CG17953i - Taper relief: trading company and holding company of a trading group - periods from 17 April 2002 - meaning of "in the course of, or for the purposes of, a trade"
An activity is carried on in the course of, or for the purposes
of, a trade if it is carried on in the process of conducting or
preparing to carry on the trade. So, for example, where a company
renegotiates an ongoing trading contract relating to its trade this
will be an activity undertaken "in the course of" its trade. It
will be clear in most cases whether an activity that a company
undertakes is carried on in the course of, or for the purposes of,
its trade or not. But similar transactions can be undertaken for
different reasons depending on the facts.
For instance, a company may buy some land. If the company is
a property developer and buys the land as trading stock, or a
manufacturer and buys it to provide a site for a factory it intends
to build to house its manufacturing process, the buying of the land
would probably count as a trading activity. However, if a company
buys the land so as to earn future rental income, or for potential
capital growth, the buying of the land would not normally be a
trading activity.
Normally, making an investment that yields investment income
would not count as a trading activity. However, there are a number
of circumstances where such activities could be undertaken in the
course of, or for the purposes of, a company's trade. An investment
may be so closely related to the conduct of a trade that it
effectively forms an integral part of the trade. For example, a
travel agent may be required to keep a fixed level of cash on
deposit for bonding requirements. Or a company might receive a
large payment, perhaps from selling a shareholding or on the
completion of a major contract, and earmark the funds for some
particular trade purposes, such as to meet some demonstrable
trading liability or expand the trade in the near future.
The short-term lodgement of such surplus funds, for example
in an interest-bearing deposit account or in bonds or equities,
could count as a trading activity. Alternatively, the company may
intend distributing the monies received to its members. Depending
on the facts, temporarily investing such funds until they can be
distributed could count as being an activity undertaken for the
purposes of the company's trade, since paying out the profits
generated by a trade can count as a trading activity. This would be
the case, for example, where the payment of an annual dividend
depended on a meeting of the company's shareholders.
However, the long term retention of significant cash
generated from trading activities may amount to an investment
activity. Factors to consider include the present and future cash
flow requirements of the business , the nature of the underlying
investments used as a lodgement for the funds, the extent to which
these investments are managed and whether the funds have been
ear-marked for a particular use in the trading activity.
Whether or not making and holding investments are part of a
company's trading activities is a question of fact that can be
determined only by reference to all the relevant circumstances.
