Monthly Archives: September 2013

Offshore bonds

Utilising tax deferral benefits to minimise tax liabilities

Finding the right offshore investments can be a key factor in making the most of your wealth, and itís not only for the wealthiest of investors. With a few well-advised decisions you could broaden your investment portfolio.

If appropriate, offshore bonds may provide an opportunity for your assets to grow in a tax-free environment. They also allow you to choose when any tax liability becomes payable. There are a number of other tax benefits with offshore bonds, especially if you have spent time living abroad. But they are complex structures that require professional financial advice.

International finance centres
While many investors will be aware that investing in an Individual Savings Account (ISA) or pension can help reduce their tax bill, you may be less familiar with offshore bonds. Like pensions and ISAs, offshore bonds are effectively ëwrappersí into which you place your investments, for example, funds or cash. They are offered by life insurance companies which operate from international finance centres.

The main tax benefit of investing in an offshore bond is gross roll-up. This means that any underlying investment gains are not subject to tax at source ñ apart from an element of withholding tax. With an onshore bond, life fund tax is payable on income or gains made by the underlying investment. This means your offshore investment has the potential to grow faster than one
in a taxed fund.

Tax deferral
As long as investments are held within the offshore bond wrapper, you donít pay any income tax or capital gains tax on them and you can switch between different funds tax-free. While you do have to pay tax on any gains when you withdraw assets, there are
a number of ways you can potentially reduce the amount you pay.

You can withdraw up to 5 per cent of your initial investment every year for 20 years, and defer paying tax until a later date. If you are a higher-rate taxpayer now but expect to become a basic-rate taxpayer when you retire, you can defer cashing in your assets until retirement and possibly pay half the tax due on any gain realised.

New ownerís tax rate
You can assign (transfer ownership) an offshore bond ñ or parts of it ñ as a gift without the recipient incurring any income or capital gains tax, although this may cause an Inheritance Tax (IHT) liability if you were to die within seven years. All future tax on withdrawals will be charged at the new ownerís tax rate, if any. This can be a tax-efficient way to help fund your childrenís university fees, for example, since your children are likely to be low or non-earners as students. Putting an offshore bond in a trust could help your family reduce or avoid IHT, provided you live for seven years after setting it up.

Understand each jurisdiction
Investor compensation schemes tend not to be as developed as in the UK, so you should always obtain professional advice to ensure that you fully understand each jurisdiction. It is also important to ensure that you are investing in an offshore investment that is appropriate for the level of risk you wish to take.

If you are an expatriate you should make sure that you are aware of all the investment opportunities available to you and that you are minimising your tax liability.

Individual Savings Accounts

A tax-efficient wrapper for your fund choices

Individual Savings Accounts (ISAs) were introduced in April 1999 by the Government to replace Personal Equity Plans (PEPs) and Tax Exempt Special Savings Accounts (TESSAs). During this current tax year you can shelter up to £11,520 from tax by investing in an ISA.

Investment Bonds

A range of funds for the medium- to long-term

Investment bonds are designed to produce medium- to long-term capital growth, but can also be used to give you an income. They also include some life cover. There are other types of investment that have ëbondí in their name (such as guaranteed bonds, offshore bonds and corporate bonds) but these are very different. With an investment bond, you pay a lump sum to a life assurance company and this is invested for you until you cash it in or die.

Investment trust

Reflecting popularity in the market

An investment trust is a company with a set number of shares. Unlike an open-ended investment fund, an investment trust is closed ended. This means there are a set number of shares available, which will remain the same no matter how many investors there are. This can have an impact on the price of the shares and the level of risk of the investment trust. Open-ended investment funds create and cancel units depending on the number of investors.

Unit trusts

Participating in a wider range of investments

Unit trusts are collective investments that allow you to participate in a wider range of investments than can normally be achieved on your own with smaller sums of money. Pooling your money with others also reduces the risk.

Open-ended investment companies

Expanding and contracting in response to demand

Open-Ended Investment Companies (OEICs) are stock market-quoted collective investment schemes. Like investment trusts and unit trusts they invest in a variety of assets to generate a return for investors. They share certain similarities with both investment trusts and unit trusts but there are also key differences.

Open-ended investment funds

Acting in the investorsí best interests at all times

Open-ended investment funds are often called collective investment schemes and are run by fund management companies. There are many different types of fund. These include:

Pooled investment schemes

Investing in one or more asset classes

Investing in funds provides a simple and effective method of diversification. Because your money is pooled together with that of other investors, each fund is large enough to diversify across hundreds and even thousands of individual companies and assets. A pooled (or collective) investment is a fund into which many people put their money, which is then invested in one or more asset classes by a fund manager.

Investment focus

Active and passive investing

Collective investment schemes can be actively or passively managed. Moreover, both investment strategies can be complementary to each other and are frequently used side by side by investors.

Smoothing out your portfolio's returns

Increasing the long-term value of your investments

In the light of more recent market volatility, itís perhaps natural to be looking for ways to smooth out your portfolioís returns going forward. Investing regularly can smooth out market highs and lows over time. In a fluctuating market, a strategy known as pound-cost averaging can help smooth out the effect of market changes on the value of your investment and is one way to achieve some peace of mind through this simple, time-tested method for controlling risk over time.