demodocus said:
Can anyone tell me (for tax purposes)
AAAA
On what date the dividend is said to be paid to the taxpayer. Is it (a) the date the share goes ex-div or (b) the date the dividend is actually received by the taxpayer.
BBBB
Ref. the 45 day rule ..........
If a share is sold before the 45 days is up then the Franking credit is lost where the taxpayer already has accrued $5000 of FC's. However what is the situation where the 45 days straddles the end of a financial year ?
Tku
You pose a very interesting scenario regarding the franking credit
A person receives a franking credit that takes the total franking credits beyond the $5000 limit. If the credit is held for 45 days the individual would claim the franking credit as a tax rebate.
However, what happens if the tax year ends before the 45 days have expired.
The dividend is recorded in this year’s tax but how do you treat the franking credit THIS year given that the 45 days had not expired.
Is the credit automatically forfeited?
Do you hold the franking credit back and report it in next year’s result?
Do you just report and take the credit knowing you will let the 45 days expire anyway?
It is a good question you raised and I do not know the answer.The answer is not in the official tax guide
http://www.ato.gov.au/content/downloads/NAT2632-05.pdf
However for the other matters…. direct from the tax guide.
I like the bit below about "when the dividend cheque was posted."
By the way the 45 day rule is really 47 days
Dividends
Your shareholder dividend statement should contain details of the date a payment was made to you – generally referred to on the statement as the payment date or date paid. It is this date that will determine which financial year you include the dividend in your assessable income.
Where the dividend is paid by cheque, it is deemed to have been paid to you on the date the cheque was posted to you by the company – not on the date the cheque was received, banked or cleared.
Holding period rule
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.