This reading lesson focusses on skills related to reading for main idea and reading for supporting details

Read this article by an accounting consultancy about setting up systems to protect your company's assets and complete the exercises in the lesson document.

When should I setup a holding company?

When you get to the stage where you’re about to incorporate your business, you’re likely already moving pretty fast.  The concept of “corporate structure” isn’t one that most business owners contemplate; you want to get through the incorporation process as quickly as possible so you can focus your energy on your business.

However, if you’ve dealt with lawyers, financial planners or accountants, or simply chatted to other entrepreneurs, you may have come across the concept of a ‘holding company.’

So just what is a holding company and what’s the point of setting one up?

A holding company is a separate legal entity whose purpose is to hold some sort of property, be it land, buildings, marketable securities or private stock.

In a basic holding company strategy, the holding company owns the shares of your operating company as a means of effective tax planning while protecting your wealth.

When should you setup a holding company?

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For example, suppose you are an IT consultant earning 150K per year. Given you need only 50K of cash to live on in a year, you incorporate your business to take advantage of tax deferral.  Once the corporation is setup, you are then the sole owner and decide to leave any money you don’t spend within the company.

Fast forward 10 years later, you’ve developed quite a successful company with 5 employees and 1M of sales. Throughout the years you’ve only taken out from the company what you needed to live and left the remaining amount of cash in a GIC which the company owns. One day you receive a fancy legal letter claiming 1M in damages when one of your employees screws up on a software implementation.  If the law suit is successful, all that hard earned cash that you’ve left within the company could be up for grabs.

Now imagine 10 years ago instead of setting up only one corporation in which you are the sole shareholder, you set up 2: Holdco and Opco. Opco is your IT consulting company, Holdco is the company which owns Opco, and you are the sole shareholder of Holdco. Instead of leaving the cash you don’t need within Opco, you transfer the ownership of that cash to Holdco by way of a dividend. Since dividends between Canadian controlled private corporations are tax-free, you now have successfully transferred your cash out of Opco to the Holdco with no negative tax consequences.  If Opco is sued or faced with a liability, you can rightfully say it doesn’t have any money as the cash belongs to Holdco.

To achieve the same result without Holdco, you would have had to take out the full amount of cash sitting in your business each year personally – paying tax at the highest rate and eliminating any tax benefits of the corporation.

While the holding company setup doesn’t offer 100% protection, it does offer one layer against similar situations.

So when should you consider setting up a holding company?

It all depends what your goals are. Generally speaking if you plan to leave the majority of your cash and investments within your corporation for many years, it may be a good idea to explore a holding company strategy.  On the flip side, by setting up a holding company you may forfeit your lifetime capital gains deduction and face higher professional fees.

As there are a number of both legal and tax considerations to take into account, it’s a good idea to talk to a professional before setting up a holding company.

When To Set Up a Holding Company
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