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Why don't gilts attract CGT?
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wmb194 said:InvesterJones said:Ciprico said:Is there a technical reason ? or could a govt change this policy on a whim...?At the moment it's hard to find good examples now that everything's close to par but for instance TR21 8% used to trade way above par. It would have been like falling off a log to lock in a guaranteed positive YTM and a stonking capital loss to use against e.g., gains from your equities.
There may be niche circumstances where converting capital gains to interest is of benefit eg someone using the savings starting rate, but I can't believe there are that many people on low incomes who could and would be able to exploit such a loophole.0 -
zagfles said:wmb194 said:InvesterJones said:Ciprico said:Is there a technical reason ? or could a govt change this policy on a whim...?At the moment it's hard to find good examples now that everything's close to par but for instance TR21 8% used to trade way above par. It would have been like falling off a log to lock in a guaranteed positive YTM and a stonking capital loss to use against e.g., gains from your equities.
There may be niche circumstances where converting capital gains to interest is of benefit eg someone using the savings starting rate, but I can't believe there are that many people on low incomes who could and would be able to exploit such a loophole.
That the interest is taxable doesn't matter - there isn't any compensation for negative interest rates (should such a thing ever happen), but capital losses can be set against capital gains.
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zagfles said:wmb194 said:InvesterJones said:Ciprico said:Is there a technical reason ? or could a govt change this policy on a whim...?At the moment it's hard to find good examples now that everything's close to par but for instance TR21 8% used to trade way above par. It would have been like falling off a log to lock in a guaranteed positive YTM and a stonking capital loss to use against e.g., gains from your equities.
There may be niche circumstances where converting capital gains to interest is of benefit eg someone using the savings starting rate, but I can't believe there are that many people on low incomes who could and would be able to exploit such a loophole.0 -
InvesterJones said:zagfles said:wmb194 said:InvesterJones said:Ciprico said:Is there a technical reason ? or could a govt change this policy on a whim...?At the moment it's hard to find good examples now that everything's close to par but for instance TR21 8% used to trade way above par. It would have been like falling off a log to lock in a guaranteed positive YTM and a stonking capital loss to use against e.g., gains from your equities.
There may be niche circumstances where converting capital gains to interest is of benefit eg someone using the savings starting rate, but I can't believe there are that many people on low incomes who could and would be able to exploit such a loophole.
That the interest is taxable doesn't matter - there isn't any compensation for negative interest rates (should such a thing ever happen), but capital losses can be set against capital gains.0 -
wmb194 said:zagfles said:wmb194 said:InvesterJones said:Ciprico said:Is there a technical reason ? or could a govt change this policy on a whim...?At the moment it's hard to find good examples now that everything's close to par but for instance TR21 8% used to trade way above par. It would have been like falling off a log to lock in a guaranteed positive YTM and a stonking capital loss to use against e.g., gains from your equities.
There may be niche circumstances where converting capital gains to interest is of benefit eg someone using the savings starting rate, but I can't believe there are that many people on low incomes who could and would be able to exploit such a loophole.
Would make sense if capital gains were taxed more heavily than income. But that's not the case at the moment. And why many people are now doing the exact opposite, ie buying low coupon gilts below par so they're replacing interest with a capital gain.
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I don't understand why someone would want to manufacture a loss to avoid paying 10-28% tax on the offset gain. Isn't 72-90% of something better than 100% of nothing? Would take a very hefty taxable coupon to make this deliver a higher overall return after factoring in the opportunity cost of using the capital in this way.
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It's the same argument in favour of using CG loss to offset a gain elsewhere. Yes, you'd pay a little more tax on the interest instead, but in return, you'd avoid CGT on TWO lots of capital (the gilt, and the gain you're offsetting elsewhere).
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zagfles said:InvesterJones said:Hoenir said:InvesterJones said:Ciprico said:Is there a technical reason ? or could a govt change this policy on a whim...?Perhaps you are retired and waiting for your pensions to be paid. You can fill your entire Personal Allowance, Starting Rate for Savings and Personal Savings Allowance before paying tax on savings interest. You may also have shares that are showing a healthy capital gain. Gilts have been exempt from Capital Gains Tax since 1986:"Since 2 July 1986 all disposals of gilt-edged securities have been exempt from Capital Gains Tax, TCGA92/S115 (1)(a)."That exemption would have been less generous when capital gains were indexed. There have been scare stories about almost every possible means of raising more tax, but this one seems to have slipped through the net. Nonetheless, nobody predicted that the Winter Fuel Allowance would be means tested either.0
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