The Pathway
- An SMSF member with OCI represents the SMSF in India.
- Funds move directly between the SMSF’s Australian bank and the OCI rep’s NRE/NRO account.
- Investments are in direct shares or mutual funds in India, always at arm’s length and in the OCI rep’s name.
- Indian tax returns are lodged under the OCI rep’s name.
- Australian SMSF returns declare Indian income and capital gains, claiming foreign tax credits for Indian taxes paid.
- On asset sale in India, obtain tax clearance and remit proceeds directly to the SMSF’s Australian account.
The Advantage
- Growth: Access high-growth Indian markets with returns of 15–25% p.a.
- Familiarity: Invest where you understand the market.
- Costs: Benefit from lower advice and implementation costs.
The Risk
- Market Risk: High-growth opportunities come with greater market volatility.
- Currency Risk: Strong Indian returns can be offset by adverse currency movements.
- Costs: Overseas investments may mean higher accounting and audit fees.
The Quirks
- Invest in other countries? Yes—SIS law allows SMSF investments in listed securities across 180+ countries.
- Real estate overseas? Technically yes, but SMSF trustees must prove each year:
- Asset ownership for the SMSF
- Asset value as at 30 June
- All income and capital returns to the SMSF Australian auditors lack access to foreign registries, so you’ll need a licensed valuer each year—adding cost and complexity.
