Just wondering if anybody, especially finance professionals, have any feedback on this?Are there any strategic points around this to look out for?
If I am coming up to the 8 years, should I exit it myself and reinvest? I presume not as I would face the 1% stamp duty on reinvesting and lose any potential refund from a subsequent fall.
If I am coming up to the 8 years and planning on cashing it anyway to use the money for something else, is there any advantage in exiting it early?
All the more reason for them to simplify the whole regime when their own staff don't even understand itI sold one of my ETFs in January 2023. This was the first disposal for many years. I am thinking of disposing of them all and just buying a selection of shares.
But for S&P 500 or NASDAQ this is quite messy
I have asked Revenue how I should account for this in my Form 11 return next year - still waiting for a reply
I don't think they have many people who understand how this works
In a situation whereby I invest monthly / regular saver, then I would have thought after 8 years, I would be paying DD on a monthly basis in line with each invested amount, but perhaps I've misunderstood based on what you've said above?You’re better off having multiple investments staggered over time than investing in just one with deemed disposal.
Say you have one lump sum investment. All growth on this will be taxed after eight years.
Say you have a regular saver investment. All growth on this will also be taxed after eight years.
But if you have multiple investment products each will only be taxed eight years after it is first created. The result of this is that your money will spend more time in the market untaxed, thus compounding better.
Oh yes sorry - I meant this only for life products subject to deemed disposal.In a situation whereby I invest monthly / regular saver, then I would have thought after 8 years, I would be paying DD on a monthly basis in line with each invested amount, but perhaps I've misunderstood based on what you've said above?
But the tax is actually deducted at that point I presume?There is some confusion here as exemplified by the examples posted by @Corola.
The actual tax due is calculated at final disposal. It is the encashment value less premiums paid and is zeroised if negative. Note any tax paid on DD does not enter this calculation.
Taxes paid at deemed disposal are just down payments.
That's useful. Thanks.Hence if you believe ET rate has more chance of falling in future than rising (which I do) you should let the DD take place and not encash and reinvest but of course vice versa if you think the rate will go up.
Yes on both counts. It is a down payment just like preliminary tax for the self employed.Thanks @Duke of Marmalade .
But the tax is actually deducted at that point I presume?
And for an ETF holder where the tax due is greater than zero, they have to either find spare cash to pay the bill or sell units of the investment to pay it I presume?
That is correct. I am surprised that no life company has designed their regular savings policies to be technically a series of new policies like used to happen in the UK (for some reason that I forget).You’re better off having multiple investments staggered over time than investing in just one with deemed disposal.
Say you have one lump sum investment. All growth on this will be taxed after eight years.
Say you have a regular saver investment. All growth on this will also be taxed after eight years.
But if you have multiple investment products each will only be taxed eight years after it is first created. The result of this is that your money will spend more time in the market untaxed, thus compounding better.
The difference is when units are sold to pay the tax, it's not a "deemed" disposal anymore, it's a real disposal which is taxable at 41%. It's equivalent to selling the whole fund, paying the tax on that, and rebuying units with your remaining money. The units disposed are gone, so they don't come back in to the calculation at the subsequent disposal at 30%.@Corola is assuming that Deemed Disposal is a "reset" whereas it is merely a down payment on the final tax due.
There is if you pay the tax using other money and leave the ETF investment intact?Agreed, I was referring to the life assurance situation. The whole thing was contrived for life assurance but you are right on ETFs where there is nothing deemed about the disposal at all.
Correct.but I'm guessing the movement will trigger maturity / encashment, and so will trigger exit tax.
Correct.Policy started 2007, AMC is 1%, with Zurich
Deemed disposal in May 2015: 20k tax paid
Deemed disposal due again in May 2023, I presume?
Correct (same question as your first).I presume the switch would require a new policy, and so exit tax would be paid on previous policy.
Like what? I can't see that it makes any difference if you're already on the verge of an 8 year anniversary anyway? Maybe if such an anniversary was further away then the timing of an encashment and reinvestment might be relevant?This thread has got me thinking that maybe there's a better strategy with the exit tax?
True. And @Corola's examples only had a part sale of the ETF to pay the tax so it still includes a large element of "deemed" disposal.There is if you pay the tax using other money and leave the ETF investment intact?
You're probably right but if it is the same policy type with just a change of AMC then there is no earthly reason why a new policy is needed. In my day changing brokers was routine and it never involved encashing the policy. Check with Zurich whether you can merely switch broker without encashing the policy and of course that you would enjoy the 65bps.If I switch brokers, the AMC falls to 0.65%, saving 500-600 per year.
It would be Zurich with the the new broker.
I presume the switch would require a new policy, and so exit tax would be paid on previous policy.
You're probably right but if it is the same policy type with just a change of AMC then there is no earthly reason why a new policy is needed. In my day changing brokers was routine and it never involved encashing the policy. Check with Zurich whether you can merely switch broker without encashing the policy and of course that you would enjoy the 65bps.
If that is possible then in my view deemed disposal is better than encashment and re-entry as you will get the benefit of any future reduction in Exit Tax rate (or vice versa, of course). And you already have 20k at stake. If say the Exit Tax rate falls from 41% to the DIRT rate of 33% you would get a c. 4k rebate.
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