The average cost accounting method was first created to allow a taxpayer to simply report the gain on partial sales based on the average cost of all shares purchased (instead of the default FIFO treatment, or by using specific share identification), but was reserved exclusively for mutual funds and not for individual equity securities. However, it appears now that the rules may be a little broader than anyone realized - because technically, an exchange-traded fund (ETF) may also be eligible, notwithstanding the fact that it trades more like a stock than a mutual fund.
Continue reading "Using average cost ... »Friday, September 5. 2008
Using average cost accounting for Exchange-Traded Funds?
Monday, May 19. 2008
Single-State Municipal Bond Funds Dodge a Bullet! But What About 529 Plans?
Earlier today the Supreme Court issued its ruling in the case of Department of Revenue of Kentucky v. Davis, stating that Kentucky's tax rules which exempt the interest earned on Kentucky muncipal bonds while taxing the interest of other state's bonds is not a violation of the so-called dormant commerce clause of the Constitution. The ruling spared what may have been a tumultuous disruption to the municipal bond market, but the Supreme Court's decision still leaves the door open for several issues...
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Thursday, April 3. 2008
Should you be doing 2008 tax planning for your rebate check?
Tuesday, March 25. 2008
New guidance on fixing a botched IRA stretch after it's "too late"
To preserve the ability to stretch IRA distributions for a beneficiary, that individual must start taking withdrawals based on his/her life expectancy in the year after death. If those required withdrawals don't start on time, can you still rectify the situation to preserve the tax deferral? A recent private letter ruling indicates the answer is "yes."
Continue reading "New guidance on fixing a ... »Monday, January 7. 2008
IRS delays for AMT patch may not be as bad as first feared!
Taxpayers awaiting a refund may be delayed in their ability to file early and receive that refund, due to Congress' late passage of an AMT patch - but apparently, the delay won't impact as many taxpayers as first feared.
Continue reading "IRS delays for AMT patch may ... »Friday, January 4. 2008
IRS steps back on non-spouse beneficiary concession!
In its list of required plan amendments for 2008, the IRS has failed to include any mandatory requirement that plans provide for non-spouse beneficiary rollovers to IRAs. This implies a change in position from their Interim and Discretionary Amendments release issued in the fall of 2007, which suggested that the IRS intended to acquiesce in advance of a Congressional Technical Corrections bill that non-spouse beneficiary rollovers from employer retirement plans to inherited IRAs would be mandatory, as covered earlier in this blog.
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