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You must keep records of each of your crypto assets and every transaction, to work out whether you have a made a capital gain or loss. For your crypto assets, you should keep:
You need to keep details for each crypto asset as they are separate CGT assets. Keeping good records is essential for meeting your tax obligations.
Keeping good records are important as crypto can be volatile. Our record keeping tips may help safeguard you against loss of information, which could happen at any time. Keep these records during the period you hold or transact using crypto:
Keep records for 5 years from the later of:
You should keep records long enough to cover your amendment period (usually 2 or 4 years) for an assessment that uses information from the record.
Your records must be in:
Last day of the financial tax year 30 June 2024
Then ATO begins to process tax returns — but wait!
It’s best not to rush in too soon.
If you run a side hustle while still employed, you’ll need to wait for your documentation to be marked as ‘TAX READY.’
Employers have until the 14 July to update their paperwork and upload it to the ATO to declare their employees’ PAYG tax to date and superannuation payments.
Financial institutions such as banks or companies issuing dividends and managed funds earnings information may take up to late July or early September to report their earnings.
Lodging too soon could mean that you might need to amend your tax return to include these later reported income items.
Make sure you’re TAX READY before lodging your tax return. This means that you’re claiming all relevant tax deductions to lower your overall taxable income. This can have a dramatic effect on your tax, and can save you hundreds, if not thousands of dollars each year.
Last day of the financial tax year 30 June 2024
Then ATO begins to process tax returns — but wait!
It’s best not to rush in too soon.
If you run a side hustle while still employed, you’ll need to wait for your documentation to be marked as ‘TAX READY.’
Employers have until the 14 July to update their paperwork and upload it to the ATO to declare their employees’ PAYG tax to date and superannuation payments.
Financial institutions such as banks or companies issuing dividends and managed funds earnings information may take up to late July or early September to report their earnings.
Lodging too soon could mean that you might need to amend your tax return to include these later reported income items.
Make sure you’re TAX READY before lodging your tax return. This means that you’re claiming all relevant tax deductions to lower your overall taxable income. This can have a dramatic effect on your tax, and can save you hundreds, if not thousands of dollars each year.
2024/25 Federal Budget Summary 14 May 2024
1. Personal income tax measures Stage three personal tax
2. Small business measures
2.1 will temporarily set the instant asset write-off threshold for small business entities at (less than) $20,000 for the 2025 income year
Watch this space as the Libs are putting forward a Bill to increase this to $30,000.
2.2 Relieving energy bill pressures The Government is providing certain direct energy bill relief for small businesses. This Budget will provide additional energy bill relief of $325 to eligible small businesses.
4. Superannuation
4.1 Superannuation on Paid Parental Leave The Government has announced that it will pay superannuation on Commonwealth government-funded Paid Parental Leave for births and adoptions on or after 1 July 2025.
5.1 Freezing social security deeming rates
The Government will freeze social security deeming rates at their current levels for a further 12 months until 30 June 2025 to support age pensioners and other income support recipients who rely on income from deemed financial investments, as well as their payment, to manage cost of living pressures.
5.2 funding: • to limit the indexation of the Higher Education Loan Program (and other student loans) debt to the lower of either the Consumer Price Index or the Wage Price Index, effective from 1 June 2023,
5.3 Energy bill relief for households The Government is providing direct energy bill relief for every Australian household. From 1 July 2024, all households will receive a total rebate of $300,
In Summary, we can hear the delusional rhetoric giving the RBA an excuse to possible raise interest rates or certainly keep them where they are for a little longer.
Areas likely to receive greater ATO audit attention for 2024 include:
· Work-related expense claims for NDIS and other support workers/carers
· Working from home deductions under the ATO’s short-cut method
· Claims for personal super contributions
· Short-term holiday rental arrangements through online platforms (e.g., Airbnb, Stayz, etc.)
· Depreciation claims for motor vehicles used by sole traders
Common backyard developments affecting the family home
Recession, stagflation, a cost of living crisis, damaged public finances and higher interest rates. The four years since a new deadly virus spread around the world from the Chinese city of Wuhan has been a catalogue of woe for the global economy. 2023 has been the first year since 2019 to be relatively shock-free, in the sense that there has been no repeat of the pandemic of 2020, the supply-chain bottlenecks of 2021 or the Russian invasion of Ukraine in 2022. The financial repercussions of conflict in Israel have, until this point, been limited to the region. But that may change. The global economy is still not in a good place as 2024 dawns. Here are a few things to look out for in the year ahead.
Higher interest rates from all the world’s big central banks (other than the Bank of Japan) have had the desired effect. Inflation is on its way down across developed economies and, so far, the side-effects of the medicine have not been as bad as feared this time last year. But with a slowdown under way in the US and recession a looming threat in the UK and the eurozone, attention is now focused on when borrowing costs will be cut and which central bank will be the first to move. Neil Shearing, the chief economist at Capital Economics, thinks the Fed might act more quickly than the European Central Bank even though the growth outlook in the eurozone is “significantly worse”.
History and recent experience suggest the ECB is institutionally more hawkish than the Fed, he says. With UK inflation coming down faster than expected, the Bank of England will struggle to maintain its ultra-cautious approach to rate cuts for much longer. Markets are now pricing in as many as six interest rate cuts by December, forecasting a possible base rate drop from 5.25% to 3.75% The CBA has indicated it envisages 3 interest rate cuts this year..
Problems have been mounting for the world’s poorest countries since the start of the pandemic, with many trapped by a double whammy of weaker growth and rising interest rates. Countries that borrowed heavily in US dollars during the 2010s have seen their repayments soar to record levels in recent years and, according to the World Bank, in the past three years there have been 18 sovereign defaults – more than in the previous two decades combined.
The list of countries struggling with their debts includes Egypt, Ethiopia, Kenya, Lebanon and Pakistan. A debt relief scheme established by the G20 in 2020 has far offered only modest help to a small number of countries. The World Bank chief economist, Indermit Gill, said: “Record debt levels and high interest rates have set many countries on a path to crisis.” Argentina, led by the newly elected right-wing populist Javier Milei and with inflation above 140%, is a country to keep an eye on.
A budget aimed at garnering support for the government is a stone-cold certainty given how the ALP are wavering in the opinion polls.
Britain is not the only developed country on election watch in 2024. The US chooses its president in November and, as things stand, the race looks like being a rerun of the Joe Biden versus Donald Trump contest in 2020. Relations between the US and China are unlikely to improve whoever wins, because the world is splintering into rival blocs and spheres of influence. US growth is likely to disappoint in the first half of 2024 as past interest rate increases feed through, while China’s post-lockdown recovery is flagging.
Beijing is grappling with some big problems: a troubled property sector, rising youth unemployment, weak European demand for its exports, and an increasingly protectionist US. If anything, the cold war between the two biggest economies is likely to get frostier in 2024 as both the US and China turn inwards. The biggest risk is that the cold war turns hot with a Chinese invasion of Taiwan,– something that would dwarf the war between Russia and Ukraine in terms of its economic impact.
One of the areas where competition between the US and China is fiercest is the race to develop generative AI – technology that can produce text, videos and other forms of content almost instantaneously. Many experts see generative AI as the successor to steam power, electricity and the internet: a general purpose technology that will transform economies and societies.
Generative AI arrived with a bang in 2023 and its rapid growth will continue in 2024. On the plus side, AI has the potential to lift countries out of a prolonged period of lowproductivity, with the biggest gains to those that move fastest. On the debit side, there are concerns that the implications of AI have not been thought through, with “smart machines” potentially leading to a concentration of wealth and power, disrupting labour markets, influencing elections and even posing an existential threat to humans.
A feature of the year ahead will be policymakers grappling with the regulatory challenges posed by the new technology. These include ensuring that the benefits are not concentrated in the hands of a few big tech companies; reskilling workforces; and the use of generative AI to create fake content.
A disruptive oil shock was the dog that didn’t bark in 2023. When Hamas chose the 50th anniversary of the Yom Kippur war to launch its attack on Israel, there were fears of a surge in the price of crude to match that seen in late 1973, but it didn’t happen.
The price of a barrel of benchmark Brent crude rose initially – from $84.58 to a peak of just under $94 – before falling back amid hopes that the war will be confined to Gaza. But in recent weeks there have been signs of a broader Middle East conflict developing. BP has suspended shipments of oil through the Red Sea after attacks on ships by Houthi rebels from Yemen. Two of the world’s biggest container operators, AP Møller-Mærsk and Hapag-Lloyd, have sent ships on a longer route around Africa after the action by the Iran-backed militants.
The risks are clear. About 10% of crude passed through the Red Sea in the first half of 2023, while closure of the Strait of Hormuz would choke off about 20% of global supply. The global economy is less dependent on oil than it was five decades ago but a prolonged disruption to supply would push crude prices up above $100 a barrel and lead to a fresh rise in inflation.
Recession, stagflation, a cost of living crisis, damaged public finances and higher interest rates. The four years since a new deadly virus spread around the world from the Chinese city of Wuhan has been a catalogue of woe for the global economy. 2023 has been the first year since 2019 to be relatively shock-free, in the sense that there has been no repeat of the pandemic of 2020, the supply-chain bottlenecks of 2021 or the Russian invasion of Ukraine in 2022. The financial repercussions of conflict in Israel have, until this point, been limited to the region. But that may change. The global economy is still not in a good place as 2024 dawns. Here are a few things to look out for in the year ahead.
Higher interest rates from all the world’s big central banks (other than the Bank of Japan) have had the desired effect. Inflation is on its way down across developed economies and, so far, the side-effects of the medicine have not been as bad as feared this time last year. But with a slowdown under way in the US and recession a looming threat in the UK and the eurozone, attention is now focused on when borrowing costs will be cut and which central bank will be the first to move. Neil Shearing, the chief economist at Capital Economics, thinks the Fed might act more quickly than the European Central Bank even though the growth outlook in the eurozone is “significantly worse”.
History and recent experience suggest the ECB is institutionally more hawkish than the Fed, he says. With UK inflation coming down faster than expected, the Bank of England will struggle to maintain its ultra-cautious approach to rate cuts for much longer. Markets are now pricing in as many as six interest rate cuts by December, forecasting a possible base rate drop from 5.25% to 3.75% The CBA has indicated it envisages 3 interest rate cuts this year..
Problems have been mounting for the world’s poorest countries since the start of the pandemic, with many trapped by a double whammy of weaker growth and rising interest rates. Countries that borrowed heavily in US dollars during the 2010s have seen their repayments soar to record levels in recent years and, according to the World Bank, in the past three years there have been 18 sovereign defaults – more than in the previous two decades combined.
The list of countries struggling with their debts includes Egypt, Ethiopia, Kenya, Lebanon and Pakistan. A debt relief scheme established by the G20 in 2020 has far offered only modest help to a small number of countries. The World Bank chief economist, Indermit Gill, said: “Record debt levels and high interest rates have set many countries on a path to crisis.” Argentina, led by the newly elected right-wing populist Javier Milei and with inflation above 140%, is a country to keep an eye on.
A budget aimed at garnering support for the government is a stone-cold certainty given how the ALP are wavering in the opinion polls.
Britain is not the only developed country on election watch in 2024. The US chooses its president in November and, as things stand, the race looks like being a rerun of the Joe Biden versus Donald Trump contest in 2020. Relations between the US and China are unlikely to improve whoever wins, because the world is splintering into rival blocs and spheres of influence. US growth is likely to disappoint in the first half of 2024 as past interest rate increases feed through, while China’s post-lockdown recovery is flagging.
Beijing is grappling with some big problems: a troubled property sector, rising youth unemployment, weak European demand for its exports, and an increasingly protectionist US. If anything, the cold war between the two biggest economies is likely to get frostier in 2024 as both the US and China turn inwards. The biggest risk is that the cold war turns hot with a Chinese invasion of Taiwan,– something that would dwarf the war between Russia and Ukraine in terms of its economic impact.
One of the areas where competition between the US and China is fiercest is the race to develop generative AI – technology that can produce text, videos and other forms of content almost instantaneously. Many experts see generative AI as the successor to steam power, electricity and the internet: a general purpose technology that will transform economies and societies.
Generative AI arrived with a bang in 2023 and its rapid growth will continue in 2024. On the plus side, AI has the potential to lift countries out of a prolonged period of lowproductivity, with the biggest gains to those that move fastest. On the debit side, there are concerns that the implications of AI have not been thought through, with “smart machines” potentially leading to a concentration of wealth and power, disrupting labour markets, influencing elections and even posing an existential threat to humans.
A feature of the year ahead will be policymakers grappling with the regulatory challenges posed by the new technology. These include ensuring that the benefits are not concentrated in the hands of a few big tech companies; reskilling workforces; and the use of generative AI to create fake content.
A disruptive oil shock was the dog that didn’t bark in 2023. When Hamas chose the 50th anniversary of the Yom Kippur war to launch its attack on Israel, there were fears of a surge in the price of crude to match that seen in late 1973, but it didn’t happen.
The price of a barrel of benchmark Brent crude rose initially – from $84.58 to a peak of just under $94 – before falling back amid hopes that the war will be confined to Gaza. But in recent weeks there have been signs of a broader Middle East conflict developing. BP has suspended shipments of oil through the Red Sea after attacks on ships by Houthi rebels from Yemen. Two of the world’s biggest container operators, AP Møller-Mærsk and Hapag-Lloyd, have sent ships on a longer route around Africa after the action by the Iran-backed militants.
The risks are clear. About 10% of crude passed through the Red Sea in the first half of 2023, while closure of the Strait of Hormuz would choke off about 20% of global supply. The global economy is less dependent on oil than it was five decades ago but a prolonged disruption to supply would push crude prices up above $100 a barrel and lead to a fresh rise in inflation.
Recession, stagflation, a cost of living crisis, damaged public finances and higher interest rates. The four years since a new deadly virus spread around the world from the Chinese city of Wuhan has been a catalogue of woe for the global economy. 2023 has been the first year since 2019 to be relatively shock-free, in the sense that there has been no repeat of the pandemic of 2020, the supply-chain bottlenecks of 2021 or the Russian invasion of Ukraine in 2022. The financial repercussions of conflict in Israel have, until this point, been limited to the region. But that may change. The global economy is still not in a good place as 2024 dawns. Here are a few things to look out for in the year ahead.
Higher interest rates from all the world’s big central banks (other than the Bank of Japan) have had the desired effect. Inflation is on its way down across developed economies and, so far, the side-effects of the medicine have not been as bad as feared this time last year. But with a slowdown under way in the US and recession a looming threat in the UK and the eurozone, attention is now focused on when borrowing costs will be cut and which central bank will be the first to move. Neil Shearing, the chief economist at Capital Economics, thinks the Fed might act more quickly than the European Central Bank even though the growth outlook in the eurozone is “significantly worse”.
History and recent experience suggest the ECB is institutionally more hawkish than the Fed, he says. With UK inflation coming down faster than expected, the Bank of England will struggle to maintain its ultra-cautious approach to rate cuts for much longer. Markets are now pricing in as many as six interest rate cuts by December, forecasting a possible base rate drop from 5.25% to 3.75% The CBA has indicated it envisages 3 interest rate cuts this year..
Problems have been mounting for the world’s poorest countries since the start of the pandemic, with many trapped by a double whammy of weaker growth and rising interest rates. Countries that borrowed heavily in US dollars during the 2010s have seen their repayments soar to record levels in recent years and, according to the World Bank, in the past three years there have been 18 sovereign defaults – more than in the previous two decades combined.
The list of countries struggling with their debts includes Egypt, Ethiopia, Kenya, Lebanon and Pakistan. A debt relief scheme established by the G20 in 2020 has far offered only modest help to a small number of countries. The World Bank chief economist, Indermit Gill, said: “Record debt levels and high interest rates have set many countries on a path to crisis.” Argentina, led by the newly elected right-wing populist Javier Milei and with inflation above 140%, is a country to keep an eye on.
A budget aimed at garnering support for the government is a stone-cold certainty given how the ALP are wavering in the opinion polls.
Britain is not the only developed country on election watch in 2024. The US chooses its president in November and, as things stand, the race looks like being a rerun of the Joe Biden versus Donald Trump contest in 2020. Relations between the US and China are unlikely to improve whoever wins, because the world is splintering into rival blocs and spheres of influence. US growth is likely to disappoint in the first half of 2024 as past interest rate increases feed through, while China’s post-lockdown recovery is flagging.
Beijing is grappling with some big problems: a troubled property sector, rising youth unemployment, weak European demand for its exports, and an increasingly protectionist US. If anything, the cold war between the two biggest economies is likely to get frostier in 2024 as both the US and China turn inwards. The biggest risk is that the cold war turns hot with a Chinese invasion of Taiwan,– something that would dwarf the war between Russia and Ukraine in terms of its economic impact.
One of the areas where competition between the US and China is fiercest is the race to develop generative AI – technology that can produce text, videos and other forms of content almost instantaneously. Many experts see generative AI as the successor to steam power, electricity and the internet: a general purpose technology that will transform economies and societies.
Generative AI arrived with a bang in 2023 and its rapid growth will continue in 2024. On the plus side, AI has the potential to lift countries out of a prolonged period of lowproductivity, with the biggest gains to those that move fastest. On the debit side, there are concerns that the implications of AI have not been thought through, with “smart machines” potentially leading to a concentration of wealth and power, disrupting labour markets, influencing elections and even posing an existential threat to humans.
A feature of the year ahead will be policymakers grappling with the regulatory challenges posed by the new technology. These include ensuring that the benefits are not concentrated in the hands of a few big tech companies; reskilling workforces; and the use of generative AI to create fake content.
A disruptive oil shock was the dog that didn’t bark in 2023. When Hamas chose the 50th anniversary of the Yom Kippur war to launch its attack on Israel, there were fears of a surge in the price of crude to match that seen in late 1973, but it didn’t happen.
The price of a barrel of benchmark Brent crude rose initially – from $84.58 to a peak of just under $94 – before falling back amid hopes that the war will be confined to Gaza. But in recent weeks there have been signs of a broader Middle East conflict developing. BP has suspended shipments of oil through the Red Sea after attacks on ships by Houthi rebels from Yemen. Two of the world’s biggest container operators, AP Møller-Mærsk and Hapag-Lloyd, have sent ships on a longer route around Africa after the action by the Iran-backed militants.
The risks are clear. About 10% of crude passed through the Red Sea in the first half of 2023, while closure of the Strait of Hormuz would choke off about 20% of global supply. The global economy is less dependent on oil than it was five decades ago but a prolonged disruption to supply would push crude prices up above $100 a barrel and lead to a fresh rise in inflation.
The ATO has advised that, while most small businesses "do the right thing", it still sees some sole traders do the following:
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