Real Estate Investor Magazine South Africa November 2014 | Página 8
ASK THE EXPERTS Q&A
Q
Q
Q
Q
A
A
upfront
A
Celine K asks:
I am bequeathing property assets to
my children in my will. Are there any
issues that should I be aware of when
drafting my will?
A
David Knott
of Private Client Trust answers:
F
irstly, consider how you are
married as this influences your
capacity to distribute assets
after your death. When married in
community of property, you only own
one half of all assets registered both
in your name and of your spouse. Your
spouse therefore still remains a one half
share owner of any fixed property you
have bequeathed to a third party, such
as your children.
If you have bequeathed your half
share to your minor children and there
are insufficient monies to discharge the
bond, the property will be sold. Please
note that few financial institutions will
agree to lend to minors.
Any property bequeathed must
devolve upon the beneficiary free of any
mortgage bond. One must ensure there
is either bond liability insurance cover
or assets held in your estate which are
easily realised to discharge this liability.
When married in terms of the accrual
regime, the calculation to determine
which spouse has a claim against the
other to equalise the growth of the
respective estates, only occurs at death.
In a co-ownership situation, you
must consider whether your spouse will
have occupation rights until death. You
can also direct what the circumstances
will be for the sale of the property.
Q John De Graaf asks:
What makes more financial sense
when buying houses to renovate and
sell at market value? Can I claim the
Capital Gains Tax back?
A
Michael Dryden
of the FinServe Group answers:
W
hen you ‘flip’ properties,
the
transaction
will
be treated as normal
‘revenue’ as opposed to ‘capital’, as
you are ‘trading’ properties. Thus, the
transaction will not be treated as a
Capital Gain. The tax payable will be
higher, as the entire ‘taxable profit’ is
taxable.
The ability to claim Value Added
Tax on supplies (‘Input VAT’) is
available to any taxpayer (individual,
company or Trust), registered as a
VAT vendor. Thus, VAT recognition
will not affect the choice of entity.
Trading in your Personal Capacity:
You will be subject to Income Tax
(not Capital Gains Tax) on a sliding
scale from 0% - 40%. Note that
the ‘profit’ from this will be added
to other income you earn for tax
purposes Thus, you will be subject
to a marginal rate of 40%. Trading
through a Trust: You will be subject
to a flat Income Tax rate of 40%.
Unless its structure allows the Trust
to distribute the taxable profit to its
beneficiaries, by taking advantage
of the ‘conduit-principle’. Trading
though a Company: You will be
subject to a flat Income Tax rate of
28%. Unless the entity qualifies for
Small Business Corporation tax rates.
Q Marieta Louw asks:
I want to buy a starter property for
a small business in Cyprus without
giving a deposit or getting a bank
loan. How do I do this?
A
Jenny Ellinas
of Cypriot Realty answers:
B
ecause of our fluctuating
currency it’s sound advice to
peg your rate at ZAR15: €1,
which gives you enough fat to play
with.
When you buy a resale property,
you need to pay cash. It takes
between 6-8 weeks for the banks in
Cyprus to approve your mortgage
(they don’t have ITC/Experian so
they need to build up their own
credit profile). Cypriot banks have
a very limited appetite for granting
expat credit at the moment. Sellers
are not prepared to wait for your
mortgage to be approved; and will
not accept an offer which is ‘subject
to’ finance approval. The only way
to buy a resale property is to secure
finance in RSA or offshore.
To buy a new property (falls
within a developer’s portfolio); you
can secure in–house finance. This
gives you an opportunity to hedge
the ZAR against the Euro. You will
build up a credit history with your
bank and can switch to a mortgage
with a Cypriot bank later.
Do you have a property question you would like answered by our experts?
If so, post it on ASK THE EXPERTS on www.reimag.co.za or email [email protected]
8
November 2014 SA Real Estate Investor
Ask The
Property Experts
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www.reimag.co.za