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Tax Information |
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For U.S. and other non-resident tax information, please refer to the Non-resident Tax Information below. Canadian Oil Sands Trust (the “Trust”) is treated as a mutual fund trust for purposes of the Canadian Income Tax Act. Each year the Trust files an income tax return and allocates all its taxable income to its Unitholders with the result that its income is taxable in the hands of its Unitholders. Distributions paid by the Trust are both a return of capital (i.e. a repayment of a portion of your investment) and a return on capital (i.e. taxable income). The allocation between these two streams is dependent upon the tax deductions that the Trust is entitled to claim against the income it earns from royalties, interest and dividends received from Canadian Oil Sands Limited (the operating company) and income the Trust earns directly. Each year the taxable income portion and return of capital, is calculated and reported in the Trust's T3 return and allocated to each Unitholder who received distributions in that taxation year on the T3 Summary Form, which is mailed out before March 31st. The T3 slip will report only taxable amounts, which are classified and shown as other income (royalty and interest) in box 26, or dividends in box 23. Historically, the portion of the Trust's distributions that were considered taxable has all been classified as "other income". The tax deferred, or return of capital, portion reduces a Unitholder's adjusted cost base ("ACB") of units and is reported in Box 42 of the T3 slip. Units held within a RRSP, RRIF or DPSP Units held outside an RRSP, RRIF or DPSP Adjusted Cost Base ("ACB") Reduction Capital gains from the disposition of Units will be equal to proceeds of the sale of the Units less the ACB of the Units and any reasonable costs of disposition. Additionally, should a taxpayer's ACB be reduced to below zero during a taxation year, an immediate disposition is deemed to have occurred and the negative amount is deemed to be a capital gain. The ACB is then reset to zero. Capital gains are reported by a Unitholder on schedule 3 of the T1 Income Tax Return. Example: An investor purchased a unit of the Trust for $35.00. During the time the investor held the units, the Trust paid distributions totaling $2.00. These distributions were comprised of $1.21 taxable income and $0.79 tax-deferred return of capital. The $1.21 taxable portion is taxable as other income in the year it was received whereas the $0.79 tax-deferred return of capital would not be taxable in that year. This amount reduced the ACB of the trust unit to $34.21. If the investor then sold the Unit for $38.00, a capital gain of $3.79 would result ($38.00 -$34.21). Purchase price = $35.00 Distribution comprised of: Tax deferred return of capital = $0.79 ACB Reduction (must be reported on Schedule 3 of T1 Income Tax Return) Unitholders who are non-residents of As Canadian Oil Sands Trust has not made an election to be treated as a partnership for The non-taxable portion of the cash distribution is treated as a reduction of cost base for purposes of computing gains or losses on disposition of a Unit. Once the full amount of the cost base has been recovered, any additional non-taxable distributions should generally be reported as capital gains. For The above information is not intended to be, and should not be construed to be, legal or tax advice to any Unitholder. Unitholders should obtain independent advice regarding the income tax consequences of their investment. Please refer to Distributions, Canadian Summary and
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