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From: | "tennyson@caverock.net.nz" <tennyson@caverock.net.nz> |
Date: | Wed, 22 May 2002 12:36:12 +0000 |
Hi LWD, > > >Say TLS shares were bought on the ASX from NZ. >What procedures are necessary to cash them up whilst >in Australia? Other than brokerage, is there anything > to do or pay to get Aussie $. > > Shares bought on the ASX will be in Australian dollars, even if bought from NZ. You can't buy a share listed on the ASX that is *not* denominated in Australian dollars. If you wish to sell shares that you bought in Australia, generally you must do so through the broker you bought them through. This is because Australian shares are normally traded on a broker sponsored system. You will need to quote your HIN (Holder Identification Number (your pin number equivalent)) and PID (Paticipant Number (your shareholder number equivalent)) to your broker before you can sell them. After you have sold the shares, you will be given an Australian cheque. You will need an Australian bank account of some form to allow you to get Australian dollars in your hand. Talk to your Australian broker and they may be able to help you with this, if you don't have an Australian bank account already. > > >If you don't mind - probably an exhausted question. >Is there any situation when you can be double taxed on a >ASX company dividend? > > Almost all Australian dividends are double taxed. This is because our Inland Revenue department doesn't recognise Australian franking credits. The only time Australian dividends aren't double taxed is when the Australian company either pays no dividend or has no franking credits to give out to shareholders. In this case, the company will take off witholding tax from the dividend, and this *is* claimable on your tax form as tax paid on the New Zealand side of the Tasman. However, this Australian witholding tax will not discharge your New Zealand income tax obligations. Unless your income tax rate is only 15%, you will be required to pay additional tax in New Zealand to make the total tax paid up to your normal marginal tax rate. > > >Forum members appear to deal a lot on foreign exchanges. >My understanding is that this facility is marginal for the small >short to medium term investor. An example of the extra costs to >purchase on the ASX from NZ are: 20% extra brokerage fees ($NZ to >$AU) and 1.4% added to buy cost (currency exchange fee) and 1.4% >deducted from sell amount (return exchange fee back to $NZ) > >Say brokerage @ $AU 29.50 in and $AU 29.50 out = say $NZ 72.00 > >Parcel of $1,000 = 7.2% plus 2.8% fees (in & out) - that's 10% >gain (stock value and/or dividends) to break even. > >Parcel of $10,000 = 0.7 plus 2.8% exchange fees - that's 3.5% gain >to break even. > To avoid those 'extra' brokerage fees you need to set up a broker account in Australia youself and buy and sell out of that. Be aware that brokers may specify a significant deposit be made in an associated cash management fund before you can do this. If you can't meet the minimum cash deposit requirements, then basically you are right. The extra brokerage fees will kill off a large proportion of any potential trading profits. Despite the grizzles I have heard on the performance of the NZSE on this forum, there is one thing I can't criticise them for. It is actually very cheap to trade shares on teh New Zealand, if you go through a discount broker. > > >I know this is basic stuff to the gurus - have I got it right by >tending only to look at the ASX for stock which is longer term buy >and hold? > > I could argue that statistically I can predict accurately that a particular investment will end up in a certain market price band at some point several years in the future. Ask me where that same share will be headed tomorrow and I wouldn't have a clue. I can estimate valuations that will be hit at some time based on an educated estimate of future fundamentals. But I can't tell you where sentiment is headed in the short term any better than flipping a coin can. I would argue that the odds will always favour the longer timeframe investor so you shouldn't invest in any other way. Unless ,that is, you are someone like Phaedrus who has read all the trading books, is fully informed of the risks, and is prepared to watch the market like a hawk to protect his positions. SNOOPY --------------------------------- Message sent by Snoopy e-mail tennyson@caverock.net.nz on Pegasus Mail version 2.55 ---------------------------------- "You can tell me I'm wrong twice, but that still only makes me wrong once." ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- To remove yourself from this list, please use the form at http://www.sharechat.co.nz/chat/forum/
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