Investing from Belgium



You can apply the Bogleheads® investment philosophy if you live in Belgium, but you must be aware of a few particularities. This page introduces a series of them. Please ask portfolio questions in the bogleheads forum and contact a professional advisor before acting on them.

The general guidance given in EU investing is applicable. The pages Investing from the Netherlands and UK investing also have useful information.

This page is not intended for US resident investors, as their situation is very specific.

Saving and investing in Belgium
The Belgian investor has access to: Most Belgian retail banks offer mutual funds and access to several stock exchanges (most banks have an in-house broker. Alternatively the Belgian investor can use one of the (foreign) often online low-cost brokers.
 * Regulated and unregulated saving accounts (with government protection until 100,000 Euro).
 * Various instruments that offer protection of the principal: Certificate of Deposit (kasbons), term accounts, government bonds (staatsleningen or Obligations Linéaires -Lineaire Obligaties; abbreviated OLO, in one of these nice Belgian bilingual abbreviations), and corporate bonds.
 * Stocks: Please note that the stock market in Belgium is very small, dominated by a few companies and not very diversified. As Belgium is very integrated into the EU, investors seeking broader diversification can consider the EU as the home-market.
 * Many people (72% in 2014) own their house in Belgium. The mortgage payments provide some tax benefit.
 * Mutual funds and ETFs: In Belgium, an investor is currently able to buy index funds in the form of exchange-traded funds (ETFs) through a bank or broker and there are companies offering index mutual funds. Please note that ETFs have a much smaller total expense ratio (TER) than the comparable Belgian mutual funds.
 * Saving through insurance contracts: The tax on the insurance premium (2%), the high total expense ratio (TER) (typically larger then 1.3%), and entry fees (typically 3%, even going up to 6%, but all negotiable) and exit fees for these funds are very high compared to what is commonly considered acceptable for Bogleheads.
 * Tak-21 savings insurance (tak21-spaarverzekering) : life insurance insuring the combined premiums (after costs) and a guaranteed fixed return augmented with an optional bonus.
 * Tak-23 investment insurance (tak-23 beleggingsverzekeringen) : life insurance investing in underlying mutual funds.
 * Tak-26: not an insurance, hence no premium tax of 2%, but no exception on tax on return.

Taxation of investments in Belgium

 * 27% taxation on income from investments (interest, dividends, royalties received by the individual investor)
 * Except for the first 1,880 euro interest on regulated (gereglementeerde) savings accounts which is exempt. Interest above that is taxed at 15%.
 * Except life insurance that is not taxed on the return; if duration of the contract is longer then 8 years, or death-coverage more then 130% of the capital.
 * Except a few other other exceptions such as real-estate collective investment trusts (bevaks), social investments, and some other movable assets.
 * No taxation on capital gains, including the dividends immediately reinvested in accumulating funds.
 * Except for 33% taxation on speculative short term gains if the position was held less then 6 months (starts on Jan 1st 2016).
 * Except for funds with more than 25% bonds; capital gain on bonds portion will subject to 27% tax.
 * No taxation on net-wealth.
 * Tax on stock exchange transactions (0.09%, 0.27%, 1.32%).

Retirement investing in Belgium
In Belgium, retirement savings are often formulated according to a "four pillar" funding system. The first two pillars are pensions, the third pillar is tax-advantaged savings and the fourth pillar are the different kinds of after-tax savings.

First and second pillar : pensions

 * The first pillar consists of a state pension (rustpensioen) that provides a basic income, the level of which is linked to the statutory minimum wage and the amount of years that a person has contributed.
 * The second pillar consists of the collective pension schemes (groepsverzekering) linked to the employer. A majority of the Belgian employees employed in the private work space have some level of collective pension. Previously these pensions were often 'defined benefit', now they are mostly 'defined contribution' by the employer. These have a guaranteed (accumulating) return (3.75% until the end of 2015; from 2016 onward this is 1.75% with a possible participation in the gains). A limited number pension schemes allow an extra personal contribution.

Tax-advantaged investments
The third pillar includes the tax advantaged investments. Two kinds of tax-advantaged saving exist: individual personal pension saving and the long term saving. The contracts are typical until age 60 or 65. The contributions result in a tax-credit of 30% for the yearly investing. At age 60 the balance is subjected to a 8% 'liberating' taxation. . No further taxation will happen. Withdrawals before the end of the contract are taxed 33%.


 * 1) The individual pension saving has a maximum contribution of 940 euro per year.
 * 2) * One can invest via a bank or via life insurance.
 * 3) * One has the choice to save in a fund with guaranteed return (pensioenspaarverzekering) or to save indirectly in mutual funds (pensioenspaarfunds). For the insurance contracts, the underlying product is a Tak-21 or Tak-23 respectively.
 * 4) ** The pensioenspaarverzekering guarantees fixed return augmented with an optional bonus. The return is announced each year.
 * 5) ** The returns of the pensioenspaarfunds are determined by the underlying funds. The typical choices are defensive/moderate/aggressive.
 * 6) Long-term saving (Langetermijnsparen) through tak-21 insurance contracts for people who do not have a mortgage payment deduction. Contribution and income limits are shown in the accompanying table.

Rebalancing is possible inside the third pillar but one needs to remain within the same "type" to avoid taxation. One switch per year is often allowed without costs.

Which funds to invest in from Belgium
The EU investing wiki page mentions useful aspects of funds to consider, such as: whether the fund distributes dividends; if it is synthetically or physically replicating; and the distinction between base currency and trading currency.

Type of ETF useful for investing from Belgium
Belgian investors can reduce tax and compliance costs through non-registered accumulating ETFs domiciled in Ireland:
 * Transaction tax for funds not registered in Belgium is 0,27% as opposed to 1,32% for funds registered in Belgium.
 * Accumulating ETF funds: because Belgium taxes distributed dividends at 27% (but does not tax reinvested dividends, nor taxes capital gains if the fund is held longer than six months).
 * Domiciled in Ireland : because Ireland does not tax foreign investors on dividends or estates and provides access to a wide treaty network.
 * Nonresident alien & Irish ETFs explains how ETFs domiciled in Ireland are more cost effective than holding US domiciled funds.
 * International investors are often advised not to buy US domiciled assets because of US estate taxes, FATCA (Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act) and because their country does not have a withholding tax treaty (see also Nonresident alien taxation).
 * Belgians investing directly in US-domiciled ETFs could qualify for the 15% US withholding tax rate on dividends, but since US domiciled ETFs are almost always distributing dividends, Belgians will suffer on top of that a 27% tax from the Belgian government and hence only retain 62.05% of the original dividend.

Sample equity ETF index funds
Like many international investors, people investing from Belgium could consider to approximate the global equity market.

Example funds (using the following selection criteria: all-cap, low costs, fund size is decent, full replication or a high amount of stocks relative to the index when using optimized sampling, accumulating):

The 3 funds selected follow MSCI indexes, this avoids problems with incompatible index definitions. Based on this, a division 15% WDSC, 10% EIMI, 75% IWDA is a good approximation.
 * IWDA- iShares Core MSCI World - excludes emerging Market and small caps
 * EIMI - Emerging Market - excluding small cap -represent now 10% of the global capitalization.
 * WDSC- world small-cap stocks - excluding emerging markets - according to MSCI definition, small caps are 15% of the market.

Sample EURO and European equity ETF index funds
The following funds can be used to focus on Europe:

For equity investing in the Eurozone:

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Sample bond ETF index funds
Belgian investors have access to many options for bond ETFs through one of the ETF exchanges: government bond funds (government bonds reduce credit risk); corporate, investment grade and high yield bond funds; inflation-linked funds; funds that are euro-denominated or funds in other currencies (generally bonds in your own currency are advised if bonds are used for protection. This avoids currency volatility which is a big part of short term volatility with bonds). Funds are available across the duration spectrum (lower duration means lower interest risk). Typically each risk reduction also reduces the expected return.

Some examples for bond ETFs:
 * Justetf.som search for world bonds accumulating with AUM >100M€
 * Examples for broad market, euro denominated bonds from the Amsterdam stock exchange; courtesy of iShares' product overview:

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