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Unit Trust - Subscriber

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UNIT TRUST (SUBSCRIBER)

This Deed of Trust requires a Trustee to be appointed by the Unit Holders. You have the ability to have ten Unit Holders (with Joint holders). Each Unit Holder agrees to take up the number of units in the Unit Trust that they determine (and which are set out in the Deed). The monies paid by the Unit Holders comprise the trust fund that is held on trust by the Trustee. The Trust has a life of 80 years.

The Deed sets out the rights, duties and obligations of the Trustee, the ability for Unit Holders to transfer their units (rights of pre-emption), calling and conduct at Unit Holder meetings.

The Deed allows for the Trustee to be replaced and for the Trust Deed to be amended.

From a taxation perspective, this Deed has been drafted to provide for the Unit Trust to be (initially) a fixed trust. Where a Trust incurs tax losses, certain rules (set out in trust loss measures in the Income Tax Assessment Act (ITAA)) need to be satisfied in order to carry forward those losses.

A trust is a fixed trust if the Unit holders have fixed entitlements to all of the income and capital of the Trust. No one Unit holder has the ability to receive more or less given certain circumstances.

For a unit trust to be a fixed trust, the Trust Deed must contain a clause that states that units can only be redeemed or issued for a price determined on the basis of the net asset value, according to Australian accounting principles, of the unit trust at the time of redemption or issue. If the Trust Deed allows for other methods of valuing new units or the redemption of units then the Trust will be a "non-fixed trust".

If your Trust is a fixed trust, to carry forward any losses it makes, Step 2 is to apply two (of the possible four) tests: