Brendan Burgess
Founder
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Investment trusts have been around for a very long time and have always been taxed like any other listed shares.
how could a company incorporated in the UK fall under the Irish Companies Acts?
Is there such a thing as a passively managed Investment Trust with very low charges? One that mimics a low cost ETF?
So if I invest in the Aberdeen UK Tracker Trust plc collect the dividends and later sell it at a loss, am I liable to be challenged by the Revenue?
So if I invest in the Aberdeen UK Tracker Trust plc collect the dividends and later sell it at a loss, am I liable to be challenged by the Revenue?
Brendan
It's extremely common for ITs to have discount control mechanisms in place - if these are effective, that doesn't magically turn an IT into a fund. An IT's NAV is an entirely notional figure - a shareholder can never realise a share of the NAV in the way that an investor in a fund can.
Obviously, completely different criteria apply to funds that are authorised in the Channel Islands (or anywhere else for that matter) and are admitted to trading on the LSE.
I have never come across a listed channel islands investment vehicle that wasn't authorised under the applicable investment fund legislation.
Can you point me to a specific UK incorporated investment trust that Revenue has suggested might be treated as a fund?
The share price of an investment trust is always correlated (however imperfectly) to its (notional) NAV - by that criteria all investment trusts would be funds.
Revenue dispute the issue in respect of certain ITs. When determining whether a UK based investment is subject to the 41%/25% gross roll up regime, there are two tests:
- Is it regulated in a manner that is equivalent to that of a regulated Irish fund?
- Can the investor expect to realise his/her proportionate share of the IT's NAV within seven years?
Hi Gordon
This ties in with what Rory Gillen said. It really surprised me at the time. Was this a conversation with a Revenue official or is it in writing somewhere?
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