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Hi All,
I have a small number of shares in one of the Irish banks that sees me sitting on a substantial loss of several thousand euro. At current share price, they are worth less than €70. Thankfully, I will also have a capital gains tax liability on some other shares sold recently, so I am anxious to realise the loss on the former and use it to offset my overall liability. I only ever bought a few shares years ago and currently don’t have an account with a stock broking company.
The shares are in certificate form and the registrar informs me that the printed certificate will have to be deposited with an independent broker before they can be sold as the registrar can’t sell them since Brexit. Am I correct in thinking that this severely limits who I can deal with and puts the on-line trading platforms like Degiro out of the picture?
If I have to pay a maintenance fee and a minimum trading fee with a broker, it is very likely that this would cost more than the shares are worth. So would Revenue accept that they are now of negligible value and allow me to write them off?
I know that they can be donated but I think that this doesn't count to crystallise a loss. Alternatively is it possible to arrange a private sale/ transfer of the shares to someone else at market value without the need to engage a stockbroker at all, and realise the loss that way?
Thanks.
I have a small number of shares in one of the Irish banks that sees me sitting on a substantial loss of several thousand euro. At current share price, they are worth less than €70. Thankfully, I will also have a capital gains tax liability on some other shares sold recently, so I am anxious to realise the loss on the former and use it to offset my overall liability. I only ever bought a few shares years ago and currently don’t have an account with a stock broking company.
The shares are in certificate form and the registrar informs me that the printed certificate will have to be deposited with an independent broker before they can be sold as the registrar can’t sell them since Brexit. Am I correct in thinking that this severely limits who I can deal with and puts the on-line trading platforms like Degiro out of the picture?
If I have to pay a maintenance fee and a minimum trading fee with a broker, it is very likely that this would cost more than the shares are worth. So would Revenue accept that they are now of negligible value and allow me to write them off?
I know that they can be donated but I think that this doesn't count to crystallise a loss. Alternatively is it possible to arrange a private sale/ transfer of the shares to someone else at market value without the need to engage a stockbroker at all, and realise the loss that way?
Thanks.
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