How to value your assets for CGT

Published Aug 29, 2000

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On April 1 next year the new capital gains tax (CGT) is due to come into

effect. Any capital gain you make from that date on any asset, with a few

exemptions such as your primary home, your motor vehicle and your personal

effects, will be taxed. The question that will face everyone on April 1 is

`what is the value of my assets?`

And, as a word of warning, you should also value your primary home because

maybe at some date in the future you may decide it is no longer your

primary home and it will become subject to capital gains tax on its sale or

transfer of ownership.

Now, you may think, I will merely declare an asset to be double the value

it actually is so when I come to sell it there will be no capital gain and

therefore no tax. It does not work this way. In fact, the taxman will be

looking out for any clever tricks to increase the value of assets unfairly

and will slap heavy penalties on anyone who does so.

So what do you do? In some cases it will be quite easy. For example, if you

own shares, the value will be set on that day, unless you paid more than

the price originally (remember you will be able to offset capital losses

against capital gains). However, some things are a bit more difficult to

value. Say you had a second home or a yacht in the marina at the Waterfront in Cape Town, what would the position be?

This raises a number of questions which were dealt with at a seminar on

capital gains tax organised recently by legal company, Cliffe Dekker Fuller

Moore Inc.

The main speaker at the conference was Matthew Lester, professor

of tax studies at Rhodes University in Grahamstown.

He says you will have to make a decision on how to value your capital

assets, which may be subject to capital gains tax on April 1 2000.

Two methods are proposed:

- Valuation at April 1 2001 by sworn appraisal; auditors valuation of

companies and closed corporations and businesses and reference to quoted

prices on the Johannesburg Stock Exchange; or

- Pro Rating of the Capital Gain. This means the capital gain is based on

the number of years the capital asset was held before and after the

implementation date of the tax. You can use this formula in working out

what would be paid:

Taxable portion of capital gain =

(Period held after implementation multiplied by capital gain)

Divided by

Total period held (Not exceeding 20 years)

The next question you must ask: ``Is it worth the cost and effort of valuing

assets at April 1 2001?``

Lester says there are only 2 000 sworn appraisers in the country and

because of the demand you can expect them to charge a fair whack for

assessing the value of your assets.

It may in fact be cheaper to take the initial cost of the asset plus the

cost of any improvements to the asset and use the formula.

The table above, compiled by Lester, shows the effective rate of capital

gains tax you will incur when you dispose of a capital asset as an

individual and company for the 10 years following the implementation of

capital gains tax, dependent on the year in which the capital asset was

acquired and assuming that the phase-in formula is applied. The capital

gains tax rate also assumes that you are on the top marginal income tax

rate of 42 percent. Once you have worked out the rate, you estimate the

value of the property when you dispose of it and multiply that figure by

the tax rate in the table.

The effect of capital gains tax is largely dependent on when the asset was

acquired. Assets acquired before 1997 and disposed of in the capital gains

tax era will attract very little of this tax when sold. However, assets

acquired in the two years prior to the implementation of capital gains tax

will enjoy lesser relief from the formula.

Lester recommends one of two choices:

Choice One: Where an asset has been acquired more than three years prior to

the implementation date of capital gains tax, it will probably not be worth

the cost and effort of arranging a sworn valuation; or

Choice Two: Where a capital asset has been acquired within three years of

the implementation date of capital gains tax and it can be anticipated that

there has been a substantial increase in the value of the asset between

acquisition date and April 1 2001, sworn appraisal should be considered.

You should consider the effective rate of tax you will be paying and then

compare that with the cost of having the asset valued and whether that

value will be considerably higher than the cost of the asset ( plus any

improvements if any).

This is one table you should cut out and keep for next year.

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DATE SOLD

DATE ACQUIRED

2001

2002

2003

2004

2005

2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

1981

0

0.53

1.05

1.58

2.1

2.63

3.15

3.68

4.2

4.73

1982

0

0.53

1.05

1.58

2.1

2.63

3.15

3.68

4.2

4.73

1983

0

0.55

1.05

1.58

2.1

2.63

3.15

3.68

4.2

4.73

1984

0

0.58

1.11

1.58

2.1

2.63

3.15

3.68

4.2

4.73

1985

0

0.62

1.17

1.66

2.1

2.63

3.15

3.68

4.2

4.73

1986

0

0.66

1.24

1.75

2.21

2.63

3.15

3.68

4.2

4.73

1987

0

0.7

1.31

1.85

2.33

2.76

3.15

3.68

4.2

4.73

1988

0

0.75

1.4

1.97

2.47

2.92

3.32

3.68

4.2

4.73

1989

0

0.81

1.5

2.1

2.63

3.09

3.5

3.87

4.2

4.73

1990

0

0.88

1.62

2.25

2.8

3.28

3.71

4.08

4.42

4.73

1991

0

0.95

1.75

2.42

3

3.5

3.94

4.32

4.67

4.97

1992

0

1.05

1.91

2.63

3.23

3.75

4.2

4.59

4.94

5.25

1993

0

1.17

2.1

2.86

3.5

4.04

4.5

4.9

5.25

5.56

1994

0

1.31

2.33

3.15

3.82

4.38

4.85

5.25

5.6

5.91

1995

0

1.5

2.63

3.5

4.2

4.77

5.25

5.65

6

6.3

1996

0

1.75

3

3.94

4.67

5.25

5.73

6.13

6.46

6.75

1997

0

2.1

3.5

4.5

5.25

5.83

6.3

6.68

7

7.27

1998

0

2.63

4.2

5.25

6

6.56

7

7.35

7.64

7.88

1999

0

3.5

5.25

6.3

7

7.5

7.88

8.17

8.4

8.59

2000

0

5.25

7

7.88

8.4

8.75

9

9.19

9.33

9.45

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