Prateek
Chatterjee | 19 May 2016
New ATO rule on property deals over $2 million will hurt Chinese buyers
even more
As
if the negative gearing debate wasn't enough before the election, on July 1, there is another
shocker waiting for real estate agents and property owners around
Australia trying to transact in property exceeding $2 million.
According
to a new ATO rule that comes into effect July 1, all Australian sellers of
$2 million-plus properties will be classified as overseas investors unless they
get a special tax clearance. That means that all buyers of $2 million-plus
properties must deduct 10 per cent from the purchase price and pay that amount
to the Australian Taxation Office (ATO) unless the seller can furnish a tax
clearance, according to a recent report in The Australian.
While the
move will affect everyone, including Australians, Chinese investors will be impacted
more, especially when taken together with steps taken to squeeze Chinese buying
in residential property.
Chinese
and Asian buying of Sydney apartments has already fallen 50 per cent in recent
weeks and the trend is spreading to other markets, particularly
Melbourne.
The
current measure can be traced back to the days when former treasurer Joe Hockey
caved into pressures to curb Chinese investment in Australian residential
property in 2015. In the process, the treasurer was convinced by the Australian
Taxation Office to widen the net to cover local residents, says the report in
The Australian.
According
to an ATO fact sheet, in May 2013, the government announced that it would
introduce a 10% non-final withholding tax on payments made to foreign residents
who dispose of certain taxable Australian property with a market value above a
specified threshold. The new legislation for this measure became law
in February 2016.
The $2
million rule applies to vacant land, buildings, residential and commercial property,
leaseholds and strata title schemes.
The ATO
website says, "The government is strengthening our foreign resident
capital gains tax (CGT) regime to assist in the collection of foreign
residents' liabilities."
The
definition of property is very wide and includes leaseholds but does not
include stock exchange investments. A purchaser who does not receive a
“clearance certificate” from the vendor and does not send 10 per cent of the
purchase price off to the ATO will still be liable to pay that 10 per cent to
the ATO plus, almost certainly, will have to pay severe additional penalties
and interest. The economics of buying the property will be severely damaged,
says the media report.
It
suggests that real estate agents selling $2 million plus properties should
study how this new tax regime would impact their business.
For
example, banks and other financiers may be affected where their secured debt
exceeds 90 per cent of the value of the selling price. In a situation where the
owner is being forced to sell, the banks will be better to take possession and
sell themselves rather than being caught in the “tax clearance” delays.
In the
majority of cases, local resident vendors will have no problem obtaining a
clearance certificate, but it might increase the risk of a tax audit for
property sellers who:
- Have not filed tax returns
for many years;
- Have filed tax returns,
which would indicate they could not afford such a property;
- Are selling their
residential house at the same time as their neighbours to a single
developer, which may give rise to a profit making scheme (such that the
principal residence capital gains tax exemption may not apply to the value
uplift generated by selling the properties together); or
- Where the ATO has gathered
information that indicates the vendor is in the business of developing
property, which means that the principal residence capital gains tax
exemption may not apply.
The post
by Robert Gottliebsen says this might lead to a rush to sell before
July 1 and might create some property bargains for buyers.
Another
implication is that as property prices rise, more vendors will fall into the $2
million plus category. Over time, the ATO may shift their audit target
identification processes to $2 million-plus property vendors and away from
other areas.
Additionally,
if the vendor has a tax debt, the application for a “clearance certificate” may
in some circumstances involve the ATO seeking to recover some or all of that
tax debt from the purchaser by way of a garnishee notice.
While the
report argues that the ATO's new rule will only help recover tax legitimately
owed, the danger is in the complexity.
The
legislation is yet another blow for Asian investors in Australian property.
Banks have already imposed a credit squeeze on Chinese property buyers.
On July
1, the Victorian state government is set to raise the levy on foreign purchases
of apartments from 3 percent to 7 percent
For a
Chinese investor, getting a tax clearance would be tough, or else they would
have to give off 10 percent off the transaction price.
This story has been brought to you
by the Emerald Chamber of Commerce Inc.
(Ph: 07 4982 3444)
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