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|    mtl.general    |    Ahh Montreal, home of good strip joints    |    39,416 messages    |
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|    Message 39,286 of 39,416    |
|    Alan Baggett to All    |
|    Personal Investor: How tax-loss selling     |
|    30 Nov 16 03:57:17    |
      From: canada.revenueagency@yahoo.com              Personal Investor: How tax-loss selling can work with RRSPs, TFSAs :CRA SOTW               By Dale Jackson - Your Personal Investor              We hear a lot about tax-loss selling at this time of the year. But for the       bulk of Canadians who invest in their registered retirement savings plans and       tax-free saving accounts, the tax-saving tool does not apply.                            It’s a blessing in disguise because tax-loss selling is a way to recuperate       capital gains taxes – and the capital gains tax is not applied to RRSPs and       TFSAs.                      For investors with equities outside RRSPs and TFSAs, and contribution space to       spare, there is a way to take advantage of both tax breaks.              First, it’s important to know how tax-loss selling works. Any capital loss       incurred during 2016 in a non-registered account can be applied against       capital gains in a non-registered account going back three years or forward       indefinitely. In other words,        if you have a money-losing stock, the loss can help wipe out taxes you paid on       other stocks that gained.                      Now, for the second tax windfall. Contribute the cash from the sale of the       losing security into your RRSP or TFSA and invest from that account. If the       stock goes up in value, you do not have to pay a capital gains tax.                     If it is in an RRSP you can deduct the full contribution amount from your 2016       taxable income or carry it forward to use in future years when the tax saving       could be greater. While the investment can grow tax free for several years,       it’s import to know        that the original contribution and gains are fully taxed when withdrawn –       preferably in a low tax bracket in retirement.                     If a stock is purchased in a TFSA the contribution cannot be deducted from       taxable income, but the gains it makes through the years are never       taxed.                      There is one important restriction: If you wish to repurchase the same       security from a tax-loss sale (whether it is inside or outside a registered       account) you must wait at least 30 days or the Canada Revenue Agency will       consider it a superficial loss.                      ----------------------------------------------------------        Miss a Tax Tale Miss a lot!        Visit the CRA SOTW Library at http://canada.revenue.agency.angelfire.com               ------------------------------------------------------------        Alan Baggett - http://www.taxcollectorsbible.com/ - Tax Collector's Bible               --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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