You can't. Stamp duty is a non negotiable tax and brokers will not work for nothing.if you use your 500e every month to directly purchase shares?? how can you purchase shares on monthly basis without these costs?
thanks for the reply Clubman. I take from this that unit funds are obviously the cheaper option for the monthly investor. So much for the recommendation in the Savings and Investment guide to invest directly, maybe this should be amended to reflect lump sum investments and not monthly savings.
(a) As above it's not necessarily as simple as you make it sound and depends on many factors including the amount of time over which you remain invested in one or ther other (b) the guide is just a summary of useful tips and (c) the key posts thread covers a lot of this stuff in more detail (e.g. the pros and cons of the different ways of holding shares). Of course if you think that specific parts of the guide need to be rewritten or refined then feel free to do so yourself and send the updates to Brendan who I am sure will give them due consideration for inclusion.thanks for the reply Clubman. I take from this that unit funds are obviously the cheaper option for the monthly investor. So much for the recommendation in the Savings and Investment guide to invest directly, maybe this should be amended to reflect lump sum investments and not monthly savings.
Yes.You pay income tax on dividends for the year for which you receive a dividend. Is this the case even if you use the proceeds to purchase more shares?
No. It is irrelevant what is done with the dividend money. In particular if the money is reinvested (e.g. through a DRIP scheme) then the (nominal) income is still assessable for income tax.If dividends are reinvested in a fund then no income tax and the effect of gross rollup work to the advantage of a fund? No?
Yes - you are completely wrong on this.The average dividend yield of the DJIA components is 2.4% (the first dividend yield I could find at a moments notice!). 41% tax on a 2.4% dividend is a cost of 1% per annum on your investment. A cost that doesn't apply to funds.
I've intrigued myself! Am I correct or have I gotten something wrong?
No. It is irrelevant what is done with the dividend money. In particular if the money is reinvested (e.g. through a DRIP scheme) then the (nominal) income is still assessable for income tax.
I assumed that you were talking about dividends paid on shares held directly which are then reinvested in more shares. In this case the dividends are still assessable for income tax.
...tax may still apply and if it does...
Completely wrong on the tax issue is what I meant (while assming that you were talking about reinvested dividends on direct shareholdings).
me said:The average dividend yield of the DJIA components is 2.4% (the first dividend yield I could find at a moments notice!). 41% tax on a 2.4% dividend is a cost of 1% per annum on your investment. A cost that doesn't apply to funds.
I would be surprised if no tax applied to dividends paid on shares held by a unit linked fund. On the other hand I don't know what tax may apply in this case.
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