Forums › ACCA Forums › ACCA ATX Advanced Taxation Forums › P6 exam tips – June 2013 (Bpp, Kaplan , LSBF, First Intuition)
- This topic has 3 replies, 2 voices, and was last updated 11 years ago by ansi.
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- May 18, 2013 at 11:19 am #125921
Exam tips are out! Enjoy but do not rely on them.
Kaplan
Corporation tax
– Group relief / consortium relief
– Capital gains groups: NGNL and rollover relief
– Overseas aspects: branch vs sub / CFCs / transfer pricing
– Acquisition of subsid /pre entry capital losses and trading losses
– R&D
– Close companies
Capital gains
– Reliefs: Rollover, holdover, gift, incorporation, PPR and letting
– Overseas aspects
Inheritance tax
– Lifetime gifts
– Valuation of shares / related property
– Deed of variation
– New IHT rate for charitable legacies
– Death estate computation
– Business property relief
Income tax
– Sole traders closing year rules
– Income tax comps at marginal rates
– Benefits: car, accommodation
– Share incentive plans
– Overseas aspects
Personal financial planning
– EIS / seed EISVAT
– Partial exemption
– Land and buildings
– Group VAT registrationScenarios
– Lease vs. buy assets: net cost
– Incorporation
– Company purchase of own shares
– Personal service companies
– IHT vs CGT for giftsStamp duty and SDLT
Ethics
BPP
The exam will comprise two compulsory questions within Section A which will both be of a case study style. The first question will be 35 marks in length and will contain four marks for professional skills. The second will be for 25 marks in total and will contain no professional skills marks. One of these questions will focus on personal tax issues and the other will focus on corporate tax issues.
Section B will comprise three questions, each of 20 marks in length of which only two are to be answered. These will be in a more succinct, note form style.
The whole syllabus is examinable throughout the paper.
The paper will examine candidates’ ability to analyse and evaluate the tax implications of various situations, numerical calculations will only be required to assist in producing an answer and no purely numerical questions will be set.
Groups of companies, unincorporated business, capital gains tax versus inheritance tax, overseas aspects are regularly examined topics.Opentuition
Questions 1 and 2 on the paper will be based around real life practical scenarios.
Question 1 will be for 35 marks and contain 4 professional marks awarded for structuring the answer in the proper format and dealing professionally with the issues raised. In either of these first 2 questions (question 2 will carry 25 marks), we are also likely to find 5 marks dealing with ethical issues such as confidentiality or non disclosure.
Here are 9 marks therefore that are little to do with technical competence in taxation in which candidates at this level should and must score highly!
A favourite area of the examining team deals with groups of companies, often where losses, both trading and capital have been experienced along with other chargeable gains arising and these need to be managed efficiently.
A number of areas where the candidate is asked to advise on both actual and planned transactions would also be involved. A major issue here is dealing with changes in group structures such as a proposed acquisition of a target business where either the client company may purchase the shares in the target company or the assets and trade of the target company. Major issues here for a buyer are access to the pre acquisition trading and capital losses of the target company through a share purchase as well as the tax write offs available on the purchase of intangibles within an asset and trade purchase. This may also test Stamp Duty and Stamp Duty Land Tax issues for buyers as well as VAT issues especially the capital goods scheme
The question may also have an international aspect to it with advice being required on whether to set up an overseas business as a subsidiary or branch, the application of the CFC legislation and whether to make the exemption election in respect of overseas branches.
Important points in the owner managed business life cycle lend themselves well to practical real life scenarios involving multiple taxes. Incorporation may test Income Tax, CGT, Corporation Tax, VAT and Stamp Duty as the assets and trade of the individual are transferred to a company.
A tax efficient exit strategy for the owner manager is also where the client would need well structured professional advice. Should the client sell his shares in his company possibly accepting shares and loan stock from the buyer as well as cash, or should the company sell its assets and trade and then distribute the net cash to the owner as either a capital or income distribution.
If the taxpayer is a minority shareholder then only a share disposal is possible and a purchase of own shares by the company might be an attractive exit strategy.
Another favoured area of the examining team has been the overseas aspects of personal tax where we may have to advise on the implications for all the personal taxes of say a non UK domicile coming to the UK on a contract of employment or renewing a contract which may then involve a subsequent remittance basis charge or now even an increased charge.
Other scenarios would include a UK resident accepting a contract of employment overseas and determining whether their overseas income would be chargeable to UK tax and if so the application of DTR and/or someone returning from an overseas contract and seeking advice on when to dispose of various assets.
With some candidates now coming through to P6 having passed F6 with IHT in that syllabus we may see a move away from standard computational exercises on the death of the taxpayer. Advice may be needed on when planned gifts should be made, in lifetime or on death and therefore in relation to lifetime gifts the taxpayer’s CGT position will need to be considered. This brings into play the CGT and IHT reliefs which are consistently examined as students consistently get them wrong! Candidates must know the conditions for reliefs to apply and must not confuse CGT and IHT reliefs – note particularly gift relief and entrepreneurs’ relief in CGT and BPR in IHT.
If a death estate is required it is likely that there would be significant bequests to charity bringing in the new reduced rate. Planning after death would then involve the use of a deed of variation.
In terms of advising on tax efficient investments then, though high risk, the savings under the EIS or new Seed EIS are high and may be tested.LSBF
Incorporation of a business including incorporation relief.
* Corporation tax including overseas aspects and controlled foreign companies.
* Partnership.
* Rent a room relief.
* Inheritance tax including business property relief.
* Personal service companies or purchase of own shares.
* Investment in SEIS.
* Remittance basis charge.First Intuition
* Business property relief.
* Use of second spouse nil rate band.
* Related property.
* Groups of companies, trading and capital losses.
* Double tax relief for companies.
* De-grouping charges.
* Incorporation relief.
* Furnished holiday lets.
* VAT partial exemption.
* Appeals and the four track tribunal system.
* Benefits in kind or extra salary, income tax and national insurance implications._______________________________________
Source: https://www.pqaccountant.com/
https://www.kaplan-exam-tips.com/acca/Very best of luck with your exams!
ansiMay 25, 2013 at 9:00 am #127127updated
May 27, 2013 at 12:04 pm #127327AnonymousInactive- Topics: 0
- Replies: 9
- ☆
Surely those BPP tips aren’t for P6 – they look more like P5!
May 27, 2013 at 4:28 pm #127357thanks for spotting that 🙂
corrected now 😉
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