Bond Washing

Bond Washing

Bond washing is the practice of selling a bond just before it pays a coupon payment and then buying it back once the coupon has been paid. Some jurisdictions consider the interest to be the income of the transferor or original bondholder and will, thus, tax the investor on that income if the investor is discovered to have carried out a bond washing scheme. An investor that sells his or her bonds prior to coupon payment and repurchases it after payment has been made, does so to convert interest income into a capital gain, a process known as bond washing. In this manner, the original bond investor holds the bond again but avoids paying taxes on the bond coupon income. Because bond washing is a tax avoidance scheme in which buyers and sellers may collude to benefit from tax avoidance, it is frowned upon and has been banned in many countries; the practice still exists, however.

Bond washing is when a bond is sold immediately prior to its coupon payment, and then repurchased once it has been paid.

What Is Bond Washing?

Bond washing is the practice of selling a bond just before it pays a coupon payment and then buying it back once the coupon has been paid. Bond washing can result in tax-free capital gains because after the coupon has been paid, the bond will sell for less.

Bond washing is when a bond is sold immediately prior to its coupon payment, and then repurchased once it has been paid.
The idea is that the bond's price will be lower following an interest payment, so they can record a capital gain while forgoing the interest income.
Bond washing is a tax-avoidance strategy and has been disallowed in several jurisdictions.

How Bond Washing Works

Bond issuers make periodic interest payments, called coupons, to bondholders throughout the term life of the debt security. The coupons may be paid quarterly, semi-annually, or annually, and represent interest income to investors. The interest income is taxed by the government at the end of the tax year.

After a coupon is paid, the price of the bond typically decreases by the amount of the coupon. An investor that sells his or her bonds prior to coupon payment and repurchases it after payment has been made, does so to convert interest income into a capital gain, a process known as bond washing.

Investors in the high-income tax bracket are usually the utilizers of this strategy. A high-income earner may reduce or avoid his tax liability by transferring securities cum dividend to another person, say a friend or family member, who has no taxable income or falls in a low tax bracket.

Bond washing is a more effective strategy for interest-paying bonds. Its tax avoidance benefits are nonexistent for deferred interest bonds or zero-coupon bonds that pay accrued interest at maturity only.

Bond Washing and Tax Avoidance

Bond washing is a method of tax avoidance that involves selling a bond cum dividend and buying it back ex-dividend. To achieve this, a bondholder finds a buyer that is willing to purchase the bond and receive the coupon as the bondholder of record. The buyer agrees to sell the bond back to the original holder at a predetermined date after the tax period closes.

The sale price, usually the same amount as the original purchase price, is also agreed on by both parties involved in the collusion. In this manner, the original bond investor holds the bond again but avoids paying taxes on the bond coupon income. In effect, the investor generates a tax-free capital gain on his or her sale and repurchase transaction.

Because bond washing is a tax avoidance scheme in which buyers and sellers may collude to benefit from tax avoidance, it is frowned upon and has been banned in many countries; the practice still exists, however.

Some jurisdictions consider the interest to be the income of the transferor or original bondholder and will, thus, tax the investor on that income if the investor is discovered to have carried out a bond washing scheme. Fixed income investors looking to implement this strategy should compare the benefits received from avoiding taxes on interest income to the costs that may be incurred from any fines or penalties that may come about from implementing this measure.

Related terms:

Accrued Interest & Example

Accrued interest refers to the interest that has been incurred on a loan or other financial obligation but has not yet been paid out. read more

Bond : Understanding What a Bond Is

A bond is a fixed income investment in which an investor loans money to an entity (corporate or governmental) that borrows the funds for a defined period of time at a fixed interest rate. read more

Capital Gain

Capital gain refers to an increase in a capital asset's value and is considered to be realized when the asset is sold. read more

Coupon

A coupon is the annual interest rate paid on a bond, expressed as a percentage of the face value, also referred to as the "coupon rate." read more

Cum Dividend

Cum dividend is when a buyer of a security will receive a dividend that a company has declared but has not yet paid. read more

Death Put

A death put is an option added to a bond that guarantees that the heirs of the deceased can sell it back to the issuer at par value. read more

Deferred Interest Bond

Deferred interest bond is a debt instrument that pays the accruing interest as a lump-sum amount at a later date rather than in periodic increments. read more

Ex-Dividend : Examples & Key Dates

Ex-dividend is a classification in stock trading that indicates when a declared dividend belongs to the seller rather than the buyer. read more

Fixed Income & Examples

Fixed income refers to assets and securities that bear fixed cash flows for investors, such as fixed rate interest or dividends. read more

Holder of Record

A holder of record is the person who is the registered owner of a security and who has the rights, benefits, and responsibilities of ownership.  read more