Re: Bed and Breakfast
Hi Jester,
Thanks for bringing this up .... I would be interested in hearing what people have to say.
Bed and breakfast usually means selling shares and then buying them back. I think it is usually done within the same tax year, and usually on the same day. It is essentially a way to crystallise a loss or a gain in your share values for the purposes of benefitting from your annual capital gains allowance. It is usually done because you can't carry forward an unused capital gain allowance to the following tax year (I think). Some stockbrokers offer a special fee to execute a B&B order which is somewhat cheaper than if you sell and buy back at a later time point. You also pay stamp duty. I'm not sure about whether there is some other sort of B&B which involves two tax years, maybe someone else would know?
UDS (if you're out there!), in relation to the parallel discussion about tax avoidance/evasion, where does B&B fit in? Could the Revenue argue that the transaction is made solely for the purposes of tax avoidance and subsequently deem that it was invalid?
Also, since lots of people have crystallised losses on shares this year, what is the role of B&B? I think I read somewhere that you must offset all losses before you can claim the allowance. Is this true?
regards,
tedd
PS Just discovered a related discussion here