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lou
12-09-2012, 10:24 PM
Are you allowed to claim interest expenses if you are investing into FIF investments?

Aaron
13-09-2012, 07:47 AM
In my opinion I think you are allowed to deduct expenses that relate to generating FIF income but it would be best to talk to an accountant though.

lou
13-09-2012, 05:04 PM
In my opinion I think you are allowed to deduct expenses that relate to generating FIF income but it would be best to talk to an accountant though.

Thanks Aaron,

Do you have any FIF investments or are you coming at it from a logical perspective.

Snoopy
13-09-2012, 10:48 PM
Are you allowed to claim interest expenses if you are investing into FIF investments?


Lou, there is an implication in your question that any interest you pay in generating your income on your FIF investment is somehow tied to that FIF investment.

In my tax return I declare various categories of income as outlined in my IR3 form. Then later on in the form there is a question about any expenses (including interest paid) I have incurred in generating that total income. There is no bracketing of interest paid against certain income streams. In my own case I just have all of my investments in my own name.

You haven't really given any detail on how you structure your own investments. From my perspective your question cannot be answered, because the question itself contains inaccurate underlying assumptions. You might have to rephrase what it is you actually want to know.

SNOOPY

lou
14-09-2012, 07:07 AM
Thanks Snoopy.

This is a hypothetical question as I don't have any FIF investments yet, but planing to have them in the future.
In terms of structure; FIF investments would be brought in my own name using borrowed money(assume no other income or expenses).
If this was a regular investment the interest would be deductible, however are there any exemptions or other rules that come with the FIF regime that I am missing?

Aaron
14-09-2012, 08:24 AM
Thanks Aaron,

Do you have any FIF investments or are you coming at it from a logical perspective.

Your investment in Foreign Investment Funds is to generate income. generally any expenses incurred as a result of that investment that are not capital in nature will be deductible such as interest on borrowings to make the investment. I am not aware of any exemptions for claiming interest in the case of FIF investments but I am not an expert in such matters so am happy to be educated if i am wrong.

Snoopy
14-09-2012, 10:02 AM
This is a hypothetical question as I don't have any FIF investments yet, but planing to have them in the future.
In terms of structure; FIF investments would be brought in my own name using borrowed money (assume no other income or expenses).
If this was a regular investment the interest would be deductible, however are there any exemptions or other rules that come with the FIF regime that I am missing?


If you buy FIF shares in your own name, and that is your only investment income, then you might have to be careful. Generally I would agree with Aaron.

However, what happens if in a particular year you made a loss on your FIF investment? Under FIF rules for individuals your FIF income for that year would be nil. If that was your only investment income then then your total investment income would be nil. I guess a question would arise then if you could legitimately claim an interest rate tax deduction against zero investment income? My guess is that you could because you went into the investment with the idea of making some FIF income. And the fact that you did not does not change your original intent to earn some FIF income.

However, I would not make such an investment decision on my guess! You would probably need to talk to an accountant who is familiar with the fine detail of such arrangements. You would probably have to minute your intentions in writing in advance to dispel any ambiguity that might catch you out in the FIF loss year situation.

SNOOPY

P.S. I do think the idea of structuring all of your investments with a 100% loan so that they fall under the FIF umbrella is rather unwise.

lou
15-09-2012, 05:09 PM
P.S. I do think the idea of structuring all of your investments with a 100% loan so that they fall under the FIF umbrella is rather unwise.

Hi Snoopy,

Which one do you find unwise? Only investing in FIFs or the margin loan?

Snoopy
16-09-2012, 07:59 AM
Which one do you find unwise? Only investing in FIFs or the margin loan?


To try to be even handed about it, there is one potential advantage in your plan. On a bad FIF year it might be possible to claim an interest rate expense against your FIF investments even though from the IRD perspective you have made no income! I guess that would partially offset the disadvantage of having to pay tax on recovering your original capital in subsequent years.

I would say the worst part of your plan is the 100% margin loan. I believe the underlying investment (overseas shares, or for that matter any shares) is too volatile for this to work in the medium term. I would describe a 20% margin loan as extremely aggressive.

Think of it this way. All sharemarket listed entities have a responsibility to their shareholders to be 'capital efficient'. A well run company will borrow money to achieve this. What you are really saying by borrowing money to invest in shares is that you believe the underlying shares are not optimally 'capital efficient' and that you can borrow more money against the fixed income stream from the underlying share to achieve a better result. On rare occasions you might be right. But in the general case you are saying that you know more about how the underlying business than management do. To me this kind of thinking is a bad bet.

The FIF regime is I believe negative from an NZ investor return perspective. If you can find a high growth index included company for example in Australia (not subject to FIF) that is growing faster than some investment in the US (or whatever FIF country you care to substitute) from a post tax perspective you are likely to be better off by putting your money in that Australian company. To me it now makes sense to get international exposure by looking at NZ/Oz exporters (the are some locally listed companies that earn almost all of their income outside of NZ/Oz) rather than trying to buy into some FIF overseas growth story.

To be hypocritical I have made one FIF investment myself since FIF came in - YUM brands on the NYSE. But even that I would consider as fairly and fully priced for now. And I certainly haven't borrowed money to get into it. In general my eyes are cast firmly towards the NZX and ASX bourses these days.

SNOOPY

Sauce
16-09-2012, 06:59 PM
The FIF regime is I believe negative from an NZ investor return perspective. If you can find a high growth index included company for example in Australia (not subject to FIF) that is growing faster than some investment in the US (or whatever FIF country you care to substitute) from a post tax perspective you are likely to be better off by putting your money in that Australian company.
SNOOPY

Thank you for posting a rational comment on the relative disadvantage of FIF Snoopy. To many people do not understand this, in my opinion.

Regards,

Sauce

lou
17-09-2012, 05:53 PM
I guess that would partially offset the disadvantage of having to pay tax on recovering your original capital in subsequent years. Do you have to pay tax on recovering your capital? I thought under the FIF regime you end up paying 5% tax on your opening book value then and that was it (FDR rules assuming your investments are increasing in value).



I would say the worst part of your plan is the 100% margin loan. I believe the underlying investment (overseas shares, or for that matter any shares) is too volatile for this to work in the medium term. I would describe a 20% margin loan as extremely aggressive.
It would not be margin loan but a loan over personal property. While the FIF investments would be purchased using 100% debt financing, the global view would reveal a conservative debt ratio.



Think of it this way. All sharemarket listed entities have a responsibility to their shareholders to be 'capital efficient'. A well run company will borrow money to achieve this. What you are really saying by borrowing money to invest in shares is that you believe the underlying shares are not optimally 'capital efficient' and that you can borrow more money against the fixed income stream from the underlying share to achieve a better result. On rare occasions you might be right. But in the general case you are saying that you know more about how the underlying business than management do. To me this kind of thinking is a bad bet.


The other-way of thinking about it is that I am arbitraging the cost of debt and cost of equity. Since the cost of debt is < the cost of equity in the long run you should make a profit. The cavet to this is "Markets can remain irrational a lot longer than you and I can remain solvent."



The FIF regime is I believe negative from an NZ investor return perspective. If you can find a high growth index included company for example in Australia (not subject to FIF) that is growing faster than some investment in the US (or whatever FIF country you care to substitute) from a post tax perspective you are likely to be better off by putting your money in that Australian company. To me it now makes sense to get international exposure by looking at NZ/Oz exporters (the are some locally listed companies that earn almost all of their income outside of NZ/Oz) rather than trying to buy into some FIF overseas growth story.
I may be wrong however. My understanding is that under the FDR rules you will pay a 5% of your opening book value as FIF income. So if you have an Australian company that returns a net dividend of 10% you will have to include the full 10% in your tax return. If that same company was a US company you would only include 5% FIF income in your tax return. I guess if your Aussie company pays no dividend you will be better off. In the long run it should balance out.

Snoopy
18-09-2012, 08:15 PM
Do you have to pay tax on recovering your capital? I thought under the FIF regime you end up paying 5% tax on your opening book value then and that was it (FDR rules assuming your investments are increasing in value).


Lou, on a one year basis your understanding is mostly correct. My comment was more in relation to a multi-year overview. At some point you may have a negative overall return on your FIF investment over a year. You will not pay any FIF tax directly if you lose money. However, any tax deducted at source from your FIF dividends will not be recoverable and cannot be carried forward to offset against any FIF tax liability in future years.

The second point is you will have lost capital when in this position. For the next year your capital base resets to the 'opening balance' of the new tax year, even if this is less than the capital you originally put in. Therefore you can be in the irksome position of paying tax while you are still recovering your original capital, and you are in net loss position.

Finally one thing that is less irksome than you assume.
"You end up paying 5% tax on your opening book value." is not right.

In fact you pay tax at your marginal rate on 5% of the opening book value, which is not the same thing.

SNOOPY

Snoopy
18-09-2012, 11:26 PM
I may be wrong however. My understanding is that under the FDR rules you will pay a 5% of your opening book value as FIF income. So if you have an Australian company that returns a net dividend of 10% you will have to include the full 10% in your tax return. If that same company was a US company you would only include 5% FIF income in your tax return. I guess if your Aussie company pays no dividend you will be better off. In the long run it should balance out.


The FIF regime does have a 'loophole' of sorts if you can find a very high yielding share. Let's say you find an FIF share that yields 10%, and the exchange rate adjusted share price does not move during the year (to keep things simple for this example). The amount of FIF tax you would pay is based on 5% of your opening balance. If your marginal tax rate is 30% then the amount of tax you will pay is 0.3 x 5% = 1.5% of the opening balance.

If as an alternative you found an Australian index listed share that paid a 10% yield, and again the exchange rate adjusted share price did not move during the year (to keep things comparable with part 1 of this example) then the amount of tax you would pay is 0.3 x 10% equivalent to 3.33% of your opening balance.

If you can find a high yielding share under FIF, then in this instance on a one year basis, FIF will deliver a better after tax result for you.

However, the reason FIF was introduced was that, in general, shares outside of Australia and New Zeland have much lower yields than other sharemarkets. So finding an FIF share or shares that behave as I have described may in practice prove difficult. If you can do it let me know though because I am looking too!

SNOOPY

Snoopy
18-09-2012, 11:32 PM
It would not be margin loan but a loan over personal property. While the FIF investments would be purchased using 100% debt financing, the global view would reveal a conservative debt ratio.


Ah so you borrow money on your house to ostensibly put in a new kitchen, but instead put that money into the sharemarket? Ok I agree that sounds much better from a global view debt ratio perspective. I would just be careful that this would still work if your house fell say 20% in capital value.

SNOOPY

Snoopy
18-09-2012, 11:55 PM
The other-way of thinking about it is that I am arbitraging the cost of debt and cost of equity. Since the cost of debt is < the cost of equity in the long run you should make a profit. The cavet to this is "Markets can remain irrational a lot longer than you and I can remain solvent."


With a well run company the cost of debt does tend to be less than the cost of equity - true. But this rule is not so black and white as you make it out to be. There are companies out there where the cost of equity is greater than the cost of debt.

You also should consider why using your logic a well run company has any equity, or in the extreme might run $1 of equity to $99 of debt. The answer is to deal with the unexpected. You need to plan for the unexpected too.

By running a 100% debt funded investment which nevertheless has a 90% chance of performing to plan (because you only invest in good companies, right?) then you might consider that you have a 90% chance of pulling your investment plan off. Unfortunately the actual answer is that if on an annual basis your investment plan has a 90% chance of success, the chances of you losing all of your investment capital over your investment timeframe (say 30 years) is virtually certain. The reason you are almost certain to do your dough is that each investment year viewed on its own is not what is called in statistical terms 'an independent trial'. Put simply the amount of capital you have to invest at the start of any investment year is fully dependent on the capital you have at the end of the previous investment year.

I personally find it quite frightening that there are a whole load of investors out there who do not understand the statistical mathematics of this.

SNOOPY

lou
19-09-2012, 06:51 AM
Thanks Snoopy. They are some very good posts :)

lou
19-09-2012, 06:55 AM
The FIF regime does have a 'loophole' of sorts if you can find a very high yielding share. Let's say you find an FIF share that yields 10%, and the exchange rate adjusted share price does not move during the year (to keep things simple for this example). The amount of FIF tax you would pay is based on 5% of your opening balance. If your marginal tax rate is 30% then the amount of tax you will pay is 0.3 x 5% = 1.5% of the opening balance.

If as an alternative you found an Australian index listed share that paid a 10% yield, and again the exchange rate adjusted share price did not move during the year (to keep things comparable with part 1 of this example) then the amount of tax you would pay is 0.3 x 10% equivalent to 3.33% of your opening balance.

If you can find a high yielding share under FIF, then in this instance on a one year basis, FIF will deliver a better after tax result for you.

However, the reason FIF was introduced was that, in general, shares outside of Australia and New Zeland have much lower yields than other sharemarkets. So finding an FIF share or shares that behave as I have described may in practice prove difficult. If you can do it let me know though because I am looking too!

SNOOPY

The other loop whole is you can't not be a trader under the FIF regime. I am not planning on being a trader, but it simplifies the compliance process a we bit. No need to justify why I bought/sold shares

lou
19-09-2012, 07:04 AM
With a well run company the cost of debt does tend to be less than the cost of equity - true. But this rule is not so black and white as you make it out to be. There are companies out there where the cost of equity is greater than the cost of debt.

You also should consider why using your logic a well run company has any equity, or in the extreme might run $1 of equity to $99 of debt. The answer is to deal with the unexpected. You need to plan for the unexpected too.

By running a 100% debt funded investment which nevertheless has a 90% chance of performing to plan (because you only invest in good companies, right?) then you might consider that you have a 90% chance of pulling your investment plan off. Unfortunately the actual answer is that if on an annual basis your investment plan has a 90% chance of success, the chances of you losing all of your investment capital over your investment timeframe (say 30 years) is virtually certain. The reason you are almost certain to do your dough is that each investment year viewed on its own is not what is called in statistical terms 'an independent trial'. Put simply the amount of capital you have to invest at the start of any investment year is fully dependent on the capital you have at the end of the previous investment year.

I personally find it quite frightening that there are a whole load of investors out there who do not understand the statistical mathematics of this.

SNOOPY

Position sizing and risk management is one of the keys to a successful investing strategy and it is outstanding how many investors don't understand it.

Sauce
19-09-2012, 07:30 AM
I agree, well articulated Snoopy.
Regards,
Sauce

Snoopy
19-09-2012, 03:13 PM
Position sizing and risk management is one of the keys to a successful investing strategy and it is outstanding how many investors don't understand it.


I am not sure I quite got my point about risk of investment plan failure across, so here are the numbers I had in mind. Let's say you devised a leveraged investment strategy that delivered excellent growth per year every year, but with a one in ten chance every year of total capital loss.

The chances of you holding onto your nicely growing capital for one year is 90% (or a probability of 0.9). But to come out ahead you need to do this for ten years in a row. Because each year of investment is dependent on the results of the previous year (in probability theory this means they are what is termed 'dependent variables'), that means you have to multiply the probabilites together to garner the multi-year picture.

After one year the probability of holding onto your fast growing fortune is 0.9.

After two years the probability of holding onto your fast growing fortune is 0.9x0.9= 0.81 (or 81%)

After ten years the probility of you holding onto your fortune is:

0.9x 0.9x 0.9x 0.9x 0.9x 0.9x 0.9x 0.9x 0.9x 0.9= 0.349, or approximately 35%

Or looked at another way you have a 65% chance eventually of losing everything after ten years has elapsed, even though on a seductive one year basis you have a 90% chance of single year success.

SNOOPY

lou
20-09-2012, 07:09 AM
I am not sure I quite got my point about risk of investment plan failure across, so here are the numbers I had in mind. Let's say you devised a leveraged investment strategy that delivered excellent growth per year every year, but with a one in ten chance every year of total capital loss.

The chances of you holding onto your nicely growing capital for one year is 90% (or a probability of 0.9). But to come out ahead you need to do this for ten years in a row. Because each year of investment is dependent on the results of the previous year (in probability theory this means they are what is termed 'dependent variables'), that means you have to multiply the probabilites together to garner the multi-year picture.

After one year the probability of holding onto your fast growing fortune is 0.9.

After two years the probability of holding onto your fast growing fortune is 0.9x0.9= 0.81 (or 81%)

After ten years the probility of you holding onto your fortune is:

0.9x 0.9x 0.9x 0.9x 0.9x 0.9x 0.9x 0.9x 0.9x 0.9= 0.349, or approximately 35%

Or looked at another way you have a 65% chance eventually of losing everything after ten years has elapsed, even though on a seductive one year basis you have a 90% chance of single year success.

SNOOPY

Hey Snoopy I did get your point but from a different angle. I was meaning position sizing and risk mangaement is crucial to increase your success rate from 90% to 99%. Therefore your sucess rate after 10 years would be 99%^10=90%.

Stranger_Danger
07-10-2012, 06:09 PM
I personally find it quite frightening that there are a whole load of investors out there who do not understand the statistical mathematics of this.

SNOOPY

Frightening? I find it mouth watering and borderline arousing!