Kaizen said:Hi Guys,
This is my first post so I thought I would make it a good one.
Does anybody now how to calculate imputation credits on dividends? I have an excel sheet that calculates unfranked amount, franked amount and total dividend but am not sure of the calculation for imputation credits. Any insight would be great full. I know it has to do with the company tax rate but have not been able to figure it out.
Thanks!
The imputation or franking credit is just the amount of tax already paid by the company that is distributed with the dividend. A fully-franked dividend would carry a 30% franking credit, meaning the cash you receive would be the other 70%.Kaizen said:Does anybody now how to calculate imputation credits on dividends? I have an excel sheet that calculates unfranked amount, franked amount and total dividend but am not sure of the calculation for imputation credits.
So providing you hold them for any consecutive 45 days overlapping the close prior to exdiv day without calculating the buy or sell days in the 45 days.All this means is that you must own shares for at least 45 days, or 90 days for preference shares (not counting the day of acquisition or disposal), before being entitled to any franking tax offset.
RichKid said:Hi Kaizen,
Welcome to the forums!
If you do some searching (search tool link near top of page) here on ASF you'll find this topic discussed at length, maybe you can post in the thread you find- good luck.
GreatPig said:Kaizen,
The imputation or franking credit is just the amount of tax already paid by the company that is distributed with the dividend. A fully-franked dividend would carry a 30% franking credit, meaning the cash you receive would be the other 70%.
So the unfranked amount has no franking credit, and the franked amount has a 30% franking credit, with the cash amount of that part of the dividend being the other 70%. To calculate the amount of the franking credit, multiply the received franked amount by 30/70.
eg: If you receive $140 franked dividend, the franking credit is 140 x (30/70) = $60.
GP
Forget the 70% franked part. That just gives you the $350 franked and $150 unfranked components ($500 x 0.7 = $350).Kaizen said:If I get a dividend for $0.50 x 1000 = $500 total dividend.
With a company rate of 10% ( Just for example) and the dividend franked at 70%.
the results will be:
Unfranked $150
Franked $350
Imputation = $38.89 - How is this calculated? I got this figure from a portfolio manager program.
Total Dividend = $500
Hi John, I think that if you get over $5k a year in divs you need to hold for 45 days- or something like that, post any further questions and people should help out if they haven't answered the question already.The Estimator said:Thanks for the link MT. I did a search before starting this thread but didn't find anything. The only question I have is regarding the fc's. If the warrant expires within the 45days how is it that you can factor fc's into the profit. I think I need to read up on this 45day holding rule. If I can somehow get the fc while trading warrants that expire within 45 days of exdiv then it would be a nice little low risk money spinner. Though I dont imagine these come up to often.
John
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