Tax Swap

  

Categories: Tax, Derivatives

If you trade your tax bill with Jeff Bezos, does that mean you get his income too?

Actually, a tax swap doesn't refer to trading tax liabilities with someone else. Instead, it's a maneuver meant to take advantage of a capital loss, even though you want to maintain the loss-inducing investment.

If you take a loss on an investment, you can deduct the loss on your taxes (after all, you have to pay taxes on capital gains, so why shouldn't you deduct the losses?). Unfortunately, to take the loss, you actually have to, uh...take the loss. In other words, you have to sell the investment and book the loss, in order to deduct it from your taxes. A paper loss doesn't count.

So a tax swap involves selling the investment that has the loss, then buying a new investment that's pretty similar (though it can't be exactly the same; the government is onto that trick).

You own shares in a major (legal) drug maker that have fallen in the past few months. You are now $2,000 underwater on the investment, and want to deduct the losses on your taxes. In order to achieve this goal, you sell the shares and lock in the loss. Then you take your capital and buy a drug-maker ETF, which happens to have the stock you just sold as its highest-weighted component.

You didn't sell and repurchase the same stock. You bought a different vehicle with similar exposure. You still have an investment in the sector you had before...plus, now you've got that $2,000 tax deduction.

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Finance: What is Tax Basis?8 Views

00:00

Finance allah shmoop What is tax basis Well your basis

00:07

is your cost Your costs for assessing how much you

00:12

owe when the tax man coming you bought a thousand

00:16

shares of whatever dot com at twelve bucks a share

00:19

in its eye po and huzzah Three years later the

00:22

stock is at thirty You decide whatever dot com is

00:26

now passe because a kardashians said so it'll be over

00:30

taken by whenever dot com and you want to sell

00:33

So you dio and you live in a thirty percent

00:35

marginal tax blue state And that is your federal tax

00:39

rates in twenty percent But then you add in ten

00:41

percent for state taxes and whatever's left for obamacare and

00:45

you pay about thirty percent tax on your gains Well

00:48

you paid twelve grand to buy the stock and after

00:51

the sale you took in thirty grand when you sold

00:55

it for a gain of eighteen thousand dollars Your tax

00:59

basis on those shares is twelve grand so you pay

01:04

thirty percent tax on the eighteen grand of gain or

01:08

fifty four hundred dollars to net from the sale of

01:11

thirty thousand dollars worth of stock How much Yeah twenty

01:15

Four thousand six hundred dollars He fancy math Had you

01:19

just gotten those shares free I'ii they were gifted to

01:22

you and you had no tax basis or a tax

01:25

basis of zero dollars a share Well then your gain

01:29

would have been from zero to thirty grand or a

01:31

gain of thirty thousand dollars to then be taxed at

01:34

thirty percent or nine grand in taxes to net just

01:38

twenty one thousand dollars after the sale So having ah

01:41

high tax basis or at least being able teo point

01:45

toe one saves you money when the tax man coming

01:48

and well that's pretty much it alright he's gone Now

01:51

you can all come out Come on it's Okay it's 00:01:53.698 --> [endTime] safe

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