Originally posted by Scruff
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Selling shares
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FWIW, the specialist that valued my company took the average of my last three years net profit after tax, adjusted for director's remuneration and multiplied it by 5. The value of the transferred shares (25% in my case) was then (0.25 * company valuation) * 0.7 (discount due to minority holding).
This resulted in a total gain just within my CGT allowance and therefore did not need to be reported on my self-assessment.Comment
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Originally posted by TheCyclingProgrammer View PostFWIW, the specialist that valued my company took the average of my last three years net profit after tax, adjusted for director's remuneration and multiplied it by 5. The value of the transferred shares (25% in my case) was then (0.25 * company valuation) * 0.7 (discount due to minority holding).
This resulted in a total gain just within my CGT allowance and therefore did not need to be reported on my self-assessment.
Are you able PM me the details of your specialist? I'm getting the feeling not many people do this after a few years of running the company.
ThanksComment
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It is extremely difficult to put a value on a private company as the shares are not traded on an exchange. The value of the company may not be as simple as net asset value or the nominal value of the shares – to highlight the difficulty in determining a value for the company consider how much you would pay for shares listed on a stock exchange to get dividend income of £30k+ per annum. If the yield on the share was say 4% then you would need to have £750k of shares to get dividends of £30k. However in your case the company would generate no dividends at all if it wasn’t for your involvement in the company.
CraigComment
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