Title: Understanding your clients
1Understanding your clients tax requirements
- Perry Truster, FCA,TEP
- Truster Zweig LLP
- Chartered Accountants
2The impact of tax rates
- Selected Ont.2003 personal tax rates
- Tax Ordinary
Capital - bracket income Dividends gains
- 0 22.05 4.48 11.03
- 32,435 31.15 15.86 15.58
- 64,368 36.98 21.86 18.49
- 104,648 46.41 31.34 23.21
3The impact of tax rates
- Obviously the after-tax return on dividends and
capital gains is greater than on ordinary income.
Therefore lesser amounts of these can be realized
while earning the same after-tax returns. - Interest Dividends
Gains - Amount 1,000 780
698 - Max tax 464 244
162 - Net 536 536
536
4Public income trusts
- Investments in publicly traded income trusts
should yield greater after-tax returns than
investments in publicly traded corporations. - The corporation will incur tax on its income. The
shareholder receiving a dividend will incur tax
as well. The total of the corporate and personal
taxes can exceed 56 to a top bracket Ontarian.
5Public income trusts
- This rate substantially exceeds the maximum
personal tax rate in Ontario of 46.41 in 2003. - The trust would be liable for tax at he highest
personal rate. However, if the trust distributes
all of its income, annually, it will have no
income subject to tax. Rather, the unitholders
are taxed on the income.
6Public income trusts
- If the unitholder is a deferred plan such as a
RRSP, the result is more dramatic in that there
is no tax at all until funds are withdrawn from
the RRSP. - The trust can distribute cash flow sheltered from
tax by, say, capital cost allowance. Such
distributions are considered to be returns of
capital and reduce the adjusted cost base of the
units.
7Public income trusts
- Only if the ACB goes negative by virtue of such
reduction will the return of capital be taxed
immediately. - Otherwise, the ACB reduction will result in a
larger capital gain or reduced capital loss on
the eventual disposition of the unit.n
8Interest deductibility
- When interest is deductible for tax purposes is
widely misunderstood. - For example, the Income Tax Act has, since 1972,
contained a provision (subsection 9(3)) that
negates the deduction of interest which is
incurred to realize capital gains.
9Interest deductibility
- In theory, therefore, interest incurred on funds
borrowed to acquire traditionally non-dividend
paying stocks could be disallowed. - However, this has not been the governments
administrative policy. - Recently, the government has lost a number of
high profile tax cases in which the courts have
been very liberal in allowing interest deductions
and have refused to apply the REOP test where
there is no personal element present .
10Interest deductibility
- The governments response has been to introduce
draft legislation which, if passed in its present
form, will commencing in 2005, introduce a REOP
test into the law. - In broad terms, draft section 3.1 will disallow
losses unless, in the year, the taxpayer can
reasonably be expected to realize a cumulative
profit over the holding period, including future
years.
11Interest deductibility
- The draft legislation also provides that, for
this purpose, profits are to be determined
without considering capital gains or losses. - In the context of investments in the market, this
could mean that interest will be disallowed where
it is incurred to fund the purchase of stocks
which do not pay dividends or other investments
which do not distribute income. - The government would use hindsight.
12Interest deductibility
- Investors may have to report gains on the
disposition of investments as ordinary income in
order to preserve their interest deductions if
the legislation is passed in its present form.
13Corporate owned life insurance
- For purposes of determining the FMV of corporate
shares that are deemed to have been disposed of
by an individual on his/her death, the FMV of an
insurance policy on the life of the individual
(or on an individual not at arms length with the
shareholder) is deemed to be its CSV immediately
before the individuals death.
14Corporate owned life insurance
- For purposes of the small business capital gains
exemption - - the FMV of corporate owned life insurance
is deemed to be equal to its CSV at any time
before the death of a shareholder whose life is
insured, and - - after death, the FMV of the life
insurance proceeds to a corporation is
15Corporate owned life insurance
- deemed not to exceed the CSV immediately
before death if the proceeds are used, within 24
months after death (or upon written request, a
longer period, if reasonable) to redeem, acquire
or cancel the deceaseds shares.
16Corporate owned life insurance
- The portion of life insurance proceeds that
increases a corporations capital dividend
account is the amount in excess of the policys
ACB. - Therefore, consideration should be given to
having the corporation acquire a policy that
returns premiums.
17Corporate owned life insurance
- When a deceaseds estate acquires shares upon
his/her death, in the absence of the
spousal/common-law partner rollover, the estates
tax value of the shares is deemed to be equal to
their FMV immediately before the deceaseds
demise. - If the estate tenders the shares for redemption,
the estate is deemed to have realized a dividend
equal
18Corporate owned life insurance
- to the excess of its proceeds over the paid-up
capital (generally nominal) of the shares. - At the same time, the estate is deemed to have
incurred a capital loss equal to the paid-up
capital of the shares less their high tax value. - Such capital loss can be utilized on the
deceaseds terminal return to offset any
19Corporate owned life insurance
- capital gains reflected thereon, generally the
gain resulting from the deemed disposition of the
shares immediately before death. - However, if the deemed dividend is elected to be
a capital dividend, rules introduced on April 26,
1995 are problematic in this regard.
20Corporate owned life insurance
- Unless the pre April 26, 1995 rules are
grandfathered, the capital loss incurred by the
estate on the redemption, will be reduced by 50
of the capital dividend received by the estate if
the loss is utilized on the deceaseds terminal
return.
21Corporate owned life insurance
- This problem can be eliminated if the deceased
bequeaths the shares to a spouse or commonlaw
partner. - The automatic rollover would be availed of on the
transfer to the spouse or common-law partner. - The shareholder should not, prior to death, enter
into an agreement requiring that the
22Corporate owned life insurance
- spouse or common-law partner to sell to the
surviving shareholder(s) as this would negate the
rollover on death. - Instead, prior to death, the shareholders would
enter into put/call arrangements - -the surviving spouse or common-law partner
would have the right to tender the inherited
shares for redemption and to
23Corporate owned life insurance
- receive capital dividend treatment, to the
extent possible, on the resultant deemed
dividend. - -the surviving shareholder(s) would be
given a call option to force the surviving spouse
or common-law partner to sell, if the shares were
not tendered.
24Corporate owned life insurance
- In most cases, the surviving spouse or common-law
partner, having inherited the low ACB of the
deceased, will not incur a capital loss that
would otherwise be reduced by 50.
25Miscellaneous tax planning ideas
- Consider transferring investments to a
corporation and drawing a salary from the
corporation to create earned income for RRSP
purposes. - Consider transferring investments to a
corporation to reduce or eliminate the OAS
clawback (which commenced at a taxable income
level of 57,879 in 2003).
26Miscellaneous tax planning ideas
- CPP benefits transferred to a spouse or
common-law partner are not subject to the
attribution rules. - Capital gains earned by a minor are not subject
to the attribution or kiddie tax rules. - Income on income is not attributed.
- Business income is not attributed.
27Miscellaneous tax planning ideas
- An individual who is older than 69 can contribute
to the RRSP of a spouse or common-law partner who
is 69 or younger. - It may be possible to establish a trust which is
resident in a lower taxed jurisdiction within
Canada, such as Alberta, to earn income which
would otherwise be taxable in a more highly taxed
jurisdiction.
28Miscellaneous tax planning ideas
- Consider having a will create multiple
testamentary trusts rather than making direct
bequests.