My understanding is that the estate effectively steps into the shoes of the deceased investor for exit tax purposes. No?
Investment Trusts are always actively managed and often leveraged.Investment Trusts are generally actively managed, hence the higher costs
Does anirshinvestorgude.wordpress.com allow for tax credits on previous tax paid in the EU UCITS Acc calculations?
Also, in my model, Revenue taxes are, theoretically at least, paid from other funds. This obviously affects matters.
Are my numbers correct? (Even if my assumptions are fanciful!)
When paying the exit tax for EU based ETF's online using ROS, under which category is best to submit the electronic payment?
None of the 20 Tax sub-categories seem suitable for Exit tax, so I'm leaning towards the section 'Foreign Income and Assets Disclosure' - even though they are Irish domiciled. The reason being, on the ETF tax manual, they say "Acquisition of an EU ETF must be included on the Form 11 in the Foreign Income section as appropriate."
I guess as long as Revenue get their cut, they can't really penalise you for making payment/declaring under the wrong category can they?
I won't worry about the declaration form until 2021, but I see the general consensus is to declare via Form 11, Section 322, payment taxable at 41% - so I'll probably go for this section too.
However, there is only enough space on the form to declare one product. I've sold multiple products.
Do Revenue need to know the ticker symbol of every fund bought and sold? I guess I could include a separate page - sure what's one extra page on the already 44 page document.
And just to double check my assumption is correct on one of the investments - Fundsmith Equity - is the tax due on this one 41% Exit tax, or 33% CGT? It's not exchange traded, but I'm still assuming as it's a fund, it's still 41%.
This is a very long thread which I find very confusing.
Any volunteers to do a summary? Or maybe it exists on some other website?
If so, start a new thread. It does not have to be perfect. You can edit it based on the feedback. It would be something like the following. Read back through the thread to see what questions come up most often.
Avoid investing in non US domiciled ETFs because of the tax treatment.
What do do if you already hold them.
The tax treatment of US domiciled ETFs.
Dividends - US withholding tax etc.
the $60,000 issue
You can invest in any part of the world, as long as the ETF is domiciled in the US.
Which is the best broker to deal with
Alternatives
UK Investment Trusts
Technically these are debt instruments, secured on the underlying precious metal - they are not ETFs.ishares Silver and Gold etfs
I don’t know - I was referring to securities issued by iShares Physical Metals plc.Is SLV a debt instrument ?
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