PART IIIncome Tax, Corporation Tax and Capital Gains Tax

CHAPTER IIICapital Gains

72Commodity and financial futures and traded options

(1)

If, apart from this subsection, gains arising to any person in the course of dealing in commodity or financial futures or in traded options would constitute, for the purposes of the Tax Acts, profits or gains chargeable to tax under Schedule D otherwise than as the profits of a trade, then, on and after 6th April 1985 —

(a)

his outstanding obligations under any futures contract entered into in the course of that dealing and any traded option granted or acquired in the course of that dealing shall be regarded as assets to the disposal of which the M1Capital Gains Tax Act 1979 (in this section referred to as " the principal Act") applies; and

(b)

any gain arising in the course of that dealing shall not be chargeable to tax under Schedule D and any loss so arising shall not be allowable against profits or gains which are so chargeable.

(2)

In subsection (1) above— (a) " commodity or financial futures " means commodity futures or financial futures which are for the time being dealt in on a recognised futures exchange, within the meaning of the principal Act; and

(b)

"traded option" has the meaning given by section 137(9) of that Act.

(3)

For the purposes of the principal Act, where, in the course of dealing in commodity or financial futures, a person who has entered into a futures contract closes out that contract by entering into another futures contract with obligations which are reciprocal to those of the first-mentioned contract, that transaction shall constitute the disposal of an asset (namely, his outstanding obligations under the first-mentioned contract) and, accordingly,—

(a)

any money or money's worth received by him on that transaction shall constitute consideration for the disposal ; and

(b)

any money or money's worth paid or given by him on that transaction shall be treated as incidental costs to him of making the disposal.

(4)

In any case where,—

(a)

a person who, in the course of dealing in financial futures, has entered into a futures contract does not close out that contract (as mentioned in subsection (3) above), and

(b)

the nature of the futures contract is such that, at its expiry date, the person concerned is entitled to receive or liable to make a payment in full settlement of all obligations under that contract,

then, for the purposes of the principal Act, he shall be treated as having disposed of an asset (namely, his outstanding obligations under the futures contract) and the payment received or made by him shall be treated as consideration for that disposal or, as the case may be, as incidental costs to him of making the disposal.

(5)

In section 137(9) of the principal Act (options and forfeited deposits) for the words " the London International Financial Futures Exchange " there shall be substituted " a recognised futures exchange".

(6)

In section 155 of the principal Act (interpretation) after subsection (3) there shall be inserted the following subsections—

“(3A)

In this Act ' recognised futures exchange ' means the London International Financial Futures Exchange and any other futures exchange which is for the time being designated for the purposes of this Act by order made by the Board.

(3B)

An order made by the Board under subsection (3A) above—

(a)

may designate a futures exchange by name or by reference to any class or description of futures exchanges, including, in the case of futures exchanges in a country outside the United Kingdom, a class or description framed by reference to any authority or approval given in that country; and

(b)

may contain such transitional and other supplemental provisions as appear to the Board to be necessary or expedient.”

(7)

Nothing in subsection (1) above affects the operation of section 312 of the Taxes Act (annuity business of insurance companies: separate charge on profits).