It does tax personal securities income (dividends and capital gains alike). There is just one exception and that is foreign (i.e. non-Georgian) securities.
Why are you mentioning Georgian securities? The whole thread is about US securities i.e trading foreign securities. My answer was in response to trading foreign securities income obviously....lol.
General consensus among serious lawyers and tax advisors with regards to foreign securities:
"Trading", no matter if private or professional, is considered a business activity if these foreign securities are held for a period of less than five to six months. There is no fixed time frame. RS uses this deliberately.
- "Professional trading" -> "Professional" -> "income taxation"
- "trading" -> "Professional" -> "income taxation"
You are usually considered to be on the safe side after six months.
So active trading in foreign securities with a offshore broker will be taxed your saying when Georgia does not tax foreign sourced income? Your saying they would still consider this offshore income taxable in Georgia due to it being considered a business activity. Is that what your saying? If so it's good to know. Do you have a source to confirm this all....thx?