The Basic Tax Consequences of Company Distributions
Distributions made by a company to its shareholders can either be a dividend or return of capital. In short, a reduction in contributed tax capital (CTC) is not a dividend but a return of capital. Various amendments have been made to the definition of CTC over the past few years. It is of utmost importance to understand these terms as the taxation is completely different.
The aim of this webinar is to simply these tax technical terms and their resulting tax consequences.
This webinar series is a great follow up to our Basic of Capital Gains Tax for Corporates webinar, now available on-demand here.
The outline of this webinar is as follows:
Overview of Company Distributions
We will commence the webinar with a high-level of how company distributions are treated for tax purposes. This session will cover:
- Definition of Dividend and Return of Capital
- High-level overview of Dividends Withholding Tax
Contributed Tax Capital
When determining whether a company distribution is treated as a dividend or a return of capital, it is important to understand what Contributed Tax Capital is as defined. This session is aimed at simplifying this technical definition that has undergone various changes over recent years.
Taxation of a Return of Capital
The tax treatment of a return of capital depends on the purpose for which the share in respect of the return of capital is received or accrued. During this session we will discuss the tax implications of a return of capital as well as the provisions in respect of company distributions in the following specific events:
- Share buy-backs
- Winding-up, liquidation or deregistration of a company (par 77)
Dividend stripping rules
The Income Tax Act contains various anti-avoidance provisions. Specifically in the context of company distributions we will discuss:
- Dividend stripping (par 19)
- Dividends treated as proceeds (par 43A)
Cost: R805 (incl. VAT) per person
CPD/CPE hours: 2 hours