had started a limited company to invest in stocks/bonds/commodities etc. The money is not big and initial investment of £15K and now has grown to £18K in the previous year. Haven't had a formal accountant/Free-agent yet, but using Pandle software for book-keeping as not worth to have a full time agent.
The 15K has been used to buy various stocks and then sell and buy etc. So there is about 100+ transactions in the previous year. the £18K is still unrealised profit, but the value of the stocks/commodities etc shown in the investment website. So the money is still not realised and not in limited company bank account yet.
I looked into an agent who could do the yearly tax calculation and one of the item he mentioned that for a "Financial Investment" limited company, the calculation is done on total bought/sold shares and the difference etc. So the value "on-paper" is shown as £18K, i have to provide all transactions into the book-keeping tool and then provide tax on the "on-paper" value difference. So in my instance, this would be profit of £18k-£15k= £3k and have to pay tax on it, though I haven't materialised it into bank account.
so to all fellow Accountants, Is the above understanding correct? Is that the way "Investment limited company" accounting is done every year? So what happens when I withdraw the money/profit to my bank account? At that time, the profit will be double taxed? Any link to how taxation works on an investment limited company?
The 15K has been used to buy various stocks and then sell and buy etc. So there is about 100+ transactions in the previous year. the £18K is still unrealised profit, but the value of the stocks/commodities etc shown in the investment website. So the money is still not realised and not in limited company bank account yet.
I looked into an agent who could do the yearly tax calculation and one of the item he mentioned that for a "Financial Investment" limited company, the calculation is done on total bought/sold shares and the difference etc. So the value "on-paper" is shown as £18K, i have to provide all transactions into the book-keeping tool and then provide tax on the "on-paper" value difference. So in my instance, this would be profit of £18k-£15k= £3k and have to pay tax on it, though I haven't materialised it into bank account.
so to all fellow Accountants, Is the above understanding correct? Is that the way "Investment limited company" accounting is done every year? So what happens when I withdraw the money/profit to my bank account? At that time, the profit will be double taxed? Any link to how taxation works on an investment limited company?
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