Tidy profit for DIY funds with Telstra shares

By John Collett
Updated October 17 2014 - 10:13am, first published September 14 2014 - 12:15am
 
 
Crunching the numbers: Senior analyst James Carlisle says someone holding the shares through a self managed super fund, who is over 60, retired and in the pension phase, and therefore paying zero tax, could make 64 cents.
Crunching the numbers: Senior analyst James Carlisle says someone holding the shares through a self managed super fund, who is over 60, retired and in the pension phase, and therefore paying zero tax, could make 64 cents.
Crunching the numbers: Senior analyst James Carlisle says someone holding the shares through a self managed super fund, who is over 60, retired and in the pension phase, and therefore paying zero tax, could make 64 cents.
Crunching the numbers: Senior analyst James Carlisle says someone holding the shares through a self managed super fund, who is over 60, retired and in the pension phase, and therefore paying zero tax, could make 64 cents.
Crunching the numbers: Senior analyst James Carlisle says someone holding the shares through a self managed super fund, who is over 60, retired and in the pension phase, and therefore paying zero tax, could make 64 cents.
Crunching the numbers: Senior analyst James Carlisle says someone holding the shares through a self managed super fund, who is over 60, retired and in the pension phase, and therefore paying zero tax, could make 64 cents.

Those of Telstra's 1.4 million shareholders who hold the shares through their super funds stand to make as much as 64 cents a share, or a 11 per cent return on the current market price, by selling their shares into the $1 billion off-market buy-back.

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