Inland Revenue has released an "issues
paper" on ring-fencing losses. Revenue Minister Stuart Nash says the
policy is an effort to "level the playing field" between speculators
and investors. Feedback is being encouraged. Submissions must be in by 11
May 2018.
The policy paper says, "The proposed loss ring-fencing
rules will mean that speculators and investors with residential properties will
no longer be able to offset tax losses from those properties against their
other income (for example, salary or wages, or business income), to reduce
their tax liability. The losses can be used in future years, when the
properties are making profits, or if the person is taxed on the sale of
land."
The argument being used to justify the policy is that
rental housing "may be under-taxed given that tax-free capital gains
are often realised when rental properties are sold. The fact that rental
property investors often make persistent tax losses indicates that expected
capital gains are an important motivation for many investors purchasing rental
property. While interest and other expenses are fully deductible, in the
absence of a comprehensive capital gains tax, not all of the economic income
generated from rental housing is subject to tax. There is therefore an argument
that, to the extent deductible expenses in the long-term exceed income from
rents, those expenses in fact relate to the capital gain, so should not be
deductible unless the capital gain is taxed."
Essentially a presumption is being made that property
speculators are not caught by either the brightline test (buying and
selling within five years) or the intention test, which doesn’t have a
time limit and is assessed by the IRD on a case by case basis. It is also being
presumed that if an investor makes a loss on a residential property then it is
very likely that they intend to resell to recover all of the losses from the
sale and make a capital gain.
While this will be true in some cases, there are many
reasons why an investor incurs a loss from a rental activity. Quite often it is
because of damage to property, unpaid rent, or vacancies. To prevent that loss
being offset against other income is, in these circumstances, grossly unfair.
The ring fencing policy, as proposed, will mostly affect
first time investors. Typically they have high debt, and they are most
vulnerable to losses during those early years of ownership. They usually make
up the loss from their day-job, and receive a tax break on the loss in the form
of a tax refund. As they repay debt and if rents rise, they will get to a
position of being cash flow positive and start paying income tax on their
annual rental income.
Those with more than one rental property are unlikely to
be affected because the loss ring-fencing rules will apply on a portfolio
basis. The report says, "that would mean that investors would be
able to offset losses from one rental property against rental income from other
properties – calculating their overall profit or loss across their
portfolio".
The effect is that a portfolio investor could use their
existing equity as security to fully finance a new loss-making rental
investment, which they could then offset against the income from their other
properties, to reduce their taxable income.
Given all residential property investors who sell within
five years are caught by the brightline test, there would be very few investors
with resale intentions who are not already caught by the regulations.
Furthermore, should the sale be outside of the brightline time limit the IRD
has the power to tax any gains, if they decide resale was the intention.
Given the data-collection powers of the IRD, they will
know if tax losses have been claimed prior to a rental property being sold. If
the losses have arisen from high gearing, they could reasonably apply the
intention test. In other words, the government already has all of the tools it
needs to capture gains from the sale of property - it does not need to add yet
another layer of complexity and compliance cost, although I am sure these
changes will please accountants, since what used to be very simple rental
income accounts are set to become much more complex.
This looks to be a case of the politicians wanting to
give the impression that they are being tough on "speculators" and
the IRD is trying to make the policy work in practical terms. The effect is bad
policy that will create hardship for some, while not achieving what the
politicians say it will. In other words, it's bad policy.
Ironically the ring-fencing proposal further discriminates
against residential property investors by creating adverse tax policies that do
not apply to investors in shares, businesses, and commercial property. Not
surprisingly residential property investors are now shifting their capital
elsewhere, but more on that next week.
The full issues paper can be found at taxpolicy.ird.govt.nz/publications/2018-ip-ring-fencing-losses/overview
Frank Newman, an investment analyst and former councillor on the Whangarei District Council, writes a weekly article for Property Plus.
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