Check to see if your promoter took Tax Counsel/Barrister advice on the Conversion process.
It appears that the Tax advice received assumes a new scheme from "scratch" not on an existing EBT scheme being converted a new "no-longer-an-employee" scheme.
The actual conversion may actually allow HMRC to challenge the new scheme and it could result in a catch 22 situation that the old EBT scheme was in fact a "disguised remuneration" scheme that can be attacked without the assistance of the new rules that came into force on 9 December 2010.
It appears that the Tax advice received assumes a new scheme from "scratch" not on an existing EBT scheme being converted a new "no-longer-an-employee" scheme.
The actual conversion may actually allow HMRC to challenge the new scheme and it could result in a catch 22 situation that the old EBT scheme was in fact a "disguised remuneration" scheme that can be attacked without the assistance of the new rules that came into force on 9 December 2010.


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