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Distributed investment plans required to request certain investor information by 15 October 2024

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EY Canada

24 Sep. 2024
Subject Tax alert
Categories 2024 Tax Alerts
Jurisdictions Canada

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Tax Alert 2024 No. 48, 24 September 2024

A distributed investment plan (DIP), which generally includes mutual fund trusts and certain partnerships, that is a selected listed financial institution (SLFI) is required to make a written request to obtain certain information from its investors by 15 October 2024. The information provided by the investors is used to calculate the DIP’s provincial attribution percentage and the DIP’s Goods and Services Tax (GST)/Harmonized Sales Tax (HST)/Quebec Sales Tax (QST) net tax liability/refund. If a DIP does not request this information by 15 October 2024, certain investors may be deemed to be residents of the highest rate province (i.e., 15%) and, as a result, the DIP may have higher tax liabilities or lower refunds.

Background

The GST/HST place of supply rules result in the vendors of a DIP generally charging GST/HST based on the place of consumption (such as the address of the trustee for a mutual fund trust). In the absence of any special rules, there would be an incentive for a DIP to locate its contracting addresses in lower GST/HST rate jurisdictions such as Alberta, where the GST/HST is imposed at a rate of 5%, as opposed to higher GST/HST rate jurisdictions such as Ontario, where GST/HST applies at a rate of 13%. To even the playing field, DIPs that are SLFIs must perform a special calculation to determine their effective rate of GST/HST in accordance with certain investor information, including the investor’s residency. DIPs are thereby required under the Selected Listed Financial Institutions Attribution Method (GST/HST) Regulations (the regulations) to obtain this information from their
 investors to properly calculate their GST/HST/QST liabilities.

If a DIP has not requested the required information from its investors by 15 October 2024 and does not have the required information by 31 December 2024, it may have to treat some or all of its investors as being resident of the highest rate province. This may lead to additional GST/HST/QST costs for the DIP. Therefore, it is recommended that a DIP send the information request to its investors by 15 October 2024. Investors are required to respond within 45 days of receiving the request. Pursuant to subsections 52(12) and (13) of the regulations, an investor that fails to respond may be subject to a penalty equal to the lesser of:

  • $10,000; and
  • 0.01% of the total value of the units held by the investor in the DIP.

The information required is dependent on the type of investor and the value of the holdings. In general, a DIP is required to request information from the following investors:

Investor type

Information required

Selected investors

Investor address that determines its province of residence and the number of units held in each series as at 30 September 2024

Qualifying investors

(i)   Investor percentage and the number of units held in each series as at 30 September 2024

(ii)  Notification that the investor is a “qualifying investor”

Securities dealers

(i)   Number of units held by the investor in each series as at 30 September 2024

(ii)  Number of units held by investors resident in the participating provinces as at 30 September 2024

Institutional investors with $10,000,000 or more invested in a particular series or unit

Investor percentage and the number of units held in each series as at 30 September 2024

Distributed investment plans

Investor percentage and the number of units held in each series as at 30 September 2024

Types of investors

Selected investor

Under subsection 52(1) of the regulations, a selected investor generally includes a person that:

  • Is resident in Canada;
  • Holds units with a total value of less than $10,000,000;
  • Is not an individual; and
  • Is not a DIP.

This type of investor includes certain corporations, trusts, pension plans and partnerships. If the DIP sends a written request to a selected investor, the investor is required to provide the following information:

  • The address that determines its province of residency as at 30 September 2024; and
  • The number of units held by the investor as at 30 September 2024.
Qualifying investor

Subsection 52(1) of the regulations define a qualifying investor as a person that is an investment plan that:

  • Holds units with a total value of less than $10,000,000;
  • Is not a DIP (such as a mutual fund trust, investment limited partnership or investment corporation);
  • Is neither a qualifying small investment plan1 under subsection 7(2) of the regulations nor a qualifying private investment plan,2 as proposed, under subsection 7(3) of the regulations; and
  • Meets one of the following conditions:
    • It is an SLFI;
    • It is a member of an affiliated group and the members together hold units with a total value of $10,000,000 or more; or
    • It is a member of an affiliated group and at least one member of the affiliated group is an SLFI.

This type of investor generally includes pension plans that are an SLFI. A DIP is not required to send an information request to qualifying investors; however, in accordance with subsections 52(9) and (10) of the regulations, these investors must provide the required information voluntarily by 15 November 2024. Given that qualifying investors may not be aware of their obligations to provide this information voluntarily, a DIP should send an information request to qualifying investors requesting the following information for each investor:

  • Its “investor percentage” and the number of units held in each series as at 30 September 2024; and
  • Confirmation that it is a qualifying investor.
Securities dealer

A securities dealer that sells or distributes units of the DIP must provide details on the units held by the investor and the residency of the investors in the participating provinces as at 30 September 2024.

Institutional investors with $10,000,000 or more invested in a particular series or unit

This type of investor is generally limited to investors that:

  • Hold $10,000,000 or more in a particular series; and
  • Are not an individual, a specified investor or a DIP.

Institutional investors include corporations, banks, insurance companies and lending companies. A DIP that has institutional investors as its unitholders should obtain the investor percentage and the number of units held by the institutional investor as at 30 September 2024.

Distributed investment plans

Subsection 1(1) of the regulations generally defines a DIP to include mutual fund trusts, mutual fund corporations, segregated funds of an insurer, unit trusts and investment limited partnerships. It should be noted that foreign partnerships with Canadian investors may be subject to the SLFI rules (including the obligation to request investor information and to self-assess GST/HST/QST). Regardless of the quantum of the investments held by DIP investors, it is recommended that DIPs obtain the following information for each investor:

  • Its investor percentage as at 30 September 2024; and
  • The number of units held as at 30 September 2024.

Learn more

For more information, please contact your EY or EY Law advisor or one of the following professionals:

East

Jadys Bourdelais
+ 1 514 879 6380 | jadys.bourdelais@ca.ey.com

West

David D. Robertson
+1 403 206 5474 | david.d.robertson@ca.ey.com

Central

Jan Pedder
+1 416 943 3509 | jan.s.pedder@ca.ey.com

Sania Ilahi
+1 416 941 1832 | sania.ilahi@ca.ey.com

Tariq Nasir
+1 416 932 6143 | tariq.nasir@ca.ey.com   

 

 

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  1. A qualifying small investment plan generally includes an investment plan that pays less than $10,000 per year of the federal component of GST/HST at the rate of 5%.
  2. As proposed, a qualifying private investment plan refers to a private investment plan, a pension entity or a master pension entity that generally meets both of the following conditions: (i) less than 10% of the plan members reside in the participating provinces, and (ii) the total value of its assets and actuarial liabilities attributable to plan members who reside in the participating provinces is less than $100 million. If enacted, this definition would apply to any fiscal year that ends after 9 August 2022.

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