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Showing posts with label cryptocurrency. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cryptocurrency. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 5, 2021

Pay Me In Bitcoin

 

He plays right guard for the Carolina Panthers and had a great quote about cryptocurrency:

         "Pay me in Bitcoin.”

We are talking about Russell Okung.

I believe he earned about $13 million for the 2020/2021 season, so he can move a lot of Bitcoin.

And Bitcoin had quite the run in 2020, moving from approximately $7,200 in January to $30,000 by year-end. The payment platform company Square added Bitcoin as an investment, and PayPal started a new service allowing its users to buy, hold and sell Bitcoin through their PayPal account.

Then there is, as always, the near inexplicable behavior of some people. In October, John McAfee (yes, John of McAfee computer security products) was arraigned for tax fraud. He was charged with, among other things, not reporting income for his work promoting cryptocurrencies.

The IRS is paying more attention.

We have existing guidance that the IRS views cryptos – which include Bitcoin and Ethereum – as property and not currency. While this might sound like an arcane topic for a business school seminar, it does have day-day-day consequences. If you buy something for $11 and pay with a $20 bill, there is likely no tax consequence.  A crypto is not currency, however. Pay for that $11 purchase using your Bitcoin and the IRS sees the trading of property.

What does that mean?

Taxwise you sold crypto for $11. You next have to determine your cost (that is, “basis”) in the crypto. If less than $11, you have a capital gain. If more than $11, you have a capital loss. The gain or loss could be long-term if you held the crypto for more than one year; otherwise, it would be a short-term gain or loss.

Assume that you have frequent transactions in crypto. How are you to determine your basis and holding period every time you pay with crypto?

You had better buy software to do this, or use a wallet that tracks it for you. Otherwise you could have a tax mess on your hands at the end of the year.

You can, by the way, also have ordinary taxable income (rather than capital gain) from cryptos. How? Say that you do consulting work for someone and they pay you in crypto.  You have gig income; gig income is ordinary income; that crypto is ordinary income to you.

By the way, mining Bitcoin is also ordinary income.

The IRS had a question about cryptos on a schedule in prior years, but for 2020 it is moving the following question to the top of Form 1040 page 1:

At any time during 2020, did you receive, sell, send, exchange, or otherwise acquire any financial interest in any virtual currency?”

The IRS moved the question to make it prominent, of course, but there is another reason. Remember that you are signing that tax return “to the best of your knowledge and belief” and “under penalties of perjury.” The IRS is raising the stakes for not reporting.

Expect more computer matching. Expect more notices.   

Even Treasury is upping its game.

There is a form that one files with the Treasury if one owns or has authority over $10,000 or more in a foreign bank or other financial account. We tax veterans remember it as the FBAR (Foreign Bank and Financial Accounts) report, but the name has since been revised to FinCen 114 (Financial Crimes Enforcement Network). Here is Treasury telling us that we will soon be reporting cryptos on their form:

Currently, the Report of Foreign Bank and Financial Accounts (FBAR) regulations do not define a foreign account holding virtual currency as a type of reportable account. (See 31 CFR 1010.350(c)).  For that reason, at this time, a foreign account holding virtual currency is not reportable on the FBAR (unless it is a reportable account under 31 C.F.R. 1010.350 because it holds reportable assets besides virtual currency).    However, FinCEN intends to propose to amend the regulations implementing the Bank Secrecy Act (BSA) regarding reports of foreign financial accounts (FBAR) to include virtual currency as a type of reportable account under 31 CFR 1010.350.

This area is moving in one direction – more reporting. There is currently some inconsistency in how cryptocurrency exchanges report to the IRS (Form 1099-B versus 1099-K versus 1099-MISC). I expect the IRS to lean harder – and soon - on standardizing this reporting. This genie is out of the bottle.

Sunday, July 5, 2020

Requesting A Payment Plan With Over $7 Million In The Bank


Sometimes I wonder how people get themselves into situations.

Let’s take a look at a recent Tax Court case. It does not break new ground, but it does remind us that – sometimes – you need common sense when dealing with the IRS.

The Strashny’s filed their 2017 tax return on time but did not pay the tax due.
COMMENT: In and of itself, that does not concern me. The penalty for failing to file a tax return is 10 ten times more severe than filing but not paying. If the Strashny’s were my client and had no money, I would have advised the same.
The 2017 return had tax due, including interest, of over $1.1 million.
COMMENT: Where did the money go? I am curious now.
In June, 2018 the IRS assessed the tax along with a failure-to-pay penalty.

In July, 2018 the Strashny’s sent an installment payment request. Because of the amount of money involved, they had to disclose personal financial information (Form 433-A). They wanted to stretch the payments over 72 months.
COMMENT: Standard procedure so far.
Meanwhile the IRS sent out a Notice of Intent to Levy letter (CP90), which seemed to have upset the Strashny’s.

A collection appeal goes before an IRS officer settlement officer (or “SO,” in this context). In April, 2019 she sent a letter requesting a conference in May.
COMMENT: Notice the lapsed time – July, 2018 to April, 2019. Yep, it takes that long. It also explains while the IRS sent that CP90 (Notice of Intent to Levy): they know the process is going to take a while.
The taxpayers sent and the SO received a copy of their 2018 tax return. They showed wages of over $200,000.

OK, so they had cash flow.

All that personal financial information they had sent earlier showed cryptocurrency holdings of over $7 million. Heck, they were even drawing over $19,000 per month on the account.

More cash flow.
COMMENT: Folks, there are technical issues in this case, such as checking or not checking a certain box when requesting a collection hearing. I am a tax nerd, so I get it. However, all that is side noise. Just about anyone is going to look at you skeptically if you cite cash issues when you have $7 million in the bank.
The SO said no to the payment plan.

The Strashny’s petitioned the Tax Court.
COMMENT: Notice that this case does not deal with tax law. It deals, rather, with tax procedure. Procedure established by the IRS to deal with the day-to-day of tax administration. There is a very difficult standard that a taxpayer has to meet in cases like this: the taxpayer has to show that the IRS abused its authority.
The Strashny’s apparently thought that the IRS had to approve their request for a payment plan.

The Court made short work of the matter. It reasoned that the IRS has (with limited exceptions) the right to accept or reject a payment plan. To bring some predictability to the process, the IRS has published criteria for its decision process. For example, economic hardship, ill health, old age and so on are all fair considerations when reviewing a payment plan.

What is not fair consideration is a taxpayer’s refusal to liquidate an asset.

Mind you, we are not talking a house (you have to live somewhere) or a car (you have to get to work). There are criteria for those. We are talking about an investment portfolio worth over $7 million.

The Court agreed with the IRS SO.

So do I.

Was there middle ground? Yes, I think so. Perhaps the Strashny’s could have gotten 12 or 24 months, citing the market swings of cryptocurrency and their concern with initiating a downward price run. Perhaps there was margin on the account, so they had to be mindful of paying off debt as they liquidated positions. Maybe the portfolio was pledged on some other debt – such as business debt – and its rash liquidation would have triggered negative consequences. That approach would have, however, required common sense – and perhaps a drop of empathy for the person on the other side of the table – traits not immediately apparent here.

They got greedy. They got nothing.

Our case this time was Strashny v Commissioner.

Tuesday, August 6, 2019

The IRS Cryptocurrency Letter


Do you Bitcoin?

The issue actually involves all cryptocurrencies, which would include Ethereum, Dash and so forth.

A couple of years ago the IRS won a case against Coinbase, one of the largest Bitcoin exchanges. The IRS wasn’t going after Coinbase per se; rather, the IRS wanted something Coinbase had: information. The IRS won, although Coinbase also scored a small victory.
·       The IRS got names, addresses, social security numbers, birthdates, and account activity.
·       Coinbase however provided this information only for customers with cryptocurrency sales totaling at least $20,000 for years 2013 to 2015.
What happens next?

You got it: the IRS started sending out letters late last month- approximately 10,000 of them. 

Why is the IRS chasing this?

The IRS considers cryptocurrencies to be property, not money. In general, when you sell property at a gain, the IRS wants its cut. Sell it at a loss and the IRS becomes more discerning. Is the property held for profit or gain or is it personal? If profit or gain, the IRS will allow a loss. If personal, then tough luck; the IRS will not allow the loss.

The IRS believes there is unreported income here.

Yep, probably is.

The tax issue is easier to understand if you bought, held and then sold the crypto like you would a stock or mutual fund. One buy, one sell. You made a profit or you didn’t.

It gets more complicated if you used the crypto as money. Say, for example, that you took your car to a garage and paid with crypto. The following weekend you drove the car to an out-of-town baseball game, paying for the tickets, hotel and dinner with crypto. Is there a tax issue?

The tax issue is that you have four possible tax events:

(1)  The garage
(2)  The tickets
(3)  The hotel
(4)  The dinner

I suspect that are many who would be surprised that the IRS sees four possible triggers there. After all, you used crypto as money ….

Yes, you did, but the IRS says crypto is not money.

And it raises another tax issue. Let’s use the tickets, hotel and dinner for our example.

Let’s say that you bought cryptos at several points in time. You used an older holding for the tickets. 

You had a gain on that trade.

You used a newer holding for the hotel and dinner.

You had losses on those trades.

Can you offset the gains and losses?

Remember: the IRS always participates in your gains, but it participates in your losses only if the transaction was for profit or gain and was not personal.

One could argue that the hotel and dinner are about as personal as you can get.

What if you get one of these letters?

I have two answers, depending on how much money we are talking about.

·       If we are talking normal-folk money, then contact your tax preparer. There will probably be an amended return. I might ask for penalty abatement on the grounds that this is a nascent area of tax law, especially if we are talking about our tickets, hotel and dinner scenario.

·       If crazy money, talk first to an attorney. Not because you are expecting jail; no, because you want the most robust confidentiality standard available. That standard is with an attorney. The attorney will hire the tax preparer, thereby extending his/her confidentiality to the preparer.

If the IRS follows the same game plan as they did with overseas bank accounts, anticipate that they are looking for strong cases involving big fish with millions of dollars left unreported.

In other words, tax fraud.

You and I are not talking fraud. We are talking about paying Starbucks with crypto and forgetting to include it on your tax return.

Just don’t blow off the letter.