1Yr·
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32 Comments

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I knew that about Telekom and Freenet, but I find such information helpful and don't understand some of the pointless comments here
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@AltesEisen Would that be a topic for exchange? Stocks with good, hopefully stable, tax-free dividends? Who knows which ones, apart from Freenet and Telekom?
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Did you know that if you mix red with green you get the color brown?
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@Reinecke Uh, no?
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@Reinecke I am currently trying to mix a new color. Black is the base color - do you have any suggestions?
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@Smudeo with black, good colors should not be mixed.
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@Smudeo That can't work, black and white are not colors 😉
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@Der_Geldsammler black is all colors. In physics, by the way, white is all colors.
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@Reinecke Interestingly, according to color theory, both colors are "not real" colors, as they cannot be obtained by mixing them
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@Der_Geldsammler additive and subtractive color mixing please, we live in the 21st century after all.
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@Reinecke Red and green should make yellow, not brown😅
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At $FNTN Freenet too. Please note, however, that the tax is then deducted when the share is sold. So the tax burden is then due once over all years of the dividend. This means that your equity increases annually by the dividend value.
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@Smudeo I have had "my" freenet for so long that it has a mathematically/tax-negative entry price. I never have to sell and continue to receive tax-free dividends. Can go on like this
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Did you know it's illegal in Alaska to sleep with a bedroom overlooking the road without curtains? Apparently moose walking by could be harassed!
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For the sake of completeness, it should be mentioned that this is **still** the case.
At Swiss Post, for example, the pot was empty in 2021.

Edit: Strictly speaking, the dividend is not tax-free either. The tax on the payout is deferred until the shares are sold.
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@G30G43BR4 What do you mean the pot was empty? Is the dividend at DHL no longer "tax-free"?
@stock_strategist_86 The dividend is only "tax-free" if it is withdrawn from the tax contribution account. And this is empty at some point. This was the case for Swiss Post in 2021. The dividend paid in 21 was the first that had to be taxed.
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The dividend is not really "tax-free". On the ex-date, the taxable purchase price is reduced by the distribution, so that the dividend is implicitly subject to additional tax when it is sold. Hold forever = tax-free
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@KLatt good explanation
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No. Are there any other AGs that do this?
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@MrMister $PBB
But beware, the tax is only deferred by reducing your ek of the share by the dividend
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@MrMister Freenet, Vonovia
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@MrMister Freenet, Vonovia
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@MrMister Still makes sense for long-term investors. It would be nice to have a comprehensive list of such stocks. I have held Freenet, for example, for years
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@7Trader only for Austrians or also for Germans with a German deposit?
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@userc818a6f2df6247c9 I think this applies to everyone, because dividends are not paid, but part of the contribution is paid back.....
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Yes. I still won't buy it 👍
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Very interesting.
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