No-gain-no-loss transactions (NGNL)
This feature is peculiar to RPGT. It yields a nil-tax effect by deeming the disposal price to be the same as the acquisition price of the disposer. But this represents a tax deferral of the RPGT liability, not an outright exemption. It suspends the imposition of RPGT at the time of the transaction. The acquirer is thus deemed to have acquired the real property at an acquisition price equal to that of the disposer.
The downside is the acquirer’s acquisition date is not similarly deemed to be that of the disposer, but moved to the actual transaction date, as seen in Illustration 1 below:
ILLUSTRATION 1
Facts
Mr A, a citizen, acquired a piece of land on 1 February 2018 for RM100,000. He transferred the land to A Sdn Bhd on 1 March 2024 in return for 200,000 shares in A Sdn Bhd, a company wholly-owned by him. A Sdn Bhd disposed of the land on 1 September 2024 to a third party for RM500,000.
RPGT treatment
Mr A’s transfer of the land to A Sdn Bhd is a NGNL transaction. A Sdn Bhd is deemed to have acquired the land for RM100,000 on 1 March 2024.
When A Sdn Bhd subsequently disposes of the land on 1 September 2024 for RM500,000, the holding period is less than one year (1 March 2024 – 1 September 2024) while the chargeable gain of A Sdn Bhd is RM400,000 (RM500,000 – RM100,000). The RPGT liability is RM120,000 (RM400,000 at 30%).
This produces an impact where the acquirer is deemed to acquire the land at the historical price paid by the disposer but on the current transaction day, thus re-setting the clock for the holding period.
Had Mr A not transferred the land to A Sdn Bhd, but sold it under his own name on 1 March 2024, the chargeable gain would have been RM360,000 (RM400,000 – 40,000) and the RPGT liability would have been nil (RM360,000 at 0%).
Examples of NGNL transactions
- Transfer of assets between spouses, or former spouses, where the asset is owned by a citizen.
- Transfer of assets owned by an individual and/or his wife or a connected person, to a company (incorporated in Malaysia) controlled by the individual, and/or his wife, or the connected person, for a consideration wholly or substantially (75% or more) in shares. The asset must be owned by a citizen.
- Gifts made to the Government, State Government, a local authority or a charity exempt from income tax.
- Assets disposed under compulsory acquisition pursuant to any law.
- Where a donor, a citizen, disposes an asset by way of gift to a recipient, who is a spouse, parent, child, grandparent, or grandchild.
- Intra-group transfer of assets, with prior approval from the Director General, for greater efficiency in operation wholly or substantially (75% or more) in shares.
- Transfer of assets in any consideration between companies in any scheme of reorganisation, reconstruction or amalgamation in compliance with the Government’s policy on capital participation in industry.
- Distribution of assets by a liquidator of a company and the liquidation was made under a scheme of reorganisation, reconstruction and amalgamation in compliance with the Government’s policy on capital participation in industry.
- The devolution of the assets of a deceased person on:
- his executor/legatee under a will or intestacy; or
- on the trustees of a trust created under his will.
Tax planning
Each of the above, except item 7, produces a NGNL transaction, where the date of acquisition moves from the original date to the current date while the acquisition price remains at the original amount. This may prove to be disadvantageous in certain circumstances.
Therefore, the disposer and acquirer should be mindful of future plans for the property before proceeding with a NGNL transaction. It may be expedient to pre-empt a NGNL transaction by not fulfilling one or more conditions to be a NGNL transaction. For instance, to avoid being a NGNL under item 2 above, the consideration may be set at less than 75% in shares, with the balance in cash.
F. Allowable losses
Where a chargeable asset is disposed of, and the disposal price is less than the acquisition price, there is an allowable loss. An allowable loss means a loss suffered on the disposal of a chargeable asset which, if it had been a gain, would have been chargeable with RPGT.
Year of assessment (YA)
Pursuant to section 10 of the RPGT Act, a YA is based on the corresponding calendar year. Therefore YA 2024 refers to the calendar year 2024 (1 January 2024 to 31 December 2024).
The concept and meaning of YA is important when considering the absorption of allowable loss.
Where there is more than one transaction of real property in a YA, the allowable loss from one transaction may be set-off against another transaction that yields a chargeable gain.
Question: Must the loss-making transaction be after the profitable one in the same YA?
Section 7(4) reads:
‘Where there is an allowable loss in respect of a disposal, such allowable loss shall be allowed as a reduction to reduce the total chargeable gain of a person for a year of assessment in which the disposal was made.’
The provision enables the deduction of an allowable loss from a transaction against the total chargeable gain of the person from other transaction(s) in the same YA, regardless of whether the loss transaction occurred before or after the profitable transaction/s during that YA.
Section 7(4)(b) goes on to state that any unabsorbed loss may be carried forward to the subsequent year(s) of assessment until it is absorbed.
Do be mindful that, for an individual, any allowable loss is absorbed after the exemption under Schedule 4 – ie the greater of 10% or RM10,000. This is provided for in section 7(5) of the RPGT Act.
G. Computation of chargeable gain
Section 7 of the RPGT Act states that ‘if the disposal price exceeds the acquisition price, there is a chargeable gain’.
Disposal price
Disposal price is defined in paragraph 6 of Schedule 2, and is summarised below:
Disposal price is:
Sale consideration for the disposal of the asset less
(a) expenditure incurred on the asset after its acquisition … for the purpose of enhancing or preserving the value of the asset
(b)expenditure incurred by the disposer after its acquisition in establishing, preserving or defending his title to, or to a right over the asset; and
(c) the incidental costs to the disposer of making the disposal.
Note that the manner of arriving at the disposal price is by deducting any enhancement, preservation expenses etc. incurred after the acquisition, from the sale consideration.
The quirk here is that the expenses [ie items (a) and (b) above] are deducted from the sale price rather than the normal accounting approach of adding the additional cost to the purchase cost of the asset.
Enhancement/preservation expenses
If a property comprising land and building is acquired, the total cost is the acquisition cost. However, if the land is acquired, then subsequently a building is erected on it, or renovations are carried out on a land-with-building, the enhancement or preservation costs must be reflected in the state of the asset at the time of disposal.
Paragraph 5(1), Schedule 2 reads:
‘… (a) the amount of any expenditure wholly and exclusively incurred on the asset at any time after its acquisition … for the purpose of enhancing or preserving the value of the asset, being expenditure reflected in the state of nature of the asset at the time of the disposal; …’
Note the difference in RPGT treatment in Illustrations 2 and 3 below, where the only factual difference is the demolition of the house erected after the purchase of the land. Illustration 4 is included to highlight the difference in treatment where the building (or any form of enhancement cost) constitutes part of the real property at the time of purchase.
ILLUSTRATION 2
Facts
A piece of land was acquired at RM100,000 on 1 February 2021, with legal fees and stamp duty of RM2,500. A house was constructed on the land in 2022 at a cost of RM300,000. On 15 September 2023, the land-with-building was disposed of for RM500,000. The disposer paid RM30,000 to the real estate agent for the successful sale.
RPGT treatment
Chargeable gain is computed as follows: