Rory Gillen
Registered User
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- 248
Having enquired from an expert, the tax treatment of investment companies (trusts) and ETFs remains a tricky area for Irish investors. To summarise;
An offshore fund that is a good offshore fund (in the EU or part of a tax treaty with Ireland - say established under UK law and resident in the UK) will be taxed under our income tax regime (gross roll up) if subject to a regulatory regime. If a non-regulated fund, then taxed as a normal security. To determine whether a fund is subject to a regulatory regime would have to be done on a case by case basis and by drilling down into the original fund prospectus.
An offshore fund is a bad offshore fund if non-EU and not part of a tax treaty with Ireland. Such funds are taxed as securities, not funds and income and CGT applies, and loss relief available.
Most ETFs, but not all, fall under the good offshore fund rules and should be taxed under gross roll-up rules, with no tax relief. ETCs (exchange-traded commodities) are securities and taxed as such. US ETFs not constituted under the US Mutual Funds Act are more likely to be bad offshore funds and taxed as securities. Difficult to determine though.
UK listed investment trusts that are constituted under UK law and subject to a regulatory regime most likely fall under Part 13, Irish Companies Act, and subject to gross roll-up rules for Irish residents. But non-UK registered investment companies (Guernsey registered for example, of which there are many) probably should be categorised as bad offshore funds and taxed as normal securities (income tax on dividend and CGT on gains) with loss relief.
Tax returns: It is a minefield for the private investor, as none of us are experts and in a position to determine the above. My own read of it is that gross roll-up rules should be your default stance unless you can prove your fund is a bad offshore fund or a good offshore fund not regulated in which case normal security tax rules apply (with loss relief).
Best I can do.
Rory Gillen
An offshore fund that is a good offshore fund (in the EU or part of a tax treaty with Ireland - say established under UK law and resident in the UK) will be taxed under our income tax regime (gross roll up) if subject to a regulatory regime. If a non-regulated fund, then taxed as a normal security. To determine whether a fund is subject to a regulatory regime would have to be done on a case by case basis and by drilling down into the original fund prospectus.
An offshore fund is a bad offshore fund if non-EU and not part of a tax treaty with Ireland. Such funds are taxed as securities, not funds and income and CGT applies, and loss relief available.
Most ETFs, but not all, fall under the good offshore fund rules and should be taxed under gross roll-up rules, with no tax relief. ETCs (exchange-traded commodities) are securities and taxed as such. US ETFs not constituted under the US Mutual Funds Act are more likely to be bad offshore funds and taxed as securities. Difficult to determine though.
UK listed investment trusts that are constituted under UK law and subject to a regulatory regime most likely fall under Part 13, Irish Companies Act, and subject to gross roll-up rules for Irish residents. But non-UK registered investment companies (Guernsey registered for example, of which there are many) probably should be categorised as bad offshore funds and taxed as normal securities (income tax on dividend and CGT on gains) with loss relief.
Tax returns: It is a minefield for the private investor, as none of us are experts and in a position to determine the above. My own read of it is that gross roll-up rules should be your default stance unless you can prove your fund is a bad offshore fund or a good offshore fund not regulated in which case normal security tax rules apply (with loss relief).
Best I can do.
Rory Gillen