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Home Promoted Content

How to invest in Cryptocurrency for your SMSF – The right way

Promoted by Seamless SMSF   Cryptocurrency has been a hot topic in the news of late. The surge in the price of Bitcoin between June 2020 & March 2021 has piqued investors wishing to explore new and unusual wealth-growing methods.

by Seamless SMSF
August 16, 2021
in News, Promoted Content
Reading Time: 4 mins read
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The lucrative nature of crypto has seen a rise in SMSF’s investing in digital currencies. However, the investment’s speculative and decentralised nature has garnered attention from the ATO, who will be cracking down on regulatory requirements and tax obligations.

Here are some key things you need to know before you decide to invest in crypto within your SMSF.

Crypto is NOT a Cash Investment

In 2014, the ATO released tax determinations (TD 2014/25 and TD 2014/26) which stated the nature of cryptocurrency for tax purposes. Crypto is, in fact, a ‘CGT Asset’ for subsection 108-5(1) of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997.

These determinations cleared some confusion for investors, as many assumed the investment was a ‘Foreign Currency’ and thus attracted different tax treatments.

The effect of this decision is as follows:

  • As cryptocurrency is considered a CGT asset, the investment will trigger a capital gains tax event if the sale of units attracts a profit. Conversely, a capital loss event will commence if unit sales attract a loss.
  • The costs involved in trading crypto are not classified as a tax deduction, thus should instead be accounted for in the asset’s cost base.

It is also worth noting that if the SMSF disposes of cryptocurrency while the members are in the pension phase, capital gains incurred will be exempt from tax (Transfer Balance Cap dependant)

Trust Deeds and Investment Strategy

As cryptocurrency is an asset, the SMSF must ensure that investments in digital currencies are allowable in the trust deed. Trustees of the fund may need to have an amendment to their trust deed prepared or possibly execute an entirely new deed.

Many trust deeds will have a clause that permits the SMSF to ‘invest in any other type of asset permitted by the SISA & SISR’. If this is relevant to your SMSF, you will not require an update to your deed as cryptocurrency is a permitted investment for SMSF’s.

When reviewing the fund’s investment strategy, this will need to be monitored and, where required, updated to ensure cryptocurrency has been acknowledged. 

Additionally, the volatility of crypto will require the SMSF to consider the relevant risks & liquidity associated with investing in the asset.

Valuations

SMSFs must ensure all asset values adhere to SISA and ATO Guidelines. Due to the daily change in value that cryptocurrency experiences, the ATO have confirmed an acceptable valuation method is to obtain the 30 June market value from a reputable digital currency exchange that publishes historical cryptocurrency values (i.e. CoinSpot)

Confirmation of Ownership

A wallet is a digital storage address investors use to trade and store their cryptocurrency. 

To satisfy separation of asset requirements under Reg 4.09A of the SIS Regulations, an SMSF needs to have its wallet entirely separate from any personal crypto wallets.

To further complicate this, wallets are entirely virtual and are only identifiable via an IP address. Difficulty can arise with having the investment registered in a particular name, including in the name of an SMSF. 

Ensuring all trade movements within a crypto wallet match transactions within the SMSF’s bank account is vital in demonstrating the link between the SMSF and the wallet. Further measures may include signing a declaration of trust which states that the SMSF is the beneficial owner of the cryptocurrency.

Purchase from a related party?

Section 66 of the SIS Act prohibits SMSF’s from intentionally acquiring an asset from a related party, with only a few exceptions. The ATO has ruled that the exemption assets do not include cryptocurrency, and thus SMSF’s cannot acquire this type of asset from a related party.

Summary

As we have witnessed with some cryptocurrencies to date, it can be a viable investment option for SMSF’s looking to grow member retirement benefits exponentially. However, without adequate planning, the fund can be exposed to significant losses. 

Ensuring an SMSF has ticked off all requirements for investing in cryptocurrency is key to avoiding the ATO’s radar – don’t make the same mistakes others likely will! 

If you’d like to learn more, get in touch! Click here.

Tags: Cryptocurrency
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Comments 6

  1. Cryptocurrency says:
    4 years ago

    Trust deed investing is simply investing in loans secured by real estate. Most trust deed[url=https://www.newventurewealth.com.au/need-to-know/][/url] are relatively short term loans (maturity under seven years, with many loans three years or less) made to real estate investors. Presently, banks are unwilling to make real estate loans unless they fit a very strict set of criteria.

    They often do not want to lend to opportunistic real estate investors because the property which is collateral for the loan is not move in ready at the time of loan funding, or people have credit issues or people have low to no income documentation. For this reason, there is a niche of people that have limited financing options available to them, and lender to this market are able to command relatively high interest rates.

    If structured properly, trust deed investments offer an attractive current yield with relatively low risk. Trust deed investors usually earn high single-digit annual returns, paid monthly. In some cases, returns above 10% or possible. These returns are very favorable relative to other investment options with similar risk profiles. The risk of losing money in a trust deed investment is mitigated by a built in margin of safety.

    Reply
  2. Just a quick rant to help yas says:
    4 years ago

    Governments and legislators can’t keep pace with the greatest transition since Fiat money took off centuries ago, what you are seeing is an acceleration of decentralisation of money via software away from a few thousand people world wide control central banks, and those people can’t take their fingers of the magic printing press, the vast majority of people don’t even read or look back at history Weimer government Germany 1919 to 1923, lookup the cash in the wheel barrow and see how inflation works. It is the single reason why BTC was released, your fox news, or sky news or most of your established media will rarely give you a deeper look into the reasoning behind something that is no taking larger slices out of the financial markets and is actually now part of at least one smaller country acknowledged currency system. Others are seeing more degrees of freedom in finance and more ways to efficient move value around via digital currencies, this is not talked about b/c those preaching to you want you not to leave their scriptures to ensure you stay within their means of control, the smart money is moving to smart contracts, to new markets, you will not go broke with traditional methods but you will miss probably the biggest generational chance for the vast majority of plebs and many middle to lower class levels of society to actually catch up to the the privileged ones. Sergey is correct Rob don’t switch of your learning faculties growth mindset the primary school teachers teach our kids these days, apply it, an old dog can learn new tricks if it decides it’s not stuck in a loop

    Reply
  3. mr tin 97 says:
    4 years ago

    “The whole concept is a scam”, Bank of America seems to think other wise along with other major financial players in the USA & europe.

    It is here stay, and will devour the financial system as we know it with in a decade or so, if not sooner.

    Adoption of BTC is starting to ramp up world wide, and those holding fiat currency (as opposed to money) will see their currency debased.

    Get on board I say , or get left behind holding ‘nada’

    Reply
  4. Educate yourself says:
    4 years ago

    Why? If an SMSF adds 5% of their total holdings to cryptocurrencies (especially established ones such as Bitcoin and Ethereum), then if it “goes to zero” as some pundits are saying, then there is no huge loss to the fund. However, if the trajectory it has held since inception in 2009 continues, there will be a lot of SMSFs with a lot of wealth.

    Have you educated yourself on how cryptocurrencies work? What’s your reason for [i]not[/i] allocating [i]any[/i] client funds to Bitcoin?

    Reply
  5. Rob P Brisbane says:
    4 years ago

    There is no “right way” for a super fund to invest in crypto currency. The whole concept is a scam and should nor play any part whatsoever in building retirement savings. My policy is that any business or platform that suggests crypto as an investment loses a lot of credibility.

    Reply
    • Sergey Naz says:
      4 years ago

      This comment won’t age well.

      Reply

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SMSF Adviser is the authoritative source of news, opinions and market intelligence for Australia’s SMSF sector. The SMSF sector now represents more than one million members and approximately one third of Australia's superannuation savings. Over the past five years the number of SMSF members has increased by close to 30 per cent, highlighting the opportunity for engaged, informed and driven professionals to build successful SMSF advice business.

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