As I explain in my four part series on bitcoin (read partsย one,ย two,ย three, andย four), I’m a skeptic of crypto-currency trading and I don’t own any crypto-currencies. I believe, much like Warren Buffett toldย CNBCย on Wednesday, that the crypto-craze won’t end well.
The IRS has given some guidance on how to account for sales of crypto-currencies, but keeping track of all sales may be hard.
Brian Fung explains in The Washington Post:
The most recent IRS guidanceย on the matterย is from 2014, when it said taxpayers should treat their virtual currencyย like property. Under that rule, taxpayers must declare any profit, also known as capital gains, or losses they take when they sellย bitcoin at a different price than when they bought it. The same policy applies to purchases of real-world goods. For example, suppose you tried to buy a cup of coffee with bitcoin. That would technically count as a sale of your bitcoin. Youย might owe capital gains tax if the bitcoin you paid at the cash register had increased in value from the time you first acquired it. The IRS declined to comment for this story, referring back toย that 2014 guidance.
While the IRS ruling cleared up some questions, it raised others, such as who would be responsible for tracking each investor’s purchase and sale prices, and what methodologyย would be used to calculate gains.ย Another questionย is howย to treat the creation of new virtual currencies that emerge asย offshoots or โforksโ of old ones.
โHow does one account for taxes when you have a fork โ is it [like] a stock split?โ asked Jerry Brito, executive director of the Coin Center, a think tank for virtual currency issues.
With stock, brokerage firms such as Vanguard and Charles Schwab typically help investors track their gains and losses with a year-end tax document, Form 1099. But companies such as Gemini that handle virtual currencies, which haven’t been around for very long, face more ambiguous reporting obligations, leaving it mostly up to individual investors to crunch the numbers themselves. Thatย demands a facility for numbers and an exacting level of attention. Things get even thornier for U.S.ย employees who work for bitcoin-related companies and may receiveย the digital currency as part ofย their salary; that money is taxed as regular income, not investment income.
Read more here.
Originally posted on Yoursurvivalguy.com.