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Do i pay tax for each transaction i make buying and selling stocks on short terms? |
i opened an investment account online for $2000. with that money i've bought and sold stocks totaling to about $40,000. i made a little money at first but ended up in a loss in the end. now the irs is charging me about $10,000 in unpaid taxes. how can that be when i only have $2000 to begin with and actually lost money? You show each transaction on your tax return, and show the gain or loss on that transaction. You add up all the gains and losses for the year, and pay tax on the net. So you started with $2,000 and have stocks totalling $40,000 and you say there is a loss? What loss? You've gained $38,000! If by loss you mean "at some point my stocks were worth $40,000 but now they're only worth $35,000" you've still have a gain. Both of the above answers are correct. Probably you didn't report the sales of the stocks on Schedule D on your income tax return or didn't report some of them. What the IRS gets is a record of all the sales that you had during the year. But what they don't get is how much it cost you to buy the stocks in the first place. So if they don't see a stock that you sold during the year listed on your tax return they will add the sale to your tax return and give you a cost basis on that stock of $0, so that you have a gain of 100% of the sale. You probably received a notice from them saying that you owed the $10,000 in unpaid taxes (probably also includes interest and penalties as well), but they should have also included any sales that they have that you didn't have. You would just need to fill out a corrected 1040, including the missing stock sales and the stock cost, and that should make the notice disappear, if you indeed did have losses on the sales. I am a CPA/Tax Preparer and we get clients who give us notices with the exact same thing. You are taxed on each transaction when you sell stocks, not when you buy the stocks. If you have short-term gain, that is added to your income and taxed along with your wages. If you have a loss, that is subtracted from your gains. Did you fill out a Sch D for the tax year in which the transactions occurred? The IRS gets a 1099B reporting gross amount you received from each sale. It is up to you to have that reported amount on a Sch D; along with other information such as when you bought and when you sold; and how much you paid for the stock. That way you identify it as being a loss. You can carry forward unused loss to following tax years, too. You may have to fill out a 1040X with a sch D attached to correct the year the IRS is after you over. |
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