Recherche
S'identifier

Mensuel de mai 2025 - Banques / Assurances

go back Retour << Article précédent     Article suivant >>


Capital gains taxation: the fiscal deathblow for Belgian SME shareholders
Opinion - By Bruno COLMANT, Ph.D., Member of the Belgian Royal Academy - Certified accountant and tax adviser (ITAA)   The taxation of capital gains, slated for implementation in 2026, will be a nightmare, particularly for unlisted companies—namely, small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs). To tax a capital gain, you need a sale price and, more crucially, an estimated starting value. Unlike a publicly listed stock, this starting value doesn’t exist for an SME (or at least isn’t indisputable). The book value is irrelevant since it fails to account for future earnings prospects, intangible assets (like goodwill, brand value, or reputation), or even a revaluation of certain assets.   As a result, the tax administration is venturing into an exercise...
Cette page n'est accessible qu'aux abonnés payants.
Veuillez vous identifier si vous êtes abonnés à la consultation de nos archives.
Nous vous invitons à souscrire un abonnement, ou à prendre contact avec nous.

This page is only accessible to paying subscribers.
Please identify yourself if you have subscribed to the consultation of our archives.
We invite you to take out a subscription, or to contact us.
Ces entreprises nous font bénéficier de  leur expertise en collaborant avec Agefi Luxembourg.

These companies give us the benefit of their expertise by collaborating with Agefi Luxembourg.
Castegnaro
Stibbe
Lamboley Executive Search
A&O Shearman
Lpea.lu
MIMCO Capital
SOCIETE GENERALE Securities Services
Loyens & Loeff
Linklaters
VP Bank
Fi&FO
NautaDutilh
Sia Partners
Comarch
Zeb Consulting
Foyer Group
Backer McKenzie
PwC
Ernst&Young
Edmond de Rothschild
Pictet Asset Management
J. P. Morgan
DLA PIPER
Digital Services, Technology and Consulting
Square management
Bearingpoint