Dan

Home | About Us | Investors | Advisors | Institutions | Articles | Media | Links | Contact Us
 
Managing capital losses
Last chance for carryback opportunity

Despite the fact that a strong stock market recovery is fresh in our minds, many individual holdings remain under water from their 2000 peaks. While fund flows data clearly indicates that many investors gave up on some of their most painful holdings, many people have stuck it through. For those who finally crystallized some of their bear market losses last year, carrying back any net capital losses can be a smart tax manoeuvre - more so than in future years.

Carry over provisions

Net capital losses arising in any year can be carried back three tax years, or carried forward indefinitely. It's important to note that all gains and losses must be netted out to determine if an individual has realized, on balance for the year, a net gain or loss. The ability to carry over net losses to other years is only possible if a net loss is calculated for a particular year.

Also, check the notice of assessment provided after filing each year's tax return. Usually, any capital losses available for carry over to other years are noted in the text portion of the assessment. Further, note that capital losses are only deductible against capital gains.

Since inclusion rates and allowable portions of capital gains and losses, respectively, have varied over the years carrying losses over to other years requires an adjustment. Let's say an individual realized net losses in 2001 and wanted to them back. The losses could be carried as far back as the 1998 tax year. In 2001, half of capital losses were allowable as a deduction against capital gains. In 1998, the allowable portion was three-quarters.

If that loss is instead carried forward, only half of the total loss will be allowable. However, carrying the loss back to 1998 will allow three-quarters of the loss to be used since 3/4 of net gains in that year were taxable.

Opportunity

The strategy that effectively expires with the filing of 2003 tax returns should become clear at this point. Net losses realized in 2003 can be carried back to the 2000 tax year. The year 2000 was confusing - not only for the challenge many thought it would bring to computers around the world but - because of the three rates of allowable capital losses. It began with 3/4 of gains being taxable - and the same proportion of losses being allowed as deductions. The February budget dropped that to 2/3 and the October 2000 mini-budget changed the rate again to today's figure of half.

The result was a rather confusing computation that sort of averaged the rate depending on gain and loss activity in each of three specified time periods within the year. Notices of assessment from 2000 tax returns list the effective capital gains inclusion rate. The result is that the vast majority of individuals who reported realized capital gains in 2000 ended up paying tax on well over half of the total gains. That means net losses realized in subsequent years could be carried back to years where higher rates of taxation applied to capital gains. Also, tax rates in general have been trending down, thereby creating incrementally more potential tax savings.

The year 2000 is the last year that capital gains inclusion rates exceeded 50 percent. 2003 was the last year in which net losses may be realized to facilitate a carryback to the year 2000.

CRA form T1A - Request for Loss Carryback is required to implement this strategy.
 
Dan Hallett and Associates Inc. Legal and Privacy Notice