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Strategx Elements Corp STRXF


Primary Symbol: C.STGX

StrategX Elements Corp. is a Canada-based exploration company. The Company is focused on the discovery of cobalt and associated energy transition metals in northern Canada. The Company’s property portfolio of over five stand-alone projects is situated on the East Arm of the Great Slave Lake, Northwest Territories and on the Melville Peninsula, Nunavut. The Company has a 100% interest in Project 939 and EA South Project located in the Northwest Territory, Canada. Project 939 and EA South Project comprise approximately 12 prospecting permits (93,821 hectares) and over 16 mining claims (12,638 hectares). The Company staked over 13 claims, approximately 9,646 hectares located adjacent and outside of the Mel Project in the Melville Peninsula region of Nunavut, Canada. Its projects also include Project NagVaak, Nunavut, Canada, and Project Mel, Nunavut, Canada.


CSE:STGX - Post by User

Comment by SoftLandingon Jul 18, 2020 10:20pm
235 Views
Post# 31286362

RE:Foreign Stocks In TFSA

RE:Foreign Stocks In TFSAOne more article from the Finacial Post.


Are you sure you can put that in your TFSA?

There’s a difference between what you should put in your Tax Free Savings Account (TFSA) versus what you can legally hold in this relatively new savings vehicle.

Contrary to popular belief, the TFSA is not merely a savings account, as its name seems to suggest, but rather can be used as vehicle to hold all kinds of qualified investments, similar to an RRSP or RRIF.

But the rules concerning qualified investments can be complex and detailed, especially when your investment is something other than a plain vanilla, blue chip Canadian stock. Take the controversy that arose online this past week stemming from the revelation in these pages that a reader’s TFSA had grown to over $172,000 by investing in shares of Fannie Mae, the U.S. housing lender that has been placed into the conservatorship of the Federal Housing Finance Agency.

While common shares generally qualify for investment in a TSFA, the rules themselves are quite technical. The Income Tax Act states that in order for a stock to be a qualified investment for a TFSA, it generally must be listed on a designated stock exchange.

The Department of Finance maintains a list on its website of designated exchanges, which includes 41 exchanges in 28 countries, ranging from the U.S. NASDAQ to Israel’s Tel Aviv Exchange. The list includes most Canadian and U.S. stock exchanges but Over-the-Counter Facilities such as the NASDAQ OTC Bulletin Board facility and the Canadian OTC Automated Trading System are not on the list.

Fannie Mae, which used to be traded on both the New York Stock Exchange and the Chicago Stock Exchange, was delisted in June 2010 and began trading on the OTC Bulletin Board, which is not a designated exchange; however, because it also listed on the Stuttgart Stock Exchange in Germany, it appears its shares do qualify for investment by TFSAs, regardless of which exchange the shares are purchased through.

The consequences of investing in a non-qualified investment inside your TFSA can be quite severe

Interestingly, there is a special rule that applies to Canadian public companies that have been delisted. Shares of Canadian listed corporations which are subsequently moved to over-the-counter status continue to be qualified investments for a TFSA and other registered plans. But this rule doesn’t apply to U.S. or other foreign stocks.

The consequences of investing in a non-qualified investment inside your TFSA can be quite severe. First of all, there is an automatic penalty of 50% of the fair market value of the non-qualified investment in the year it is purchased by the TFSA. Fortunately, as long as you can demonstrate that it was purchased inadvertently, this penalty can be refunded in the year the non-qualified investment is disposed of by the TFSA.

But the real problem is that the TFSA itself must pay tax, at the top marginal tax rate, on any income or capital gains earned from the non-qualified investment. To make matters worse, the capital gain is taxed in full, and not at the normal 50% inclusion rate.

Jamie Golombek, CA, CPA, CFP, CLU, TEP is the Managing Director, Tax & Estate Planning with CIBC Private Wealth Management in Toronto.


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