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Motormouth: Cars can ‘read,' but sometimes not very well
Motormouth: Cars can ‘read,' but sometimes not very well

Miami Herald

time4 days ago

  • Automotive
  • Miami Herald

Motormouth: Cars can ‘read,' but sometimes not very well

Q: In response to a recent question, you indicated that automobile displays of speed limits are GPS mediated. While that may be true, an SUV we had would consistently read an exit ramp speed sign on Minnesota Route 62 at 169 mph. Even more interesting, the car would decelerate as we passed a County 50 road sign. P.H., Edina, Minnesota A: Yeah, some vehicles mistake route numbers for speed limit numbers. Like me, they may be a bit numerically dyslexic. Or, perhaps, a remedial reading class is in order. Thanks for the chuckle. Q: I recently took my 2018 Buick Encore with 44,000 miles in for an oil change at an all-purpose auto repair facility. The service manager advised (and showed me) that my coolant level had dropped about 2 inches below the fill indicator line on the reservoir, and that as a result, I should get a complete cooling system flush. He explained that there might be acidity in the coolant, which could ultimately corrode internal engine parts. My owner's manual recommended this service at 100,000 miles. D.B., Winfield, Illinois A: I would top off the coolant with some premixed stuff. Then I would check the coolant reservoir regularly. The level is usually higher after running the engine due to expansion. The next morning, it will be lower as the coolant is sucked back into the cold engine. If you keep adding coolant, have the cooling system checked out. The service manager is right that worn out coolant can lead to internal engine problems, especially the water pump. Q: I bought a 2024 Ford Maverick hybrid truck in July 2024. It has 3,000 miles on it so far and I was wondering when it should have its first oil change. Since the engine is running on the battery part time, how do you figure the miles it has actually driven in a year? The owner's manual doesn't say anything about it. I hope you can answer me on this. R.D., Yorkville, Illinois A: It is often hard to give up control and allow the vehicle's oil life monitor to let you know when it's time to change the oil. But that is what you should do. Q: I own a 2021 BMW 430xi. It has almost 8,000 miles on it. Several months ago, the warning sign came up and it indicated my oil needs to be changed. My husband insists it does not. I had it changed about two years ago, before the warranty expired. When I contacted the dealer about it, they said the oil is "old" so, yes, it needs to be changed. My husband insists it does not. Of course, the warning sign appears every time I drive, which annoys me and worries me that I am causing harm to the engine due to my husband's stubbornness. Who is right here? D.I., Dyer, Indiana A: BMW uses a condition-based service system; it monitors the condition of the oil. The CBS system tracks your oil's life based on mileage, the amount of fuel consumed and an oil quality sensor in the oil pan. Trust it when it tells you to change the oil. Q: I have a 2018 Subaru Outback with 112,000 miles on it. I take very good care of this car and faithfully follow the manufacturer's maintenance recommendations. The dealer tells me that I need to replace the timing chain at 120,000 miles. Other sources inform me that I never need to replace the timing chain. What's your thought about this? C.H., Cologne, Minnesota A: The timing chains on the FB25 engines are maintenance-free. Copyright (C) 2025, Tribune Content Agency, LLC. Portions copyrighted by the respective providers.

I bought shares in the company I worked for but how do I figure out any tax liability
I bought shares in the company I worked for but how do I figure out any tax liability

Irish Times

time18-05-2025

  • Business
  • Irish Times

I bought shares in the company I worked for but how do I figure out any tax liability

I read your article online about a couple selling Bank of Ireland shares and wondering about capital gains. My wife worked in Bank of Ireland from 1976 to 1991 and got shares in lieu of bonus and dividends. We have lots of paperwork but difficulty in seeing what she actually paid for the share. Any advice? Mr P.H. It's something that we never really think about at the time, the need to keep track of things like when we received or bought shares and when we sold them. READ MORE Dividends are different because they count as income and therefore should be declared to Revenue at the end of every tax year. But it really is only when we look to sell shares that many people realise they need the purchase data – when and for how much – in order to establish what if any capital gains tax liability they have. I'm always surprised that people who actively choose to invest don't understand the need for such paperwork but this situation is different. Your wife is clearly an accidental investor who took advantage of an opportunity in her workplace. That's not going to make the job any easier really, given how far back we are looking here. Bank shares were blue-chip back then in the days when the financial crash was a scenario that not even the most pessimistic shareholder could foresee. They had two advantages. First, they tended to rise in value over time, allowing for the temporary setbacks that are inevitable with any listed company. Second, they were reliable sources of dividends, making them attractive to investors who were looking for some income as well as capital appreciation over time. I contacted the bank, with your permission, and they did go looking back in their files to see if they could identify how many shares you would have received in lieu of bonus over the years that such a scheme was available. However, they have run up against a brick wall, ironically with a piece of legislation that was designed to protect your privacy and give you more control over your own personal information – the EU's General Data Protection Legislation (GDPR). Bank of Ireland tells me that, as we are talking about a period that is more than 30 years ago, 'in line with our GDPR requirements we can no longer hold this information'. But all is not lost. The bank may no longer have a record of what shares you got when but every listed company has a share registrar – a company that is responsible for keeping track of the ownership of its shares. It keeps a register of who owns what, when they acquire them and when they sell them. In this case, the share registrar is Computershare, one of the most established and largest players in that market. In fairness, the bank did try to approach it for information that might assist your wife but, as they correctly point out, they will only deal directly with individual shareholders in respect of their investment, not third parties. Like everyone these days, Computershare would prefer you to deal with them online through their Investor Centre. And, to be fair, that can be the most efficient way. However, if your wife holds only these Bank of Ireland shares and does not intend to trade otherwise, it hardly seems to be worth the hassle of acquiring yet another online login and password that will inevitably be forgotten. Computershare can also be contacted by phone or by letter. The phone number depends on the company in which you hold the shares. In the case of Bank of Ireland, the correct number is 01 2475414. However, given the level of detail here, it might make more sense to put things in writing which you can do to: Computershare Investor Services (Ireland) Limited, 3100 Lake Drive, Citywest Business Campus, Dublin 24, D24 AK82. Interestingly in this day and age, they are not particularly keen to receive email. Now, from what I understand, your wife does know how many shares she now holds, or at least how many she held back in the day – we'll come back to that in a minute. What she wants to know is how many of those shares were acquired on which specific dates – and at what price. Computershare should be able to track back to when the various shares were acquired but you want to check with them before they start if there is any charge for that exercise and, ideally, how long it will take. A bigger issue is when it comes to the key issue of price. I suspect staff may have been able to buy those shares at a slightly discounted rate to the market and, for capital gains tax purposes, that is the figure that is important. I'm not sure Computershare would have those details. But at least when you have the date the shares were bought, you will be able to find out what the market price was on those dates by checking back on The Irish Times epaper, or possibly with the bank. Capital gains The good news, in a twisted sort of way, is that it probably does not matter in terms of capital gains tax, as I cannot imagine any circumstances in which your wife would have a CGT liability. At the end of last week, Bank of Ireland shares were trading at €11.60. If we turn the clock back to, say, 1984, you would have paid between £283.5 pence and £4,44 for those shares over the course of that year at market rates – which translates into euro at somewhere between €3.60 and €5.63. If she was able to buy at a discount those figures would be slightly lower. However, the shares your wife bought in the 1980s and early 1990s are very different creatures from the Bank of Ireland shares that trade today. In 1999, the bank split each share in two so the number of shares your wife owned at that time would have doubled. However, in 2017, as the bank tried to get its share register back in order following the chaos of the financial crash, it executed a share consolidation in which shareholders got one new share in Bank of Ireland for every 30 shares they held previously. So let's say you bought 30 shares in 1984 at, say, the equivalent of €3.74 each. Following the split in July 1999, you would now have 60 shares in place of these 30 shares, with each having a notional 'purchase price' of €1.87. Before the split the shares had been trading at €18.10, On the first day of trading after the split each of the divided shares was worth €9.25, so your wife was certainly well ahead on her investment at that stage. Fast forward to 2017, and the value of those shares had collapsed to 24.6 cent before the bank's consolidation. By giving you one share for every 30 you owned at the time, after the consolidation you now owned two shares in relation to those 30 we bought back in 1984 in our example and the notional price of each of those two shares was €56.10. When they started trading after the consolidation, they were doing so at a price of €7.38. Compared to your rebased purchase price of €56,10, you can see how disastrously in the red this investment now was. Since then, the shares have traded within that five euro band, closing last Friday at €11.60. They are on a rising trend but, as you can see, it will be an awful long time before your wife is even back at par, never mind about having to worry about capital gains tax. You would need to go through that exercise for each tranche of shares acquire din lieu of bonus to get an accurate fix on the financial position. That doesn't mean their purchase price is irrelevant. If you were to sell those notional 1984 shares now, you would be at a loss of €44.50 on every one of today's shares sold. That capital loss can be set against gains you might make from the sale of other shares or assets. You will not have to worry about any capital gains on any sale once the loss crystallised in any sale of Bank of Ireland stock is fully offset, so it is worth making sure you track down the correct purchase price. But at least you have the peace of mid of knowing that you'll not need to worry about a tax bill whatever happens. As you'll note from a recent reply, any actual physical share certificates that your wife holds are no longer valid as all Irish shares have, as of the start of this year, transferred to electronic form. It doesn't change her rights: in fact, it does make things easier if and when she goes to sell any of the shares but it can be confusing for people. Please send your queries to Dominic Coyle, Q&A, The Irish Times, 24-28 Tara Street Dublin 2, or by email to with a contact phone number. This column is a reader service and is not intended to replace professional advice

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