Buying share equity in a company, can you use Ltd
Discussion
There is no reasons why the shares could not be bought in the name of your company rather than you personally.
The taper relief situation would not be that different as taper relief is baed on the time period over which the asset is owned and the nature of the asset itself (i.e. business or non-business).
What would be different is the rate of tax applicable to any gain - a company pays CGT at its Corporation Tax rate. An individual pays CGT at their maximum Income Tax rate.
Also, indiuviduals can will be able to offest their CGT Allowance (currently £8,800 per annum) against any Capital Gains on disposal. Companies do not get this allowance.
The taper relief situation would not be that different as taper relief is baed on the time period over which the asset is owned and the nature of the asset itself (i.e. business or non-business).
What would be different is the rate of tax applicable to any gain - a company pays CGT at its Corporation Tax rate. An individual pays CGT at their maximum Income Tax rate.
Also, indiuviduals can will be able to offest their CGT Allowance (currently £8,800 per annum) against any Capital Gains on disposal. Companies do not get this allowance.
hundleydavid said:
Hi
About to buy into a company that my Partner works for and will become director off and also form part of the board.
I have a small limited company, has any one purchased share equity using there ltd and are there any pitfalls to think about?
Regards
David
About to buy into a company that my Partner works for and will become director off and also form part of the board.
I have a small limited company, has any one purchased share equity using there ltd and are there any pitfalls to think about?
Regards
David
Not entirely sure I fully understand the question, but if you're using a Ltd company to purchase shares in another company then there are a couple of things to consider:
1) If the assets of your current company include significant investments then this could effect the taper relief if you were to sell it. The Revenue use something called the 20% rule - which is rather ambiguous in reality, but in essence Taper Relief is designed for "trading" companies and not "investment" companies.
2) If your current (Ltd) company has significant assets, be that shares, cash, property, etc, then these assets are not ringfenced. They're not yours they're the company's. Should the company get into trouble and you have creditors coming after you then these assets are up for grabs. For this reason, I tend to ringfence my assets by owning them personally rather than through a company - even if it means paying Tax to extrapolate them.
Just my penny's worth!
And if your compsany becomes an Investment Company (rather than a trading company) because of its purchase of shares in the other company, it loses the special low rates of Corporation Tax applicable to "small trading companies". As well as that disdavantage, under Company Law it also has to disclose a lot more information in its accounts
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