home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
Text File | 2004-04-18 | 61.0 KB | 1,174 lines |
- Path: senator-bedfellow.mit.edu!dreaderd!not-for-mail
- Message-ID: <investment-faq/general/part15_1082200966@rtfm.mit.edu>
- Supersedes: <investment-faq/general/part15_1079601013@rtfm.mit.edu>
- Expires: 31 May 2004 11:22:46 GMT
- References: <investment-faq/general/part1_1082200966@rtfm.mit.edu>
- X-Last-Updated: 2003/03/17
- From: noreply@invest-faq.com (Christopher Lott)
- Newsgroups: misc.invest.misc,misc.invest.stocks,misc.invest.technical,misc.invest.options,misc.answers,news.answers
- Subject: The Investment FAQ (part 15 of 20)
- Followup-To: misc.invest.misc
- Summary: Answers to frequently asked questions about investments.
- Should be read by anyone who wishes to post to misc.invest.*
- Organization: The Investment FAQ publicity department
- Keywords: invest, finance, stock, bond, fund, broker, exchange, money, FAQ
- URL: http://invest-faq.com/
- Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.Edu
- Originator: faqserv@penguin-lust.MIT.EDU
- Date: 17 Apr 2004 11:28:39 GMT
- Lines: 1150
- NNTP-Posting-Host: penguin-lust.mit.edu
- X-Trace: 1082201319 senator-bedfellow.mit.edu 576 18.181.0.29
- Xref: senator-bedfellow.mit.edu misc.invest.misc:42161 misc.invest.stocks:840680 misc.invest.technical:101769 misc.invest.options:54804 misc.answers:17228 news.answers:270010
-
- Archive-name: investment-faq/general/part15
- Version: $Id: part15,v 1.61 2003/03/17 02:44:30 lott Exp lott $
- Compiler: Christopher Lott
-
- The Investment FAQ is a collection of frequently asked questions and
- answers about investments and personal finance. This is a plain-text
- version of The Investment FAQ, part 15 of 20. The web site
- always has the latest version, including in-line links. Please browse
- http://invest-faq.com/
-
-
- Terms of Use
-
- The following terms and conditions apply to the plain-text version of
- The Investment FAQ that is posted regularly to various newsgroups.
- Different terms and conditions apply to documents on The Investment
- FAQ web site.
-
- The Investment FAQ is copyright 2003 by Christopher Lott, and is
- protected by copyright as a collective work and/or compilation,
- pursuant to U.S. copyright laws, international conventions, and other
- copyright laws. The contents of The Investment FAQ are intended for
- personal use, not for sale or other commercial redistribution.
- The plain-text version of The Investment FAQ may be copied, stored,
- made available on web sites, or distributed on electronic media
- provided the following conditions are met:
- + The URL of The Investment FAQ home page is displayed prominently.
- + No fees or compensation are charged for this information,
- excluding charges for the media used to distribute it.
- + No advertisements appear on the same web page as this material.
- + Proper attribution is given to the authors of individual articles.
- + This copyright notice is included intact.
-
-
- Disclaimers
-
- Neither the compiler of nor contributors to The Investment FAQ make
- any express or implied warranties (including, without limitation, any
- warranty of merchantability or fitness for a particular purpose or
- use) regarding the information supplied. The Investment FAQ is
- provided to the user "as is". Neither the compiler nor contributors
- warrant that The Investment FAQ will be error free. Neither the
- compiler nor contributors will be liable to any user or anyone else
- for any inaccuracy, error or omission, regardless of cause, in The
- Investment FAQ or for any damages (whether direct or indirect,
- consequential, punitive or exemplary) resulting therefrom.
-
- Rules, regulations, laws, conditions, rates, and such information
- discussed in this FAQ all change quite rapidly. Information given
- here was current at the time of writing but is almost guaranteed to be
- out of date by the time you read it. Mention of a product does not
- constitute an endorsement. Answers to questions sometimes rely on
- information given in other answers. Readers outside the USA can reach
- US-800 telephone numbers, for a charge, using a service such as MCI's
- Call USA. All prices are listed in US dollars unless otherwise
- specified.
-
- Please send comments and new submissions to the compiler.
-
- --------------------Check http://invest-faq.com/ for updates------------------
-
- Subject: Strategy - Survey of Stock Investment Strategies
-
- Last-Revised: 20 Jan 2000
- Contributed-By: John Price (johnp at sherlockinvesting.com)
-
- This article offers a brief survey of several strategies that investors
- use to guide their stock purchases and sales.
-
- Before we start the survey, here's a golden rule of investing: Know why
- you are buying a particular stock -- donÆt wait until its price goes up
- or down to think about it. Many investors are not sure why they bought
- a stock in the first place, so when a dramatic fall in price happens,
- they're not sure what to do next.
-
- Here's an example. Let's say you bought Intel. When you know why you
- bought Intel you will have a stronger basis for knowing what to do when
- its price goes up, or down, or even stays the same. So if Intel starts
- to go down in price and you bought it as a momentum play, then you will
- probably want to sell as quickly as possible. But if you bought it as
- an undervalued stock, and if the fundamentals have not changed, then you
- might want to buy more."
-
- Of course, every investor and every stock presents a different reason
- for contacting your broker. But we have to start somewhere, so here is
- my analysis of the six main investment styles.
-
-
-
- Brother-in-law investor
- Your brother-in-law phones, or perhaps your stockbroker or the
- investment writer for the regional newspaper. He has the scoop on
- a great stock but you will have to act quickly. If you are likely
- to buy in this situation, then you are a "brother-in-law investor."
- Brother-in-law investors rely on the advice of other people to make
- their decisions.
-
-
- Technical investor
- Moving averages, candlestick patterns, Gann charts and resistance
- levels are the sort of things the technical investor deals with.
- Technical investors were once called chartists because their
- central activity was making and studying charts of stock prices.
- Nowadays this is usually done on a computer where advanced
- mathematics combines with grunt power to unlock past patterns and
- correlations. The hope is that they will carry into the future.
-
-
- Economist investor
- This type of investor bases his decisions on forecasts of economic
- parameters. A typical statement is "The dollar will strengthen
- over the next six months, unemployment will decrease, interest
- rates will climb -- a great time to get into bank stocks." Random
- walk investor This is the area of the academic investor and is part
- of what is called Modern Portfolio Theory. "I have no idea whether
- stock XYZ will go up or down, but it has a high beta. Since I
- donÆt mind the risk, IÆll buy it since I will, on the average, be
- compensated for this risk." At the core of this strategy is the
- Efficient Market Hypothesis EMH. There are a number of versions of
- it but they all end up at the same point: the current price of a
- stock is what you should buy, or sell, it for. This is the fair
- price and no amount of analysis will enable you to do any better,
- says the EMH. With the Efficient Market Hypothesis, stock prices
- are assumed to follow paths that can be described by tosses of a
- coin.
-
-
- Scuttlebutt investor This approach to investing was pioneered by
- Philip Fisher and consists of piecing together information on
- companies obtained informally through wide-ranging conversations,
- interviews, press-reports and, simply, gossip. In his book Common
- Stocks and Uncommon Profits, Fisher wrote:
-
- Go to five companies in an industry, ask each of them
- intelligent questions about the points of strength and
- weakness of the other four, and nine times out of ten a
- surprisingly detailed and accurate picture of all five
- will emerge.
-
- Fisher also suggests that useful information can be obtained from
- vendors, customers, research scientists and executives of trade
- associations.
-
-
- Value Investor
- In the fourth edition of the investment classic _Security
- Analysis_, the authors Benjamin Graham, David Dodd, and Sydney
- Cottle speak of the "attempts to value a stock independently of its
- current market price". This independent value has many names such
- as `intrinsic value,Æ `investment value,Æ `reasonable value,Æ `fair
- value,Æ and `appraised value.Æ They go on to say:
-
- A general definition of intrinsic value would be "that
- value which is justified by the facts, e.g., assets,
- earnings, dividends, [and] definite prospects, including
- the factor of management." The primary objective in using
- the adjective "intrinsic" is to emphasize the distinction
- between value and current market price, but not to invest
- this "value" with an aura of permanence.
-
- Value investing is the name given to the method of deciding on
- individual investments on the basis of their intrinsic value as
- contrasted with their market price.
-
- This, however, is not the standard definition. Most authors refer
- to value investing as the process of searching for stocks with
- attributes such as a low ratio of price to book value or a low
- price-earnings ratio. In contrast, stocks with high price to book
- value or a high price-earnings ratio are called growth stocks.
- Investors searching for stocks from within this universe of stocks
- are called growth investors. These two approaches are usually seen
- to be in opposition.
-
- Not so, declared Warren Buffett. In the 1992 Annual Report of
- Berkshire Hathaway he wrote, "the two approaches are joined at the
- hip: Growth is always a component in the calculation of value,
- constituting a variable whose importance can range from negligible
- to enormous and whose impact can be negative as well as positive."
-
-
- Conscious Investor
- This type of investor overlaps the six types just mentioned.
- Increasingly investors are respecting their own beliefs and values
- when making investment decisions. For many, quarterly earnings are
- no longer enough. For example, so many people are investing in
- socially responsible mutual funds that the total investment is now
- over one trillion dollars. Many others are following their own
- paths to clarify their investment values and act on them. The
- process of bringing as much honesty as possible into investment
- decisions we call conscious investing.
-
-
- Most people invest for different reasons at different times. Also they
- donÆt fall neatly into a single category. In 1969 Buffett described
- himself as 85 percent Benjamin Graham [Value] and 15 percent Fisher
- [Scuttlebutt].
-
- Whatever approach, or approaches, you take, the most important thing is
- know why you bought a particular stock. If you bought a stock on the
- recommendation of your neighbor, be happy about it and recognize that
- this is why you bought it. Then you will be more likely to avoid the
- "investor imperative," namely the following behavior: If your stock
- rises, claim it as your ability; if it falls, pass on the blame.
-
- Do all that you can to avoid going down this path. Write down why you
- bought a stock. Tell your spouse your reasons. Tape them on your
- bathroom mirror. Above all, if you want to be a successful investor,
- donÆt kid yourself.
-
- For more insights from John Price, visit his site:
- http://www.sherlockinvesting.com
-
-
- --------------------Check http://invest-faq.com/ for updates------------------
-
- Subject: Strategy - Value and Growth
-
- Last-Revised: 23 Oct 1997
- Contributed-By: Chris Lott ( contact me )
-
- Investors will frequently read about value stocks (or value strategies)
- as well as growth stocks (and growth strategies). These terms describe
- reasons why people believe certain stocks will increase in value. This
- article gives a brief summary.
-
- The value strategy attempts to find shares of companies that represent
- good value (i.e., value stocks). In other words, their stock prices are
- lower than comparable companies, perhaps because the shares are out of
- favor with Wall Street. Eventually, they believe, the market will
- recognize the true value of the stock and run up the price. People who
- believe in this strategy are sometimes called fundamentalists because
- they focus on the fundamentals of the company. The grand champion of
- this strategy is (was) Benjamin Graham, author of two classic investment
- books, Security Analysis and The Intelligent Investor. Measures of
- value may be a company's book value, earnings, revenue, brand
- recognition, etc, etc.
-
- The growth strategy attempts to find shares of companies that are
- growing and will continue to grow rapidly (i.e., growth stocks). In
- other words, their earnings are increasing nicely and the stock price is
- increasing along with those earnings. People who believe in this
- strategy are sometimes called momentum investors. They are sometimes
- criticized for paying high prices for growth and ignoring fundamentals.
- Measures of growth usually focus on the earnings growth.
-
- With just a little bit of looking, it's easy to find mutual funds that
- take one, the other, or a combined strategy.
-
-
- --------------------Check http://invest-faq.com/ for updates------------------
-
- Subject: Tax Code - Backup Withholding
-
- Last-Revised: 20 Mar 1997
- Contributed-By: John Schott (jschott at voicenet.com)
-
- Once the IRS declares you a "Bad Boy" (for having underpaid or been
- negligent on your tax filings in other ways) they stick you with "Backup
- Withholding."
-
- What this means, essentially, is that any firm that deals with your
- money in taxable tranactions is required to withhold (and submit to IRS)
- 31% of the proceeds of ANY transaction (on the assumption that the
- entire amount is a taxable gain). Then, next year when you file, they
- have all this money of yours, and you might be able to get it back if it
- is in excess of your actual tax liability once they have themselves
- determined it is indeed excess.
-
- So if you trade often, 31% disappears each time and soon all of your
- capital is held by the IRS.
-
- I think that your time in the "penalty box" lasts for 5 years (I'm not
- sure) if you remain faultlessly clean and petition to have it lifted.
-
- In short - this is not something you want to get into. By the way,
- there is a substantial penalty if you lie to the broker about whether
- you are subject to this treatment.
-
-
- --------------------Check http://invest-faq.com/ for updates------------------
-
- Subject: Tax Code - Capital Gains Cost Basis
-
- Last-Revised: 7 Jan 2000
- Contributed-By: Art Kamlet (artkamlet at aol.com), Chris Lott ( contact
- me )
-
- This article discusses how to determine the cost basis of a security
- according to the rules of the US tax code. The most common need for the
- cost basis of a security like stock is to report the proper gain or loss
- when that security is sold. This article sketches the issues for the
- simple case (you bought a security) and a couple less simple cases (you
- are given or inherit a security). Of course you might have not just one
- share but instead many hundreds; the word "security" is used here for
- simplicity.
-
-
-
- You bought the security
- The cost basis is simply the money you paid when you bought the
- security, including any commissions that you paid to acquire that
- security. For example, if you bought 10 shares of IBM at 100 and
- paid $29.95 in commission to do so, your cost basis would be
- 1029.95. This example lists just a single purchase of a security.
- If you accumulated stock over the course of many purchases, the
- total cost basis is still just the cost of all the purchases
- including commissions. The situation gets a bit more complex if
- you sell only a portion of an investment; see the FAQ article about
- computing capital gains for more information about this.
-
-
- You were given the security
- To oversimplify the issue, if the shares are given away at a gain,
- the donor's cost basis and acquisition date are used. If the
- shares are given away at a loss, the fair market value as of the
- date of gift must be used to calculate a subsequent sale at a loss,
- while the donor's cost basis must be used to calculate a subsequent
- sale at a gain. In the case of a gift at a loss, which is later
- sold at a loss, the date of the gift is used as the "acquisition
- date" of that stock. All of this means that an individual can
- transfer a gain but not a loss to another individual. Read on for
- all the details.
-
- The date when the gift is made is important. To figure the cost
- basis, the fair market value (FMV) of the gift on the gift date
- must be determined. A local library's microfilm archive might be
- the best resource to find the value of shares on a particular date.
- But be cautious about stock splits and other stock dividends! It's
- wise to consult the S&P stock guide, the Value Line Investment
- Survey, or the company that issued the shares for a history of the
- stock price, stock splits and dividends, etc.
-
- In the happiest and simplest case, the donor bought shares for a
- pittance, and donated them to some lucky individual, maybe you,
- after the shares had appreciated dramatically. That individual
- immediately sold the shares. The fair market value (FMV) of the
- shares on the gift date far exceeded the original cost basis, so
- the recipient's cost basis is the same as the donor's cost basis
- (possibly small, but definitely NOT zero).
-
- For example, the donor's cost basis is $20, and the FMV on the date
- of the gift is $100. The cost basis that the recipient must use is
- $20. On the other hand if the shares were sold for only $5, the
- same cost basis is used, and the loss is $15. In both cases, the
- acquisition date that must be reported is the same as the donor's
- acquisition date.
-
- The other possibility, of course, is that the share's FMV on the
- gift date was less than the original cost basis thanks to some
- decline in value. In this case, the gift assumes a dual cost basis
- that is not determined until the shares are sold. The donor's cost
- basis must be used to determine the gain if the shares are sold at
- a gain. The FMV on the date of the gift must be used if the shares
- are sold at a loss.
-
- For example, the donor's cost basis is $20, and the FMV on the date
- of the gift is $10, thus establishing a dual cost basis. Here are
- three possibilities.
- * Case 1: If the shares are subsequently sold for $25, this is a
- gain with respect to the donor's original cost basis and the
- FMV, so the recipient consequently reports a gain of $5,
- namely $25 (sales price) less 20 (donor's cost basis).
- * Case 2: If the shares are sold for $8, this is a loss with
- respect to the donor's original cost basis and the FMV, so the
- recipient consequently reports a loss of $2, namely $8 (sales
- price) less $10 (FMV on gift date).
- * Case 3: Here's where it gets complicated. If the shares are
- sold for $15, representing a loss with respect to the donor's
- cost basis but a gain with respect to the FMV on the gift
- date, what cost basis should the recipient use?
- * If the donor's cost basis of $20 is used, this would
- produce a loss for the recipient. However, the $20 can
- be used only when the recipient has a gain, so that's
- out.
- * If the FMV of $10 is used, this would produce a gain for
- the recipient. However, the $10 can be used only when
- the recipient has a loss, so that's out too. Result: The
- recipient has neither a gain or loss.
-
- The acquisition date that must be reported depends on the cost
- basis, and is pretty straightforward. If the donor's cost basis is
- used, use the donor's acquisition date, and if the FMV on the date
- of the gift is used, use the date of the gift.
-
- The IRS is light on advice as to how to report a transaction where
- the stock was given at a loss, and the sale produces neither gain
- nor loss. If you report the net sales price and then show the cost
- basis equal to the sales price, you end up with no gain. You can
- choose to use either the date of gift or original date as your
- acquisition date, since no gain or loss makes it a pretty much
- "don't care" condition.
-
-
- You inherit a security
- The cost basis is simply the value of the security on the date of
- the person's death who bequeathed that security to you. (The
- accountant lingo for this is "when the stock was inherited, its
- cost basis was stepped up to fair market value on date of death".)
- The easiest way to get this is probably to look in a library's
- archive (probably on microfiche or CD-ROM) of the Wall Street
- Journal or the New York Times. Don't forget about stock splits
- while doing the research.
-
- In rare cases, the executor will choose to use an "alternate
- valuation date" instead of date of death. The alternate valuation
- date, always 6 months after death, can be chosen only when it will
- reduce the estate tax, and if chosen, must be used for all property
- of the estate. An executor who makes this election should notify
- the heirs of the value used.
-
- Note that when figuring capital gains taxes, inherited property is
- always long term, per se. In fact if you glance at Pub 550 it asks
- you to not use an acquisition date for inherited property but to
- write "INH" to indicate it is inherited property.
-
-
- Be careful of reinvested dividends! If a stock paid dividends and the
- dividends were reinvested, computation of a fair cost basis requires a
- bit of work. All reinvested dividends need to be added to the cost
- basis, otherwise the cost basis will be much too low and the person who
- sells the security will pay too much tax. If the dividend payment and
- reinvestment records are not available, you need to reconstruct them.
- Find out from old Wall Street Journals or New York Times financial
- sections how much the dividend was each year since the stock was
- acquired or inherited, and use the number of shares and price per share
- on the dividend pay date. You might use a spreadsheet to show number of
- shares each year, amount of dividend, price at time of reinvestment,
- etc. This requires a good deal of researching the dividend amounts and
- the share price.
-
- If computing the cost basis of some security looks hopeless, here's an
- alternative to consider: donate some or all the shares to charity. If
- you normally make donations to your church, alumni association, or other
- charity, it is quite easy to persuade them to accept stock instead of
- cash. By doing so, you never have to calculate gains nor list the sale
- as income on your tax return. Moreover, if the stock was held more than
- a year (long-term gain), you get to itemize the charitable deduction at
- fair market value on the date of gift. Note that stock gifted to
- charity and held short term can be deducted at the lower of cost basis
- or fair market value. This implies that stock bought with reinvested
- dividends within a year of the gift would be limited to the lower of
- fair market value or cost basis.
-
- For the last word on the cost basis issue, see IRS Publication 551,
- "Basis of Assets."
-
-
- --------------------Check http://invest-faq.com/ for updates------------------
-
- Subject: Tax Code - Capital Gains Computation
-
- Last-Revised: 4 Aug 1998
- Contributed-By: John Schott (jschott at voicenet.com), Art Kamlet
- (artkamlet at aol.com), Chris Lott ( contact me ), Rich Carreiro (rlcarr
- at animato.arlington.ma.us)
-
- Gains made on equities (i.e., stocks or mutual funds) are subject to
- capital gains taxes. In the simplest case, you bought a lot of shares
- (either stocks or mutual funds) at some date, made no further
- investments (took your dividends in cash), and finally sold the shares
- at some later date. Your gain is simply the difference between your net
- cost and net income, and you report that as a capital gain. This
- article focuses on computing the amount of the gain (but not the amount
- of tax you'll have to pay, see the article on capital gains tax rates
- elsewhere in the FAQ for that).
-
- Note that this article discusses only realized capital gains. Tax is
- only due on a realized capital gain, never (at least not as of this
- writing) on an unrealized capital gain. A realized capital gain is
- money in your pocket. If you bought shares at 10 and sold at 20, you
- realized a capital gain of $10 per share, and of course Uncle Sam (and
- just about every other tax authority out there) wants a piece of the
- action. An unrealized capital gain is a gain that you have on paper; in
- other words, you bought a stock at 10, still hold the shares, and on
- some date it's trading at 20. You have an unrealized capital gain as of
- that date of $10 per share, and because it's unrealized, there are no
- tax implications.
-
- The first part of computing capital gains and gains taxes is determining
- the cost basis of the securities that you sold. For more information on
- that, see the FAQ article on computing cost basis . That article
- discusses how to compute the cost basis if you inherit or are given some
- stock or other equities.
-
- Computing gains is simple for a sale of a single share, or a sale of a
- single lot of shares. The situation becomes more complex if you
- acquired several lots of shares at different prices. It's not so bad
- for stocks, because when you sell shares of stock, you always, always,
- always sell specific shares. But when you sell shares in a mutual fund,
- things are not as simple. We'll cover these two cases next.
- * Selling shares of stock.
- For example, say you hold 200 shares of IBM, half of which you
- bought at $40 and half at $50 (I should be so lucky). What price
- should you use if you sell 100 shares?
-
- In this simple example, it's your choice: either $40 or $50. But,
- to be legal, you must specify to your broker precisely which lot
- you are selling before you give the sell order. IRS Pub 550
- clearly says that adequate specific identification of shares has
- been made if you tell the broker at time of sale what shares are
- being sold and if the broker so notes it on the confirmation slip.
- Many brokers (especially as they now have years of computer
- records) are able to mark that on your confirmation slip
- automatically. But another way is to tell your broker and then get
- him to sign a confirmation letter attesting to that fact. If you
- don't do this, the IRS, in an audit, may reverse your decisions.
-
- Note that the broker is under no obligation to accept a specific
- shares order, but I personally would take my business to another
- broker if I ran into that.
-
- In any case, the key element in identifying specific shares to be
- sold is that you've got to convince the IRS that you made your
- choice of what shares to sell prior to the trade and convince the
- IRS that you informed the broker of that choice (also prior to the
- trade).
-
- If you don't tell the broker, and get no information on the
- confirmation slip, the specific shares you sell are the oldest
- (sometimes called first-in first-out or FIFO).
-
-
- * Selling shares of a mutual fund.
-
- Mutual fund investors have to choose one of four possible methods
- of computing their basis for sold shares. These are as follows.
- 1. Specific shares -- the investor decides which specific shares
- are to be sold.
- 2. First-in-first-out (FIFO) -- the oldest shares are sold first
- (this is actually a kind of specific shares).
- 3. Average cost, single category -- the basis of a share is the
- average basis of all shares.
- 4. Average cost, double category (may now be triple category,
- given the new capital gains law) -- shares are segregated by
- holding period, the basis of a share in a given category is
- the average basis of all shares in that category.
-
- Investors may switch between (1) or (2) as they like, but once (3)
- or (4) is chosen for a security, the investor must stick with that
- method until he has entirely liquidated his position in the
- security or receives IRS permission to change methods.
-
- The following discussion details the average cost, single category
- method (3), which is probably the most commonly used method.
-
- The description that "the basis of a share is the average basis of
- all shares" pretty much says it all. Despite this, the calculation
- often confuses people, especially when additional purchases are
- made subsequent to sales, and it can be laborious to keep track of
- everything. Key points to remember are the following.
- * Reinvestment of distributions are treated exactly like (and in
- fact are) purchases.
- * Every time a sale is made, the basis of every remaining share
- becomes the average cost used in the sale calculation. A
- share has no "memory" of what its previous basis values were.
- * For purposes of computing holding period only, you are deemed
- to be selling the oldest shares first. You have no choice in
- the matter.
-
- Various software packages such as Captool, by Captools Inc
- (formerly Techserve) can do the computation for you. If I were
- doing it manually (or using a spreadsheet) I'd probably do
- something like the following.
- 1. Divide a piece of paper into six columns. Label them "Date",
- "Number of shares", "Cost", "Total Shares", "Total Cost" and
- "Average Cost".
- 2. Fill in the first three columns for all your purchases up to
- the point of your first sale.
- 3. Now fill in the "Total Shares" column. Obviously, for the
- first entry this will be equal to the number of shares bought.
- For subsequent entries, it will be equal to the "Total Shares"
- value of the previous entry plus the "Number of Shares" value
- for the current entry.
- 4. Fill in the "Total Cost" column the same way.
- 5. Fill in the "Average Cost" value for the final entry by
- dividing that entry's "Total Cost" value by its "Total Shares"
- value. You could do this for every entry (and that would be
- the easier thing to do in a spreadsheet) but only the average
- cost as it existed right before a sale matters, and if you're
- doing it manually why waste the time computing and writing
- down numbers you won't need?
- 6. Now put in an entry for your first sale.
- * Put down the date.
- * Put the quantity of shares sold in the "Number of Shares"
- entry as a *negative* number (you are selling them, after
- all).
- * Multiply "Number of Shares" by the average cost you got
- in step (5) and enter that in the "Cost" column. This
- will be negative -- as well it should -- since a sale
- reduces your total basis by the basis of the shares that
- are sold.
- * Fill in "Total Shares" for this entry like you did in
- step (3). Since "Number of Shares" for this entry is
- negative, "Total Shares" will decrease as it should.
- * Fill in "Total Cost" for this entry like you did in step
- (4). Since "Cost" for this entry is negative, "Total
- Cost" will decrease as it should.
- * Note that your gain (or loss) on the sale is the sum of
- your sales proceeds and the "Cost" value (which is a
- negative number) of the sale entry.
- 7. If your next transaction is a sale, do it just like (6). If
- your next transaction is a purchase:
- * Put down the date.
- * Put down the shares bought in the "Number of Shares"
- column.
- * Put down the cost in the "Cost" column.
- * Fill in "Total Shares" as in step (3).
- * Fill in "Total Cost" as in step (4).
- * If desired, fill in average cost column. You only really
- have to do this for a purchase entry that immediately
- preceeds a sale entry.
- 8. Keep the sheet up to date with all purchases and sales as you
- make them.
-
- Note that this procedure only tells you the overall gain or loss on
- a sale. You still have to determine the holding period for the
- shares sold, and if multiple holding periods are involved,
- apportion the gain or loss into each holding period.
-
- As previously stated, you must consider the oldest remaining shares
- to be the ones sold for this purpose. So if you sell N shares, go
- back to your purchase records and mark off (physically or mentally)
- the oldest remaining N shares (which may well be from different
- purchases) and see what the holding periods are.
-
- Here's an example for all of this:
- * On 02/01/97 buy 100sh for $1000.
- * On 08/01/97 buy 75sh for $1000.
- * On 12/23/97 reinvest $600 of distributions getting 40sh.
- * On 12/01/98 sell 200sh for $4000.
- * On 12/24/98 reinvest $300 of distributions getting 14sh
- * On 06/15/99 buy 100sh for $2000
- * On 10/31/99 sell 50sh for $900
-
- Date Nr Shares Cost Total Shares Total Cost AvgCost
- 02/01/97 100 $1000.00 100 $1000.00
- 08/08/97 75 $1000.00 175 $2000.00
- 12/23/97 40 $ 600.00 215 $2600.00 $12.0930
- 12/01/98 (200) ($2418.60) 15 $ 181.40
- 12/24/98 14 $ 300.00 29 $ 481.40
- 06/15/99 100 $2000.00 129 $2481.40 $19.2357
- 10/31/99 (50) ($961.79) 79 $1519.61
-
-
- Since the basis of the shares sold on 12/01/98 was $2418.60 while
- the proceeds of that sale were $4000, there was a $1581.40 gain on
- the sale. The shares that were sold were the 100 shares purchased
- 02/01/97, the 75 shares purchased 08/08/97, and 25 of the forty
- shares purchased 12/23/97. The 100 shares purchased 02/01/97 have
- a holding period of over 12 months, the 75 shares purchased
- 08/08/97 also have a holding period of over 12 months, and the 25
- shares sold out of the block of 40 purchased 12/23/97 have a
- holding period of less than 12 months. Enter each piece in the
- appropriate part of Schedule D, prorating the $2418.60 basis and
- the $4000 proceeds across the pieces based on the number of shares
- in each piece.
-
- Now, since the basis of the shares sold on 10/31/99 was $961.79
- while the proceeds were $900, there was a $61.79 loss on that sale.
- The shares that were sold were the remaining 15 shares in the block
- of forty purchased 12/23/97, the 14 shares purchased 12/24/98, and
- 21 shares from the block of 100 purchased 6/15/99. The 15 shares
- purchased 12/23/97 have a holding period over 12 months, while both
- the 14 shares purchased 12/24/98 and the 21 shares purchased
- 06/15/99 have holding periods under 12 months. Again, enter each
- piece in the appropriate parts of Schedule D, prorating the $961.79
- basis and the $900 proceeds.
-
- Finally, there's a reporting shortcut. If you have multiple
- purchase blocks in the same holding period category, you can
- combine them into a single entry. Just write "various" for the
- acquisition date and combine the basis and proceeds of the blocks
- to get the basis and proceeds of the single entry. For example,
- for the 10/31/99 sale, on the short-term part of Schedule D I would
- combine the 14 12/24/98 shares and the 21 6/15/99 shares into a
- single entry, reporting 35 shares, acquisition date of "various",
- sell date of 10/31/99, basis of $673.25, proceeds of $630.00, and a
- loss of $43.25.
-
- And now you see why I use a piece of software to track all this and
- generate reports for me :-).
-
- Remember that the averaging method for computing cost basis applies only
- to shares of mutual funds and does not apply to conventional stock
- sales. A cost basis includes brokerage and all other costs specifically
- attributable to holding the security. Be sure to correct your per-share
- values for stock splits (see the article elsewhere in the FAQ for more
- information about splits) and dividends, as well as any participation in
- a DRIP.
-
- Ok, hopefully by now you have computed the total gain on your equity
- sales. Now you have to figure out how much tax you owe. Please see the
- article in the FAQ on capital gains tax rates for more help.
-
-
- --------------------Check http://invest-faq.com/ for updates------------------
-
- Subject: Tax Code - Capital Gains Tax Rates
-
- Last-Revised: 10 Jan 2001
- Contributed-By: Rich Carreiro (rlcarr at animato.arlington.ma.us)
-
- While reading misc.invest.*, you may have seen people talking about
- "long-term gains" or "short-term losses." Despite what it sounds like,
- they are not talking about investment strategies, but rather a
- potentially important part of the United States tax code. All this
- matters because the IRS taxes short- and long-term gains differently.
-
- The "holding period" is the amount of time you held some security before
- you sold it. For reasons explained later, the IRS cares about how long
- you have held capital assets that you have sold. The holding period is
- measured in months. The nominal start of the holding period clock is
- the day after the trade date, not the settlement date. (I say nominal
- because there are various IRS rules that will change the holding period
- in certain circumstances.) For example, if your trade date is March 18,
- then you start counting the holding period on March 19. On April 19
- your holding period is one month. On May 19 your holding period is two
- months, and so on.
-
- With holding period defined, we can say that a short-term gain or
- short-term loss is a gain or loss on a capital asset that had a holding
- period of 12 months or less, and that a long-term gain or long-term loss
- is a gain or loss on a capital asset that had a holding period of more
- than 12 months.
-
- Note that a short-sale is considered short-term regardless of how long
- the position is held open. This actually makes a kind of sense, since
- the only time you actually held the stock was between when you bought
- the stock to cover the position and when you actually delivered that
- stock to actually close the position out. This length of time is
- somewhere from minutes to a few days.
-
- Net capital gains and losses are fully part of adjusted gross income
- (AGI), with the exception that if your net capital loss exceeds $3,000,
- you can only take $3,000 of the loss in a tax year and must carry the
- remainder forward. If you die with carried-over losses, they are lost.
- Short-term and long-term loss carryovers retain their short or long-term
- character when they are carried over.
-
- Discussions from this point on talk about the various tax rates on
- capital gains. It is important to note that these rates are only the
- nominal rates. Because capital gains are part of AGI, if your AGI is
- such that you are subject to phaseouts and floors on your itemized
- deductions, personal exemptions, and other deductions and credits, your
- actual marginal tax rate on the gains will exceed the nominal tax rate.
-
- Short-term gains are taxed as ordinary income. Therefore, the nominal
- tax rate will be whatever tax bracket you are in.
-
- Long-term gains are a somewhat more complicated. The majority of people
- will only have two rates to worry about -- 10% and 20%. Your long-term
- gains are taxed at 10% if you are in the 15% bracket overall and 20% if
- you are in any other bracket. The long-term gains are included when
- figuring out what bracket you're in. However, the 10%/20% rate doesn't
- apply to all long-term gains. Long-term gains on collectibles, some
- types of restricted stock, and certain other assets are instead subject
- to rate that is the lesser of your tax bracket or 28%. And certain
- kinds of real estate depreciation recapture are taxed no higher than
- 25%. I do note that for 1998 only, many average investors will see some
- so-called 28% gain. This will be from mutual fund capital gain
- distributions made in the 1st quarter of 1998 for gains realized by the
- fund in the closing months of 1997, when a different set of rules was in
- place. Your fund should provide explanations when you receive 1099-DIV
- forms in early 1999.
-
- Another complication in long-term taxation arrives January 1, 2001. As
- of that day (unless Congress changes things before than), lower rates
- come into effect for gains having a holding period of over 60 months
- (called the "ultra-long-term rate" here). The rates are 8% if you are
- in the 15% bracket, 18% otherwise.
-
- If the asset was acquired before 1/1/2001 it can never gain 8%/18%
- (i.e., ultra-long-term) status (with exceptions) no matter how long it
- is held. The exception is that you can mark the asset to market at its
- fair market value on 1/1/2001. You will have to declare as income and
- pay tax on any unrealized gain (and presumably get to deduct any
- unrealized loss) on the asset. The holding period clock will also
- reset. (This is the same as selling and repurchasing the asset without
- actually doing so. It is currently unclear if wash sale rules will
- apply to loss property marked to market).
-
- There is yet another twist to this exception -- if you are in the 15%
- bracket, the 8% rate is available to you as of 1/1/01, even if you did
- not acquire the asset before 1/1/01. In any case, I strongly advise
- researching the issue and talking to a tax professional before doing
- something that is subject to this rule.
-
- Here's a summary table:
-
- Tax Bracket S-T Rate L-T Rate U-L-T Rate
- 15% 15% 10% 8%
- 28% 28% 20% 18%
- 31% 31% 20% 18%
- 36% 36% 20% 18%
- 39.6% 39.6% 20% 18%
-
-
- As you can see, the ordinary income and short-term rate is over 100%
- higher (39.6% vs. 18%) than the ultra-long-term rate and close to 100%
- higher than the long-term rate. While you should never let the income
- tax "tail" wag the prudent investing "dog," the ultra/long/short term
- distinction is something to keep in mind if you are considering selling
- at a gain and are getting close to one of the holding period boundaries,
- especially if you are close to qualifying for long-term treatment.
-
- Now what happens if you have both short-term capital gains and losses,
- as well as long-term gains and losses? Do short-term losses have to
- offset short-term gains? Do long-term losses have to offset long-term
- gains? Well, the rules for computing your net gain or loss are as
- follows.
-
- 1. You combine short-term loss and short-term gain to arrive at net
- short-term gain (loss). This happens on Sched D, Part I.
- 2. You combine long-term loss and long-term gain to arrive at net
- long-term gain (loss). This happens on Sched D, Part II.
- 3. You combine net short-term gain (loss) and net long-term gain
- (loss) to arrive at net gain (loss). This happens on Sched D, Part
- III.
- * If you have both a short-term loss and a long-term loss, your
- net loss will have both short-term and long-term components.
- This matters if you have a loss carryover (see below).
- * If you have both a short-term gain and a long-term gain, your
- net gain will have both short-term and long-term components.
- This matters because only the long-term piece gets the special
- capital gains tax rate treatment.
- * If you have a gain in one category and a loss in another, but
- have a gain overall, that overall gain will be the same
- category as the category that had the gain. If you have a
- loss overall, that overall loss will be the same category as
- the category that had the loss.
- 4. If you have a net loss and it is less than $3,000 ($1,500 if
- married filing separately) you get to take the whole loss against
- your other income. If the loss is more than $3,000, you only get
- to take $3,000 of it against other income and must carry the rest
- forward to next year. When taking the $3,000 loss, you must take
- it first from the ST portion (if any) of your loss. The Capital
- Loss Carryover Worksheet in the Sched D instructions takes you
- through this.
- 5. If you have a net gain, the smaller of the net gain or the net
- long-term gain will get the special tax rate. This happens on
- Sched D, Part IV.
-
-
- --------------------Check http://invest-faq.com/ for updates------------------
-
- Subject: Tax Code - Cashless Option Exercise
-
- Last-Revised: 12 June 2000
- Contributed-By: Art Kamlet (artkamlet at aol.com), Chris Lott ( contact
- me )
-
- This article discusses the tax treatment of an employee's income that
- derives from stock options, specifically the case in which an employee
- exercises non-qualified stock options without putting any money down.
-
- First, a digression. What is a non-qualified option? A non-qualified
- stock option is the most popular form of stock option given to
- employees. Basically, an employee who exercises a non-qualified option
- to buy stock has to report taxable income at the time of the purchase,
- and that income is taxed as regular income (not as a capital gain). In
- contrast, an incentive stock option (ISO) dodges these tax bullets, but
- is more complicated because employees who receive ISOs have to worry
- about alternative minimum tax (AMT). Unfortunately some companies are
- sloppy about naming, and use the term ISO for what are really
- non-qualified stock options, so be cautious.
-
- Next, what is a cashless exercise? Basically, this is a way for an
- employee to benefit from his or her stock option without needing to come
- up with the money to purchase the shares. Any employee stock option is
- basically a call option with a very long expiration; hopefully it's also
- deep in the money (also see the FAQ article on the basics of stock
- options ). When a call option is exercised, the person who exercises it
- has to pay to buy the shares. If, however, the person is primarily
- interested in selling the shares again immediately, then a cashless
- option becomes interesting. The company essentially lends the person
- the money needed for the option exercise for the fraction of a second
- that the person owns the shares.
-
- In a typical cashless exercise of non-qualified stock options (you can
- tell it is non-qualified because the W-2 form suddenly has a huge amount
- added to it for stock option exercise), here is what happens. Let's use
- E as the Option Exercise Price and FMV as the fair market value of the
- shares. The employee needs to pay E as part of the option exercise.
- But this is a cashless exercise, so the company (or, more likely, a
- broker acting as the company's agent) lends the employee that amount (E)
- for a few moments. The stock is immediately sold, for FMV. The broker
- takes back the amount, E, loaned to the employee for the exercise, and
- pays out the difference, FMV-E. The broker will almost certainly also
- charge a commission.
-
- Ok, now for those fortunate people who are able to do a cashless stock
- option exercise, and choose to do so, how do they report the transaction
- to the IRS? The company imputes income to the employee of the difference
- between fair market value and exercise price, FMV-E. That amount is
- added to the employee's W-2 form, and hopefully shows up in Box 14 with
- a cryptic note such as STKOPT or whatever. The amount FMV-E is the
- imputed income. Again, you will notice FMV-E is not only what the
- broker paid out, it is also the imputed income amount that shows up in
- the W-2 form.
-
- The Schedule D sales amount reported by the broker is FMV minus any
- commission. The employee's cost basis is the FMV. So the FMV is the
- sales price, and the Schedule D for this transaction will show zero (if
- no commission was charged) or a small loss (due to the commission).
-
- In certain situations, FMV might differ slightly from the price at which
- the shares were sold, depending on how the company does it, and if so,
- the company should report the FMV to the employee. Then the Schedule D
- must be completed appropriately to show the short-term gain or loss (the
- difference between the sales price and FMV).
-
- For extensive notes on stock and option compensation, visit the Fairmark
- site with articles by Kaye Thomas:
- http://www.fairmark.com/execcomp/index.htm
-
- Julia K. O'Neill offers an extensive discussion of the differences
- between incentive stock options and non-qualified options:
- http://www.flemingoneill.com/stockopt.html
-
-
- --------------------Check http://invest-faq.com/ for updates------------------
-
- Subject: Tax Code - Deductions for Investors
-
- Last-Revised: 24 Oct 1997
- Contributed-By: Art Kamlet (artkamlet at aol.com), David Ray
-
- This article offers a brief overview of the deductions that investors
- can claim when filing US tax returns.
-
- The most significant one is losses. An investor may deduct up to
- US$3,000 in net capital losses each year using the Form 1040 Schedule D.
- Additional losses in a calendar year can be carried forward to the
- following year. Note the key word in the first sentence: net capital
- losses. For example, if you realized $5,000 in capital gains and $9,000
- in capital losses during a tax year, you would have a net capital loss
- for that year of $4,000. You could deduct $3,000 for that year, and
- carry forward $1,000 of net loss to the following year's tax return.
- Another example: if you realized a loss of 4,000 in one stock and a net
- gain of 4,000 in a second stock, you could not deduct anything because
- the net loss was zero.
-
- What about margin interest? If you borrow money to purchase securities
- (not tax-exempt instruments), and if you itemize deductions on Schedule
- A, you can itemize as investment interest on Schedule A (Interest, not
- Misc. deductions) the investment interest you actually paid, but only
- to the extent you had that much investment income. Investment interest
- that you cannot claim because you didn't have enough investment income
- can be carried forward to the next year.
-
- Investment income includes investment interest, dividends, and
- short-term capital gains. You can elect to include mid- and long-term
- capital gains, but if you do, you cannot choose to elect tax-favored
- treatment of those gains.
-
-
- --------------------Check http://invest-faq.com/ for updates------------------
-
- aSubject: Tax Code - Estate and Gift Tax
-
- Last-Revised: 6 Jan 2003
- Contributed-By: Rich Carreiro (rlcarr at animato.arlington.ma.us), Art
- Kamlet (artkamlet at aol.com), John Fisher (TaxService at aol.com),
- Chris Lott ( contact me )
-
- This article offers an overview of the estate and gift taxes imposed in
- the United States. The main issue is the amount of money a person can
- "gift" (used as a verb in this context) to another person without tax
- consequences, as well as the tax consequences when that amount is
- exceeded. The handling of estates is relevant and discussed with gift
- taxes because transfers while a person is living (i.e., gifts) can
- influence estate taxes.
-
- Here's a brief summary. An estate of less than US$1,000,000 will not be
- taxed in 2003 (although it depends on prior gifts, read on). A gift
- recipient never has anything to worry about, no matter the size, because
- gifts are not taxable income. A gift giver who gives less than $11,000
- to any one individual in one year also has nothing to worry about. If a
- person gives more than $11,000 to an individual in one year, then the
- regulations discussed in the rest of this article must be followed
- carefully. Finally, note that gifts are never deductable from a gift
- giver's gross income.
-
- A fundamental concept to understand here is the unified credit .
- Roughly speaking, this is the amount of wealth that the IRS (well,
- really the US Congress) allows a person to transfer without incurring
- various tax obligations. As of this writing, the unified credit amount
- for tax year 2003 is $1,000,000. But given the annual gift tax
- exclusion amount of $11,000 (newly increased in 2002 from 10,000 in
- prior years), the total amount that a person can effectively transfer to
- another individual without triggering taxes is much larger. The term
- "unified credit" is used because the credit is the "unified gift/estate
- tax credit". This is a single, combined credit amount that is applied
- against both gift and estate tax.
-
- A person can gift fairly large amounts annually without affecting the
- unified credit. Basically, any US taxpayer can gift up to $11,000 to a
- single person in a tax year and there are no tax consequences: the gift
- giver's lifetime unified credit is not affected, and the gift recipient
- pays no tax. In fact, a person can make $11,000 gifts to as many
- different people in a year as she or he likes with no tax consequences.
- (See below; this number is indexed to inflation and will change over
- time.) Spouses can give each other gifts of any amount without gift tax
- filings. Finally, a husband and wife can gift anyone $22,000 without
- gift tax consequences, but unless the husband gives 11,000 and the wife
- gives 11,000 (e.g., they both write a check), they should file a Form
- 709a with the IRS and elect to use gift splitting.
-
- What is gift splitting? Gift splitting means a husband and wife can
- elect to treat a gift given by one of them as if half were given by each
- of them. The implications are simple: If one spouse gives $22,000 to
- someone during the year, and gift splitting is not elected, the IRS can
- treat that as a 22,000 gift by just the one spouse, even if the funds
- are drawn from a joint account. The IRS Form 709a can be filed for
- notifying the IRS that gift splitting is elected. (The instructions for
- the form are on the form itself.) This is a bit silly in many cases,
- since in community property states, community property is automatically
- considered split equally between each spouse, but that requires the IRS
- to somehow know it came from community property funds and not from
- non-community funds. So they require you to prove it, basically.
-
- If a donor gives away more than $11,000 to a person (not a charity) in a
- tax year, then the donor may owe gift tax, depending on the donor's
- history of giving. After making a large gift, the donor is responsible
- for filing a Form 709 declaring that gift and keeping a running,
- lifetime total of the lifetime exclusion used. As long as the exclusion
- is below the maximum, no gift tax is due. Once the exclusion reaches
- the maximum, the donor calculates the tax due with Form 709 and attaches
- a check (payable to the United States Treasury). So in a nutshell,
- computation of gift tax is quite easy: just fill out the 709. If there
- is some remaining lifetime gift tax exclusion remaining, then there is
- no tax due. If there is no exclusion remaining, there is tax due. Note
- that there is no way to pay gift tax and somehow "preserve" some amount
- of lifetime exclusion; the system simply does not work that way.
-
- Now we'll discuss the lifetime exclusion. Basically, the first $1
- million of transfers in life and death are exempt from estate and gift
- tax as of 2002 (and remains that way in 2003). However, it is not
- handled in quite in the way that most people think. Most people (for
- example) think that when someone who made no taxable transfers during
- life dies, you total up the estate, subtract off any deductions, and
- then subtract $1,000,000 and compute the tax on whatever (if anything)
- is left. The way it actually works is that you subtract off any
- deductions, compute the tax on that amount, and then apply against the
- tax the unified credit of about $300,000 (this number needs to be
- checked).
-
- Of course the result is identical for most estates; the first $1 mil of
- the estate is not taxed. But look what happens to the first dollar past
- the limit. If the tax really was done the first way, the taxable estate
- would be $1, and you'd be starting at the bottom of the estate tax
- bracket structure. But what actually happens is that you compute the
- tax on an estate of $1,000,001, which leaves you in the middle of the
- bracket structure, and then subtract off the credit. So your marginal
- rate is much higher under the way things actual work than it is under
- the "naive" way.
-
- A gift (used as a noun) in this article means a gift of present value .
- A gift of present value is an unrestricted gift the receiver can use
- immediately (if an adult, or immediately upon becoming an adult).
- However, if a trust is set up for a child and the trust is payable to
- the child only on the child's 25th birthday provided the child has
- graduated from college and has no felony convictions, that gift is
- considered restricted (it's not a gift of present value), so a 709 would
- have to be filed starting at the first gift dollar.
-
- Note that if securities or other non-cash instrument is given, the fair
- market value of the securities on the gift date are used to determine
- whether the gift tax rules apply.
-
- Ok, time for an example: If an individual makes a gift of present value
- of $41,000 in a year, the 30,000 above the 11k limit reduces the amount
- of estate excluded from estate tax to the current limit less the 30,000.
-
- Now another example: What happens if a wealthy married couple (we'll
- call them Smith) gifts $44,000 to a less wealthy married couple (let's
- call them Doe)? This is perfectly ok and has no tax consequences
- provided things are done properly. Let's examine some of the
- possibilities. If a single check is drawn on Mr. Smith's account and
- deposited into Mrs. Doe's account, the very conservative amongst the
- tax folk will point out that the gift was from Mr. Smith and not Mr.
- and Mrs. Smith and further, even if the check was to both Doe's, it was
- deposited into only one of the Doe's accounts, so it could be a gift of
- 44,000 from one person to another! Since the gift splitting rule is out
- there, the moderately conservative tax experts would have separate
- checks written to Mr. Doe and Mrs. Doe. The ultra conservative would
- have four checks written of 11k each (the combinations are left as an
- excercise for the reader :-). The use of four checks avoids the gift
- splitting election as well as the worry about whose account it is
- deposited in. (Since a spouse can gift unlimited amounts to the other
- spouse, it really should not matter.)
-
- Dramatic changes to the estate tax laws were made by the Economic Growth
- and Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2001. In fact, that act repealed
- the estate tax -- but with many caveats. The lifetime exclusion numbers
- for the next ten years are as follows: $1 million in 2003; 1.5 million
- in 2004 and '05, $2 million for 2006, '07, and '08, and finally $3.5
- million in 2009. And in 2010, the estate tax is gone. But (don't you
- just love Congress), in 2011 the estate tax comes back with a lifetime
- exclusion of $1 million. This is how Congress balances its books. It's
- anyone's guess what will actually happen by 2011. Note that the gift
- tax was not repealed; the lifetime exclusion remains stuck at $1 million
- after 2011. And the annual gift tax exclusion amount is $11,000 in
- 2003; because this number is indexed to inflation, it is difficult to
- predict how this value will change in future years.
-
- To recap one important issue, the blessed repicients of a gift never pay
- any tax. Stated a bit differently, receipt of a gift is not a taxable
- event. Of course if someone gives you securities, and you immediately
- sell them, the sale is a taxable event. See the article elsewhere in
- the FAQ about calculating cost basis for help with computing the number
- used when reporting the sale to the IRS.
-
- For more information about estate issues, visit Robert Clofine's site:
- http://www.estateattorney.com/
-
-
- --------------------Check http://invest-faq.com/ for updates------------------
-
- Subject: Tax Code - Gifts of Stock
-
- Last-Revised: 20 Dec 1999
- Contributed-By: Art Kamlet (artkamlet at aol.com), Chris Lott ( contact
- me )
-
- This article introduces some issues that crop up when making gifts of
- stock. Gift taxes are an orthogonal but closely related issue; see the
- article elsewhere in the FAQ for more details. Also see the FAQ article
- on determining the cost basis of securities for notes on computing the
- basis on shares that were received as a gift.
-
- Occasionally the question crops up from a person who has nice stock
- gains and would like to give some money to another person. Should the
- stockholder sell stock and give cash, or give stock directly? It's best
- to seek professional tax advice in this situation. If stock is given,
- and the recipient needs cash so sells the shares immediately, the
- recipient only keeps about 80% of the value after paying capital gains
- tax. I.e., the gift came with a big tax bill. On the other hand, if
- the stockholder sells some stock (perhaps to stay under the 10k annual
- exclusion), that pushes up that person's annual income. If the
- stockholder has a sufficiently high income, then the stock sale could
- push that person across various thresholds, one for which itemized
- deductions begin to be reduced, and the other where personal exemptions
- begin to be phased out. In addition, higher income could possibly
- trigger alternate minimum tax (AMT).
-
-
- --------------------Check http://invest-faq.com/ for updates------------------
-
- Compilation Copyright (c) 2003 by Christopher Lott.
-