tmmonline.nz  |   landlords.co.nz        About Good Returns  |  Advertise  |  Contact Us  |  Terms & Conditions  |  RSS Feeds

NZ's Financial Adviser News Centre

GR Logo
Last Article Uploaded: Friday, November 22nd, 6:31PM

News

rss
Latest Headlines

Advisers at risk from tax avoidance trap

Financial advisers could face legal action from clients if they put them in products that are later targeted by Inland Revenue for tax avoidance, a tax expert has warned.

Wednesday, December 21st 2011, 5:55AM 2 Comments

by Niko Kloeten

Yesterday the IRD released its draft tax avoidance interpretation statement, which is largely based upon the Supreme Court's judgments and approach to the law in the Ben Nevis and Penny and Hooper cases.

PricewaterhouseCoopers tax partner Geof Nightingale said the message is clear - transactions or financial products that have any sort of tax benefit could be at risk, even if they comply with the letter of the law.

"The way it works is you may have structured a transaction so it meets all the tax laws but if Inland Revenue doesn't like the outcome from a tax perspective it can change it backwards.

"If you're advising on a transaction you've got to ask whether Parliament would have liked that outcome."

The new guidance on the issue is "very helpful" but the IRD now has the "benefit of hindsight as opposed to the certainly of black letter law," Nightingale said.

"For businesses structuring transactions they're no longer going to be as sure as a few years ago as to where the boundary lies."

He said the situation created uncertainty and would encourage taxpayers to act more conservatively, potentially avoiding lower-tax options for fear of later being accused of tax avoidance.

Asked what effect it would have on managed funds, Nightingale said, "That's a very good question and I don't know the answer.  That's exactly the kind of area where this sort of thing might have a chilling effect.

"The best example is cash PIEs - on the face of it they offend tax avoidance rules but because [former Finance Minister] Michael Cullen came out and said very clearly they are deliberately doing this they're ok.

"In the absence of really clear guidance from Parliament you've got to guess."

He said this risk could potentially flow through to financial advisers if they recommended products that complied with the letter of the law but were later found by the courts to have been tax avoidance.

"That's got to be a risk in terms of what people's expectations are, although it will all depend on the contracts between advisers and their clients.

"If an adviser says invest in this way because of tax benefits that brings up the tax avoidance issue so you've got to work out whether it was intended by Parliament or not, which is never easy."

Niko Kloeten can be contacted at niko@goodreturns.co.nz

Tags: regulation

« Huljich cops big fine for misleading investorsKiwiSaver mismatch a 'huge challenge' for advisers »

Special Offers

Comments from our readers

On 21 December 2011 at 9:06 am Nick said:
Ahh, the erosion of the Rule of Law...what was Parliament's 'intention'. What a wonderfully subjective test.
On 21 December 2011 at 2:09 pm Shark Boy said:
Sort of unrelated - but it does touch into an interesting area regarding capital gains on NZ shares........

Recommending that people invest directly in NZ shares still carries an element of risk in regards to an individual being required to pay tax on capital gains.

In contrast, investing in NZ shares through a PIE ensures capital gains are tax free.

It would be interesting to see if the IRD ever came knocking on clients' doors to ask that they pay tax on gains how an adviser would justify making recommendations that people invest in direct shares (in face of the ability to remove the capital gains tax risk completely through using PIEs).

For all the direct share investment fans who will rubbish this as a concept, please make sure to refer to the principles contained in cases like "CIR v Rangatira Ltd" and "Trustees of Alexander and Alexander Pension Plan v CIR, Auckland High Court" in making up an argument......

The way I see this issue is that it looks like a free hit for the clients. If they get clobbered for capital gains tax by the IRD, they can have a crack at suing their adviser for giving poor advice.
Commenting is closed

 

print

Printable version  

print

Email to a friend
News Bites
Latest Comments
Subscribe Now

Weekly Wrap

Previous News
Most Commented On
Mortgage Rates Table

Full Rates Table | Compare Rates

Lender Flt 1yr 2yr 3yr
AIA - Back My Build 5.44 - - -
AIA - Go Home Loans 7.99 5.99 5.69 5.69
ANZ 7.89 6.59 6.29 6.29
ANZ Blueprint to Build 7.39 - - -
ANZ Good Energy - - - 1.00
ANZ Special - 5.99 5.69 5.69
ASB Bank 7.89 5.99 5.69 5.69
ASB Better Homes Top Up - - - 1.00
Avanti Finance 8.40 - - -
Basecorp Finance 9.60 - - -
BNZ - Classic - 5.99 5.69 5.69
Lender Flt 1yr 2yr 3yr
BNZ - Mortgage One 7.94 - - -
BNZ - Rapid Repay 7.94 - - -
BNZ - Std 7.94 5.99 5.69 5.69
BNZ - TotalMoney 7.94 - - -
CFML 321 Loans 6.20 - - -
CFML Home Loans 6.45 - - -
CFML Prime Loans 8.25 - - -
CFML Standard Loans 9.20 - - -
China Construction Bank - 7.09 6.75 6.49
China Construction Bank Special - - - -
Co-operative Bank - First Home Special - 5.79 - -
Lender Flt 1yr 2yr 3yr
Co-operative Bank - Owner Occ 7.65 5.99 5.75 5.69
Co-operative Bank - Standard 7.65 6.49 6.25 6.19
Credit Union Auckland 7.70 - - -
First Credit Union Special - 6.40 6.10 -
First Credit Union Standard 8.50 7.00 6.70 -
Heartland Bank - Online 7.49 5.65 5.55 5.55
Heartland Bank - Reverse Mortgage - - - -
Heretaunga Building Society ▼8.60 6.75 6.40 -
ICBC 7.49 5.99 5.65 5.59
Kainga Ora 8.39 7.05 6.59 6.49
Kainga Ora - First Home Buyer Special - - - -
Lender Flt 1yr 2yr 3yr
Kiwibank 7.75 6.89 6.59 6.49
Kiwibank - Offset 8.25 - - -
Kiwibank Special 7.75 5.99 5.69 5.69
Liberty 8.59 8.69 8.79 8.94
Nelson Building Society 8.44 5.95 6.09 -
Pepper Money Advantage 10.49 - - -
Pepper Money Easy 8.69 - - -
Pepper Money Essential 8.29 - - -
SBS Bank 7.99 6.95 6.29 6.29
SBS Bank Special - 6.15 5.69 5.69
SBS Construction lending for FHB - - - -
Lender Flt 1yr 2yr 3yr
SBS FirstHome Combo 5.44 5.15 - -
SBS FirstHome Combo - - - -
SBS Unwind reverse equity 9.75 - - -
TSB Bank 8.69 6.49 6.49 6.49
TSB Special 7.89 5.69 5.69 5.69
Unity 7.64 5.99 5.69 -
Unity First Home Buyer special - 5.49 - -
Wairarapa Building Society 8.10 6.05 5.79 -
Westpac 8.39 6.89 6.39 6.39
Westpac Choices Everyday 8.49 - - -
Westpac Offset 8.39 - - -
Lender Flt 1yr 2yr 3yr
Westpac Special - 6.29 5.79 5.79
Median 7.99 6.02 5.79 5.69

Last updated: 20 November 2024 9:45am

About Us  |  Advertise  |  Contact Us  |  Terms & Conditions  |  Privacy Policy  |  RSS Feeds  |  Letters  |  Archive  |  Toolbox  |  Disclaimer
 
Site by Web Developer and eyelovedesign.com