I doubt this is correct. Your gain (or loss) is the change in value of the share plus the change in the exchange rates. If you paid for your shares in euro, the increase in value of sterling vs the euro will increase your returns in euro terms.
For example, if you bought a share at say 5.68 GBP this time last year and today the share is now worth 6.56 GBP, you have a gain of 15% in GBP terms. But as you paid for the share in euro, last year you paid 6.9889 EUR for the share at the prevailing GBP/EUR exchange rate.
In the past year sterling has increased in value relative to the euro. If you sold today you would get 8.9932 EUR for the share at the current GBP/EUR exchange rate.
As the euro has decreased in value relative to sterling your gain in euro terms is 28%. So you are getting a double gain, one from the increase in the value of the share and one from the increase in value of the currency in which the share is denominated relative to the euro.
Hi Landlord
It is not correct to say that dividends paid by UK companies are subject to a 10% withholding tax. In fact, no tax is withheld on UK dividends but a tax credit system currently applies (which is of no benefit to non-UK tax residents). As an aside, the UK Chancellor announced last week that the tax credit system is going to be abolished next year but this will have no impact on Irish resident investors.
The bottom line is that Irish residents receive dividends from UK companies on a gross basis, with no withholding.
Also, the withholding tax on US securities is reduced from 30% to 15% (not 20%).
Thanks Sarenco....
My information regarding UK dividend withholding tax comes from this recent post...apologies if I have miss understood it.
http://www.askaboutmoney.com/threads/the-taxation-of-uk-dividends.172787/#post-1435326
Brendan and others seemed to suggest in that post that there was a 10% DWT in the UK with no refund or credit? perhaps you could comment on that post with the correct information.
Regarding the the 20% DWT from US securities, this information came from a phone call with someone in TD Waterhouse. Could they potentially have confused me with someone living in the UK? Would that make a difference? Either way i am sure you are correct!! thanks....
You're absolutely right the last few days I've been re-doing the table at the start of this thread accounting for approximate currency conversion costs for shares or ETFs denominated in other countries currencies.
I am guessing very roughly .5% conversion cost for a cheap online conversion company?
So am i right in thinking that if I was to invest 1000 EUR monthly into an ETF domiciled in the US such as Vanguard VOO, I would have to pay 2 fees to my broker each month:
1. The brokers transaction cost.
2. The conversion cost to convert 1000 EUR to USD?
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