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Where Taxpayers and Advisers Meet

6 month rule on venture capital trusts

Oldtramp
Posts:16
Joined:Sun Mar 26, 2017 7:20 pm
6 month rule on venture capital trusts

Postby Oldtramp » Thu May 17, 2018 6:36 pm

I appreciate that I can't sell long-held VCT shares and claim tax relief if I participate in a new issue of shares in the same trust within 6 months. I also understand that, if I sell shares in a VCT, HMRC construes me to be selling those I've held for longest.

What, then, if I have 5000 shares in trust X, held for more than 5 years and, this year, participate in its new issue, buying another 5000, wait one day after the new shares are issued, then sell the 'old' 5000?

Clearly I carry investment risk and need more free cash to work this way.

But, is it caught by the 5-year rule or not?

SusanaP
Posts:1
Joined:Tue Jun 12, 2018 6:26 pm

Re: 6 month rule on venture capital trusts

Postby SusanaP » Tue Jun 12, 2018 6:31 pm

Interesting question. I keep investigating it and I have not found the correct answer to it. Hopefully another member of the community will help us

Oldtramp
Posts:16
Joined:Sun Mar 26, 2017 7:20 pm

Re: 6 month rule on venture capital trusts

Postby Oldtramp » Tue Jun 19, 2018 10:14 am

I have learnt, elsewhere, that the answer lies in:

Section 53, Schedule 10, Venture Capital Trusts, pages 361 to 362
Linked sales
2 (1) After section 264 of ITA 2007 insert—
“264A Restricting relief where there is a linked sale
(1) This section applies where—
(a) an individual subscribes for shares (“the relevant shares”) in a VCT (“the VCT”), and
(b) there is at least one linked sale of other shares by the individual.
(2) For the purposes of this Part, the amount the individual subscribes for the shares is to be treated as reduced (but not below nil) by the total consideration given for the linked sales of other shares. This is subject to subsection (3).
(3) If a sale is linked in relation to more than one subscription for shares—
(a) the consideration for it is to be applied to reduce subscriptions under subsection (2) in the order in which the subscriptions are made, and
(b) accordingly, to the extent that any consideration has been used to reduce an earlier subscription, it is not available to reduce a later one.
(4) A sale of shares (“the sold shares”) is “linked” if conditions A and B are met.
(5) Condition A is that the sold shares are in—
(a) the VCT, or
(b) a company which is (or later becomes) a successor or predecessor of the VCT.
(6) Condition B is that—
(a) the individual subscribes for the relevant shares in circumstances where—
(i) the purchase of the sold shares from the individual was conditional upon the individual subscribing for shares in the VCT, or
(ii) the individual’s subscription for shares in the VCT was conditional upon that purchase, or
(b) the subscription for the relevant shares and the sale of the sold shares are within 6 months of each other (irrespective of which came first).
(7) A company (“company X”) is a “successor or predecessor of the VCT” if— etc etc.

So, buying first and selling old shares afterwards doesn't get around this nuisance and I'll have to follow the alternative approach of either (a) selling 'old' holdings at the start of a tax year to have the greatest chance of a six month gap before any new issue or (b) buying Northern and selling Baronsmead, or whatever.


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