Hi everyone,
In late 2019 I started buying shares with the view of holding them till my retirement with all the dividends reinvested.
However, with the much higher interest rates now, and my accountant charging me much more because I have shares, it means I need to make 7% a year on my shares just to break even.
So I've decided to sell all my shares, but not sure how the taxes will be worked out due to the reinvestment.
Normally if I buy 100 x ABC shares for $X and I sell it for $Y. The difference in $X and $Y minus the fees is my profit and loss. That's easy and I understand that.
However in my case over the last 3 years my ABC shares have gone from 100 to 110 due to reinvestment. How can I tell if the dividends reinvested to buy the extra shares was already taxed or not?
It seems to me to be very complicated, have I misunderstood this, or is there a very easy way to work this out?
This will obviously something my accountant is for, but I would like to know.
TIA
In late 2019 I started buying shares with the view of holding them till my retirement with all the dividends reinvested.
However, with the much higher interest rates now, and my accountant charging me much more because I have shares, it means I need to make 7% a year on my shares just to break even.
So I've decided to sell all my shares, but not sure how the taxes will be worked out due to the reinvestment.
Normally if I buy 100 x ABC shares for $X and I sell it for $Y. The difference in $X and $Y minus the fees is my profit and loss. That's easy and I understand that.
However in my case over the last 3 years my ABC shares have gone from 100 to 110 due to reinvestment. How can I tell if the dividends reinvested to buy the extra shares was already taxed or not?
It seems to me to be very complicated, have I misunderstood this, or is there a very easy way to work this out?
This will obviously something my accountant is for, but I would like to know.
TIA