Tax Season 2015: How to protect your investments from the taxman - Action News
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Tax Season 2015: How to protect your investments from the taxman

The 2014 tax year is behind us, there are still opportunities for the savvy investor to protect his or her portfolio from the taxman before the April 30 filing deadline - or at the very least, map out a financially sound stratgey for next year.

Even small-scale investors can benefit from tax-saving tools like TFSAs and charitable stock donations

If you invest in stocks or other securities, there are various instruments you can use to reduce the amount of tax you pay on your investments, including everything from putting your capital gains into a tax-free savings account or donating some of your stocks to charity. (Mark Blinch/Reuters)

Even though 2014is behind us, there are still opportunities for the savvy investor to protect his or her portfolio from the taxman perhaps by getting caught up on some oft-overlooked paperwork or thinking ahead to 2015and beyond.

Marc Lamontagne, a certified financial planner with Ottawa-based Ryan Lamontagne Inc., is, for instance, making sure his clients fill out their T1135 forms.

If they don't, it could lead to a "pretty harsh" penalty of up to $2,500 a year, Lamontagne said in an interview with CBCNews.ca.

The T1135, or Foreign Income Verification Statement, was reworked in 2013 as part of Ottawa's crackdown on those who hide money overseas. It applies to individualswho have more than $100,000 in non-Canadian securities perhaps rental property in the Caribbean, or cash in foreign bank accounts, or stock in a foreign company that's traded on a foreign exchange.

"Filling out the form is the most important thing," said Lamontagne. "You don't need to give details if the interest or dividends show up on a T3 or T5, but you need to file the form."


Boxed out

Safety deposit boxes are no longer tax deductible, as of March 21, 2013, for companies and Jan.1,2014, for individuals. It's a verysmall change, but one that will affect alot of people saysLamontagne.

Because stocks and other securities are no longer issued on certificates, investors no longer need safe places to store all that paper or the long-standing deduction that went with them.
"It was only a matter of time," saysLamontagne, before some clever government accountant thought to eliminate it.


As of Feb. 9, 2015,individual taxpayerscan file their tax returnsonline. Corporations and partnerships must still mail the forminto the Canada Revenue Agency's foreign reporting unit in Ottawa. The government expects to make electronic filing available to corporations and partnerships in the future.

The rules for reporting foreign holdings have, Lamontagne concedes, always been a bit confusing to some investors. But those individuals would do well to start sorting out the confusion, because thegovernment has been cracking down.

"If you own a house in Florida for personal use, that's not a problem. But if you're renting it out, you need to start reporting it,"Lamontagnesaid.

TFSAs a good investment vehicle

The start of a new year often sees investors putting as much money as possible into RRSPs in order to reduce their taxable income before the contribution deadline, which this year falls on March 2. But this is also a good time to think about tax-free savings accounts, since with every Jan. 1, we all get another $5,500 in allowable contributions, up from the prior limit of $5,000.

"If you have any interest or dividends or capital gains, non-registered money or even money in a savings account, put it in[a TFSA]," says Lamontagne.

If you own foreign property or investments make sure to file a T1135 form and that you understand which of your assets need to be reported for tax purposes, says financial planner Marc Lamontagne. (Courtesy of Marc Lamontagne)

Experts have long noted that TFSAs are not fully understood or exploited by many Canadians.

Some people think they are only meant for investment income;others don't understand exactly how contributions work.

"If you don't use [your contribution room], you don't lose it," says Lamontagne.

Any unused contribution amounts are carried forward into the next year and accumulate.

"For instance, this year, somebody who never made any contribution [to a TFSA] would be allowed to put in $36,500," Lamontagne said.

Someone who has that kind of money in a standard savings accountwould do well to move it into a TFSA, he says, wherethe interest andinvestmentincome it generatesremain sheltered from tax.

"Why pay taxes?" Lamontagne asks, whenTFSAs are "really, very flexible."

Federal tax brackets 2014 tax year
Income Tax Rate
Up to $43,953 15%
$43,954 $87,907 22%
$87,908 $136,270 26%
Over $136,270 29%
Source:CRA

The money you put into a TFSA is not deductible for income tax purposes, but, like an RRSP,it can be invested once it's in the TFSAin a variety of ways from high-interest savings accounts tomutual funds, equities or listedsecurities and the investment income, including capital gains, the accountearns won't betaxed, even when money is withdrawn.

The advantage over an RRSP is that money in a TFSA can be withdrawn at any time for any purpose without penalty.

"If you take the money out, they actually give you back the contribution room come Jan. 1 the following year," said Lamontagne. "So, let's say you put $10,000 into a TFSA, and it grew to $11,000, and you took out $11,000. It's still all tax free but come Jan. 1, your new contribution room is $5,500 plus $11,000."

Capital gains tax less of an issue for small investors

RRSPs and TFSAs have, for many, become the bread and butter of investing. Canadians held more than $1 trillion in assets in RRSPs and $131.5 billion in TFSAs as of June 2014, according to Investor Economics.

The more traditional approach of investing directly in the stock market and making use of tax breaks oncapital gains and dividends to reduce one's taxable income is less of an issue for small-time investors, though Lamontagnesays he still gets questions on that point from some of his wealthier and older clients.

One way to cut your tax bill is to defer capital gains until you are in a lower tax bracket. (Richard Drew/Associated Press)

"We still see clients for whom capital gains are an issue," he said.

For the 2013tax year,roughly 2.29 million Canadians, orabout eight per cent of all tax-filers, reported taxable capital gains, according to the CRA.

This compares to the 10.70million (38 per cent) who hadTFSAsthat year a number that has since risen to about 13 million, according to Investor Economicsand the roughly 6.21 million (22per cent) whocontributed to RRSPs.

A capital gain, or loss for that matter, is the difference between an asset's total cost price and its total sale price. For example, if you purchased $10,000 worth of a given stock and then sold it for $11,000, you would have a capital gain of $1,000.

In Canada, this type of investment profit is taxed more favourably than other types of income. The so-called inclusion rate is 50 per cent,meaning only half the value of a capital gain is included in the income tax calculation. Individuals also have a lifetime capital gains exemption of $800,000 (up from the previous year's limit of $750,000)that applies tothe sale of shares in certain qualified small businesses and tosome farm and fishing properties.

Turngains into losses

Lamontagneoften advises his clients to turn capital gains intolosses by selling something from their portfolio that will offset the gain, even if they plan to buy it back later. A capital loss must first be applied to yourtaxable capital gain in the current tax year, but if you still have a loss after you do that, it can be used to offset your taxable gain in any of the three preceding tax years or any future year.

When you trigger a loss,you're not really saving taxes;you're deferring a tax bill to a future year. But hopefully,a dollar saved today is better than one [paid] tomorrow.- MarcLamontagne,financial planner

"What you do when you trigger a loss,you're not really saving taxes;you're deferring a tax bill to a future year. But hopefully,a dollar saved today is better than one [paid] tomorrow,"Lamontagne said.

The rationale behind having a lower tax regime for capital property whether that property is stocks, business capital or real estate is based upon a simple but long-standing notionheld byeconomists: ifyou cut the cost of investing, you boost the profitability of such investments and, ultimately, get more cash going into productive capital.

The economy gets more investment into important areas, so the argument goes, and individuals make more money that can be reinvested or saved.

Other tax-saving tips

If you are an investor, there's more than one way to save a few bucks on your taxes. Whether you're on the more modest or affluent end of the incomespectrum, you might also want toconsider the followingtax-saving strategies:

Donate securities to charityYou'll both avoid paying the capital gains taxand get a charitable donation credit for your troubleif by year-end you give a publicly traded security straight to a registered charity. You can even donate one that lost value and still claim the loss.

Split your incomeThere are many useful income-splitting manoeuvres, including the new family tax cut, which is in effect for the 2014 tax year. Families in which one family member holds most of the income, from a family business, for example, should consider splitting that income among other relatives. The income as a whole will be taxed at a more favourable rate.

Give losing investments to one of your adult children "Happy birthday, son. By getting rid of this failing stock, I can claim a capital loss, and, if it rebounds sometime in the future, you can both enjoy the benefits and pay the capital gains."

Defer those gainsInvestors can and should defer taxation on capital gains, experts advise. "One strategy is to not trigger gains until you're retired and in a lower tax bracket," saysLamontagne. Failing that, even a few years of inflation will make what seemed like an onerous tax on one's capital gains in 2014easier to handle in 2020.

Set up a trustThey're not just for the country club set, anymore. Whether set up to provide for one's children, a spouseor to split income, the staggering assortment of trusts recognized by theCRAhas recently gained popularity among the less affluent as a tax and financial planning tool.

Mind the dividend tax creditInvestors get federal and provincial tax credits on dividends paid out by public Canadian corporations as well as Canadian-controlled private corporations, but the federalrules for the latter, known as non-eligible dividends, changed on Jan. 1, 2014, making the credit less favourable. Some provinces, such asOntario, are also revising the way they calculate dividend tax credits. Business owners who pay themselves in dividends rather than salarymight want to rethink that strategy.