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Posted
Just now, greenspan76 said:

Actually, I thought it used to be done that way, but I haven't looked back to verify, so its possible I said that. If so, sorry for the confusion.

No worries. Thanks to you and @yowster as well as @cwelsh I sm looking into this in more details although I agree with you that IB is likely to be computing it correctly. The weird thing I find is that the number don't seem to make sense. For example, if I ignore wash sales, 1099 would show a loss for the year but taking wash sales into account it shows trading gains for the year. If I run a yearly statement for 2017 from IB, it shows gains. That is really what is confusing me. 

Posted
13 minutes ago, anand331 said:

No worries. Thanks to you and @yowster as well as @cwelsh I sm looking into this in more details although I agree with you that IB is likely to be computing it correctly. The weird thing I find is that the number don't seem to make sense. For example, if I ignore wash sales, 1099 would show a loss for the year but taking wash sales into account it shows trading gains for the year. If I run a yearly statement for 2017 from IB, it shows gains. That is really what is confusing me. 

When you have a wash sale, your cost basis is adjusted for the new position that caused the wash sale. So, for example, if you sold an XYZ put for a loss of $100, but then bought another XYZ put 1 weeks later, your cost basis on the new XYZ put is increased by $100 to account for the loss you were not allowed to recognize on the prior put.. Hence, your reported cost basis numbers are higher by the amount of wash sale losses disallowed that have already been closed (if you still have some open, they won't show up on the From 8949 worksheet yet). Now that I think about it, this might be the confusion on the cost basis being already adjusted.

Posted
1 minute ago, greenspan76 said:

When you have a wash sale, your cost basis is adjusted for the new position that caused the wash sale. So, for example, if you sold an XYZ put for a loss of $100, but then bought another XYZ put 1 weeks later, your cost basis on the new XYZ put is increased by $100 to account for the loss you were not allowed to recognize on the prior put.. Hence, your reported cost basis numbers are higher by the amount of wash sale losses disallowed that have already been closed (if you still have some open, they won't show up on the From 8949 worksheet yet). Now that I think about it, this might be the confusion on the cost basis being already adjusted.

This makes perfect sense. Thanks so much @greenspan76. So, unless I have any trades that are still alive at the end of the year, the wash sale shouldn't have any impact and that's really what I was seeing. Just couldn't explain why. Appreciate your time and detailed responses.

Posted
On 4/4/2018 at 10:45 AM, anand331 said:

Hi @Yowster, I just checked one of my accounts at IB and the proceeds and the cost basis as reported on 1099 do not account for wash sale. However, the 8949 form does account for it when coming up with gain or loss. Is it your experience as well? I know it is more of an accountant question, but if I have wash sale losses denied for 2017 for certain option trades and if I don't ever trade the option on that underlying in 2018, would that wash sale loss be gone forever?

@anand331 Sorry for the delay in responding, but I've been on vacation and away from trading since last Wednesday afternoon.   On my IB 1099, when I take my Proceeds-CostBasis+WashSaleLossDisallowed the result matches my own records for overall P&L.   Also, the wash sales don't appear to be "real" wash sales when you buy something back within a month or so - Rather, they seem to be how IB does some record-keeping when individual option prices are different.   For example, occasionally I'll open a spread trade for say 10 contracts and all are filled at the same price - however when I look at the individual prices for the long and short legs one or two of the fills have prices way out of whack, and these are the trades that seem to show up in the 1099 wash sales.

Posted
12 hours ago, Yowster said:

@anand331 Sorry for the delay in responding, but I've been on vacation and away from trading since last Wednesday afternoon.   On my IB 1099, when I take my Proceeds-CostBasis+WashSaleLossDisallowed the result matches my own records for overall P&L.   Also, the wash sales don't appear to be "real" wash sales when you buy something back within a month or so - Rather, they seem to be how IB does some record-keeping when individual option prices are different.   For example, occasionally I'll open a spread trade for say 10 contracts and all are filled at the same price - however when I look at the individual prices for the long and short legs one or two of the fills have prices way out of whack, and these are the trades that seem to show up in the 1099 wash sales.

Thanks @Yowster. I think the reason probably is as @greenspan76 above suggested, IB is adjusting the cost basis for some contracts to track the wash sales and recapture it when the next trade is closed. I also found that (proceeds - cost basis + wash sales) matches my own p&l calculations, but I was confused by the large wash sale amount shown.

Posted
13 minutes ago, anand331 said:

Thanks @Yowster. I think the reason probably is as @greenspan76 above suggested, IB is adjusting the cost basis for some contracts to track the wash sales and recapture it when the next trade is closed. I also found that (proceeds - cost basis + wash sales) matches my own p&l calculations, but I was confused by the large wash sale amount shown.

@anand331For me, out of my large number of trades in my 1099, the vast majority of wash sales came for one or two specific trades - and they weren't even particularly large allocations.

Posted

That is strange because from my SO trades a large percentage was flagged as wash sales. Big ones being NFLX (straddle strangle combo) and GOOG but many small trades as well. In any case, the final numbers look correct, so not worried anymore. I also let TradeLog trial lapse, although IB doesn't treat VXX, VIX, SVXY, UVXY trades as section 1256 whereas tradelog does (as @ChadK pointed out earlier in his post). Since most of these trades get closed before the year is over, it doesn't really make that much difference for me.

Posted

I read through this thread to get an idea for what others are doing with respect to taxes and trader status. For me, 2018 will be the first year where I would qualify as a trader as per Section 475(f). I understand that, broadly speaking, I have to follow a 2-step process:

1) elect mark-to-market accounting by attaching a statement with my tax return this year (AY2017), and

2) Attach form 3115 (Application for Change in Accounting Method) with my tax return next year (AY2018).

 

Assuming this is accurate, I'm trying to figure out how to attach the statement with my 2017 tax return if I'm e-filing through H&R Block. Is this possible, or will I have to file on paper ? Any information would be helpful.

  • 8 months later...
Posted

Am I correct that selling losing stock and buying an in the money call option will be considered a wash sale? Basically this has been a great year for short-term trade closed out using So strategies but my long-term Holdings mostly in spy have my acct at even on the year but 12k in realized gains I'll have to pay taxes on.  Unless I can do the trader status which may work based on some research as I do own a business?  Can i get the same delta of 250 spy using /es and some options?

Posted
35 minutes ago, lrfsdad said:

Unless I can do the trader status

Based on my research, and assuming you're in the US, you have to make the Mark-to-market election along with your prior year's tax return, and then apply it to the current year's taxes.

PS: I'm no expert. I'm just sharing what I've learned during my own journey towards Trade Tax status.

  • 6 months later...
Posted

Can someone help me with a few tax questions?  I'm using TOS, and according my 1099 form, my profit for 2018 is about 15% higher than my actual profit for the year (based on my personal records).  I assumed my accountant made a mistake and forgot to subtract my commissions from my profit.  If the commissions are subtracted from the net gain reported on my 1099 form, then this value would match my personal records.  I called TOS today, and they said that my commissions and fees are included in my cost basis for each trade.  So something is not right.  Could wash sales be the reason why my reported net gain is greater than my actual net gain?  Can someone explain how I can find out how much of my P/L is a result of wash sales?  Thank you in advance!

Posted
6 minutes ago, Hany said:

Can someone explain how I can find out how much of my P/L is a result of wash sales? 

Just a quick response - TD Ameritrade provides 2 spreadsheets in the Tax Center Gain/Loss area of their website. One includes Wash Sales, and the other excludes them. You should be able to compare them.

Posted

I found the documents!  Thank you so much, @rasar!  I really appreciate your help.

However, this raises another concern.  How can I have a wash sale if I closed all positions by the end of the year?  It doesn't seem right that I should pay taxes on gains I did not make.  Is it possible that TD Ameritrade made a mistake?

Posted (edited)
15 hours ago, Hany said:

I found the documents!  Thank you so much, @rasar!  I really appreciate your help.

However, this raises another concern.  How can I have a wash sale if I closed all positions by the end of the year?  It doesn't seem right that I should pay taxes on gains I did not make.  Is it possible that TD Ameritrade made a mistake?

I had the same exact thing happen to me.  Ended up owing taxes last year even though my account was basically flat.   My understanding is that you if you had wash sales and then opened trades in the same stocks in December those losses will not get realized until January so they essentially roll forward into the 2019 tax year and your 2018 returns only show them as disallowed wash sales.   I believe you will then see the loss in your 2019 tax statements (assuming you did not open any new positions for those same stocks within 30 days).  So you will still get the benefit of the loss, you just have to wait 12 months to realize it.

 

This was such a headache for me that I am now doing most of my options trading in my IRA to avoid all the tax issues.  

 

I found this podcast helpful where they address wash sales for options:  https://optionalpha.com/options-trading-taxes-part-2-19229.html

 

Edited by FrankTheTank
Posted (edited)

Disallowed wash sales are those that are a result of first taking a loss, and then buying the same "thing" again within 30 days - either before or after the sale, and any of your own or your spouse's accounts. That's the problem with wash sales. It's one of those pitfalls in the tax code, and it affects option traders a lot. You can take the loss eventually, but only after you've stopped buying the "thing". I'm getting way out of my depth here, so definitely do NOT take this as advice of any sort. There are many good articles about wash sales that explain the various scenarios and situations.

Edited by rasar
Clarified timing of buy, and also scope of accounts.
Posted

Thank you so much @frank the tank and @rasar for responding to my questions!  You guys are awesome!

I've been a member of SO for many years, but I've participated in only a few trades during this time.  SO has been an enormous learning experience, and trading has been more of a hobby and a curiosity than a way to make money.  Last year was the first year I made any real money.  This wash sale thing is ridiculous.  I've been doing more reading about it.  Am I correct in assuming that if I make no trades in the month of December (31 days), I won't generate any disallowed wash sales for the year?  I've scheduled a meeting with my accountant tomorrow, so I'll ask him this question.  If this problem with wash sales continues, I might invest in software like TradeLog to keep track of these trades.  Thanks again!

Posted
13 hours ago, Hany said:

Thank you so much @frank the tank and @rasar for responding to my questions!  You guys are awesome!

I've been a member of SO for many years, but I've participated in only a few trades during this time.  SO has been an enormous learning experience, and trading has been more of a hobby and a curiosity than a way to make money.  Last year was the first year I made any real money.  This wash sale thing is ridiculous.  I've been doing more reading about it.  Am I correct in assuming that if I make no trades in the month of December (31 days), I won't generate any disallowed wash sales for the year?  I've scheduled a meeting with my accountant tomorrow, so I'll ask him this question.  If this problem with wash sales continues, I might invest in software like TradeLog to keep track of these trades.  Thanks again!

I think that is correct and to be safe I may stop trading options in my taxable account around Thanksgiving (or at the least make sure to not open as potential wash sale positions after that point).

 

Good luck with your accountant and let us know what they say.   When I met with accountant a few months ago the guy did not understand options so he was not very helpful with the wash sale question.   

  • 1 year later...
Posted
19 hours ago, LangdonJohn said:

I had a similar situation where the profit on my records did not match the documentation of my accountant.

And what did you do?

  • 7 months later...
Posted (edited)
4 hours ago, Yowster said:

That 100K portfolio max is a general guideline setup by @Kim, people use various allocation sizes but we have no way of knowing the different trade sizes that members use.   That said, certain stocks whose options have very large volume/OI can scale up to any allocation size.   For those with more moderate volume/OI, having large allocations could possibly cause some pricing issues when trying to open or close.    It would be great if all options had high volume/OI with tight bid/ask spreads - but there aren't enough stocks like this so we have to also use some with more moderate volume/OI.

Doe anybody know the IRS guidance on losses on rollover when we use an iron condor or a butterfly strategy ? can they deny the losses incurred for taxation under the 30 day wash rule for securities and still tax the profits occurred as part of that strategy ?

 

Edited by skalmadi
Posted
29 minutes ago, Peeyotch said:

Probably. Options contracts on equities very quickly fall afoul of the wash sale rule. 
 

https://www.tradelogsoftware.com/resources/wash-sales/

 

Disclaimer: I am not a lawyer or accountant. Trade Log is the software I use to handle my trading taxes. 

Thanks. Very informative website. The  30 day wash rule as it applies to rolling losses on butterflies or iron condors , looks like it can be very tricky when rolling options. I wonder if some of the more experienced traders  have any tips or experiences regarding this. 

I found another website with examples of what is substantially identical securities

https://www.optionstaxguy.com/substantially-identical

 

Posted
1 hour ago, skalmadi said:

Doe anybody know the IRS guidance on losses on rollover when we use an iron condor or a butterfly strategy ? can they deny the losses incurred for taxation under the 30 day wash rule for securities and still tax the profits occurred as part of that strategy ?

 

Spreads mean nothing for tax purposes. Each contract stand on its own. Rolled options can fall afoul of the wash sale rule, as @Peeyotch mentioned.

Check out the last section in this article.

Posted

@skalmadi I used Turbo Tax and directly downloaded all the trades in my main account, IRA trades don't matter, you don't even have to report them because you are going to pay taxes on that money when you withdraw it.  But I sure thought Turbo Tax basically subtracted my output from my input, I did check to see if it was close to my trade log and it was but I didn't dig deep.  Rolls don't matter, a roll is just multiple options transactions.  I did notice that the import had every single option individually logged.  What I paid, what I received, it does not matter what order the buying and selling occurred.  I also elected "Active Trader" status so I could deduct other expenses.  I did run all of it past a tax attorney that was my go to guy when I had the business and he said it all looked good, so I felt pretty safe.

Posted
5 minutes ago, Ringandpinion said:

....IRA trades don't matter, you don't even have to report them because you are going to pay taxes on that money when you withdraw it. ....

(Disclaimer - I'm not a tax expert)

I'd be careful with that statement. I'm fairly certain that wash sales do apply across *all* accounts. In other words, all transactions are recorded, and then processed to figure out wash sales.

From Investopedia: If a security is sold in a non-retirement account at a loss, then an identical investment is bought in an IRA, the result is a wash sale.

In any case, I think this topic should probably be moved to the tax-related thread (which I can't seem to locate now 😐. Maybe @Kim knows where it went.)

 

  • Upvote 1
Posted (edited)
26 minutes ago, Ringandpinion said:

@skalmadi I used Turbo Tax and directly downloaded all the trades in my main account, IRA trades don't matter, you don't even have to report them because you are going to pay taxes on that money when you withdraw it.  But I sure thought Turbo Tax basically subtracted my output from my input, I did check to see if it was close to my trade log and it was but I didn't dig deep.  Rolls don't matter, a roll is just multiple options transactions.  I did notice that the import had every single option individually logged.  What I paid, what I received, it does not matter what order the buying and selling occurred.  I also elected "Active Trader" status so I could deduct other expenses.  I did run all of it past a tax attorney that was my go to guy when I had the business and he said it all looked good, so I felt pretty safe.

If you select the active trader status, I think the 30 day wash rule may not apply to active traders. That is why turbotax may not consider any of those as "wash sales". 

 

From what I am reading,  @rasar comments also about IRA transactions can be regarded as being "similar" can be used for wash rules . 

 

You have to however meet the IRS requirement  for active traders, which are not well defined either, as to who qualifies.

 

I am not a tax expert, just a newbie trying to understand the IRS rules. 

 

I am sorry I put this question/conversation in this trade, I agree with the person above that this should be in a tax related thread. maybe @Kim or @Yowstercan help move this to the right thread.

Edited by skalmadi
Posted (edited)
22 minutes ago, Ringandpinion said:

IRA trades don't matter, you don't even have to report them because you are going to pay taxes on that money when you withdraw it.

Not true, unfortunately… you need to be extremely careful about trading the same things in a taxable and IRA account or you could end up permanently disallowing a loss in your taxable account. The link I posted earlier has an entire section that details the issue; I highly recommend reading it. 

EDIT

As @skalmadi said, the rules may be different for those who elect active trader status. I can’t speak to that. 

Edited by Peeyotch
Posted

I'm certainly no expert, but I have had various IRA's for many years and I've never seen any place on any tax return to list the capital gains or any gains or losses IN the IRA that aren't related to the tax deductible funding you put in once a year or the enumeration of the withdrawals you make when it comes time to use the funds.  So I have no idea where you could report capital gains, wash sales or any such if you wanted to.  So I made an assumption, and I should know better.

Posted
12 minutes ago, Ringandpinion said:

I'm certainly no expert, but I have had various IRA's for many years and I've never seen any place on any tax return to list the capital gains or any gains or losses IN the IRA that aren't related to the tax deductible funding you put in once a year or the enumeration of the withdrawals you make when it comes time to use the funds.  So I have no idea where you could report capital gains, wash sales or any such if you wanted to.  So I made an assumption, and I should know better.

Excellent article from one of the law websites on the active trader exemption issues

https://andersonadvisors.com/trader_taxation/

Posted
10 minutes ago, Ringandpinion said:

I'm certainly no expert, but I have had various IRA's for many years and I've never seen any place on any tax return to list the capital gains or any gains or losses IN the IRA that aren't related to the tax deductible funding you put in once a year or the enumeration of the withdrawals you make when it comes time to use the funds.  So I have no idea where you could report capital gains, wash sales or any such if you wanted to.  So I made an assumption, and I should know better.

At the risk of getting deeper into the weeds, Forms 8949 and Schedule D are where you identify the wash sales yourself after doing the analysis across all accounts. That is, you don't have to report the IRA transactions as such; instead, you ony list the transaction in the taxable account, and then identify it as a wash sale.

I think I'll stop now before I get myself into any more trouble.

Posted (edited)

@Kim @Yowster

 

can either of you clarify the wash rule for me please ?

 in my fidelity account, i had about 20 thousand disallowed as wash sales, since i rolled over and bought the same option and sold it again.

 

is the rule that the loss on the prior sales, will be added to the basis of your new purchase and then when you sell it, you will get a final loss number , or is it that you completely lose the loss on the first loss for tax purposes, as long as these transactions are not pending at the end of the year ?

 

in effect scenario 1-- if the first sale loss is added to the basis of the second transaction, you lose nothing as long as you stop trading that security, and the effect vanishes 30 days after the last transaction with that CUSIP security ?

scenario 2-- the first sale loss is denied completely, then you have lost a ton of tax capital losses that you could otherwise claim on your tax returns

 

which one is correct ?

 

Edited by LaughingGas
Posted
8 minutes ago, LaughingGas said:

@Kim @Yowster

 

can either of you clarify the wash rule for me please ?

 in my fidelity account, i had about 20 thousand disallowed as wash sales, since i rolled over and bought the same option and sold it again.

 

is the rule that the loss on the prior sales, will be added to the basis of your new purchase and then when you sell it, you will get a final loss number , or is it that you completely lose the loss on the first loss for tax purposes, as long as these transactions are not pending at the end of the year ?

 

in effect scenario 1-- if the first sale loss is added to the basis of the second transaction, you lose nothing as long as you stop trading that security

scenario 2-- the first sale loss is denied completely, then you have lost a ton of tax capital losses that you could otherwise claim on your tax returns

 

which one is correct ?

 

I am not a tax expert, I can only tell you how I handle this.    The year-end 1099 tax forms from your broker have a "wash sales disallowed" number.  Going into my tax prep, I've tracked all my trades so I know what my overall gain is, and when I add that "wash sales disallowed"  number back into the "proceeds" number and subtract out the "cost basis" the total comes out to the gain I expect it to be.   I can't say this holds true for everyone, but the math has always held true for me.      When I calculate my yearly gain/loss for these short term trades, I don't factor in any wash sales - I just add all the winning amounts and subtract the losing amounts (to me they were all short term trades and I was kind of surprised to see anything show up as a wash sale in the first place).  

  • Like 1
Posted
30 minutes ago, Yowster said:

I am not a tax expert, I can only tell you how I handle this.    The year-end 1099 tax forms from your broker have a "wash sales disallowed" number.  Going into my tax prep, I've tracked all my trades so I know what my overall gain is, and when I add that "wash sales disallowed"  number back into the "proceeds" number and subtract out the "cost basis" the total comes out to the gain I expect it to be.   I can't say this holds true for everyone, but the math has always held true for me.      When I calculate my yearly gain/loss for these short term trades, I don't factor in any wash sales - I just add all the winning amounts and subtract the losing amounts (to me they were all short term trades and I was kind of surprised to see anything show up as a wash sale in the first place).  

Thank you. Looks like you are right, the tax loss is not lost forever. it is "deferred".  Was worried about it all of yesterday, am a total newbie at this. 

Here is the explanation from HRBLOCK and another website

https://www.hrblock.com/tax-center/income/investments/wash-sales/

You’ll need to figure the basis for shares sold in a wash sale. When you do, add the amount of disallowed loss to the basis of the shares that caused the wash sale. These are the new shares you received. By doing this, you defer the loss, but it’s not disallowed for good. You’ll get the benefit of the loss when you eventually sell the new shares (unless it’s another wash sale!).

 

https://www.thebalance.com/wash-sale-rule-3192972

The tax benefit of your capital loss isn't gone forever, but it's deferred. The loss on the original investment will be taken into account when you sell your replacement shares by applying the losses to your adjusted cost basis.

 

Posted

I have had no long term trades for the last 3 years.  All my long term stuff has been outside the stock market, so my trading has gross income minus gross costs = total profits.  Of course my costs included a few things other than commissions and the cost of equities purchased, but not many, even with the Active Trader designation.  So I guess my experience is not really relevant to the long term and wash sale rules. 

 

I really am a fan of Turbo Tax, I started using it before they were affiliated with Quickbooks and I used QB from 1995 to 2010 for all my business.  In 2010, my business was too complicated for me or QB to handle reporting to all the government entities and sending the appropriate money to them so I used an accountant and gave up QB.  A couple of years after the sale of the company when all my finances settled out from it, I went back to TT for my trading taxes.  If you set it for step by step instructions for the complete idiot, it's pretty hard to go wrong.  I'm sure some of the other outfits that do it are good, but I've used TT since the mid 90's.

 

Who are the two Men In Black knocking at my front door and why does it say IRS on their car?😱

  • Haha 1

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