The United Kingdom has categorised “designated crypto assets” for Investment Manager Exemption (IME) for the 2022-2023 fiscal tax year.
Commissioners for His Majesty’s Revenue and Customs (HMRC) have enacted the legislation which lawmakers announced in April this year. The tax body of the UK government passed the new regulation this week, which will enter force on 1 January next year.
While the government has not defined “designated crypto assets,” the new regulations refer to “investment transactions” cited in Section Two of the Investment Transactions (Tax) Regulations 2014.
IME allows the UK to boost its status as a financial hub and allows non-UK investors residing in the country the right to select British investment managers. The latter can conduct some investments on their behalf without becoming subject to British taxation rules.
The new IME will place “designated cryptoassets” as stocks, included in Whitehall’s FinTech Sector Strategy in early April.
According to the consultancy paper, the measures,
“will provide certainty of tax treatment to U.K. investment managers and their non-U.K. resident investors who are seeking to include cryptoassets within their portfolios, and we anticipate that this will also encourage new cryptoasset investment management businesses to base themselves in the U.K.”
The news comes as multiple countries recommend financial regulations tighten across their respective governments. Countries such as Israel, South Korea, Australia, and the United States have submitted recommendations linked to the collapse of several key crypto exchanges.
This comes after FTX, one of the world’s largest cryptocurrency exchange platforms, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy after mismanaging billions in funding. Bahamian authorities have arrested the company’s former chief executive, Sam Bankman-Fried, who awaits extradition to the United States for his malfeasance.