platform for cross-border capital structures.

From a tax perspective, the relationship between the AIFC and the Kazakhstan tax regime provides incentives to participants in the centre for a number of financial services, exemption from certain local taxes and the ability to apply double tax treaties. It is important to assess the commercial feasibility of opening an office in the AIFC taking into account the investment strategy, investors’ jurisdictions and the operational risk map.

Map of AIFC licenses

Illustration for the section «Map of AIFC Licenses» in the article «AIFC Investment Licenses in Kazakhstan»

Types of AIFC investment licenses are detailed in the AIFC regulatory framework for investment services. The AIFC license map: broker, dealer, manager, depository and related statuses allows flexible selection of the scope of authorisations to suit a business model.

Broker, dealer and market maker

The AIFC securities broker license and the AIFC market-maker and dealer license cover «dealing in investments», «arranging deals», «making a market». Separate requirements apply to algorithmic trading: strategy testing, risk controls and compliance when using algorithmic trading. The COREDO team has implemented projects where access to derivatives and derivative instruments with enhanced limit management was added to the basic dealing permission.

Asset and fund managers

The AIFC asset management license grants the right to «managing investments» for a separate mandate, while the AIFC fund manager license covers management of collective investment schemes. There are also specialized categories: an AIFC alternative investment management license for private equity and VC structures. A solution developed at COREDO often combines a managed account and a fund platform to flexibly onboard both institutional and qualified investors.

Depository and custody

An AIFC depository license and the organisation of custody and asset accounting in the AIFC imply strict segregation of client assets, segregated accounts, as well as restrictions on commingling client and own funds. For some strategies a separate custodian provider is required or outsourcing services: fund administration and custodian with clear SLA and KPI.

Investment adviser

The AIFC investment adviser license (advising on investments) is critical for groups where the portfolio is managed outside the AIFC, while advisory, distribution and oversight functions are performed at the centre. Our experience at COREDO has shown that such a configuration is convenient when AIFC licenses are compatible with European regulations (MiFID) and when a MoU with foreign supervisory authorities is in place.

Digital assets sandbox

An AIFC digital assets trading license is possible through AFSA regimes for Digital Asset Trading Facility and custody of digital assets. The AIFC regulatory sandbox for fintech and tokenisation (regulatory sandbox) allows testing of asset tokenisation models and security tokens in the AIFC before obtaining a permanent license. In several projects, COREDO selected smart contract architectures with legal recognition in the AIFC, ensuring AML compliance/KYC when obtaining an AIFC license.

Regulatory framework of AFSA and AIFC

Illustration for the section «Regulatory framework of AFSA and AIFC» in the article «Investment licenses of the AIFC in Kazakhstan»

The rules for regulating investment activity in the AIFC are built on the principles of risk-based supervision and are close to MiFID approaches. AFSA relies on Conduct of Business Rules (COB), Prudential Rules (IPRU), Collective Investment Schemes (CIS) and the AIFC AML Rulebook.

Capital requirements and adequacy

capital requirements for an AIFC license depend on the type of activity: broker-dealer, custodian, manager, consultant. Capital requirements and the calculation of capital adequacy are applied taking into account market, credit and operational risks, as well as off-balance obligations. We prepare ICAAP/ICARA models, portfolio stress testing and liquidity management considering counterparty and credit risk limits.

Corporate governance: fit and proper

The AIFC corporate governance rules define the minimum governance structure required to obtain an AIFC license: a board of directors with an independent director, Senior Executive Officer, Finance Officer, Compliance Officer and MLRO. Requirements for AIFC directors and senior personnel include checks of probity (fit and proper) and fitness and propriety checks for experience, reputation and competence. The COREDO team prepares CVs, competency matrices and justification for role allocation to pass Due Diligence AFSA without delays.

AML/KYC Compliance Program

AIFC compliance requirements for investors and clients imply risk-oriented KYC procedures and CDD for clients, a register of beneficial owners and BO disclosure, as well as AML/CFT policy and requirements. The compliance program—policy, procedures, monitoring—must include sanctions screening, compliance performance indicators (for example, false positive rate for transaction monitoring systems), and the preparation and submission of SARs. COREDO’s practice confirms that correct tuning of thresholds and scenarios in transaction control systems and risk monitoring at the AIFC reduces the burden on the team and improves the quality of risk detection.

Protection of client assets

Restrictions on mixing client and own funds and protection of client assets through segregated accounts: a key element of trust. AFSA requires documented reconciliation procedures, reporting on client assets and regular external audit, as well as independent internal audit if the scale of the business exceeds established thresholds.

Substance and residency in banks

Illustration for the section «Substance and residency in banks» in the article «AIFC investment licenses in Kazakhstan»

Residency and substance requirements at the AIFC include having an office within the centre’s perimeter, local managers and key functions on the ground. This is especially important for tax benefits and for demonstrating the place of effective management.

Interaction with correspondent banks for AIFC companies and onboarding requires a pre-prepared AML package, a policy on sources of funds and control procedures. In several cases COREDO has arranged a combined solution: local settlement banks for operational flows and foreign correspondent banks for cross-border clearing.

How to obtain an AFSA license

Illustration for the section «How to obtain an AFSA license» in the article «AIFC investment licenses in Kazakhstan»

obtaining an AIFC investment license AIFC: this is a project with clear stages. I always start by assessing the business model for compliance with the AIFC rulebook and check which permitted activities are actually needed today and how to keep the option to scale tomorrow.

How to prepare the package and IT environment

Preparing the documentation package for submission to AFSA includes a business plan, financial forecasts, risk, compliance and information security policies, as well as minimum requirements for IT infrastructure and cyber security. AFSA assesses checks for financial soundness and the business plan, the presence of continuity processes, an incident log and a DRP/BCP testing plan. The COREDO team designs internal control procedures and internal audit from scratch, the duties of the Compliance Officer and the MLRO role.

Timelines, cost and communication with the regulator

The timeline for issuing an AIFC license is usually 3–6 months from a correctly prepared dossier, especially if the regulatory sandbox mode for fintech is involved. The cost of obtaining an AIFC license consists of AFSA regulatory fees, expenses for legal preparation, audit and compliance setup, as well as CAPEX on IT and operational environments. In one recent project, a solution developed by COREDO helped reduce the budget by outsourcing the fund administrator and custodian functions until the AUM threshold was reached.

Supervision and reporting

regulatory supervision and AFSA inspections involve regular IFRS reporting, audit opinions, notifications of changes in controllers and risk events. Reporting requirements and IFRS standards are a mandatory part of licensing conditions. In addition, information exchange with foreign regulators (MoU) is in effect, which is especially important for groups operating in multiple jurisdictions.

Funds in the AIFC: registration and listing

registration of an investment fund in the AIFC includes choosing a form: open‑ended or closed‑ended, as well as using SPVs and holding levels to structure flows. Private equity and VC funds in the AIFC often employ closed‑ended models with mechanisms for capital calls and returns.

Fund manager and depository

An AIFC fund manager license allows operating a collective investment scheme provided there is an independent depository. Contracting depositories and beneficiary agreements require a clear compliance architecture: segregated custody, reporting, SLAs and liability clauses. For public products, preparing a prospectus and making disclosures for funds is mandatory in accordance with AFSA requirements.

Listing and exit

Listing and exit opportunities in Kazakhstan via the AIFC are implemented through the AIX, and synergies are also possible when interacting with KASE and international venues. Exit strategies — IPO, asset sales, secondary market — depend on investor profiles and jurisdictions of placement. The COREDO team has helped funds prepare data rooms, assess economic impact and perform investment due diligence for exits to international markets.

Taxes and private equity strategy

The advantages of an AIFC license for private equity funds include simplified dealings with qualified investors, clear rules on carried interest and flexibility in structuring the waterfall. Tax optimization measures and double tax treaties can reduce the tax burden on repatriated profits if the criteria for AIFC participant status are met. ROI metrics for funds in the AIFC are combined with methodologies for valuing illiquid assets, while liquidity management and portfolio stress‑testing are embedded in the investment committee’s regulations.

Liability of license holders

Risks and liabilities of AIFC license holders include sanctions compliance, legal risks of cross-border asset management and counterparty risk-control requirements. Compliance with sanctions regimes and screening is not reduced to a formal list check; continuous calibration of policies and staff training are required.

Regulation of derivatives and derivative instruments in the AIFC requires documented limits, margin modelling and close‑out terms. For algorithmic trading, code verification procedures, a change log and pre- and post-trade controls are important.

Compatibility with MiFID and passporting

The compatibility of AIFC licenses with European regulations (MiFID) is reflected in the similarity of approaches to client classification, suitability and product governance. Direct passporting of services through the AIFC into the EU is not applied. Nevertheless, international recognition of AIFC licenses is growing thanks to unified standards, MoUs and participation in IOSCO initiatives.

Using the AIFC for cross‑border investments is convenient when the parent company is in the EU or the UK, and fund management functions for regional deals are located in the AIFC. In such structures, anti‑money laundering and counter‑terrorist financing procedures in the AIFC and the group’s unified KYC/CDD policy are useful.

COREDO Case Studies: how it works

In Case No. 1 an international group requested Licensing of a broker-dealer with a market-making option. The COREDO team implemented a phased approach: first the permitted activities «arranging deals» and «advising on investments», then an extension to «dealing in investments». We built a capital model, calculated operational limits, and implemented transaction controls and risk monitoring in the AIFC. Time to obtain the basic license: four months, the extension – another three.
Case No. 2 – registration of an investment fund in the AIFC under a private equity strategy. We designed a closed-ended structure with an SPV for individual deals, arranged the AIFC fund manager license and the engagement of a depositary. During the preparation of the prospectus the risk framework, ROI metrics and the procedure for valuing illiquid assets were disclosed. The fund passed an audit, set up IFRS reporting and began placement among institutional investors.
Case No. 3 – a fintech company with a trading platform model for digital assets. At the start we used the regulatory sandbox, implemented AML/KYC when obtaining the AIFC license, and then moved to a full AIFC license for trading digital assets with a digital-asset custody module. The solution developed at COREDO included smart contracts and legal recognition in the AIFC, as well as compliance metrics with a false positive rate below 8% alongside a steady flow of SARs for actual incidents.

Commercial feasibility

Assessing the scalability of a business model through the AIFC includes a comparison of CAPEX/OPEX scenarios, the AUM growth model and substance requirements. It is often more advantageous to start with lean operations, using outsourcing services: fund administration and custodian, and then insource functions as volumes grow.

corporate structure: holdings, trusts and funds are structured to take into account restrictions on profit distribution and return of capital, as well as the terms for attracting institutional investors. For international jurisdictions we support the employment of foreign personnel and work permits, set up management remuneration policies and monitor the compliance of delegated functions with regulatory expectations.

COREDO Roadmap

  • Diagnosis: mapping activities to license “maps” and the AIFC rulebook, risk assessment and capital.
  • Designing governance: minimal governance structure, roles SEO/CO/MLRO, independent directors.
  • Capital and financial model: capital requirements, ICAAP/ICARA, liquidity stress tests.
  • Compliance: AML/CFT policy and requirements, KYC and CDD procedures for clients, sanctions screening, register of beneficiaries.
  • Asset control: segregated accounts, agreements with depositaries and custodians.
  • IT and cybersecurity: incident log, BCP/DRP, access control and logging.
  • Preparation of dossier for AFSA: business plan, policies, fit and proper packages, evidence of substance.
  • Bank onboarding: correspondent relationships and source-of-funds control.
  • Reporting and audit: IFRS, internal audit, regulatory reporting and interaction with AFSA inspections.
  • Scaling: adding licenses (for example, AIFC market‑maker and dealer licenses), going public, international MoU.

Frequently asked questions from clients

  • Impact of international sanctions on business in the AIFC. The regulator expects reliable sanctions screening and de‑risking scenarios. We develop processes taking into account the dynamics of sanctions regimes and the data‑sharing requirements under the MoU.
  • Passporting services through the AIFC. There is no direct passporting into the EU, but compatibility with MiFID helps build cross‑border chains via subsidiary structures and recognition by banks and counterparties.
  • Reporting requirements. In addition to IFRS, AFSA emphasizes risk disclosure, management of conflicts of interest and fee transparency. Prospectus preparation and disclosures for funds: an area of special attention.
  • Comparison of the AIFC with EU and UAE jurisdictions regarding investment licenses. The AIFC wins on launch flexibility but requires meaningful substance and discipline in compliance. For groups with an Asian focus this is often the optimal balance.

What a partnership with COREDO provides

I maintain personal involvement in the design of each structure, while the COREDO team supports the project from the initial architecture to the first regulatory inspection. We combine legal expertise, the financial model, AML/KYC practices and operational implementation so that you receive not just a license, but a sustainable business. Our clients appreciate predictable timelines and transparent costs, as well as the readiness to explain complex requirements in plain language.

If you are considering obtaining an ADGM investment license, an ADGM license for investment activities can become the center of your international structure. The regulator AFSA offers clear rules of the game, and tax incentives in the ADGM for investors help increase the returns of strategies. The main thing is to assemble all the elements correctly: from capital and governance to AML/CFT and IT architecture.

Conclusions

The AIFC is a mature yet flexible platform for investment business, fund management and fintech initiatives. The AIFC rulebook and regulations provide clear guidelines: capital requirements, corporate governance rules, KYC/CDD procedures and client asset protection. With proper preparation, obtaining an AIFC investment license takes a reasonable timeframe, and the structure remains scalable and compatible with international standards, including MiFID principles.

I am convinced that success here is built on three pillars: a correct licensing architecture and substance, compliance discipline, and a pragmatic scaling plan. The COREDO team helps establish all three pillars sequentially and without unnecessary iterations. If you need a roadmap — from choosing an AIFC securities broker license or a fund manager license to setting up custody, IFRS reporting and interaction with AFSA, we have proven solutions and experience implementing them.

The future of offshore jurisdictions has long arrived: transparency, digital identification, and risk‑based compliance are setting new rules. In the past it was enough to incorporate a company in the BVI or the Cayman Islands and manage flows carefully. Today offshore tax planning without economic substance, proper KYC and reporting stops working and generates an increased risk of de‑banking and payment blocking.

In this article I have compiled the practice of COREDO through the prism of the challenges faced by entrepreneurs and CFOs from Europe, Asia and the CIS. There are no slogans or “silver bullets” here. There are proven approaches, cases and tools that help safely register companies abroad, obtain financial licenses, build AML compliance and maintain access to correspondent banks in the era of total financial transparency.

The Future of Offshore Jurisdictions

Illustration for the section «The Future of Offshore Jurisdictions» in the article «The Future of Offshores in a World of Transparency»

The future of offshore jurisdictions is shaped by three forces: BEPS (Base Erosion and Profit Shifting) and the OECD Inclusive Framework, the automatic exchange of tax information CRS and FATCA, as well as regional directives like ATAD in the EU. These initiatives change not only taxation but also the risk management culture, pushing business toward a “transparent by default” model.

The role of FATCA and CRS in de-anonymization is obvious: banks, service providers and tax authorities can see the ultimate beneficiary (beneficial ownership) and the structure of the ownership chain. The automatic exchange of tax information makes the “don’t show” strategy obsolete. It is now more important to build a correct reporting model and demonstrable economic substance in offshore jurisdictions than to try to hide behind nominee directors.

At the same time, BEPS’s influence on offshores is strengthening: rules on controlling passive income, limits on interest deductions, CFC approaches and real-activity tests cut the margin of “empty” structures. The COREDO team has carried out dozens of restructurings in which abandoning offshores in favor of onshore or mid-shore solutions increased access to financing and reduced overall risk.

Risks and benefits of offshore registration

Illustration for the section 'Risks and benefits of offshore registration' in the article 'The future of offshore in a world of transparency'
Registering a legal entity in an offshore jurisdiction still provides advantages: flexibility of corporate law, fast administration and neutrality for holding functions. On the other hand, de-banking and strict criteria for access to correspondent banking relationships make the standalone existence of an offshore structure difficult. Banks assess PE risk (permanent establishment), substance and UBO as carefully as tax authorities.

Reputational risks of offshore structures for public companies have grown: investors request reputational due diligence in the style of Transparency International standards and assess the impact of the UBO structure on the ESG profile. In COREDO projects public issuers increasingly choose alternatives to traditional offshore jurisdictions: Cyprus, Malta, Ireland, Luxembourg, the UAE and Singapore provided there is real activity, an office and resident directors.

To assess rationality, I always ask the team to build a compliance cost model (compliance cost modeling). It includes the total cost of ownership (TCO) for offshore structures, the impact on ROI and the return on compliance investment (ROCI): how much formal economic substance will save by reducing the risk of payment refusals, licensing delays and cost of capital. In some cases the TCO of an offshore with full substance proved to be higher than that of an onshore solution.

Economic substance: requirements

Illustration for the section 'Economic substance: requirements' in the article 'The future of offshore jurisdictions in a world of transparency'
Economic substance (economic substance) is not a set of “tick-boxes”, but a managerial necessity. Requirements for a local director and substance in island jurisdictions are increasing: an office, employees, on-site management decisions, contracts and key risks in the jurisdiction. Relying on nominees no longer works: nominee director risks (nominee director risks) manifest in bank refusals, tax issues and fines.

From an economic standpoint, substance requirements help reduce PE risk, confirm the center of management and control (mind and management), and pass bank scoring. COREDO’s practice confirms: when the board of directors actually meets in Cyprus or Dubai, and the CFO and risk function operate in the EU, regulators’ concerns are resolved faster. This is reflected in lower financing costs and greater resilience of the operating cycle.

New contours have appeared in reporting: substance reporting and reporting against shell company criteria. Regulators request minutes of meetings, employment contracts, leases and local tax payments. Our experience at COREDO has shown that it’s better to invest in a real team and processes than in “paper” substance. It’s easier to defend with banks and tax authorities, and it reduces overall costs over a three-year horizon.

Compliance of offshore structures: KYC and DAC6

Illustration for the section 'Compliance of offshore structures: KYC and DAC6' in the article 'The Future of Offshores in a World of Transparency'
In working with offshore structures, compliance covers a wide range of requirements – from KYC and AML procedures to mandatory reporting under DAC6. Below we consider practical approaches, including e-KYC, that help minimize risks and ensure compliance with international standards.

How to comply with AML/KYC and e-KYC for offshore structures

Complying with AML when using an offshore is not a question of legal form, but of the quality of data and processes. I use a risk-based approach: AML risk scoring based on geography, business model, source of funds and transaction profile. AML/KYC automation tools (SaaS), integration of compliance processes into ERP/CRM and regtech solutions for KYC reduce onboarding friction and improve client UX without loss of quality.

AMLD5 and AMLD6 require beneficial ownership verification, enhanced (Due Diligence, EDD) for complex structures and ongoing monitoring. Transaction monitoring systems and sanctions screening are now standard not only for banks, but also for fintechs and payment companies. The COREDO team developed an e-KYC framework and digital identification using pseudonymization to balance privacy vs. transparency, which facilitates cross-jurisdictional data exchange.

I propose assessing AML risks when working with a foreign jurisdiction using metrics: probability × impact × cost. Such scoring fits into the budget and helps make decisions, build substance, change the bank provider or carry out re-domiciliation (change of jurisdiction). This is a pragmatic way to protect Licensing and maintain stable correspondent lines.

International reporting: CRS, FATCA, CbC

Automatic exchange of information (CRS) and offshore jurisdictions are in a new linkage: account and beneficiary data are transferred under international data exchange agreements. FATCA strengthens checks for clients with US ties, and banks form additional requirements for describing flows, sources and control over UBOs. At COREDO we build a reporting calendar to synchronize CRS, local declarations and corporate obligations.

Country-by-country reporting (CbC) and transfer pricing documentation have linked taxation to operational reality. Tax rulings and advance pricing agreements help remove uncertainty when there are cross-border flows of royalties, loans and services. I recommend agreeing on these instruments before scaling activities to avoid falling under transfer pricing rules and fines for non-compliance at a time when turnover is already large.

Consultants’ obligations: DAC6 and ATAD

DAC6 and reporting obligations for advisers require declaring “schemes” with indicators of tax advantage. This changes the role of advisors: the legal liability of advisers and directors becomes personal and requires strict procedures. The solution developed at COREDO includes “red flags” checklists, a roles matrix and a board decisions log to confirm business purpose and compliance with anti-avoidance rules and ATAD.

Directors increasingly must be residents of the relevant jurisdiction and actively participate in management. Requirements for director residency and the elimination of nominee directors strengthen the resilience of the structure and help with banking compliance. This approach gives confidence to investors and reduces the likelihood of being classified as a shell company.

Restructuring: from secret to transparent

Illustration for the section “Restructuring: from secret to transparent” in the article “The Future of Offshores in a World of Transparency”
Restructuring strategies help organize the transition from secret structures to transparent ones, reducing risks and improving business manageability. Below is a practical step-by-step transition plan that shows which actions and priorities need to be implemented at each stage.

Steps for transitioning to transparent structures

The transition from secret structures to transparent ones begins with a map of risks and objectives. I propose a step-by-step plan: audit of the structure for UBO and PE risk, benchmarking substance, assessment of TCO and ROCI, aligning the roadmap with regulatory and banking timelines. Then: phased compliance and possible sunset clauses to close old links without impacting cash flow.

The next stage: aligning corporate documentation, updating contracts, notifying banks and counterparties. COREDO’s practice confirms that a pre-prepared communication package for banks and auditors shortens lengthy approvals and keeps correspondent channels open. This is especially important when licensing payment institutions and fintech providers.

Redomiciliation vs closing an offshore company in the EU

Migration of a company from an offshore to the EU is possible via re-domiciliation or liquidation followed by registration. Migration cases — re-domiciliation vs closure — depend on assets, contracts and licenses. The COREDO team implemented scenarios where re-domiciliation provided continuity of contractual relationships, and in others: closure and transfer to a new legal entity reduced regulatory risks and simplified bank scoring.

I always include an assessment of the impact on CbC, transfer pricing and possible triggers for anti-avoidance rules. Legal support for international holdings at this stage is critical: taxation agreements, substance in the new jurisdiction, and ATAD requirements for controlled foreign companies must align without contradictions.

Beneficial ownership and the UBO registry

Rebuilding the ownership structure and the UBO registry is not only a formality but also an element of trust in the group. The register of beneficial owners (UBO registry) and beneficial ownership verification require complete and up-to-date information, as well as compliance with local definitions of control. At COREDO we implement an annual re-verification procedure so that changes in shareholdings, option agreements or trusts are timely recorded in the registry.

The consequences of disclosing beneficial owners for investors are usually positive with correct governance settings. A transparent board of directors, clear voting rights and minority protection strengthen the company’s valuation and reduce the structural discount. This is especially noticeable in transactions with institutional investors and in industry due diligence standards for venture investments.

Tax risks associated with dividend repatriation

Dividend repatriation requires synchronization of double taxation agreements, a beneficial ownership test for the income and substance at the holding. I recommend agreeing tax rulings or an APA in advance for significant flows, and also documenting mind and management at the level of the dividend recipient. This reduces the risk of requalification and claims under ATAD and local anti-avoidance rules.

It is important to link this with transfer pricing documentation and CbC so that dividends and intra-group services do not conflict in the logic of functions, risks and assets. The COREDO team builds tax planning models with economic substance, where profit allocation is supported by real centers of competence and personnel in the relevant jurisdictions.

Offshore doesn’t work: fintech licensing

When licensing payment institutions, forex dealers, crypto providers and electronic money issuers, an offshore form often slows access to banking infrastructure. De-banking and access to correspondent banks depend on transparency, sanctions profile and jurisdiction of registration. Our projects in the EU, the UK, Singapore and Dubai show that onshore structures open doors faster and provide stable operations.

Fintech and open APIs for banks require provable control over transactions and customers. Asset tokenization and smart-contract compliance help here, along with a built-in blockchain audit trail for transparency and the use of blockchain for transparent reserve reporting. The COREDO solution integrates regtech tools into core banking and processing, which eases licensing and compliance verification.

Company registration in the EU, Asia and Africa

Legal company registration in the EU for international business requires attention to ATAD, substance and local accounting and audit requirements. Cyprus, Estonia, Czechia and Slovakia set clear rules of the game, and e-residency and digital company registration in Estonia shorten onboarding times and allow managing processes remotely. It’s important to establish KYC processes for clients and suppliers from the start to avoid having to rework infrastructure for the bank.

Business registration in Asia and Africa: the compliance checklist covers sanctions risks, local requirements for an office and directors, and specifics of currency control. Singapore demonstrates a high standard of governance and access to financing, while a number of African jurisdictions require closer engagement with banks and regulators. The COREDO team adapts checklists by industry to speed up account openings and integration into payment networks.

Responsibility in tax planning

Tax optimization vs. evasion — the boundaries of responsibility are determined by business purpose, substance and the documentation of decisions. International tax planning today is built around functions, risks and assets, not only around rates. OECD Inclusive Framework, ATAD and local anti-avoidance rules establish a common language by which banks, regulators and auditors assess models.

Advance pricing agreements and tax rulings reduce uncertainty, especially for IP centers and service hubs. Transparent intellectual property management schemes that take into account marketing and R&D functions in the relevant locations help avoid being classified as a shell company. At COREDO we design the corporate structure of the holding so that transfer prices reflect reality, and that CbC and local files do not contradict each other.

Requirements and due diligence for trusts

Trust structures and requirements for registration of trusts have tightened: trust register, disclosure of the settlor, protector and beneficiaries, as well as trustee due diligence have become the norm. The beneficial owner in the context of a trust is interpreted more broadly than in corporate structures and requires additional communication with banks. I recommend using independent trust administrators with a proven track record and a transparent KYC policy.

Beneficial ownership verification for trusts relies on evidence of the source of funds and mechanisms for controlling distributions. The COREDO team builds procedures under which distributions from the trust align with their purposes and are documented in a single register, available for audit and to banks. This increases the likelihood of successful account openings and reduces operational delays.

Metrics and the return on transparency

The cost of maintaining transparency for a business is an investment that pays off by reducing risks and providing access to capital. I use three metrics: TCO of the structure taking substance into account, ROCI as the effect of compliance on margin, and probability × impact × cost as the basis for risk scoring. This approach allows the CFO to defend the compliance budget before the board of directors.

Sunset clauses and phased compliance help make the cultural transition from legacy structures to an onshore model without shocking the operational business. The offshore blacklist and whitelists provide guidance on where it is better not to open accounts and which payment routes to reduce. COREDO’s solution for a reputation risk management model for investors includes regular reputational due diligence and a public transparency policy on UBO.

COREDO cases: from legacy to onshore

In COREDO cases we analyze real business transformation scenarios: the move from legacy structures to onshore solutions, covering jurisdictional, managerial and tax changes. The first example is dedicated to relocating a fintech group from the BVI to Cyprus and to the Czech Republic with a detailed breakdown of the stages, risks and benefits of such a transition.

Relocating a fintech from the BVI to Cyprus and the Czech Republic

Practical cases: moving a business from offshore to onshore delivers a measurable effect when a bank starts lowering limits or dragging its feet on letters of credit. For a fintech group with processing, we migrated the holding from the BVI to Cyprus and moved the operational office to the Czech Republic. Substance: the director, risk officer and product management were placed in Cyprus, which opened new correspondent lines and sped up licensing approvals.

The ROI assessment when moving capital to onshore schemes showed a positive ROCI within 14 months due to reduced bank fees and higher turnover. Additionally, we agreed an APA on service arrangements and tied the transfer pricing documentation to actual functions so that regulators would have no questions about profit allocation.

Re-domiciliation of the holding company to Singapore

For an investment holding, we carried out re-domiciliation (jurisdiction transfer) from the Cayman Islands to Singapore. The LP investor market required a more “regulated” domicile and improved access to Asian banks. We strengthened governance, reinforced the board with an independent resident director and implemented transaction monitoring systems with e-KYC, which reduced onboarding friction for portfolio companies.

As a result, the holding gained access to several banks with strong correspondent banking relationships. The project was completed without loss of contractual continuity and improved the fund’s valuation among institutional investors, as confirmed by their due diligence.

Closure of the Malta SPV and creation of substance

In the third case we chose to close the Malta SPV due to rising compliance costs and banking restrictions. Instead, we opened a holding and an operating company in Dubai, where we formed a real team, office and board of directors. Payment services licensing went through faster than expected, and a blockchain audit trail for reporting on client funds increased banks’ confidence.

Access criteria to correspondent banking improved because the bank saw on-site management decisions, local contracts and a transparent AML framework. The client exited the “manual payment management” mode and stabilized cash flow, avoiding de-banking.

Preparation for an international AML review

How to prepare a company for an international AML review should start with a gap analysis and process maps. I recommend implementing AML risk scoring, sanctions screening, EDD triggers for high-risk clients, and automatic transaction monitoring. This is the basic layer that banks and regulators expect to see in any licensed company.

Next comes digitization: e-KYC and digital identification, regtech for offshore compliance, pseudonymization of client data (pseudonymization) and secure data exchange with providers. Integrating compliance processes into ERP/CRM reduces manual work and human error. COREDO’s practice confirms that such a stack reduces bank response time and facilitates scaling to new markets.

When to close an offshore company

Sometimes the best choice is to close an offshore company. An exit strategy for offshore structures is justified when TCO grows faster than the benefits, the jurisdiction lands on an offshore blacklist, and banks impose strict limits. In these cases a phased exit with the redistribution of functions and assets to onshore reduces shocks and preserves the client base.

Legacy structures and restructuring require a clear plan for transferring contracts, IP and personnel. Reputation risk management models for investors include proactive communication about the reasons for changes, updating the UBO registry and confirmation of compliance standards. The COREDO team helps carry out this process without payment interruptions or operational risks.

Transparent transfer pricing

Transparent intellectual property management schemes are based on real R&D and marketing functions. The identification of shell companies and substance tests quickly reveal discrepancies if the IP hub “exists on paper”. We recommend early dialogue with tax authorities, an APA request and establishing a product management function in the jurisdiction where the IP is located.

Transfer pricing documentation, master/local file and CbC create a single narrative for the auditor, the bank and the tax authority. This way the business avoids penalties for non-compliance and reduces the risk of retroactive assessments. Within COREDO we support such projects comprehensively: from licensing and bank account opening to regtech integration and building substance.

Transparency by default and partnership

The future of offshore is about both offshore structures and transparency. creating an offshore company in 2026 is possible and rational if the structure relies on economic substance, proper compliance and a clear business purpose. The alternative: a deliberate move away from offshore in favor of onshore jurisdictions with a strong banking infrastructure and access to capital.

At COREDO I build a culture of decision-making where compliance is an investment, not an expense. The COREDO team has implemented dozens of projects: from migrating a company from offshore to the EU and licensing payment institutions to integrating blockchain audit trails and launching e-KYC. If you are looking at restructuring, licensing, or strengthening banking infrastructure, I can propose a pragmatic plan including calculations of TCO, ROCI and risk management using the formula probability × impact × cost.
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