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Cross-Border Trading Compliance Essentials: Reporting and Restrictions
Master cross-border trading compliance: FBAR and FATCA thresholds, PFIC reporting, Regulation S, short-sale restrictions, and sanctions screening.
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Cross-border trading adds a compliance layer beyond your home regulator. A trade legal domestically can trigger reporting duties, withholding failures, or sanctions exposure when one leg sits abroad.
Reporting Duties for US Persons
| Form | Trigger | Threshold (2025) |
|---|---|---|
| FBAR (FinCEN 114) | Foreign financial accounts | Aggregate > $10,000 at any time |
| FATCA Form 8938 | Specified foreign assets | $50,000 last-day / $75,000 mid-year (single) |
| Form 8621 | PFIC holdings | Any amount |
| Form 5471 | Foreign corporation ≥10% | Various categories |
| Form 5472 | Foreign-owned US corp | 25%+ ownership |
FBAR has a separate April 15 deadline (automatic October extension) and non-willful penalties from $10,000 per account. FATCA penalties start at $10,000 for failure to file.
Offshore Offerings and Short Sales
US persons generally cannot buy securities offered offshore under Regulation S if the issuer is US or the offering targets the US; Regulation D (Rule 506) private placements are the compliant path. Short sales trigger the foreign regime too: the EU SSR requires reporting net shorts ≥0.1% of share capital (0.2% public); UK SSR mirrors with FCA variations and bans naked shorts; US Reg SHO adds a circuit breaker when a stock drops 10%+ in a day.
Sanctions Screening
Every cross-border trade clears sanctions screening against OFAC (US SDN list, country embargoes on Cuba, Iran, North Korea, Syria, Crimea), the EU consolidated list, UK HMT OFSI, and UN lists. A US person trading a sanctioned entity's securities — even through a foreign broker — faces civil and criminal liability; penalties can exceed the trade value by orders of magnitude.
PFIC: The Cross-Border Trap
A US person holding a non-US pooled vehicle (foreign mutual fund, many foreign ETFs, certain offshore funds) almost always holds a Passive Foreign Investment Company. Default taxation (Section 1291) imposes the highest ordinary rate plus an interest charge on unrealized gains — often worse than the economic return. The QEF or mark-to-market elections on Form 8621 mitigate but require timely filing and fund information that foreign funds rarely provide to retail.
Withholding and Treaty Claims
US-source dividends to non-US persons face 30% default withholding, reduced by treaty via Form W-8BEN; failure to file defaults withholding to 30%. US persons receiving foreign dividends claim a foreign tax credit on Form 1116, capped at the US tax on that income.
Action Points
- Maintain a residency-day log; residency drives every downstream rule.
- Calendar FBAR (April 15) separately from income tax filing.
- Confirm PFIC status before buying any foreign pooled vehicle; default to US-listed equivalents.
- Run every foreign ticker through OFAC/EU/HMT screening before trading.
- File W-8BEN (NRAs) or claim FTC (US persons) on foreign dividends to avoid double taxation.
The cost of a cross-border compliance mistake is rarely just a fine — it is the recharacterization of the entire trade, often years later.
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