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Showing posts with label Crypto. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Crypto. Show all posts

Monday, January 30, 2023

Donating Cryptocurrency

 

I was reading something recently, and it reminded me how muddled our tax Code is.

Let’s talk about cryptocurrency. I know that there is bad odor to this topic after Sam Bankman-Fried and FTX, but cryptocurrencies and their exchanges are likely a permanent fixture in the financial landscape.

I admit that I think of cryptos – at least the main ones such as Bitcoin, Ethereum or Binance Coin – as akin to publicly traded stock. You go to www.finance.yahoo.com , enter the ticker symbol and see Bitcoin’s trading price. If you want to buy Bitcoin, you will need around $23 grand as I write this.

Sounds a lot like buying stock to me.   

The IRS reinforced that perspective in 2014 when it explained that virtual currency is to be treated as property for federal income tax purposes. The key here is that crypto is NOT considered a currency. If you buy something at Lululemon, you do not have gain or loss from the transaction. Both parties are transacting in American dollars, and there is no gain or loss from exchanging the same currency.

COMMENT: Mind you, this is different from a business transaction involving different currencies. Say that my business buys from a Norwegian supplier, and the terms require payment in krone within 20 days. Next say that the dollar appreciates against the krone (meaning that it takes fewer dollars to purchase the same amount of krone). I bought something costing XX dollars. Had I paid for it then and there, the conversation is done. But I did not. I am paying 20 days later, and I pay XX minus Y dollars. That “Y” is a currency gain, and it is taxable.

So, what happens if crypto is considered property rather than currency?

It would be like selling Proctor and Gamble stock (or a piece of P&G stock) when I pay my Norwegian supplier. I would have gain or loss. The tax Code is not concerned with the use of cash from the sale.

Let’s substitute Bitcoin for P&G. You have a Bitcoin-denominated wallet. On your way to work you pick-up and pay for dry cleaning, a cup of coffee and donuts for the office. What have you done? You just racked up more taxable trades before 9 a.m. than most people will all day, that is what you have done.

Got it. We can analogize using crypto to trading stock.

Let’s set up a tax trap involving crypto.

I donate Bitcoin.

The tax Code requires a qualified appraisal when donating property worth over $5,000.

I go to www.marketwatch.com.

I enter BTC-USD.

I see that it closed at $22,987 on January 27, 2023. I print out the screen shot and attach it to my tax return as substantiation for my donation.

Where is the trap?

The IRS has previously said crypto is property, not cash.

A donation of property worth over $5 grand generally requires an appraisal. Not all property, though. Publicly-traded securities do not require an appraisal.

So is Bitcoin a publicly-traded security?

Let’s see. It trades. There is an organized market. We can look up daily prices and volumes.

Sounds publicly-traded.

Let’s look at Section 165(g)(2), however:

    (2)  Security defined.

For purposes of this subsection, the term "security" means-

(A)  a share of stock in a corporation;

(B)  a right to subscribe for, or to receive, a share of stock in a corporation; or

(C)  a bond, debenture, note, or certificate, or other evidence of indebtedness, issued by a corporation or by a government or political subdivision thereof, with interest coupons or in registered form.

The IRS Office of Chief Counsel looked at this and concluded that it could not see crypto fitting the above categories.

Crypto could therefore not be considered a security.

As property not a security, any donation over $5 grand would require a qualified appraisal.

There was no qualified appraisal in our example. All I did was take a screen shot and include it with the return.

That means no charitable deduction.

I have not done a historical dive on Section 165(g)(2), but I know top-of-mind that it has been in the Code since at least 1986.

Do you know what did not exist in 1986?

The obvious.

Time to update the law, me thinks.

This time we were discussing CCA 202302012.

Sunday, October 24, 2021

ProShares Bitcoin ETF and Futures Taxation

 

This week something happened that made me think of a friend who passed away last year.

I remember him laboring me on the benefits of CBD oil and the need to invest in Bitcoin.

When he and I last left it (before COVID last year), Bitcoin was around $10 grand. It is over $60 grand presently.

Missed the boat and the harbor on that one.

This past week ProShares came out with a Bitcoin ETF (BITO). I read that it tripped the billion-dollar mark after two or three days of trading.

With that level of market acceptance, I suspect we will see a number of these in the near future.

This ETF does not hold Bitcoin itself (whatever that means). It instead will hold futures in Bitcoin.

Let’s talk about the taxation of futures.

First, what are futures and what purpose do they serve?

Let’s say that you are The Hershey Company and you want to lock-in prices for next year’s cacao and sugar. These commodities are a significant part of your costs of production, and you want to have some control over the price you will pay. You are a buyer of futures commodity contracts – in cacao and sugar – locking in volume, price and date of delivery.

Whereas you do not own the cacao and sugar yet, if their price goes up, you would have made a profit on the contract. The reverse is true, of course, if the price goes down. Granted, the price swing on the futures contract will likely be different than the swing in spot price for the commodity, as there is the element of time in the contract.  

That said, there is always someone looking to make a profit. Problem: if commodity traders had to actually receive or deliver the commodity, few people would do it. Solution: separate the contract from actual product delivery.  The contract can then be bought and sold until the delivery date; the buyers and sellers just settle-up any price swings between them upon sale.

It would be also nice to have a market that coordinates these trades. There are several, including the Chicago Mercantile Exchange. The Exchange allows the contracts to be standardized, which in turn allows traders to buy and sell them without any intent to ever receive or deliver the underlying commodity.

The ETF we are discussing (BITO) will not own any Bitcoin itself. It will instead buy and sell futures contracts in Bitcoin.

Bitcoin futures are considered “Section 1256 contracts” in tax law.

Section 1256 brings its own idiosyncrasies:

* There is a mark-to-market rule.

The term “mark” to an accountant means that something is reset to its market price. In the context of BITO, it means that – if you own it at year-end – it will be considered to have been sold. Mind you, it was not actually sold, but there will be a “let’s pretend” calculation of gain or loss as if it had been sold. Why would you care? You would care if the price went up and you had a taxable gain. You will soon be writing a very real check to the IRS for that “let’s pretend” mark.

* The 60/40 rule

This rule is nonintuitive. Whether you have capital gains or losses, those gains and losses are deemed to 60% long-term and 40% short term. The tax Code (with exceptions we will ignore for this discussion) does not care how long you actually owned the contracts. Whether one day or two years, the gain or loss will be deemed 60/40.

Mind you, this is not necessarily a bad result as long-term capital gains have favorable tax rates.

* Special carryback rule

If you have an overall Section 1256 loss for the year, you can carryback that loss to the preceding three years. There is a restriction, though: the carryback can only offset Section 1256 gains in those prior years.

This is a narrow rule, by the way. I do not remember ever seeing this carryback, and I have been in tax practice for over 35 years.

I do not know but I anticipate that BITO will be sending out Schedules K-1 rather than 1099s to its investors, as these ETFs tend to be structured as limited partnerships. That does not overly concern me, but some accountants are wary as the K-1s can be trickier to handle and sometimes present undesired state tax considerations.

Similar to my response to Bitcoin investing in early 2020, I will likely pass on this opportunity. There are unusual considerations in futures trading – google “contango” and “backwardation” for example – that you may want to look into when considering the investment.

Saturday, November 24, 2018

A College Student and Ethereum


I have passed on Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies.

I do not quite understand them, nor am I a Russian oligarch or Chinese billionaire trying to get money out of the country.

I certainly do not think of them as money.

The IRS agrees, having said that cryptos are property, not money.

This has very significant tax consequences.

I can take $100 out of my bank and pay cash at the dry cleaners, Starbucks, Jimmy John’s and Kroger without triggering a tax event.

Do that with a crypto and you have four taxable events.

That is the difference between property and money.
COMMENT: To be fair, money (that is, currency) can also be bought and sold like property. That is what the acronym “forex” refers to. It happens all the time and generally is the province of international companies hedging their cash exchange positions. Forex trading will trigger a tax consequence, but that is not what we are talking about here.
I am reading about a college student who in 2017 invested $5,000 in Ethereum, a cryptocurrency.


Within a few months his position was worth approximately $128,000.

He diversified to other cryptos (I am not sure that counts as diversification, truthfully) and by the end of the year he was closing on $900 grand.

Wow!

2018 has not been kind to him, however, and now he is back to around $125 grand.

Do you see the tax problem here?

Yep, every time he traded his crypto the IRS considered it taxable as a “sale or exchange” of property.

Maybe it is not that bad. Maybe he only traded two or three times and can easily pay the taxes from his $125 grand.

He estimates his 2017 taxes to be around $400 grand.

Seems a bit heavy to me, but let’s continue.

Does the IRS know about him?

Yep. Coinbase issued him a 1099-K reporting his crypto trades. Think of a 1099-K as the equivalent of a broker reporting your stock trades on a 1099-B.

He argues that he reinvested all his trades. He never took a personal check.

I don’t think he quite understands how taxes work. Try telling the IRS that you did not have taxable income upon the sale of your Apple stock because you left all the money in your brokers’ account.

He says that he reached out to a tax attorney – one who specializes in crypto.

I am glad that he sought professional help, whether attorney, CPA or EA.

I however doubt that the attorney’s crypto expertise is going to move the needle much. What he needs is a someone with expertise in IRS procedure, as he is rushing toward an installment plan, a partial pay or offer in compromise.

After all, he is not paying the $400 grand in taxes with what he has left.