Would a resident of a tax free/territorial tax country using a BVI company to invest in equities, ETFs REITs etc on the major exchanges pay tax upon disposal?
Martin Everson said:
For a resident of a tax free country no. For a territorial tax country depends on the CFC and DTA rules as a BVI may be tax resident in that country and hence subject to its corporate tax rules on capital gains.
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travelES said:
Am I missing something or is this as obvious as it sounds: if you reside in a tax free company you should typically favor REITs over direct reality.
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Martin Everson said:
REIT vs Direct investment is like cybersex vs real sex. Which one do you prefer more at end of day?
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travelES said:
Lol. The one with the biggest ROI with the lowest risk and energy/time expenditure.
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Dear , check some REITs price in 2008-09.travelES said:
Lol. The one with the biggest ROI with the lowest risk and energy/time expenditure.
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You believe that a REIT (a financial instrument) is less risky and more profitable than a real asset that you can research, fully own, and choose yourself (producing far-above average returns) from amongst millions of properties in dozens of countries?travelES said:
Lol. The one with the biggest ROI with the lowest risk and energy/time expenditure.
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JimBeam said:
Of course, REITs have good and bad sides...
What I like about that (except the dividends) is the fact that you can sell it with a click of a button and have your cash back in no time for a very small commission.
While to do that with the real property it can take months to find a buyer, negotiate the price and it can cost a fortune to do that.
Also you can start investing with a smaller amount of money.
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