Originally posted by Bradley
I think I'm missing your first point. I was referring to married couples and there are no CGT or IHT implications for transfers between spouses. I wasn't necessarily meaning the shares needed to be held jointly either of course - ie a separate shareholing could be held by each spouse. The point was that a married couple can take advantage of 2 annual CGT exemptions.
On your second point, I agree completely, but we're talking at cross purposes. I was looking at it from the CGT viewpoint. It makes no sense to pay 30% CT on a capital gain when an individual (or 2 married individuals) could make the gain with less or no CGT.
If the capital won't ever be required, it would presumably make more sense to put it into a pension fund anyway.
You've missed my point when you say ' the regime for claiming expenses is far less stringent'... If you were to pay a family member an amount that was clearly far more than is warranted for their supposed investment management services, the Revenue would have every right to refuse tax relief.

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